VOL. 76, NO. 5 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1967 40 PAGES, 3 SECTIONSBy JEFFREY KUTAEditor-in-Clii«fIt was to just about no one’s surprise that Provost Edward H.Levi was elected in mid-September to the presidency of the Uni¬versity of Chicago.As Board of Trustees Chairman Fairfax M. Cone put it, “Thefirst time the (selection) committeemet we all had a candidate.” Al¬though the committee consideredother possibilities, ‘‘our standardwas Mr. Levi and no one else metthat standard.”Cone told the press about twelvecandidates were talked about seri¬ously although more than a hun¬dred were considered.Levi will succeed PresidentGeorge W. Beadle upon his retire¬ment in his 65th year. Levi willformally take office in the fall of1968.Although Beadle’s announcementof his retirement plans early in thesummer came as a surprise tomany, insiders knew that he andthe University had planned his re¬tirement before he took office.There are some who say thatBeadle was picked on the under¬standing that Levi would be"groomed” for the job during theeight years Beadle would hold of¬fice.Support in I960According to many sources therewas much support for Levi by ‘hefaculty in 1960 when Lawrence A.Kimpton resigned as chancellor. Onthe other hand, many obstaclesstood in the way of Levi’s electionthen.One was the problem of inbreed¬ing. Except for a year at Yale, Levihad spent all his academic life atChicago—from the time he enteredthe kindergarten of the Lab Schoolto his appointment as dean of theLaw School. He will be the onlygraduate of the College electedpresident of the University.Another was his lack of glamorappeal. No Nobel prize winner, hecuts quite an ordinary figure in hisconservative suits and what somewould call ill-chosen bow ties. Andhis cigars probably didn’t help.Whether Levi narrowly missedthe tap in 1960 or not is unclear.But on September 14, 1967, a pressconference was assembled in theUniversity’s downtown Board roomand told that Levi was the ‘‘unani¬mous choice” of both the advisoryfaculty committee and the trustee See other stories inside.committee entrusted with the taskof selecting a successor to Beadle.Eighth Chief ExecutiveLevi’s election took place at aregular meeting of the Board ofTrustees in its downtown room.Levi was notified of his electionsoon after and accepted immediate¬ly. He will become the eighth chiefexecutive of the University.In announcing the selection ofLevi, Cone said:“I . . . am pleased that our trus¬tee and faculty committee was ableto find on the University’s campusa man who enjoys national respectfor his contributions to higher edu¬cation and to scholarship. EdwardLevi was selected in the enthusi¬astic conviction that he will con¬tinue to strengthen the University.“The committee which recom¬mended Mr. Levi was impressed byhis personal qualities cf humility,decisiveness, and breadth of intel¬lectual interests, and his under¬standing of the needs and chal¬lenges of modern academic admin¬istration—ranging from the prob¬lems of undergraduate education tothe further development of mean¬ingful professional education. . . .“We are confident that the Uni¬versity of Chicago will achieve newheights of academic leadership un¬der the direction of Edward H.Levi.”Protest from the LeftDespite this and other statementsof praise from established personswithin the University and without,the left wing at Chicago appearsto have reservations about thechoice. Many disagree with Levi’sposition against a formal studentdecision-making role in Universitypolicies and are curious about hisstatements favoring research overteaching.The majority7 of the student body,however, seem to agree that he isTurn to Page 4 IN ACADEMIC ROBES: From left to right President George Beadle, Chairman of the Board ofTrustees Fairfax Cone, and President-designate Edward Levi.Lynd Traces His RejectionTo the Lemisch ControversyStaughton Lynd, pacifist and historian who was denied a job at Chicago State College becausehe made a trip to North Vietnam two years ago, has accused the University of Chicago of notwanting to hire him because he made a statement critical of the University’s handling of As¬sistant Professor of History Jesse Lemisch.Lynd made the charges in aspeech on academic freedom Mon¬day, sponsored by the CampusChristian Association at ChicagoState College.He is currently waiting for thesuit he is bringing against theBoard of Governors of Illinois StateColleges to be heard. Court pro¬HANDBOOK REVISEDDeans Clarify Narcotics RulesBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorThe flowers may bloom in the spring (tra la) but Chicago’s administration made clear this weekthat flower power will be in serious trouble this fall.In statements to incoming undergraduates, resident heads have indicated that the Universitywill not permit the use of hallucinatory drugs by its students and that violators will be subject todisciplinary action.In addition, The Maroon haslearned that the revised edition ofthe Student Handbook, to be re¬leased today, contains a specificprohibition on the use of “danger¬ous” drugs and that a statement ondrtjg abuse co-signed by Dean ofthe\ College Wayne Booth and Deanof Students Charles O’Connell willbe released some time early thisquarter.The University’s action comes inthe wake of what many studentsviewed as a crackdown on drugsduring Spring Quarter of last yearand growing confusion about the University’s position on the drugproblem.In past years, Chicago has nothad a reputation for strictness indealing with drugs, and the use ofdrugs has not until now been spe¬cifically forbidden in the studentcode, although action has beentaken against pushers or flagrantviolators in the past.Only a ClarificationUniversity officials insist that thenew moves represent no real changein this policy, but only a clari¬fication of it. “We got in kind ofa bind last year,” said George Playe, dean of undergraduate stu¬dents and chairman of the Dis¬ciplinary Committee.“Things were never fuzzy in ourminds, but they were in the mindsof students. We are now makingcrystal clear that we will treatdrug abuse as a very serious mat¬ter.”Playe also indicated that the Uni¬versity will not make a distinctionbetween marijuana or "pot” viola¬tions and violations involvingstronger drugs. He did, however,state that “flagrant” violators mightTurn to Page 6 ceedings will probably begin aroundmid-November.The Board of Governors re¬jected the recommendations of thepresident and history faculty ofChicago State that Lynd be givena one-year appointment at theschool. The Board publicly statedthat Lynd’s trip to Hanoi, which hemade over the Christmas vacationperiod of December 1965 and Janu¬ary 1966, was the main reason fortheir rejection of his appointment.Lynd is currently on leave fromYale, at which he has an appoint¬ment which will not expire untilJune 1969. In his Monday speechhe also accused Yale of deciding notto reappoint him after he made theHanoi trip.Since this spring, Lynd has beenin Chicago working as an advisorwith the Center for Radical Re¬search, a group of college studentsfrom several institutions who wereinvestigating the power structureof Chicago over the summer.Yale, Chicago Not PureIn his speech, Lynd gives the fol¬lowing account of his dealings withthe University of Chicago:"... I believe persons associatedwith universities like Yale and Chi¬cago tend to assume too quicklythat, in contrast to institutions suchas Chicago State College, NorthernIllinois University, or the CircleCampus of the University of Illi¬nois (all of which rejected Lynd),they have academic freedom. “From my standpoint the truthis almost the reverse: first, thatChicago State College had the cour¬age to carry my appointment to afinal stage where it became publicknowledge; second, that the Boardof Governors, much as I resenttheir action, at least had the candorto say that they rejected me forpolitical reasons and had no ques¬tion about my record as teacherand scholar.“The University of Chicago inmy experience was both more timidand less honest.“Shortly after the Board of Gov¬ernors declined to confirm my ap¬pointment at Chicago State, I wasapproached by the chairman ofone of the social science depart¬ments at the University of Chicagoabout the possibility of a job there.”(Lynd told The Maroon that theperson he referred to was MarshallHodgson, chairman of the Commit¬tee on Social Thought.)“From mid-July to mid-August,there ensued a series of conversa¬tions and small meetings with Uni¬versity of Chicago personnel. Final¬ly on August 19 (Hodgson), whohad been good enough to approachme in the first place, telephonedto say he was giving up.Reaction to Maroon Quote“According to notes I made soonafter our telephone conversation,(Hodgson) stated that, while manyfactors were involved in a decisionTurn to Page 1?- FoundedIn 1892Trustees Select LeviThe Chicago MaroonTo Be New PresidentMAROON INTERVIEWLevi is against Formal Student Decision-Making RoleThe following intentew withProvost Eiluurd H. Levi, Presi-de nt-designate of the University,tins conducted Monday afternoonin L> vi's fifth-floor office in theAd ministration Building by Ma¬roon Editor Jeffrey Kata. TheMaroon intends to print similarinerriews with other high-leveladministrators during the year.MAliOON: Lot’s begin witli a sim¬ple question. What do you wantfor the University?LEVI: I want the University tocontinue on the path which itbegan on 75 years ago, to be agreat intellectual institution. Thatmeans that it is primarily a re¬search institution a research in¬stitution that has committed it¬self wholeheartedly to a teachingprogram of the highest standards.MAROON: How do you expect toachieve this aim after you takeoffice as president?LEVI: I think the faculty is themost important element of a uni¬versity, of the kind that the Uni¬versity of Chicago is and wantsto be. The responsibility of thefaculty is to see to it that theCollege that they bring here isthe same as the excellent stand¬ards that they have. I think thatone can be sure if one has thesame kind of dedicated and ablefaculty that we had in the past.This would be the best road tothe objectives we have.MAROON: Whose job do youthink it is to pick the facultyat Chicago?LEVI: As I have indicated, thejob is mainly that of the facultyitself. All faculty appointmentsat the University originate by theruling body involved. That meansthat they originate in the College,within the divisions, within thedepartments in the school. Theweeding-out process, the selectionprocess, is basically done there.Moreover, the faculty are at¬tracted! by other factors. It iseasier to build through strengthsthan it is to build through weak¬nesses.MAROON: Do you feel that thereshould be a College at this Uni¬versity?LEVI: I think I have taken af>osition on that frequently. I cer¬tainly do think that there should!lie a College at the University ofChicago. I think that it is wellknown that the College at theUniversity «»f Chicago is one ofthe three cddleges in the countrywhich has had the greatest effecton undergraduate education in thestates. (Editor’s Note: The othersare Harvard and Columbia) 1think that our College has a veryimportant mission in undergradu¬ate edlucation.MAROON: What specifically doyou think is the misison of ourCollege?LEVI: I think that our Cddlegeis somewhat unique, being a smallCollege within a small but impor¬tant research University. Thisgives the College the opportunityto be a generalizing influence ineducation. At the same time, itis very close to the new discov¬eries and the new ways of think¬ing about subject matter. TheCollege, therefore, can be a forcein not only educating the under-graduate students, but in helpingto conditkm and to clarify the re¬search which is cimductcdl morebasically in the graduate and pro¬fessional schools. There is another|K»int and that is that the Cddlegeat Chicago is in an important Uni¬versity with important researchconcerns for the students whocome here. Traditionally, theyhave gone on to do gradluate orprofessional work. Also, they be¬come the leaders am! the teachersof teachers. And, therefore, whatis done at Chicago early throughthese means influences what isdone in umlergradluate schoolsthroughout the country.MAROON: Is this what you thinkthe students want out of the Col¬lege?LEVI: I think that there is a gooddeal of self-selection by the stu¬dents who come to Chicago. Thevery fact that most of them dlogo on to dlo graduate work indi¬cates that this is the kind ofthing that they have in mind.MAROON: Could you describewhat you think is the ideal roleof the studlent at a university?LEVI: I assume that a studentwho comes to a university such asthe one at the University of Chi¬ cago is very anxious to increasehis intellectual powers. The uni¬versity's primary concern is theintellectual life. But that doesn'tmean that the student does nothave other concerns; we all dohave other activities that interestus.MAROON: The way that you’vedescribed the relationship, it ap¬pears that the University is theparty that defines the role of thestudent. Are there any means bywhich you see the student influ-encing his own role within theUniversity community?LEM: I do not think that thereis anything about the Universitythat defines the role of the stu¬dent— d>r the individual facultymembers, for that matter. 1 thinkthat a university such as thisone is basically interested in theintellectual growth of an individ¬ual. The faculty if one looks atthe faculty for a moment— is com¬posed of indiv iduals who are look¬ing at very different subject mat¬ter in very different ways. Andthe role of the University is basic¬ally to help them to give thefreedom, the time, the equipmentby which to dd) their work. Thekind of thing which tries to helpthem remember may not help an¬other. I think that students wouldhave to be approached very muchin the same way. The kind of in¬tellectual growth which wc w ouldseek for each one of our studentswould be in an individual manner.So that when one lod>ks at a uni¬versity such as the University ofChicago, of course there aregroups within the university. Ithink that the first point that hasto be made and always be re-memberedl is that it is the in¬dividual that counts. Now, thereis a distinction between the aimsof a university and the reasonspeople come to a university andthe other interests anil aims whichall pediple have. And therefore,one would findl within a universitya group of somewhat high-mindedpeople — sometimes very diversepeople who find companionship indiversity, and one would expectthe development of the kind ofinterest which they find mutuallyrewarding. In other words, thereare many interests that peoplehave and do not put away justbecause they are coming to a uni¬versity. I think that one has todistinguish the University fromother institutions and try to puta finger on what is uniquely thepurpose of the University. Thatdoes not mean that a person doesnot have other interest. A stu¬dent at the University of Chicagohas a variety of organizationswhich should help. They havegreat freedom and self-determina¬tion in the way that organizationsgo.MAROON: To be more specific,suppose an individual student—and this could mean a majorityof the students—was of the opin¬ion that he was not getting whathe wanted out of the Universityin terms of what is required ofhim before he is awarded a de¬gree, or anything else for thatmatter. What say do you thinkstudents should have, if any, aboutwhat the University gives them?LEVI: If I heard you correctly,this is a very good question onwhether the kind of curriculumor the kind of teaching or thekind of intellectual program atChicago is sufficiently challengingor rewarding for an individualstudent or a group of studentswho feel the same way. Thestatutes of the University arequite clear on the legislative partof the curriculum. Questions ofcurriculum, admission, grading,and examination in the Collegeare basically a question for facul¬ty action -at least initially—inthe College. Students who havesuggestions on these matterseither for themselves or for otherscertainly ought to be encouragedto be in touch with the facultycommunity in those areas. I be¬lieve that is a tradition which istrue within the University. As amatter of fact, over the years theStudent Government has had avariety of committees which haveconfronted these matters. I thinkthat there ought to be every dis¬position, every attempt by thefaculty to know what the stu¬dents’ views on these matters maybe. As a matter of fact, this wasthe reason why, when I made a• September 2f, 1*47 proposal for the organization ofthe College ten years ago, thefirst thing that I did was to talkto individuals and groups of alarge segment of the College stu¬dent body. I think that I—in oneway or another- must have heardfrom at least a thousand studentsbefore I went ahead w'ith the rec¬ommendations.MAROON: Do you really thinkthe relationship which you’ve de¬scribed keeps students in a closeenough contact with faculty andadministrators so that the latterparties can fully comprehend theformer’s needs and desires? Also,do you really feel that personalinterests of administrators andfaculty would not interfere in theexercising of their powers to makedecisions affecting students ifthese interests were opposed tothose of the students?LEVI: That’s a long question. Itake it that the first part is onwhether the arrangements arenow as good as they can be sothat the students’ needs may beexplored. I think that the impor¬tant point to make here is thatit is not just a question of havinga reaction that may change fromday to day. The views may turnout to be just transient. But ifwe have some mechanism bywhich the views may really bediscussed and explored- my an¬swer to that is that I do notknow whether these arrangementsare as good as they can be or not.Usually, one might say as a ruleof thumb that they are not asgood as they can be. I think itdepends on the area. One reasonfor setting up the collegiate divi¬sions is to have and identify afaculty group concerned with anidentified number of students, andto make it possible for arrange¬ments to develop within theseunits so that the arrangementswhich you are suggesting mightmore easily develop. I think thatthe second part of the questionasks whether the students andthe faculty will always agree. Ofcourse, the answer to that is thatit will not.MAROON: You’re saying, then,that students have no guaranteethat their interests will be pro¬moted ?LEVI: I do not think that thereis any doubt that the faculty isseriously concerned with the stu¬dents. I think that raises thesame question again — mainly,what to do when the faculty, hav¬ing had full discussions wdth thestudents, make up their mind inone way and the students disagree.I think one has to say that theessential educational program ofthe University has to be set bythe faculty. I do not think thatis the same thing as saying thatthe faculty would want to set upan educatonal program whichwould not be, in their judgement,desirable for the students. I would have to agree that there may liea disagreement on that.”MAROON: Then you're againstgiving students a formal voice inUniversity decision-making suchas seats on the College and Uni¬versity Councils or on appointedcommittees?LEVI: I think there are again,really, two aspects to the ques¬tion. The first, aspect would behow one would regard the ar¬rangements in a particular areaof the University, a collegiate di¬vision, or a particular school inw hich there might be joint facultyand student committees. In fact,we have had joint faculty andstudent committees. That is notnew at all. They have existedboth within particular areas andin particular problems which haveaffected the whole University.MAROON: But they have not hadthe power to make policy deci¬sions.LEVI: I think the ultimate powerto make these educational deci¬sions rests with the faculty. I canunderstand why other kinds ofeducational institutions with dif¬ferent kinds of purposes, such asAntioch, might have a very dif¬ferent purpose of education. Ithink it is a good thing that wehave a large variety of differenttypes of universities and schools.But I think that a university suchas this one has a somewhat dif¬ferent direction than a school suchas Antioch.MAROON: Do you feel there isjustification fiy student protestwhen agreement can not liereached between the people whomake the rules and the studentswho are asked to abide by them?LEVI: I do not think that ques¬tion means so much whether pro¬test is justified because whenthere is protest those who do pro¬test feel sure it is justified whileothers might not think so. I thinkthat the question really is wheth¬er I think that student protestshould be carried to the lengththat would interfere wdth theproper operations of an educa¬tional institution—and I do notthink so. I think that, on theother hand, because a student pro¬test may cause embarassment isno reason to be against it. If stu¬dent protest is a way of commu¬nicating, then the communicationhas to be handled as part of adiscussion on the issue. A univer¬sity is committed to a life ofreason. The means are just asimportant as the ends.MAROON: You feel, then thatcoercive protest is unjustifiedeven if the overwhelming ma¬jority of the students of the Uni¬versity are in agreement withthe protest?LEVI: I do not think that coerciveprotests—if I understand whatyou mean by coercion—are justi¬fied at the University of Chicago.I would hope that the majority of the students and the facultywould agree with me.MAROON: What social restric¬tions do you think the Universityshould place on sudents, if any?LEVI: I am not prepared to an¬swer that question other than tosay, I think, it is to have as fewas possible.MAROON: Would you be morespecific about your interpretationof the social relationship of theUniversity to the students? Do yousee it as one of in loco parentisfLEVI: I really do not know whatin loco parentis means and I doubtwhether anyone does. I do notthink that the University viewsthe matter that way at all. As Isaid before, I think that the re¬strictions should be minimum. Ishould remind you that the Coun¬cil of the University recommendedlast year that there would be afive-man elected student group tojoin with live designated facultymembers to act as an advisorygroup. I should think that thiskind of problem that you havejust raised is the kind of problemthat these people have examined.MAROON: What justification doyou see in the University assum¬ing any disciplinary role?LEVI: A disciplinary role on any¬thing?.MAROON: In terms of socialrules.LEVI: Generally speaking. I thinkthat the University does have theresponsibility to try to provide anadequate environment for the stu¬dents. I suppose that part ofhaving an adequate environmentis having some kind of rules whichpeople can live up to, to the ex¬tent that the rules can be formu¬lated by the people concerned. Ithink that this must be done..MAROON: Given,that the Uni¬versity has corporate, financialpowers, do you think it has aresponsibility to decide to employthem in a morally justifiable way,even if this decision has politicalramifications?LEVI: I think there is a verygood statement which was draw nup by a faculty committee onthe point and I commend it toyou. <Editor's note: this state¬ment is referred to below.)MAROON: Last year, for example,a dispute arose over the Univer¬sity's relationship with the Con¬tinental Illinois Bank. Some stu-dents felt that the Universityhad the responsibility to make apolitical decision as to the use ofits financial powrer and felt thatthe decision should have been toremove funds from the bank be¬cause of its involvement in a con¬sortium which made loans toSouth Africa. Would you elab¬orate on your comments in thiscontext.IJTCVI: I think that it was per¬fectly appropriate for the stu¬dents who felt that way to maketheir views known and they didmake their views known. Andtheir views were seriously consid¬ered. A faculty committee towhich I have referred consideredthat kind of problem. In a senseit was the background for thestatement which the faculty com¬mittee wrote. I think that theoverall point is that the Univer¬sity, in order to preserve its in¬tellectual freedom, ought not—except possibly under the mostextreme circumstances take of¬ficial position on matters of thatkind. The problem is always topreserve and maintain the free¬dom and independence of the Uni¬versity from outside forces andalso, not to take a position whichwould become an official dogmawithin the University so as to, ineffect, deny freedom of thoughtor expression. There are alwaysmany temptations for the Univer¬sity to take a position on issuessuch this kind, I ned only to re¬mind you of the time when thestudents invited George LincolnRockwell to speak at the Univer¬sity. Many students, many facul¬ty members, and many people inthe larger community felt thatthe University by permitting thespeech was identifying itself withobnoxious ideas and that thespeech should be prevented. Ithink that we have to keep re¬minding ourselves that coercion,boycott and so on are not theways of the intellectual life. Theintellectual life is not the onlykind of life worth living, of course.• THE CHICAGO MAROON2O'Connell Stiffens RulesBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorDean of Students Charles D.O’Connell has announced a stric¬ter policy on visiting hours indormitories in a letter to housepresidents and members of the In¬ter-House Council (IHC).in an apparent switch from lastyear's policy of house autonomy, hecalled for sign-in sheets in eachhouse, a strict deadline on rulesapplications to his office, and anend to sexual intercourse in the'dormitories.In the letter O'Connell pointedout that a third of the College con¬sists of first-year students andthat a far higher percentage ofdormitory residents are first-year.He agreed that last year therules were successful and well re¬ceived generally, and went on topraise the IHC for its work. Butstating that this was a new yearand he a new dean of students,O’Connell listed his thoughts onhow visiting rules should run.They should be set by the housecouncils, he said, which are re¬sponsible for their enforcement.“This in turn means,” he continu¬ed, "that a relatively simple sys¬tem of sign-in sheets” should beused, “to save the council em-barassment.”Changes Must Be ApprovedThe rules should go into effect,stated O'Connell, only after thehouse council has been elected and is functioning regularly. Further,any house that wishes to expandits hours from those of last yearis supposed"to send a copy of itsrules to O’Connell for approval.A deadline was set up in the let¬ter Tor submission of the ruleswhich differs from the agreementnegotiated last year by IHC mem¬bers and then Dean of StudentsWarner A. Wick.O’Connell concluded that "theuse of inter-visitational hoursnecessarily means that, in mostcases, a student must entertain hisguest in a combination study-bed¬room. The granting of inter-visita¬tional hours, however, does notmean that the University permitsor condones their use for the pur¬pose of sexual intercourse.”Student Reaction VariedStudent reaction to the letterwas mixed. Alan Bloom. IHC vice-president said, “It seems okay tome. He is merely formalizing forthe public some rules that havepreviously been in effect. Ofcourse, his letter dealt just withhours, and not with other aspectsof house autonomy.“It disturbs me that O'Connell’smind runs solely in direction ofhours. Wick wanted houses tohave autonomy—more than just inhours. He dealt with all aspects qfhouse autonomy. It is very unfort¬unate that O’Connell is thinkingonly of hours.One orientation aide was moreexplicit. “O'Connell is a horse’s ass.” Another former IHC officialfelt “it's all right for him to saythat—so long as no one goesaround pounding on doors. I mean,it’s okay for the public, but theyshouldn’t try to enforce it.”Last year, after extended negoti¬ations between the IHC and theoffice of the Dean of Students, itwas agreed that each house wouldmake its own social rules and fewrestrictions. Activities condoned bythe houses, had to be legal and nohouse was permitted to entertainvisitors of the other sex from 3a.m. to 11 .a.m.Change in Policy?Social rules were written by thehouses and varied widely, dorms;with all single rooms opting for ■fewer restrictions than those withdoubles. In some houses the coun- icil was in charge of disciplinary jaction, in others the resident head. IAccording to the O’Connell letter, jhowever, this last choice will nolonger be accepted.Further, the rules went into ef¬fect 17 days after their, submis¬sion to the IHC unless vetoed bythe dean; no approval was neces¬sary. This also seems to be changedby the letter O’Connell has sentout.According to the letter, the sys¬tem last year was “successful andwell received.” There were, how¬ever, several disciplinary prob¬lems w'here the houses had failedto keep their own rules enforced.Dean of Undergraduate Students George Playe told of “several oc¬casions on which residents com¬plained about what was happeningaround them, with the usual ad¬monition ‘why don’t you do some¬thing about it—but don’t mentionme.’ ”Some of the cases were inWoodward and most of the rest in Pierce. There w'as only one casein Hitchcock and none at all fromBurton-Judson.Both Playe and Dean of theCollege Wayne C. Booth statedthat they thought O’Connell hadmeant to insert no changes in pastpolicy in his letter. “It was prob¬ably a slip of the pen,” said Playe.College To ConsiderNew Grading OptionTSPEAKS TO NEW CLASSBeadle Hits Student Activists at Freshmen MeetingFirst-year students weregreeted with the traditionalspeeches at a meeting on Mon¬day, but President Beadlechanged the script with an attackon student activists.Director of Admissions AnthonyT. G. Pallett, before introducingBeadle, called the class “the bright¬est ever,” continuing the traditionof many past years.“This is now your University,”Beadle began. “It is not entirelyyours, of course, but you have somelarge investment financially in it,and a smaller one intellectually.”Beadle said that the most impor¬tant act of his administration hadbeen to persuade Edward Levi, thendean of the Law School, to becomeprovost and now president-elect.He went into a description of thedivision of authority at the Uni¬versity.“All jniwer in the University isin the hands of the Board ofTrustees, Beadle explained. . . .•They delegate large powers to theofficers and deans, who in turn delegate them to academic groupsand their faculties.“Students also have rights andresponsibilities,” he stated, such aselecting a student government, andpublishing The Maroon.There are some students whowant to change the balance ofpower, Beadle asserted. They wouldchange the nature of the Univer¬sity, but should be aware of whatthey are doing since they thenplace student freedoms in jeopardy,he warned.“The University should be thehome and sponsor of critics, notitself the critic,” he continued, at¬tacking leaders of last year’s dem¬onstrations demanding Universitywithdrawal of funds from Con¬tinental Illinois National Bank,member of a consortium whichloans money to South Africa.The University, he stressed, mustbe open to all sorts of ideas. “Itis a community which cannot actby majority vote.”Following Beadle’s speech, Deanof the College Wayne C. Boothwarned the first-year students to be on guard: “Never before haveyoung people had so much guffthrown at them by those whowould exploit them.”The students are wary of admin¬istrations for that reason, he con¬tinued, but they "should know thatthey will receive much guff fromthose who appear to be theirfriends, such as other students andstudent organizei-s.”Booth also warned against ac¬ceptance of “positively harmfulslogans” such as “the University isa knowledge factory, or multiver¬sity,” or “research versus teaching,”and against acceptance of mythsabout courses, that they are filledwith busywork.Booth concluded with a plea tothe freshmen to think. “Thinkdeeper than anyone else. Thinkcritically about everything, includ¬ing the scepticism and negationsthat fly from all sides. Booth tellsyou to think—well, think criticallyabout his telling you to think. Whatis thinking? Have I ever done any?Is he doing it now?” A proposal to institute a newgrading system for some courseswill be discussed at the nextmeeting of the College Councilon October 3.Also to be discussed is the pro¬posal passed last spring in a refer¬endum that all ranking be abolish¬ed in the College and a requestby The Maroon that it be permit¬ted to have a reporter at meet¬ings of the Council.The new grading system will con¬sist of a pass-no credit system, un¬der which a student could take acertain number courses outside hismajor field and either receive cred¬it or fail to receive credit, de¬pending on how well he does.Neither grade would be averagedin within the others, in contrastwith the present system in whichpass-fail grades are averaged inonly when the grade is F. Actual¬ly, under the present system pass-fail grades are not allowed in theCollege, and the courses that usethem are technically violating therules.No More WinkingDean Wayne C. Booth, talkingabout the old system, said “that oneof the reasons why we want to in¬stitute the new system is so thatwe don’t have to wink at the hypo¬crisy of disallowing what actual¬ly goes on.”He also suggested that the Coun¬cil discussion will mainly centeraround a section of the proposallimiting the number of pass-noCredit courses a student may take.As the report stands a studentwould be permitted no more thanone such course per quarter, witha minimum of 75 percent of thecourses marked with the standardA—B—C—D. Such a system willnot be in operation this quarter,although it may start with thewinter quarter.The system will be largely usedfor tutorials, small seminars, andindependent study projects in thestduent’s major field as well. “Wewould lie to have it established asa principle that in his last twoyears every student may register in one quarter for one tutorial witha member of the faculty of theUniversity,” the report stated.Criticized Low GradesThe report is the second part ofthe Williams committee report ongrading in the College. Last year,in the first part of the report,the committee called for a sub¬stantial change in the gradingsystem of the College, with an in¬crease in the number of As andB’s granted.The committee suggested thatan absolute standard be used forperformance rather than the com¬parative standard, or curve, pre¬sently used.The report was based on a sur¬vey of several other institutionswith freshman classes of compar¬able quality, which showed thatChicago issued the lowest grades,only 39 percent A’s and "B’s com¬pared with up to 66 percent ormore at other schools.The proposal that all rankingbe abolished is not expected topass the Council, as all previousindicators are against. Last year,when the vote was taken on thereferendum to abolish all rank¬ing, students in the College voted798 to 443 in favor, while the fac¬ulty voted 5 to 2 opposed. Most ofthe College faculty abstained, notwanting to participate in the votewhich they refused to recognizeas valid in any case.Promised ConsiderationThe reason the proposal is be¬ing considered, Booth said, is be¬cause he promised the studentslast year after the referendumthat the results would be consid¬ered.The request by The Maroonthat it be permitted to have re¬porters at meetings was submit¬ted late last year to both the Col¬lege and University Councils. Thelatter has already rejected it be¬cause the faculty wishes to “pre¬serve for itself a forum where itcan freely discuss any and all is¬sues without even the presenceof non-faculty persons,” accordingto the Chairman George J. Stig-ler.NSA Meeting Calls For 'Action, Not Words'By DAVID L. AIKENExecutive EditorSpecial to The Chicago MaroonCOLLEGE PARK, Md. —“Action, not words” was the cryheard at the U.S. National Stu¬dent Association’s twentieth an¬nual Congress, held August 13-26New LAC Scheduled;Student Aid RequestedStudents interested in workingon the Liberal Arts Conferencefor this year should get in touchwith Karl Bemesderfer. assistantdean of the college, Ext. 2823.The original Liberal Arts Confer¬ence was held two years ago, whena week was spent discussing “WhatKnowledge Is Most Worth Hav¬ing.” There were many lecturesby men outside the University andseminars offered by a large num¬ber of faculty members.Last year the conference tookonly four days and dealt with“The Challenge of New Knowl¬edge.” The plans are not made forthis year’s conference, and studentswho are interested will have achance to make them. The CollegeCouncil approved this Conferencelast spring. at the University of Maryland.But there was divided counselamong the 1200 students fromover 330 colleges and universitiesabout just what sort of actionstudents in general and NSA inparticular should be taking tochange their schools and society.In their first national meetingsince last February’s revelation ofpast financial links between NSAand the Central Intelligence Agen¬cy, the delegates approved thenational staff’s recommendationfor a further cutback in inter¬national activity for the associa¬tion.No Drastic ReshapingProposals to drastically re¬shape the structure of the associa¬tion itself were heard, but notimmediately accepted.One idea — of imposing a “headtax” of a penny per student inaddition to the dues of a memberstudent government pays —gained a majority but not the two-thirds it required. It will be votedon by member schools during thecoming year.A proposal to split NSA intotwo separate corporations gainedsupport from Edward Schwartz,.last year’s national affairs vice-president, who was elected NSApresident at the Congress.Under the plan, local “unions”students, growing from the “grass roots” on each campus,would be associated in regionaland national confederations. Paral¬lel to the union structure, wdiichwould grow from the bottom up,would be an “institute” to providemany of the same sorts of serv¬es to student governments andlocal campus unions that are nowprovided by NSA.Unions A GoalThe unions could engage in “col¬lective bargaining” over issues ofstudent life, curriculum and othermatters with university administra¬tions. In some places, they might“co-exist” with already-establishedstudent governments, or might re¬place' them./Schwartz predicted it would be“/at least ten years before the idea0f student unions' really becomesa movement.”Meanwhile, NSA will continue todraw its support and representativesfrom student governments on mem¬ber campuses.Education Reform PushedSchwartz, a 1965 graduate ofOberlin College, promised to ex¬pand and strengthen NSA’s acti¬vities for educational reform. Theseefforts have grown rapidly in thepast two years, replacing inter¬national student affairs as the pri¬mary preoccupation of the associa¬tion’s staff.To be retained and developed are such programs as helping studentson local campuses design courseand teacher evaluation programs:the Tutorial Assistance Center,which offers advice and materialsfor students operating tutoringprojects in ghetto neighborhoods;and the "student stress” programs,which arranges free-wheeling con¬ferences at which administratorsand students discuss university lifeon an equal, first-name basis.New Draft Program StartedIn addition to its present pro¬grams, NSA will move into newefforts related to the draft, blac^power, and student power.The delegates at the congresdapproved a resolution calling for!NSA to sponsor a committee of*students to organize a “campaigiagainst compulsory service in thjmilitary actions of the Unit/dStates.”The committee will send to localcampuses information on consci¬entious objection, draft resistance,counseling, and legal aid for draftresisters. Legal advice for consci¬entious objecters and support ofcourt test of the legality of preseidraft law will also be arranged byNSA-sponsored committee.A provision was removed fromthe resolution which called for aidto American students who wish toemigrate to Canada rather thanaccept military service. A resolution was also approvedendorsing the goal of “black pow¬er,” and urging white students to"’organize poor whites around theirown self-interest” and to educate“the white middle class to the needto understand black power and tounderstand its own racist atti¬tudes.”After about 50 black studentsthreatened to stage a walkout fromthe Congress floor, the delegatesVoted to include a phrase definingblack power as “unification of allblack peoples in America for theirliberation by any means necessary.”In a close vote, they had first re¬moved the words, “by any meansnecessary.” after some delegatescautioned that they might be takenas an endorsement of riots.When a bid to replace the wordsfailed a group of both Negro andwhite delegates left the room, forc¬ing adjournment for lack of a[uorum. When the session recon¬ciled the next morning the dele-;ates voted again, this time approv¬ing a motion to reinsert the words.Speeches by supporters of theresolution made it clear they didnot intend to “condone rioting” un¬der all circumstances, but stressedthe necessity for whites to takeaction which would make riotingunnecessary.September 29, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONLevi Calls Research the Primary ObjectBy ALFIE MARCUSStoff WriterThe University of Chicago,declared Provost and President¬elect Edward Hirsch Levi, “ex¬ists for the life of the mind. Itsprimary purpose is intellectual.”“The measure of the school'svalue is its committment to thelife of reason,” said Levi in an ad¬dress to the entering first-year stu¬dents last Sunday night in MandelHall.“A true university,” according toLevi, “cannot reflect the total so¬ciety in its tastes and interests.”There may be those who doubtthe life of reason in these troubled times, “but the university has al¬ways existed in troubled times,” as-seited Levi.We must have faith in the uni¬versity and in its inner integrity,he claimed.The new freshman, said Levi,“will not know the university ina week or in a lifetime.”Their understanding of it willgrow and change, he commented,reflecting their own growth andchange and that of the University’s.Research over Teaching“The search for knowledge haspre-eminence at this University,”said Levi. If the University had tochoose between teaching and re¬search, it would take research, heaffirmed. Yet Chicago is “one of three in¬stitutions that have had the great¬est influence in shaping under¬graduate education and its missionis to continue to do so,” he added.Levi reported that the averagecost per student at Chicago is $4603per year. To make ends meet thetrustees must always be engagedin a “gigantic fund drive,” he said.Last year the deficit was reducedfrom $4.5 million to $1.7 million,he revealed.The pressure of a budget demandsthat priorities be established, saidLevi. At the University of Chicagothe highest of these priorities arefaculty salaries, scholarships, andthe needs of the library, he report¬ed.TO REPLACE BEADLELevi Named New PresidentContinued from Page 1the man best qualified for the joband will serve admirably.Levi said at a press conferencehe had not yet found someone totake his place as provost, the posi¬tion created especially for him byBeadle after Levi persuaded Beadleto accept the presidency in 1961.Levi has since been what somewould call the real strongman inthe University, for as provost hehandled appointments to the facul¬ty and the administration.Levi showed his persuasiveness atthe press conference announcing hiselection when he nearly convincedBeadle to commit himself to con¬tinue his ties with the University.Beadle, however, after telling Levihis “recruiting pitch (was) verygood,” said he was considering“many possibilities.”'Mission towards ExcellenceOutside of that vignette, nothingunexpected occurred at the pressmeeting. Levi talked of a “missiontoward excellence” and maintain¬ing Chicago’s high standards, asmall but not excessive growth inthe student body, and acceptanceof what one reporter called the“current revolt of our young peo¬ple against authority.”“I’m not sure it’s an entirely newrevolt,” Levi observed, citing his¬torical references. He concludedthat such questioning of authorityis necessary unless "you’re running a country club or a nice place tobe.” / .JAsked about a return of sportsto the Midway, Levi said he thoughtthe University already placed agreat deal of emphasis on intra¬mural physical education.In hopes of involving students inthe presidential selection process.The Maroon during the summerobtained a list of the seven facultymembers elected to the search com¬mittee by the Council of the Uni¬versity Senate:• Dr. Albert Dorfman, a profes¬sor and chairman of the Depart¬ment of Pediatrics and a professorof biochemistry;• Jacob W. Getzels, a professorin the Departments of Educationand Psychology;• Clyde A. Hutchison, Jr., theCarl William Eisendrath professorin the Department of Chemistryand in the Enrico Fermi Institutefor 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; andsbjscovmART MATERIALSPICTURE FRAMINGOFFICE & SCHOOL SUPPLIESFILING CABINETS & ETC.DUNCAN'S • George J. Stigler, the CharlesR. Walgreen distinguished serviceprofessor of economics and in theGraduate Suhool of Business.Soon after The Maroon publishedthese. Cone released the names ofthe six trustees he appointed toserve on the committe with him:• Glen A. Lloyd, former Chair¬man of the University’s Board ofTrustees, who will serve as chair¬man of the trustees’ election com¬mittee;• Gaylord Donnelley;• Stanley G. Harris, Jr.;• Ben W. Heineman;• Homer J. Livingston; and• J. Harris Ward. Faculty salaries have now beenincreased to the point where theyare the second highest in the coun¬try, Levi said.Academic Freedom“The fate of the University wasgreatly aided by Rockefeller,” Levicommented, but the tradition es¬tablished during the Rockefellerera does not allow donors to inter¬fere with the workings of the Uni¬versity.The faculty is the ruling bodyof this University, Levi explained.It has legislative power over allmatters.The elected Council of the Uni¬versity Senate selects a commit¬tee which meets with the presidentof the University every two weeks,Levi explained.“All this does not mean to sug¬gest that there is a minimum ofconfusion, however,” he said.“Chicago is a fast moving Uni¬versity with few rules and consi¬derable freedom,” he declared. "Its most important contribu¬tions,” he added, “are the w'ork >>fthe individual scholar and the workof the individual student.”The 1967-68 AcademicCalendar was revised thissummer upon recommen¬dation of the academicdeans. The change movesthe opening date of Win¬ter Quarter from January8, 1968, to January 3, per¬mitting Spring Quarter to- begin March 25. SummerQuarter is June 17 to Au¬gust 30. iHULL HOUSE AT PARKWAY500 E. 67th ST.Presents■THE LAUNDROMAT"ROGER CORNISHThrough Nov. 11 Friday and Saturday 1:30—$3.00Sunday 7:30—$2.50Student Discount, $1.00 off Phone Reservations 324-3680HniiiiiiiimimiHiitiiWitiiiffiitiiiltuttttitmiiini'iwiiiiiwittiiii.k >■'. oattMuniiniwnnimtttmjMi- • »■' .••wwnMM'tiwMiiMMmi1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111u.c.KARATECLUBORGANIZATIONAL MEETING8:00 TUESDAY, OCT. 3THEATRE—THIRD FLOOR—IDA NOYES HALLAll interested persons should attend.4 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • September 29. 1967 Student Co-Op. (, ~ *\BookstoreStudent Service CenterUsed Boolcs Texts & General ReadingV. /-Bought and SoldSoc. I, 2 Chem.Hum. I, 2 Lib. ArtsWest. Civ.Stock of 14,000 Used BooksStudent Employment OfficeBabysittingHousing ListsNew Hours During 1st Week 10:00 — 8:00 Sat. 12-5Same Place Reynolds Club BasementIIUIIIIiMlilillMlMII<Millll!IIIIMimillllHmilHMIIMIHIIIWimultmtMlimilllllilllllHllimi»IM<|ilwll|IM,MihlLevi Known as Skilled Lawyer and Scholartt» tj : ~ s* u r .fit. « , . . _ •Edward H i r s c h Levi wasborn in Chicago on June 26,1911.He received the HutchinsPh.B. degree in 1932 and the J.D.in 1935 from Chicago, both withhonors. He received the J.S.D. in1938 from Yale, where he was aSterling fellow. Later, in 1939,the University of Michigan wasto award him an honorary LL.D.Levi joined the faculty of theLaw School in 1936 and is stillan active member. He served asdean from 1950 to 1962.Under Levi’s guidance, the law’School became one of the leadinginstitutions of its kind. He w'asresponsible for building a strongand diversified faculty, for an ex¬tensive curriculum revision, andfor spearheading a drive for amodern Law School building. De¬signed by Eero Saarinen, the pres¬ent building is one of the dom¬inant structures on the SouthCampus. The Illinois SupremeCourt holds sessions there annu¬ally while a neighboring buildinghouses the American Bar Center,headquarters of the American BarAssociation.While dean, he was also re¬sponsible for giving impetus tothe University’s traditional inter¬disciplinary approach by combin¬ing the legal and economic aspectsof law and by bringing the w'orkof the behavioral sciences intothe Law School. An economistand a sociologist were added tothe faculty.Anti-Trust ExpertLevi is considered an authorityon anti-trust law. During Frank¬lin D. Roosevelt’s administrationhe served under Thurman Arnold,head of the Justice Department’santi-trust division and, as hisfirst assistant, prosecuted numer¬ous cases.In a recent survey by ProfessorHerbert L. Packer of Stanford,Levi was described as one of thetwo most brilliant scholars in theanti-trust field in his generation.The study comments on the de¬velopment of a “Chicago school’’of anti-trust thought and notesthat the manifesto of this schoolis an article by Levi and AaronDirector.He was responsible for the de¬velopment at the Law School ofa continuing large-scale reexam¬ination of the anti-trust laws andtheir economic effect and haswritten many articles on the sub¬ject. A number have appearedin the Journal of Law and Eco¬nomics, a pioneering publicationfounded at the Law School in1958 under Levi’s leadership.Domestic Nuclear ControlLevi has also been influentialin the area of atomic energy leg¬islation. He was a principal drafts¬ man of the McMahon Atomic En¬ergy Control Law of 1946, a lawwhich was virtually written in thebasement of the University’s oldLaw' School. As the legal counselfor the Federation of Atomic Sci¬entists, he provided the basis forthe establishment of the AtomicEnergy Commission and for thewriting of the U. S. Atomic En¬ergy Act.He played an important role inreform of legal procedure in Illi¬nois when he argued before theU. S. Supreme Court in cases in¬volving Illinois post - convictionprocedures. These decisions led torevision of the state’s convictionprocedures and to comparablecourt reforms in several otherstates.After he became provost in1962, Levi became involved on aday-to-day basis with the College.For months, Levi met with stu¬dents, faculty and alumni of theCollege in an effort to understandits problems and promises.Directed College ReorganizationIn 1965, in addition to his dutiesas provost, Levi was named actingdean of the College. Shortly after¬ward, he directed a study whichled to the reorganization of theCollege curriculum into live col¬legiate divisions.The new organization was cre¬ated to “give impetus to the kindsof experiments which have char¬acterized Chicago’s leadership,”Levi said. “It is better to developdiverse challenging programs suit¬ed to the growth capacity of stu¬dents . . . than to compromiseon what is acceptable to all.”Levi has been concerned withthe recruitment of faculty mem¬bers from many sectors of theworld and a w'ide spectrum of dis¬ciplines.In his tenure as provost, thenumber of faculty members hasrisen this year to an all-time highof 1,080. Earlier this year, a sur¬vey by the American Associationof University Professors show'edthat Chicago ranked second onlyto Harvard in average facultysalaries.Levi has been involved inti¬mately and actively with the Cam¬paign for Chicago, the Univer¬sity’s current effort to raise $160million in a three-year period forfaculty support and physical plantimprovement.In 1966 he was elected to theBoard of Trustees, one of the fewfaculty members in the Univer¬sity’s history to be so honored.Served on CommitteesHe also has served on a numberof local and national committeesconcern with academic admin¬istration. He was a member of aFord Foundation-sponsored com¬mittee to examine the progressand future role of the UniversityRCHDRUMERMY.J -I-'".,.;-ihe new Plymouth Pood Runnernowet yout Plymouth Dealerswh&e the beet goes on. 90Iirnir Iru Irti ^ V Edward H. Levix vtof Pittsburgh. He also was amember of the Citizens Commis¬sion on Graduate Medical Educa¬tion, commissioned by the Amer¬ican Medical Association, whichwas concerned with the characterand standards of medical educa¬tion and the qualifications of fu¬ture members of the profesison.Levi served on a White Housepanel on educatior, which recent¬ly issued a report suggesting thatthe Federal government continueto focus on inner city and ruralschools rather than shift to gen¬eral aid to education.Between 1940 and 1950, whileon leave from the Law School, Levi served in various capacitieswith the national government inWashington, including:Special assistant to the AttorneyGeneral of the United States,1940-45; first assistant, War Divi¬sion, Department of Justice, 1943;first assistant, Autitrust Division,Department of Justice, 1944-45,and counsel, Subcommittee onMonopoly Pow'er of the JudiciaryCommittee, House of Representa¬tives, 81st Congress, 1950.Active in Scholarly GroupsLevi is a member of the Amer¬ican, Illinois and Chicago Bar As¬sociations and the American Ju¬dicature Society.Previously, he was a memberof the board of the Social ScienceResearch Council. He is a trusteeof the Institute of Psychoanalysisof Chicago, and a fellow' of theAmerican Bar Foundation and ofthe American Academy of Artsand Sciences.He also served as chairman ofthe Council on Education for Pro¬fessional Responsibility, a jointproject of the American Bar As¬sociation, the National Legal Aidand Defender Association, and theAssociation of American Law'Schools. The Council providesfunds for clinical w'ork by lawstudents.In addition, Levi is a memberof the board of directors of TheInternational Legal Center, withheadquarters in New' York City.The Center, aided by American philantrophic foundations, is aimedprimarily at helping the develop¬ing nations to strengthen theirsystems of law'.Authored Legal WorksHe is a member of the Councilof the American Law Instituteand cf the National Council ofLegal Clinics.Levi also is a member of theadvisory board of the AntitrustBulletin and an associate editorof the Natural Law Forum.He also is a fellow' of the Uni¬versity’s Center for Policy Study,which recently completed a year¬long discussion and analysis ofMainland China. The Center ispreparing for an intensive reviewof urbanization. The Center forPolicy Study was established atthe urging of Provost Levi.Levi’s published works include“An Introduction to Legal Rea¬soning,” “Four Talks on LegalEducation,” and numerous studiesin the fields of law and economics.He and his wife, the formerKate Sulzberger Hecht, are theparents of three sons, John, David,and Michael.His brother, Julian H. Levi, isa professor of Urban Studies inthe Division of the Social Scienceshere. Julian Levi also is executivedirector of the South East Chi¬cago Commission, w’hich has beenone of the leading forces in thenationally-recognized Hyde Park-Kenwood urban redevelopmentprogram.A Tribute toR. S. CRANE1886-1967 ^The Idea of the Humanitiesand Other Essays, Critical and Historicalin two volumes1967Editor ofCritics and CriticismAncient and Modem1952Modern Philology1930-1952|||gg New Essays by Oliver Goldsmith HifliNow First Collected1927 iHi!Whether Crane is indeed doing what no one else has attempted scarcelymatters. But it may be important, especially for readers who have heardthat Crane is the “founder,” or “one of the founders,” of “the Chicago schoolof literary criticism,” to see at the beginning just how much more than literarycriticism he has attempted. For the main line running through Crane’s work,.visible at every stage but perhaps obscured by recent critical controversies, hasbeen nothing less than the effort to establish adequate intellectual foundationsfor humanistic studies in our time.”—Wayne C, Booth, in his introduction toThe Idea of the Humanities.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESSSeptember 29,1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON ♦ SOPEN TO STUDENTS: Hutchinson Commons began serving regu¬larly during the summer. ISENBERG, PALLET NAMEDNew Deans Take Their PostsTwo new deans have been ap¬pointed to positions traditional¬ly plagued by controversy.Meyer Isenberg, an associateprofessor of humanities, will be¬come acting dean of undergradu¬ate students and Anthony T. G.Pallet, former director of admis¬sions at Wells College, will per¬form the same duties here.As part of his duties Isenbergbecomes chairman of the infamouscommittee on undergraduate dis¬cipline. Last year a studentcharged that he was "effectivelybrow-beaten almost to the pointof tears” by this committee.You Don't Have To Be Jewish..."You don’t have to be Jewishto love Levi.”The posters that originatedin New York’s undergroundmust have known all along thatjraise would pour in from allUreas (and ethnic groups) at theannouncement of the selection ofEdward Levi as the Universityof Chicago’s eighth president.But the appointment (as notedin Time magazine) does makeLevi “one of the few Jewish scholars ever to head a majorU. S. university.” Both his fath¬er and grandfather were rabbisin the Hyde Park area, whereLevi has lived since birth.His grandfather, Rabbi EmilHirsch, a member of the originalWilliam Rainey Harper facultyassembled for the University,headed the Sinai Temple Con¬gregation for four decades. Levi’sfather, Rabbi Gerson Levi, wasthe spiritual leader of the TempleIsaiah Israel until his death inUniversity Moves To Clarify Drug PolicyContinued from Page lbe dealt with more harshly than"accidental” violators.He defined “accidental” violatorsas first offenders who “just happento walk into a room where pot isbeing used and decide they’d liketo try it.” «Shortly after releasing the clar¬ification of its drug policy, the ad¬ministration moved to allay fearsof a widespread witch-hunt orcrack-down. “This is not going tobe a repressive campaign, at leastif I have anything to do with it,”stated Booth."No Moralizing”“We’re not trying to moralizeabout it. We’re only trying tomaintain a climate that makesscholarship possible.” Booth him¬self favors reform of the mari¬juana laws, but supports Universityaction against pot users so long asthe drug is illegal.Others involved with enforcingthe policy also emphasized that theUniversity will not go out lookingfor offenders. “Our policy has al¬ways been that resident heads andother University oflicials do notsearch student rooms without theirpermission," stated Edward Tur-kington, director of student hous¬ing. “and that is still our policy.”Officials were also adamant indenying that the University was inany way cooperating with policeofficials in dealing with its drug problem. “We regard this questionas an internal one,” Turkington as¬serted, “and we maintain no rela¬tionship, covert or overt, with thepolice.” And using even more ve¬hement language, Playe gave his“absolute assurance” that "thereare no federal agents on campusoperating with University knowl¬edge or permission.Why Chicago’s Nervous“We would never go self-pro¬pelled to the police,” Playe contin¬ued, “and we want to avoid havingthe police come here. That’s whywe’re so nervous about this thing.”While there are no reliable fig¬ures on drug use here most ob¬servers believe that the incidenceof marijuana and LSD violationsis growing.A survey conducted for TheMaroon last year by Slade Landerfound 17 percent of the studentbody to have tried marijuana atleast once, but this figure is dis¬torted by the inclusion of graduatestudents particularly in law, busi¬ness, and divinity, the vast majorityof whom refrain from drug use.KARATE$20 FIRST QUARTER$10 Subsequent Quarters 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 DELIVERYHILLEL FESTIVAL SERVICESROSH HASHANAHConservativeOrthodoxYOM KIPPURReformConservativeOrthodox October 4 and 58:00 p.m.8:30 a.m.October 138:00 p.m.5:30 p.m.5:30 p.m. October 5 and 44:00 p.m.7:30 a.m.October 14In addition, arrangements have been made to enable students to attend localReform, Conservative, and Orthodox synogogues. Contact Hillel for details.B’HAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION5715 Woodlawn Avenue PI 2-1127FREE—EDISON LIGHT BULBS” with billHOUSEWARES - PAINT - HARDWARE - SHELVINGEVERYTHING FOR TOUR APARTMENTOVER 35.000 ITEMS IN STOCK AT ALL TIMESSc rman J ~>dce Sdardware1377 £. 53rd StreetBU 8-2132 1924.Levi’s family ties to the HydePark neighborhood are exceededonly by his own close associationswith the University. He enteredthe kindergarten of the Univer¬sity Laboratory Schools at agefive and kept right on—throughthe Lab grade school and highschool. The College was naturallythe next step (“It never occurredto me to even think of going any¬where else,” Levi once comment¬ed), and upon graduation he en¬tered Chicago’s Law School. In1936, at age 25, he joined thefaculty there, where he quicklyestablished a reputation for witand acuity in tpe classroom.'Dynamic . . . Entertaining’Students have said of him: “Mr.Levi is dynamic . . . He encour¬ages, if not compels, you to thinkfor yourself,” and “He is the mostentertaining professor I know.”On the teaching of law, Levihimself has said: “The job of legaleducation is to turn out law stu¬dents who will continue to learn.Ultimately, the lawyer must ad¬vise on matters of policy. He mustbe able to translate the issues ofthe present into the probable is¬sues of the future. He must beable to cut through the clichesof his own time. . . .”NOW AVAILABLEinterestPer AnnumSavings Certificatespayable in Six Months.7. 8, 9, 10, 11, & 12month certificateSPECIALSTUDENT CHECKINGACCOUNTS AVAILABLEUNIVERSITYRATIONAL BANK**a strong bank991354 E. 55th ST.MU 4-1200Member:Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.Federal Raserve SystemChicago Clearing House Assn. "I doubt if anything of that sorthas happened here or will happenhere,” claimed Isenberg. “A stu¬dent who gets into difficulty needssympathy and understanding,” hesaid.Isenberg has served in the pastas chairman of the second yearHumanites sequence. He is 56 andtook his Ph. D. in classics here in1940.Won Quantrell PrizeIn 1961 he won the University’sQua.itrell Award of $1,000 for ex¬cellence in undergraduate teach¬ing. Besides teaching philosophy,history, and Indian civilization, hehas helped to create the course inRussian civilization.Pallet steps into a post that wascritized last year for alleged prej¬udice against black stuaent radi¬cals.“I anticipate no change in ad¬mission policy,” he says. “If any¬thing, the University of Chicagohas one of the most open admis¬sions policies in the country,” headded.“The primary qualification thatis needed by a prospective stu¬dent,” he explained, “is a sincereinterest in academic life.”Compete for Negroes“The competition for qualified Negro students is very tough,”Pallet said. “Last year, the collegeaccepted many more Negro stu¬dents than the 29 who actuallycame,” he commented.“Every effort, however, is madeto encourage qualified Negroes toapply,’’ Pallet affirmed.Pallet, 37, has completed h i scourse work for the Ph. D. at Chi¬cago. He has been involved in ad¬missions work for the past sevenyears.For three years he was assistantdirector of admissions at HobartCollege, for three years he heldthe same post at Chicago, and lastyear he was director of admis¬sions at Wells College.Draft DefermentsThe Selective Service Systemhas announced the availability ofII-S deferments to all college stu¬dents "who are satisfactorily pur¬suing a full time course of instruc¬tion.”Students here should fill out Re¬quest for Undergraduate StudentDeferment (SSS 104) forms duringregistration for the Autumn Quar¬ter and then send them to theirlocal draft boards.MORNING'S AT SEVENby PAUL OSBORNa! St. Paul’s Community Players50th and DorchesterGen. admiss. $2.25Stud, rate $1.75 Fri. and Sat. 8:30Sun. 7:30through Nov. 12thReservations 624-3185SPECIAL MATINEE FOR THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITYDuke EllingtonAND HIS ORCHESTRAAt Rockefeller Memorial ChapelIN ACONCERT OF SACRED MUSICSunday, October 15,3:00 p.m.Members of Hie OrchestraStephen Little, Aaron Bell, Johnny Hodges, Russell Procope,Jimmy Hamilton, Paul Gonsalves, Harry Carney,"Cat" Anderson, Herbert Jones, Mercer Ellington,"Cootie" William;, Lawrence Brown, Buster CooperCharles ConnerSoloistsJimmy McPhail, Dorothy King, Tony Watkins, vocalsBuster Brawn, DanceTicketsAll seats $2, unreserved. Available at Student Co-op; Stu¬dent Activities Office, Classics 13, Chapel office.6 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • September 29, 1967D,L Party Wartour invites ijou to visit6th -Annual 'IVine SaleSaturday, October 7than d3rom •Sunday (October 8ili10:00 -AM to 10:00 PM.Vo discount o^ered wifi be less tb an 20%and dome wi ft I, e as biab*dJtie following are sample prices j^roni the moreSome wii/hich are to he on Salewi i^n as 50%than One Shousand lAJineSLSt. Johan net S\(odtergarlen Spatfede 1664 'Vintage regular $2.98 Safe $t.76Cjeidenheimer IIjatterclew Spatfede 1964 Vintage regular $3.98 Safe $2.78Warcot runner Seindte Srochenheerenaudfede 1933 'Vintage regular $47.50 Safe $23.75Urzujer 'IVurzgarten Studfede Cabinet 1964 Vintage regular $6.99 Safe $3.50Chateau Cjaudreffe Vouvray 1964 Vintage regular $3.39 Safe $2.15C habfid It/out de 'Itlifieu ler C ru 1964 Vintage regular $3.39 Safe $2.37Chalfis oLed f-^reuded 1964 Vintage regular $3.99 Safe $2.88Chateau d 'Ljguem 1961 Vintage regular $13.99 Safe $8.98Sardac 1964 Vintage regular $1.89 Safe $1.10Solaji S/dzu 4 f^uttonod 1961 Vintage regular $3.75 Safe $2.91of. Or de Jerudafem S/udfede 196/ Vintage regular $3.98 Safe $1.99oCancer d regular $2.98 Safe $2.39Chateau oCajitte 1962 Vintage regular $2.98 Safe $1.68Chateau oCatour 1952 Vintage regular $14.95 Safe $11.95Chateau 'Hjouton Saron f^hiffip 1961 Vintage regular $7.98 Safe $5.45Chateau oCa 'U/iddion Sdaut Sri on Vintage 1962 regular $5.98 Safe $3.88Verneuif Seaujofaid 1964 Vintage regular $1.49 Safe $1.18Srouiffy 1964 Vintage regular $2.19 Safe $1.58Cjrcindd Cchezeaux / 945 'Vintage .regular $11.95 Safe $7.1) /Clanilertin Cfod de Seze 1961 'Vintage regular $9.95 Safe $6.231860 Vintage 'tttadeira regular $37.50 Safe $18.731955 Vintage '11/end\z f~^ort regular $6.98 Safe $3.50Tore weSome o^ these items are in short Supply, thereatSuggest early attendance in order to accjuire the hest values an d th e widest possible Se lecti (Ohe Party Wart24-27 ddasl 72nd Street at ddxcl ang< 35/ ddast 103rd Street at South f~^arhSeptember 29, 1967 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • 7The Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 1891Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-Ch'ufJerry Levy, Business AlaiiagerManaging Editors Roger HackJohn WelchEiecutive Editors David L. AikenMichael Seidman Newt Editor John Moscow pjCulture Editor Edward Chikotsky iffLiterary Editors Ted Hearne f;:tryan Dunlap piEditor Emeritus David A. Satter £j§■V Mr. Levi“You can’t have your cake and eat it too.”This, seemingly, is Ed Levi's position on the relationship ofthe student to the University of Chicago—you can’t have aca¬demic excellence and student decision-making power both. Levi’sideas on education have come out quite clearly this week, bothin his speech to first-year students and an interview with TheMaroon which appears in this issue.An example of these ideas is in Levi’s concept of Chicago asprimarily a research-oriented institution. To acquire the kind offaculty that make a university “great” in this aspect, Levimaintains, an institution must both offer the facilities desirableto research scholars and allow its established faculty to judgetenure for new appointees.There is no doubt either that Chicago’s emphasis on researchhas done much to make it one of the leading universities today,or that most students on the graduate or post-doctoral levelwould want it any other way. As the graduate divisions andprofessional schools account for tw’O-thirds of the student body,Levi’s research concept certainly has relevance to the Universityas a whole.But what about the minority of the student body who comprisethe College? Clearly an emphasis on teaching rather than re¬search is more important to it. And although the College maybenefit in many ways from its association with a great researchUniversity, its students must acquire not only a basic ground¬work in general education but also inspiration from great teach¬ers before they can enter more specialized areas of enquiry.THUS WHILE THE COLLEGE has special needs of its ownin teaching, Levi has said that—if forced to choose—he wouldgive priority to research since it is research more than teachingthat earns the reputation for excellence.All of which indicates a few things about the man who is tobecome the University’s next president: Levi is determined tomaintain and further excellence at Chicago, but on his termsand definitions only. Like most of the faculty, he will listen tohundreds of students before making a decision that affects them,but in the end he will make the final decision—not necessarilyon the basis of what students want out of the University, butmore on the basis of what he thinks the University should givethem. It’s the Levi Law: Levi knows best what is good for theUniversity, and what is good for the University is good for thestudents. And its corollary: What the students want might notbe good for the University. So don't dare let them stick a footin the door by giving them say in decision-making or the Uni¬versity will most certainly lose some of the excellence Levi haswon for it.Levi does not forget that there is more than one definition ofexcellence, although he selfishly and dogmatically sticks to thepursuit of his. To Levi, an institution like Antioch at whichstudents have considerable say in decision-making has not andcannot achieve the excellence of a Chicago, even though it maybe an excellent innovator in undergraduate education.WE WOULD DISAGREE. In our opinion, Levi can have hiscake and students can have theirs. For we think the Universityof Chicago is too strong an institution to undergo the kind ofdecline Levi seems to be afraid it will if students are broughtformally into the decision-making process. And once the gapbetween the faculty and the administration on the one hand,and the students on the other, is closed, students will be moreenlightened about the University’s more intricate problems andbetter able to help solve them.We view Levi’s meetings with students preceding the Collegereorganization and at informal lunches last year as steps in theright direction, but merely as steps taken by a “standard liberal,”as the author of one of today’s letters to the editor has calledhim. We have no doubt Levi will bring new heights of “excel¬lence” to the University, but wonder at what price to the desiresof students for a voice in matters that affect them. We sincerelycongratulate Levi on his election to the presidency, but aresorry we did not have the chance to help make the choiceourselves.WelcomeSo maybe (heaven forfend) the Class of ‘71 is really notthe “brightest ever.” If this is the case, then they form themost unusual class in the University’s long history. And ifthey have succeeded in ending the seemingly endless string ofcliches that have greeted freshmen since time immemorial, thenthey deserve our heartiest welcome and congratulations.8 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • September 2*.1967 ‘So whafs new?’jDAVID L AIKENMessrs. Lynd, Lemisch:Gadflies on Academia“Sound judgment” seems to bea popular phrase among membersof the established academic com¬munity.In the definition of the board ofgovernors of Illinois State Col¬leges, it was not “sound judg¬ment” for Staughton Lynd to goto Hanoi to find out what "theother side” is like, or to tell any¬body about his observations on hisvisit.In the definition of some facul¬ty members here, it does not seemto be “sound judgment” for Lyndto have made a statement equat¬ing Lynd’s treatment by theBoard of Governors with the ear¬lier treatment of Assistant Pro¬fessor of History Jesse Lemisch.Lynd said both firings were ex¬amples of “harassment” of aca¬demic critics of the Vietnam war.It was certainly not “soundjudgment,” in the opinion of evi¬dently the bulk of the Chicagofaculty, for Lemisch to havestarted getting mixed up in theprotest activities of those unde¬sirable people, radical students.Whether or not this was the mainfactor in the decision of theHistory Department not to renewLemisch’s contract they’re notsaying.IN ANY CASE, it is evidentthat both Lemisch and Lynd aregadflies on the body of academia.This alone is likely to give rise inthe minds of many denizens ofthe the groves of academe abouttheir “sound judgment.” This isprobably what a large paid, of theantipathy to them is about.The academic animal likes tostudy things. He likes to gather books and clippings into his nest,chewing at them, churning theminto theories and hypotheses, spit¬ting out his own books and arti¬cles when he is finished.He likes to be left alone, forthe most part, while he is doingthis. He is Visually willing to putup with intrusions from students,as long as they go along with theway of doing things to which heis accustomed.He does not like getting out ofacademia and trying to shake upthe established order of things,though he may participate incampaigns for a respectablecause, or lend his services as ad¬visor to some group he supports.LEMISCH AND LYND seem tobe academic animals of a differ¬ent stripe. They seem to be mostcomfortable not in chummy facul¬ty lounges and dining clubs, butin student meeting halls, or outwith the people picketing forsome radical cause, or down inMississippi teaching in a freedomschool.What’s more, they are pre¬pared, even eager, to suggest that“the life of the mind” consists ofsomething more than chewingover articles and once in a whilesigning a petition. They are “ac¬tivists,” and occasionally suchactivism can take forms which isnot always respectable, such asvisiting a Communist country orjoining a sit-in.It might possibly be rewardingto consider whether this sort ofcriticism - through - action of theestablished way of doing thingsin academia might not lie, per¬haps not explicitly, at the root of some of the criticisms of certainpeoples’ “unsound judgment.”NONE OF this, it is hoped, willbe taken as personal criticismlevelled at individuals for any sortof special evilness. The sort ofattitude described is simply partof the atmosphere in those lush,green, but somewhat mustygroves of academe to which mostpeople are acclimated.In any ease, it is not specific toany particular institution — it ispresent at Chicago State just asmuch as at the University of Chi¬cago, at Yale just as much as ata Negro women's college in At¬lanta.The academic world is perhapsrewarding, certainly useful in itsown way, but there’s a largerworld outside. Students who areentering academia for the firsttime—beware. As Lynd said inintroducing his talk telling of hisexperiences at Yale and at Chi¬cago, “de te tabula narratur” —don’t go to sleep, brother, thisstory is about you, too.Tlie UuYa"o MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Univer¬sity of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool year and intermittentlythroughout the summer, except duringChe tenth week of the academic quar¬ter and during examination periods.Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305 ofIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, Ill. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3265. Distributed on campus anain 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.September 29, 1967 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Dissent, and Satire Ed Chikofsky, EditorAfter the Riots, What?By PHILIP HAUSERDespite the calendar, thelong hot summer is still withus. This year the seasonal heathas been turned on in over 100cities across the land, with vio¬lence ranging from a fewscuffles and fisticuffs to majorbattles generating death andwidespread destruction . Na¬tional and local agencies arestill investigating the “causes”of the civil unrest and open re¬bellions—as if further investi¬gation were needed.After all, to understand the1967 riots one need only beartwo things in mind. One, theNegro American has been resi¬dent in what is now the UnitedStates for three and one-halfcenturies — two and one-halfcenturies in slavery, a half cen¬tury in the rural slum Southunder the unfulfilled promisesof the Emancipation Proclama¬tion, and a half century in theslums and ghettos of urban andmetropolitan America. Two, thepost-war world has been swept by the “revolution of rising ex¬pectations” which has not by¬passed the Negro American.The Negro revolt is America’slocal manifestation of the revo¬lution of rising expectations.No amount of additional in¬vestigation will reveal anymore about the basic causes ofthe “riots” than is alreadyknown.TO BE SURE, when a soci¬ety is beset with disorder,whether it be a nation, a cityor a university, there is no al¬ternative, if the society is toremain viable, to the use ofsuperior force for the restora¬tion of order. But after the re¬storation of order, then what?If after order is restored thecauses of the disorder are notremoved, tensions and pres¬sures are bound to mount tolevels at which much more seri-ious and prolonged disorder isthe prospect.The United States stands ata critical crossroad in her racerelations. Despite the progress which has been made in remov¬ing the inequities and iniquitieswhich have been, and which re¬main, the Negro’s lot in thisnation, tensions and pressuresare mounting, not abating.IRONICALLY, THE RIOTSthemselves are symptoms ofthe progress being made. Com¬pletely subjugated populationscannot riot or revolt. TheUnited States must choose be¬tween the alternatives of re¬moving the causes of theriots or mustering overwhelm¬ing force to suppress them. Thefirst of these alternatives, need¬less to say, would be consistentwith our, at present tarnished,image of a democratic societyaffording equality of opportu¬nity to all. The second wouldconvert the United States intoa caste, apartheid society inthe' image of the Union ofSouth Africa. The second alter¬native would make a mockeryof our position of leadershipin the free democratic world.How can the causes of the widespread and increasing dis¬orders be removed? Why havethe “Great Society” programsfailed to bring domestic peaceto America?THE ANSWER TO the sec¬ond of these questions helps toprovide an answer to the first.New Haven and Detroit, citieswhich have perhaps more suc¬cessfully than any others util¬ized the available programs toalleviate the miserable condi¬tions which characterize theBlack ghettos of metropolitanAmerica, were not immune toserious disorders. It is arguedby some that the “Great Soci¬ety” programs are, in fact, re¬sponsible for the riots—and, ina sense, this argument is sound.For up to this point in time theGreat Society programs havegreatly raised expectationswhile rat infested slum dwell¬ings, massive unemployment,inadequate welfare programs,ineffective schools, and de factosegregation remained starkreality. As the gap between expectations and grim realityincreased so did frustration,alienation and bitterness —to alevel of explosion. The lessonof Detroit and New Haven isclear. Present Great Societyprograms are too little and toolate.But the situation is by nomeans hopeless. There are waysto remove the causes of theriots and there may be the willto employ them. The sameHouse of Representatives thatjocularly, in the Marie Antion-ette tradition, said in effect“Let them have rats,” has nowreversed itself. The Senate,which only a short while agogave every indication of follow¬ing the House in its gutting ofthe Great Society programs, isnow giving support to thePresident’s proposed 1 e g i s 1 a -tion. These if ndt adequateremedies are at least hopefulsigns.IF AMERICA IS to live upto her cherished ideals and do-Turn to Page 5CULTURE VULTUREAuterstehn: Poof!! Like Cousin Phoenix, perennially rehatching, the Vulture is back. Capistrano was nice, but with Thursday’s Yardbird on the squawk,it’s time to return Underground. Good hunting, kinder.TheaterTo the uninitiated, the Chicago theatre scene at first seemsswinging. The daily papers are filled with ads proclaiming there-birth of second city, the creation of a new midwest actingtroupe, or the “discovery" of the voice of the ghetto. But you’reapt to spend a lot of bread finding out that good theatre in thiscity is rare. The best advice is to learn the reputations of themost important theatres and the basis of the most importantreviewers before you plunk down $15 for two orchestra seats.Starting close to home: The University Theatre in the ReynoldsClub usually produces worthwhile shows. Since their programmust be approved by their student board of directors, UT hasn’tannounced their schedule. They will produce Macbeth for oneperformance only on September 30th, a holdover from their sum¬mer season. UT’s productions of modern plays have generallybeen better than their Shakespeare and other classics. Watchalso for the “Tonight at eight-thirty” series, which, althoughuneven, is almost the only showcase for student-directed andstudent-written plays on campus. Prices are always low forthese one-acts, and often they don’t receive the publicity duethem, so keep an eye peeled for posters around campus.THE BIGGEST theatrical event in Chicago this fall will takeplace in Hyde Park when the Second City Rep Company opensDeer Park on October 24th. followed at two-week intervals byFrank Weinstein’s The Party, The Cherry Orchard, Farquhar'sThe Recruiting Officer, a Shakespeare play, and perhaps someoriginal pieces, all playing in rep. The company includes someof the best talent in Chicago, and it looks like the Second Citygroup will fare far better than the other outfits which havedrifted in and out of the Harper Theatre in the past few years.As if starting a full scale rep company wasn’t enough. SecondCity is adding an underground film theatre (opening with worksfrom the Canadian underground), a children’s theatre (openingwith Peer Gynt), and a cabaret for “Off-off Broadway produc¬tions all scheduled for a late October debut. Harper Court maybecome a swinging place yet. Incidently, the cheapest way tosee the Second City shows is to work for them—ushering, ticket¬taking, set constructing, or acting. If you’re interested, Call JoyceSloane at 561-2541 for an interview.ANOTHER NEW COMPANY started in Hyde Park this lastweek; The Saint Paul Players opened with Morning’s at Seven,by Paul Osborn, which will run weekends until November 12;their season plans include The Emperor Jones, The Alchemist,The Deputy, and The Firebugs. In spite of their name, the groupmaintains they are a secular theatre supported by private funds.Interested volunteers should call David T. Cox, 624-3185 forinformation. The theatre is located at 50th and'Dorchester.Also in Hyde Park proper, The Last Stage Players have pro¬duced a number of seeable productions over the past years. Thedepartment of Urban Renewal has temporarily ousted them fromtheir stage, but they are trying to locate new quarters, andshould be back in business towards the end of the year.The Goodman School of Drama, located behind the Art Insti¬tute on Michigan Avenue in the Loop, has a fine record of hits,although their acting almost never equals their truly impressivetechnical designs, and their high prices make you wonder whothey produce their plays for. The Goodman has a solid but safeseason scheduled. They open with The Miser on October 20 (gueststarring Donna Holabird), followed by Othello on November 24.Look for Shaw, Genet, and Brecht during the winter—-if we’relucky. They haven’t chosen the plays yet, and may chicken out.A LITTLE GROUP called The Chicago City Players claimthey have a play which will “hit you with a social commentthat has the same effect as a well placed body blow.” On thebasis of their past productions, I don’t recommend it, but if youfeel like slumming, you might want to see it; “The Death andLife of Sneaky Fitch” open October 22, weekends only.Some of the city’s best theatre is to be seen at the HullHouse community centers. Although the theatre is by no stretchof the imagination a true community enterprise, Hull House doeshave a relevant repatory, and the acting is usually first rate,particularly on small cast shows. Currently you can see MurrySchisgal’s one-acts, The Typists and The Tiger at the Jane Ad-dams Center, 3212 North Broadway.AT THE PARKWAY Community House, 500 East 67th Street,you can see The Laundromat, a new play by Roger Cornish,through November 12. They give a healthy student discount OnFridays and Sundays.For something different, try Paul Sills’ Game theatre, 1935North Sedgwick, where audience participation is the gimmick.The fun starts at 9:30 on Saturdays, and reservations are helpful.Sometimes during your stay in Chicago, you should see theoriginal Second City, which has moved into a new building inPiper’s Alley, 1616 North Wells. Their reputation has been sag¬ging over the past few years, but shows some signs of reviving.Call DE 7-3992 for information.I haven’t hit any of the professional theatres in Chicago, be¬cause information about them is readily available. Check theDaily News’ Panorama Magazine, the WFMT Guide, and theMaroon’s Culture Calender for current offerings. Pop MusicWhat’s happening? On theChicago pop music scene thisfall, a lot. Where’s the action?Like Chicago itself,, spread out.If you spread yourself out thinenough and can sometimesmanage to be in two or threeplaces at once, here are someplaces to be:ORCHESTRA HALL: Onthe night of October 6, at least,there is no better place in theworld to be, for Ravi Shankarand Alla Rakha will be appear¬ing in concert. Need I saymore? Booked for future datesare Spanky & Our Gang (10/13), Judy Collins (10/27),Charles Aznavour (11/10, 11),Pete Seeger (11/17, 18), andJanis (“Society’s Child") Ian(11/29).THE OPERA HOUSE: Ifyou spent the summer inSouthern California, you canrevive your spirits and reliveold memories by seeing theBeach Boys on October 8.Gremmies might want to catchNancy Wilson with the Bud¬dy Rich band (10/13, 14), ora Thanksgiving Jazz Mini-Fes¬tival featuring Cannonball Ad-derley, Wes Montgomery, JoeWilliams, and comedienneMoms Mabley (11/22).REGAL THEATER: Locat¬ed in the heart of the SouthSide, the Regal presents a dif¬ferent stage show each month. The main attraction lies in see¬ing top soul groups like theTemptations, but you can havealmost as much fun just dig¬ging the audience reaction.October’s headliner is ArethaFranklin, who will be in forjust three days instead of theusual six (10/5, 6, 7).THE CHEETAH: This dancehall is definitely the place togo if you want to check outChicago's teenyboppers. Thereis also the added boon of beingable to hear some of the bestrock music around. VanillaFudge, the best such group tocome out of New York, playsthere this weekend (9/29-10/1), followed by the outstand¬ ing Butterfield Blues Band(10 6-8) and one of Canada’stop groups, The Mandala (10/13-15).WHISKEY A GO-GO: Thisclub changed its policy lastspring and now books top namesoul acts exclusively. Sam &Dave are currently ensconsed,with the Impressions and OtisRedding set for November. Forthe benefit of those you can’tfind phoney ID’s, there is a spe¬cial teenage section.PLUGGED NICKEL: Al¬though folksinger Josh White isthe current attraction, the Nic¬kel usually concentrates onwell known jazz artists. Com-T»irn to Page *»NEW BOOKSBY CAMPUS AUTHORSUnder the Bo Tree — Studies in Caste, Kinshipand Marriage on the Interim of Ceylon.by Nur YalmonThe Language of Lifeby George and Muriel BeadleHistory and Social Sciencesby Mark M. KrugGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. $050$ 145$£50UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOHyde Park CommunityBookstoresREID MICHENER JOSEPH O'GARA5309 S. KIMBARK 1360 E. 53rd ST.General and Scholarly Used and Out of PrintUsed Books Scholarly BooksOPEN 6:00 P.M. to MIDNIGHT OPEN 2 P.M. to 9 P.M.STAYER, BOOKSELLERS RUDOLPH VAN TELLINGEN1301 E. 57th ST. 5225 S. HARPER COURTQuality Cloth and Paperbacks General Used BooksSocial Ss., Humanities, Physical Sc. OPEN DAILY & EVENINGSGREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP THE BOOK CENTER1450 E. 57th ST. 5211 S. HARPER COURTOPEN 12 to 12 SERVES ALL YOUR READING NEEDS—Paperbacks, Hardcovers, Medical Books, Foreign & Domestic PeriodicalsN. Y. Times on Sunday & NewspapersTHE BOOK NOOKHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERHard Cover & PaperbackBooks — Cards/i2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE September 29, 1967SEPTEMBER 29, 1967 The Chicago Maroon ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT j|COULD BE BRIGHTESTClass of 71 Largest, Most WomenThe Class of 1971 is the largest in the history of the Collegeand has the highest percentage of women. It even continues thetrend of past years on having SAT scores as good or better thanthose of the preceeding class.It is not, however, the brightestclass ever in the opinion of themen in charge of admissions.“I would not say that this isthe brightest class ever.” saidDean of Students Charles D.O’Connell, who was director ofadmissions when the class waselected -thus reversing the trendin which he has called each suc¬ceeding class "the brightest ever.”His successor, Anthony T. G.Pallett, called the class "not sig¬nificantly brighter statisticallythan the one that preceeded it,even though I claimed it was ‘thebrightest ever’ in my opening ad¬dress.”The 731 students, 21 more thanlast year, had average SAT scoresof 672 on the verbal test and 663on the mathematical section. Thiscompares with last year’s aver¬age scores of 664 and 665, andscores from five years ago whenthe averages were lower, of 646and 650.Where the Girls AreOne significant difference is inthe male-female ratio, 401 to 328.Just a few years ago it was 75:25but with this class it has drop¬ped to 55:45. Last spring O'Con¬nell tried to explain it this way:"There is no discrimination bysex in admitting students. We tryto obtain the best possible class. . . . Usually the male-femalebalance in the group accepted re¬flects the proportion of males tofemales in the group of appli¬cants."This means that probably thenumber of female applicants hasgone up over the past three orfour years,” he continued. "ThisIs due to the greater desirabilityof top-flight coeducational schoolssuch as Chicago, together withthe fact that the Hyde Parkneighborhood is no longer as dan¬gerous as it was during the 1950’s.Other coeducational schools dohave strict quotas for women, andsurveys have shown that it isharder for a female to get into acoed school than it is for a male.Academically StrongExcept for the change in num¬bers and sexual distribution, how¬ ever, the class of ’71 is not muchdifferent from its predecessors.The Class of ’70 was a stronggroup marked by high class ranks.Thus even though it may not bethe ‘brightest ever,’ this year’sentering class seems to be as goodas any. There are 85 valedictor¬ians, compared with 80 last year.There are 40 salutatorians, anincrease of two over last year.There are also more nationalscholarship winners in this class,which has 29 National Merit andseven National Achievement scho¬lars. Last year there were 27 andfour, respectively. There are also17 University scholars, comparedwith 15 last year.But class rank still is one ofthe more important criteria foradmission. More than 58 per¬cent of the first-year studentswere in the top five percent oftheir graduating classes; another18 percent were in the second fivepercent; and altogether morethan 89 percent are known tohave been in the top quarter ottheir classes.Less than five percent of theclass were admitted from the bot¬tom three quarters of their clas¬ses, either as calculated risks otfrom exceptionally competitive momschools. Rank data does not existfor the remaining six percent.Geographically DiverseThis year there are fewerschools represented than last year,although the class is larger by 21students. There are representa¬tives from 518 schools in 45slates and six foreign nationswhereas last year there were 558schools represented, from 44states and six other countries.About a quarter of the class isfrom Illinois this year, with an¬other fifteen per cent from NewYork State.One of the most underrepre¬sented groups in the class are theNegroes. According to an admis¬sions officer, only about 4 per¬cent of the class are Negro. Thisis about the same as last year, butbelow the national proportion ofblacks, which is ten percent. The Chicago Maroon — Jerry KesslerFACTS OF LIFE: Part of the entering student's life is spent laboring through placement exams.The first two days included twelve hours of testing....And One of the Most RadicalThe Class of 1971 is one of the most radical ever to be admitted to the College, according toCIS percent random sampling conducted by The Maroon.More than 94 percent of the students polled disagreed with President Johnson’s Vietnam poli-cieSTof which 85 percent wanted a more peace-like stand.. The most surprising thingabout the class is the lack ofmoderate?.' A majority of theClass—saw that they would jointhe -Students for a Democratic More than 83 percent of th£- use on campus, the majority disin tviontr AOOAV ... n /V .Society SDS in preference topther groups, including the YoungAmericans for Freedom (2 per¬cent), the Young Republicans (13percent), the Young Democrats< 15 percent), the IndependentVoters of Illinois (13 percent), orthe DuBois Club <6 percent).The groups on the list that mostWould call “moderate” accountedft\r only 41 percent of respon-sess.Want To Make DecisionsThe first-year students alsowanted more power for the stu¬dents in the University decision¬making. Only 6 percent of thosepolled were satisfied with thepresent system under which theadministration and the facultyhave complete final power overUniversity decisions. pollees disagreed, in many cagiving multiple answers. Tf elarger number felt that "studenshould have some voice as nonvoting members of committees inquestions of policy-making.Thirty-one percent of the stu¬dents polled felt that there wasnothing wrong with "makingthemselves heard by invokingdemonstrations or sit-ins. agreed entirely. The womenagreed 54-46 percent, but themajority of men (58-42 percent)felt that the University shouldnot allow drug use on campus.^Vhether the question presumedgalization of some kind or not,owever, was not made clear tohe respondents.The men were much more infavor of premarital sex than were. iw t v/i v**. pi viiiui uni ova mail t* vi vA majority of those students the women, while men favored itanswering said that they "would. . . use marijuana,” and a muchlarger majority favored its legali¬zation. The women said that theywould use it by a majority ofonly 56 percent to 44 percentwhile the men favored it by 65-35percent.Favor Drug LegalizationThe results favoring its legali¬zation were 71-29 percent and 76-24 percent, but when asked ifthe University should allow its by a 69-31 percent vote, womenfavored it only 60-40 percent.Many women expressed no opin-2n on the subject.When asked if they engaged in11, however, the relationshipchanged considerably. Thirty-fourpercent of the women said theyhad, while 66 percent denied it.Of the men 32 percent said thatthey had engaged in sexual ac-Turn to Page 14College Has Unique, Distinguished HistoryAt DEDICATION OF HITCHCOCK HALL: Two of the University's most notable figures — JohnD. Rockefeller (left) and William Rainey Harper. The City White hath fled theearth,But where the azure waters lie,A noble city hath its birth,The City Gray that ne’er shalldie.“. . . Even as the author of the‘Alma Mater’ called the Universitya city, he slipped into the meta¬phor of living things. A universityhad been born rather than con¬structed, and in the course of itshistory it was to escape deathrather than the disintegration thatlevels deserted cities.” So writesRichard J. Storr, associate profes¬sor of history, in his recent bookHarper's University.Even before the birth of thepresent University an earlier insti¬tution, now known as the OldUniversity, had been born, hadbreather, and had died. Incorpo¬rated in 1957 and located on a sitedonated by Sen. Stephen A. Doug¬las on Cottage Grove Ave. near35th St., it granted a total of 312degrees before it was forced byfinancial difficulties to close in1886.The American Baptist Educa¬tion Society resolved in 1889 toaid in the establishment of a new collegiate institution in Chicago,scribed $600,000 on condition that$400,000 more should be pledgedwithin a year. Eventually liewould contribute nearly $35 mil¬lion to the venture.Under the leadership of ThomasW. Goodspeed, president of theBaptist Theological Seminary, andFrederick T. Gales, secretary ofthe Education Society, the neces¬sary pledges w ere obtained. Mar¬shall Field presented a tract ofland as a site, and the Universityof Chicago was incorporated. Thephoenix on its coat of arms rep¬resents the rebirth of the Old Uni¬versity as the new one.A Precarious ExperimentWilliam Rainey Harper, a pro¬fessor of Hebrew at Yale whohad received his Ph.D. there at 18,W'as appointed by the Board ofTrustees as Chicago’s first pres¬ident. His insistence that the in¬stitution be envisaged as a realuniversity, with a faculty andfacilities adequate not only forundergraduate teaching but forthe pursuit of advanced studiesand research, placed the venturein the category of a precariousexperiment.Turn to Page SCULTURE VULTUREAuterstehn: Poof!! Like Cousin Phoenix, perennially rehatching, the Vulture is back. Capistrano was nice, but with Thursday's Yardbird on the squawk,it's time to return Underground. Good hunting, kinder.Pop Music The ma*n attract*°n ^es *n see_TheaterTo the uninitiated, the Chicago theatre scene at first seemsswinging. The daily papers are filled with ads proclaiming there-birth of second city, the creation of a new midwest actingtroupe, or the “discovery” of the voice of the ghetto. But you’reapt to spend a lot of bread finding out that good theatre in thiscity is rare. The best advice is to learn the reputations of themost important theatres and the basis of the most importantreviewers before you plunk down $15 for two orchestra seats.Starting close to home: The University Theatre in the ReynoldsClub usually produces worthwhile shows. Since their programmust be approved by their student board of directors, UT hasn’tannounced their schedule. They will produce Macbeth for oneperformance only on September 30th, a holdover from their sum¬mer season. UT’s productions of modern plays have generallybeen better than their Shakespeare and other classics. Watchalso for the “Tonight at eight-thirty” series, which, althoughuneven, is almost the only showcase for student-directed andstudent-written plays on campus. Prices are always low forthese one-acts, and often they don’t receive the publicity duethem, so keep an eye peeled for posters around campus.THE BIGGEST theatrical event in Chicago this fall will takeplace in Hyde Park when the Second City Rep Company opensDeer Park on October 24th, followed at two-week intervals byFrank Weinstfein’s The Party, The Cherry Orchard, Farquhar’sThe Recruiting Officer, a Shakespeare play, and perhaps someoriginal pieces, all playing in rep. The company includes someof the best talent in Chicago, and it looks like the Second Citygroup will fare far better than the other outfits which havedrifted in and out of the Harper Theatre in the past few years.As if starting a full scale rep company wasn’t enough, SecondCity is adding an underground film theatre (opening with worksfrom the Canadian underground), a children’s theatre (openingwith Peer Gynt), and a cabaret for “Off-off Broadway produc¬tions all scheduled for a late October debut. Harper Court maybecome a swinging place yet. Incidently, the cheapest way tosee the Second City shows is to work for them—ushering, ticket¬taking, set constructing, or acting. If you’re interested, Call JoyceSloane at 561-2541 for an interview.ANOTHER NEW COMPANY started in Hyde Park this lastweek; The Saint Paul Players opened with Morning’s at Seven,by Paul Osborn, which will run weekends until November 12;their season plans include The Emperor Jones, The Alchemist,The Deputy, and The Firebugs. In spite of their name, the groupmaintains they are a secular theatre supported by private funds.Interested volunteers should call David T. Cox, 624-3185 forinformation. The theatre is located at 50th and Dorchester.Also in Hyde Park proper, The Last Stage Players have pro¬duced a number of seeable productions over the past years. Thedepartment of Urban Renewal has temporarily ousted them fromtheir stage, but they are trying to locate new quarters, andshould be back in business towards the end of the year.The Goodman School of Drama, located behind the Art Insti¬tute on Michigan Avenue in the Loop, has a fine record of hits,although their acting almost never equals their truly impressivetechnical designs, and their high prices make you wonder whothey produce their plays for. The Goodman has a solid but safeseason scheduled. They open with The Miser on October 20 (gueststarring Donna Holabird), followed by Othello on November 24.Look for Shaw, Genet, and Brecht during the winter—if we’relucky. They haven’t chosen the plays yet, and may chicken out.A LITTLE GROUP called The Chicago City Players claimthey have a play which will “hit you with a social commentthat has the same effect as a well placed body blow.” On thebasis of their past productions, I don’t recommend it, but if youfeel like slumming, you might want to see it; “The Death andLife of Sneaky Fitch” open October 22, weekends only.Some of the city’s best theatre is to be seen at the HullHouse community centers. Although the theatre is by no stretchof the imagination a true community enterprise, Hull House doeshave a relevant repatory, and the acting is usually first rate,particularly on small cast shows. Currently you can see MurrySchisgal’s one-acts, The Typists and The Tiger at the Jane Ad-dams Center, 3212 North Broadway.AT THE PARKWAY’ Community House, 500 East 67th Street,you can see The Laundromat, a new play by Roger Cornish,through November 12. They give a healthy student discount onFridays and Sundays.For something different, try Paul Sills’ Game theatre, 1935North Sedgwick, where audience participation is the gimmick.The fun starts at 9 :30 on Saturdays, and reservations are helpful.Sometimes during your stay in Chicago, you should see theoriginal Second City, which has moved into a new building inPiper’s Alley, 1616 North Wells. Their reputation has been sag¬ging over the past few years, but shows some signs of reviving.Call DE 7-3992 for information.I haven’t hit any of the professional theatres in Chicago, be¬cause information about them is readily available. Check theDaily News’ Panorama Magazine, the WFMT Guide, and theMaroon’s Culture Calender for current offerings. What’s happening? On theChicago pop music scene thisfall, a lot. Where’s the action?Like Chicago itself,, spread out.If you spread yourself out thinenough and can sometimesmanage to be in two or threeplaces at once, here are someplaces to be:ORCHESTRA HALL: Onthe night of October 6, at least,there is no better place in theworld to be. for Ravi Shankarand Alla Rakha will be appear¬ing in concert. Need I saymore? Booked for future datesare Spanky & Our Gang (10/13), Judy Collins (10/27),Charles Aznavour (11/10, 11),Pete Seeger (11/17, 18), andJanis (“Society's Child”) Ian(11/29).THE OPERA HOUSE: Ifyou spent the summer inSouthern California, you canrevive your spirits and reliveold memories by seeing theBeach Boys on October 8.Gremmies might want to catchNancy Wilson with the Bud¬dy Rich band (10/13, 14), ora Thanksgiving Jazz Mini-Fes¬tival featuring Cannonball Ad-derley, Wes Montgomery, JoeWilliams, and comedienneMoms Mabley (11/22).REGAL THEATER: Locat¬ed in the heart of the SouthSide, the Regal presents a dif¬ferent stage show each month. ing top soul groups like theTemptations, but you can havealmost as much fun just dig¬ging the audience reaction.October’s headliner is ArethaFranklin, wrho will be in forjust three days instead of theusual six (10/5, 6, 7).THE CHEETAH: This dancehall is definitely the place togo if you want to check outChicago’s teenyboppers. Thereis also the added boon of beingable to hear some of the bestrock music around. VanillaFudge, the best such group tocome out of New York, playsthere this weekend (9/29-10/1), followed by the outstand¬ ing Butterfield Blues Band(10/6-8) and one of Canada’stop groups, The Mandala (10/13-15).WHISKEY A GO-GO: Thisclub changed its policy lastspring and now books top namesoul acts exclusively. Sam &Dave are currently ensconsed,with the Impressions and OtisRedding set for November. Forthe benefit of those you can’tfind phoney ID’s, there is a spe¬cial teenage section.PLUGGED NICK E 1.: Al¬though folksinger Josh White isthe current attraction, the Nic¬kel usually concentrates onwell known jazz artists. Corn-Turn to 1*hk«‘ ftNEW BOOKSBY CAMPUS AUTHORSUnder the Bo Tree — Studies in Caste, Kinshipand Marriage on the Interim of Ceylon.by Nur YalmanThe Language of Lifeby George and Muriel BeadleHistory and Social Sciencesby Mark M. KrugGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. $050$ 145$£50d/~ >UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOHyde Park CommunityBookstoresREID MICHENER JOSEPH O’GARA5309 S. KIMBARK 1360 E. 53rd ST.General and Scholarly Used and Out of PrintUsed Books Scholarly BooksOPEN 6:00 P.M. to MIDNIGHT OPEN 2 P.M. to 9 P.M.STAYER, BOOKSELLERS /RUDOLPH VAN TELLINGEN1301 E. 57th ST. 5225 S. HARPER COURTQuality Cloth and Paperbacks General Used BooksSocial Ss., Humanities, Physical Sc. OPEN DAILY & EVENINGSGREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP THE BOOK CENTER1450 E. 57th ST. 5211 S. HARPER COURTOPEN 12 to 12 SERVES ALL YOUR READING NEEDS—Paperbacks, Hardcovers, Medical Books, Foreign & Domestic PeriodicalsN. Y. Times on Sunday & NewspapersTHE BOOK NOOKHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERHard Cover & PaperbackBooks — Cards2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE September 29, 1967Ronald Crane (1886-1967): Scholar and HumanistBy WAYNE C. BOOTHRonald S. Crane was, I amconvinced, a great humanisticscholar. Scholarship iS todayon the defensive as it has notbeen in some decades. The airis full of attacks on research,as the natural enemy of teach¬ing. And academic life in gen¬eral is held in no high esteem.As portrayed in “academic nov¬els,” for example, our campuseshouse only phonies, comic ped¬ants who, as Mr. Edward Ros¬enheim has pointed out, arenever shown engaged in anyactivity that might reasonablyattract a responsible humanbeing with an IQ above 100.The reform pamphlets of theNew Left have yet to describe,so far as I can discover, asingle instance of scholarshipworth pursuing; it is all a mat¬ter of “so-called scholarship.”and of blind self-servers who.because they hate teaching andundergraduates, lock them-selves up in “ivory towers” (Ialways find myself thinking ofHarper West) and count com¬mas or invent abstract and ir¬relevant theories. In such aclimate, to eulogize a man asa “great scholar” might verywell be to damn him—as if onehad called him a great nit-picker.IT IS IMPOSSIBLE, I suspect,to demonstrate to the unconvinc¬ed the difference between thegreat scholars and the feeble im¬itators or — what is the samething to show the value to theworld of genuine scholarship. Iread this summer an attack onour "knowledge factories,” in“The Multiversity: Crucible ofthe New Working Class,” by aman who cited, as his only ex¬ample of what researchers do, adissertation done at MichiganState, "An Evaluation of Thir¬teen Brands of Football HelmetsTHE BALANCE OF POWERIS CHANGING . . .THE SHIBBOLETHS OF THE COLDWAR ARE OUTDATED . . .THE EURAMERICAN ALLIANCEIS UNDER FIRE . . .iEuropean/American affairs chartsthe dynamic movement of the newtechnological societies. Though writtenentirely (and entertainingly) in English.INTERPLAY draws upon the thinkingand experience of seers and punditsfrom both shores of the Atlantic—university dons and deans,international affairs experts,industrialists, government officials,journalists, philosophers, not onlyfrom English-speaking countries but* from all the countries of the Continent.If you are concerned about thefuture that is going to be theInheritance of those coming after, youwill welcome the intelligent andsprightly thrust into the EurAmericanfuture that INTERPLAY will presentten times a year.To take advantage Of the Chartersubscription rate of $6.00(regularly $7.00). please WW outthe attached coupon.a multi-national magazine ofeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee INTERPLAY .1200 West 57th Street, New YOfk, N.Y. 1001$ #• Please enroll me as a Chsrter subscriber **t« INTERPLAY at the special rate 01: #~1 year (10 Issues) !.?•??e2 veers (20 Issues) $11.003 years (30 issues) $16.M**0 Payment enclosed Q Please bill me •♦hlnmn .. - • , - *^ Address - ,■ 1 •l City Z*p-55fi •ItMIflftfttfflfl on the Basis of Certain ImpactMeasures.” No amount of argu¬ment is likely to show Mr. CarlDavidson, the author, the totalirrelevance of his example towhat real scholars do. What per¬haps I can do is assume thatreaders of this magazine alreadyhave some predisposition to honorthe real thing when it appears,and try to explain why RonaldCrane, for so many of us, stoodfor what the university at its bestcan mean.What he did was to set for usa model of what a man can dowith a first-class mind, when thatmind is backed by character.Character is almost as unfash¬ionable a term as scholarship, butI know of no other word to de¬scribe the combination of moralforce, intellectual integrity, andenergetic persistence in inquirythat Crane exhibited.THE PASSION FOR TRUTH isnot so obvious a commitment assome other passions, but in Craneit was clear to everyone who wasaround him for more than a fewmoments. It was a commitmentthat like any other could some¬times trample on the feelings ofothers; Crane took it for grantedthat a student would want to findout the truth about a subjectmore than he would want to beloved by his teacher. He assum¬ed that his deepest service toany student was in attempting toteach him how to find the truth,and he was sometimes surprisedto discover that his rigorouscriticisms had been taken person¬ally and interpreted as spring¬ing from hostility. Students, onthe other hand, were often sur¬prised to discover that what hadajK*ared to be a brutal critic oftheir errors was in fact a manwho loved them.His passion for trut h took manyforms. Most obviously, it express¬ed itself in searing criticism ofother men's generalizations. Ishall never forget the seminarperiod which left me, one day,in despair; a paper which I hadthought might serve as a chapterin my dissertation had been an¬nihilated before my eyes, and Ifelt that in the process I hadlearned my own unfitness forscholarship. To find the truth in such matters was just too diffi¬cult. Perhaps I should just takea job somewhere as a teacher,which is what, after all, I hadgone into this business to do inthe -first place? But then, ofcourse, the question arose of whatexactly I was going to teachabout if I couldn’t say somethingthat would stand up to the criti¬cism of Ronald S. Crane. Be¬cause, you see, unfortunately hiscriticism had been convincing; Idid not see how to answer it. SoI decided to work the thingthrough—and as I did so I beganto discover why Crane himselfpublished so little: he applied tohis own work the same rigorousstandards he applied to us, andfew of his first drafts could es¬cape the wastebasket.“WHAT’S YOlTt EVIDENCE?”"Most people believe this; is ittrue?” “This is clever, but doesit really satisfy you?” “Theadroit juggling of abstract ideasis no doubt pleasurable in itself,but what does it have to do withthe actual works of Fielding?”“The evidence you give supportsyour conclusion that the Twen¬tieth Century is a ‘rhetorical age.’But have you considered theamount of pure science, puremusic, pure mathematics, purephilosophy, and pure history inour time? Can any earlier timeexhibit so much that is non-rhet-orical?” Such comments on/ myown work drove me back, againand again, to specific works, thehard and irreducible facts whichalone justified my professionalcommitment and tested my con¬clusions.His critical habit of mind con¬tinued until his death. Even inthe hospital, when from manypoints of view he was “no longerhimself,” he maintained his deter¬mination not to be self-deceived.“Ronald, you’re looking better to¬day.” “What’s your evidence?”One day he told me that the chiefindignity of dying in the hospitalwas for him the sense of beingat the mercy of “a bunch ofdamned a prior fats. I’ve led alife of scholarship, trying tohe honest to the evidence,and I 'find myself surroundedby a bunch of weak graduatestudents who have learned a few!_ _$_6_5MRobin Hood LightweightMade by Raleigh $37 ♦5 and«*PLooking for a high-quality touring bicycle?This world-famous bicycle has all the features you want.Reliable Sturmey-Archer 3-speed hub with triggercontrol, Brooks leather saddle, Dunlop AmberwallTires, front and rear caliper brakes, all steel tubingconstruction, front lamp bracket, pump, touring bag,double stay mudguard, three point chain anchorageand shock-stop rubber grips. Boy’s andgirl's models available in a choiceof sizes and colors.On/y « Raleigh is c&J/y * RaleighArt's Cycle & Hobby Shops1*3* E. 55th St.1714 E. 87th St. 3*3-7524SA 1-5443 pat diagnoses and who haven’tthe slightest interest in testingtheir conclusions by observationor critical analysis."IN A TIME WHEN, as Yeatssays, “The best lack of all con¬viction,/While the worst are fullof passionate intensity,” RonaldCrane did not lose his convictionthat it matters whether one re¬spects or cooks the evidence,whether one reasons or ration¬alizes, whether one manipulatestruth to serve self or schools toserve truth.Such men are rare in any age.It may be that they are especial¬ly rare in ours. At least we havebeen told, throughout this cen¬tury, that heroes of any kind areno longer possible, that honor isdead, or so close to it that theman of implacable integrity mustbe on the defensive:Now all the truth is out,Be secret and take defeatFrom any brazen throat,For how can you compete,Being honour bred, with oneWho, were it proved he lies,Were neither shamed in his oumNor m his neighbours’ eyes fI REMEMBER HIS SHOCKwhen a critic misquoted him, andthen apologized for the ‘finadvert-ent error." “Any scholar worththe name,” he said, “will recog¬nize his own natural inclinationto reduce his opponent to termsthat can be refuted. And he willcheck the original again, andagain, and then one last time, tomake sure that he has been ac¬curate and fair.”When such values are held bya naturally combative and ag¬gressive man—and Ronald Cranewas never merely “tolerant” or“permissive” or “amiable" in hisintellectual dealings — they areespecially impressive. RonaldCrane had strong views, and hewanted them to prevail in the world of criticism and scholar¬ship. But if Satan had come tohim to offer all success and allhonor, in exchange for one min¬or misprint, one slight bit offudging, just a touch of deliber¬ate distortion, the Master otFudgers would have left the sem¬inar room, like the rest of us,with his tail between his legs.In a time when every kind ofcheating on the evidence is de¬fended in the service of reformor reaction, it is no mean thingto be a man who would ratherfail than cheat. If, as seems possi¬ble, future historians will char¬acterize the twentieth century, asa time of corruption and moraldecay, one or another of themwill- know of Ronald S. Craneand his kind. There are notmany of them, in any age, butthey no doubt deserve at least afootnote—an honest one, carefullychecked against the evidence andfinally proofread as if the his¬torian’s life depended on it: "Ron¬ald S. Crane (1886-1967), unlikehis contemporaries, believed inmany things: in the value ofcritical inquiry; in teaching, as anatural twin of scholarship; inpersonal honor as inseparablefrom scholarly integrity; in ‘thehumanities’ as the study of man’spossibilities and achievements. Inpursuing his beliefs he demon¬strated that even in the twen¬tieth century a man could givehimself nobly to an ideal.”Mr. Booth is George M. Pull¬man Professor of English andDean of the College.... the new lightweight bikethat draws the sheers!SCHWINN RACERBUY NOW ONEASY TERMS•Ike riding time is here! And whatbetter way than ta step out on thisnew lightweight with 3-speedgaare, caliper brakes, Schwinntubular rims, and many other fun-•Med features. FACTORY FRAMOUStDsammH siRvia...V - \ •Fait/efficient, and fairly priced... next time your bike needsrepair, take it to an expert . . .our service facilities ore com-Art's Cycle & Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th St. 363-75241710 E. 87th St. SA 1-5883eSeptember 29, 1947 • WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3From Bad to Verse: The Poetry of Ida NoyesBy CLIVE A. HARDINGThe controversy over Picas¬so’s gift to the city of Chicagohas brought to the fore onceagain the question of whetherman is capable of judging —accurately and fairly —- theworth of artistic creations ofhis contemporaries. What seemsbeautiful and impressive in oneage leaves future generations fine creations, there was per¬haps an even larger number ofso-called artistic representa¬tions which appall us, not tosay, turn our stomachs.AND SO, GENTLE reader,into this category of artisticmisdirection must we place thepoetry of Ida E. S. Noyes(1853-1912), considered by hercontemporaries to be a beauti-Ida Noyes: The Lady of the Violetsquite cold, while, often, workswhich were callously disre¬garded in their time, haveemerged with reputations ofgreatness.No age is more typical ofthis lack of artistic judgment—or foresight—than our own—,except, perhaps, for the lateVictorian and early Edwardianage of the turn of this century.A quick glance—and it surelymust be quick—at the sculp¬ture, painting, furnishing,dress, and poetry which wasconsidered much in vogue atthe time will indicate that, inspite of the large number of ful woman, charming hostess,possessor of a gentle wit, andcapable of producing poetry de¬signed to please. Lest we criti¬cize her friends too harshly, letme quote part of the “Appre¬ciation” to “Occasional Verseby Ida Noyes,” written by oneFrank Pixley: “Mrs. Noyesmade no claim to great literaryability and very rarely at¬tempted the lofty heights oftrue poetry; but she possesseda rare aptitude for rhyme andhappy faculty of expressingherself tersely and wittily inverse.” With the first part ofthe statement, let no one dis¬ agree: having what was themodesty of a true lady, Mrs.Noyes probably did not consid¬er herself to have much talentin the poetic art.We must remember, however,that these verses were writtenfor many occasions which werealmost humorously unimpor¬tant, and this might certainlyexcuse the low level of theverse. Yet, to imagine that thelisteners found these rhymesentertaining, let alone terse andwitty, is an indication of theartistic degeneracy of thetimes and the aesthetic feeble¬mindedness of early twentiethcentury upper-class Chicagoansin particular.TO BEGIN WITH, let ustake a glance at the lady's gen¬tle wit:Just a Few Knights(At dinner by Mr. and Mrs. T. D.Knight)Though knights of old were everboldAnd cast in that heroic moldWhich armor wore of tons ormoreIn weight, and swore their foes tokillOr wade in gore; to hunt theGrail;Dames to adore and such likeloreOf chivalry, the Knights todaySay what you may, are in ourway "Of thinking, much more bravethan they.“Exceedingly clever," you say,“is Mrs. Noyes’ technique ofcomparing the Knights toknights.” And the internalrhyme is disarming! And thefigures of speech: why you canfairly see the knights (orKnights) beating the livingdaylights out of their oppo¬nents.I have spared you the re-Contact Users...Morgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd St.— KARATEU. C. KARATE CLUBMEMBER J.K.A.Expert Japanese InstructorClasses Monday, Wednesday 7 P.M.Beginning on October 5thIda Noyes Hall 1FOR INFORMATION,call B. VARGA — 363-3175 mainder of the poem, whichsimply exhausts the compari¬son beyond all imaginable en¬joyment. Had Ogden Nashwritten the verse, there mighthave been reason to rejoice inthe approach, for, at least, asurprise ending would delightus. But instead we are treatedto a tiresome display of rhyme,which is quite overwhelming(old, mold, bold, armor, wore,swore, gore, adore).“ALL RIGHT, PERHAPS itis a little empty and tiring,”you say, “but this is only oneof many poems.” But no:The Powers that Be(To Mr. and Mrs. Powers, etc.)The Powers that beAre such as weMuch love to seeAnd greet with glee.The Browers, tooMake no adoo,And though so young,They do not wooNor even cooIn public, as doSome who write less wellThan she (Mrs. B.) . . .or:The Lady of the VioletsOh lady of the violets,So dainty and true blue —Not of the blue-stocking type,But of the rosy hue—Who guards with care all sentient lifeAnd takes the humane view,We honor these your principlesAnd tune our lyre to you!Enough said. The point ismade; I wish not to be asheavy-handed as Mrs. Noyes!“But poetry is not justrhyme,” you cry. defending themaligned lady. True enough,but her poetry is lacking in allsubstance: complete lack ofsimile, metaphor, and almostevery other device that givespoetry a lasting quality. Pageafter page of sixth-grade qual¬ity greets the eye:No trace have we of royalty.And yet we boast our Georgesthree—George Washington. GeorgeRogers ClarkAnd our latest admiral, GeorgeDewey.The hatchet and the cherry tree;The axe and splitted rail;The eagle's scream; the patriot'sdream;And “big stick" on the trail;Feriod pieces indeed!IF THIS VERSE had beenread at a President’s inaugura¬tion or some other occasion, itmight have been worth remem¬bering, but it was read at noneother than the West End Worn-Turn to Pur** 5Don't payComparewith othersand SAVE...Priced up toVi less thanotherleadingsolutionsThis ONE Solution . . .WETS • CLEANS • SOAKSAn antiseptic wetting, cleaning andsterilizing agent. Just a drop guaran¬tees a smoother surface when in¬serting ypur contact lenses. Endsirritation . . . Cleans better, too. Re¬tards build-up of foreign substanceson lenses . . . When used for soak¬ing, ANDREA DUMON solution keepslenses free from harmful bacteria.drud/teaNEW YORK • CHICAGOl.OS ANGELES• -•*. .-.v-'.*' Ac' Vw*:' *r* -. - SOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED“A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersMl 3-4020Witzie J 3Lwer Si,op"FLOWJRS FOR ALL OCCASIONS''1308 EAST 53RD STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615WAV/AW/AVAW.WHYDE PARK THEATERLAKE PARK AT 53rd STREETTelephone: NO 7-9071FROM SWEDEN — THE MOSTDARING PICTURE EVER PRODUCED!FOR ADULTSSTARTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29thNIt is entirelypossible to makeexcitationa way of life!4 WEEKEND MAGAZINE September 29, 1967SEPTEMBER 29, 1967 The Chicago Maroon ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENTCOULD 01 BRIGHTESTClass of 71 Largest, Most WomenThe Class of 1971 is the largest in the history of the Collegeand has the highest percentage of women. It even continues thetrend of past years on having SAT scores as good or better thanthose of the preceeding class.It is not, however, the brightestclass ever in the opinion of themen in charge of admissions.“I would not say that this isthe brightest class ever,” saidDean of Students Charles D.O’Connell, who was director ofadmissions when the class waselected—thus reversing the trendin which he has called each suc¬ceeding class “the brightest ever.”His successor, Anthony T. G.Pallett, called the class “not sig¬nificantly brighter statisticallythan the one that proceeded it,even though I claimed it was ‘thebrightest ever’ in my opening ad¬dress.”The 731 students, 21 more thanlast year, had average SAT scoresof 672 on the verbal test and 665on the mathematical section. Thiscompares with last year’s aver¬age scores of 664 and 665, andscores from five years ago whenthe averages were lower, of 646and 650.Where the Girls AreOne significant difference is inthe male-female ratio, 401 to 328.Just a few years ago it was 75:25but with this class it has drop¬ped to 55:45. Last spring O'Con¬nell tried to explain it this way:“There is no discrimination bysex in admitting students. We tryto obtain the best possible class. . . . Usually the male-femalebalance in the group accepted re¬flects the proportion of males tofemales in the group of appli¬cants.“This means that probably thenumber of female applicants hasgone up over the past three orfour years,” he continued. “Thisis due to the greater desirabilityof top-flight coeducational schoolssuch as Chicago, together withthe fact that the Hyde Parkneighborhood is no longer as dan¬gerous as it was during the 1950’s.Other coeducational schools dohave strict quotas for women, andsurveys have shown that it isharder for a female to get into acoed school than it is for a male.Academically StrongExcept for the change in num¬bers and sexual distribution, how¬ ever, the class of ’71 is not muchdifferent from its predecessors.The Class of ’70 was a stronggroup marked by high class ranks.Thus even though it may not bethe ‘brightest ever,’ this year’sentering class seems to be as goodas any. There are 85 valedictor¬ians, compared with 80 last year.There are 40 salutatorians, anincrease of two over last year.There are also more nationalscholarship winners in this class,which has 29 National Merit andseven National Achievement scho¬lars. Last year there were 27 andfour, respectively. There are also17 University scholars, comparedwith 15 last year.But class rank still is one ofthe more important criteria foradmission. More than 58 per¬cent of the first-year studentswere in the top five percent oftheir graduating classes; another18 percent were in the second fivepercent; and altogether morethan 89 percent are known tohave been in the top quarter oftheir classes.Less than five percent of theclass were admitted from the bot¬tom three quarters of their clas¬ses, either as calculated risks orfrom exceptionally competitiveschools. Rank data does not existfor the remaining six percent.Georgraphically DiverseThis year there are fewerschools represented than last year,although the class is larger by 21students. There are representa¬tives from 518 schools in 45states and six foreign nationswhereas last year there were 558schools represented, from 4tstates and six other countries.About a quarter of the class isfrom Illinois this year, with an¬other fifteen per cent from New'York State.One of the most underrepre¬sented groups in the class are theNegroes. According to an admis¬sions officer, only about 4 per¬cent of the class are Negro. Thisis about the same as last year, butbelow the national proportion ofblacks, which is ten percent. FACTS OF LIFE: Port of the entering student's life is spent laboring through placement exams.The first two days included twelve hours of testing....And One of the Most RadicalThe Class of 1971 is one of the most radical ever to be admitted to the College, according toa 15 percent random sampling conducted by The Maroon.More than 94 percent of the students polled disagreed with President Johnson’s Vietnam poli¬cies. of which 85 percent wanted a more peace-like stand.The most surprising thingabout the class is the lack ofmoderates. A majority of theclass said that they would jointhe Students for a DemocraticSociety SDS in preference toother groups, including the YoungAmericans for Freedom (2 per¬cent), the Young Republicans (13percent), the Young Democrats(15 percent), the IndependentVoters of Illinois (13 percent), orthe DuBois Club (6 percent).The groups on the list that mostwould call “moderate” accountedfor only 41 percent of respon¬ses.Want To Make DecisionsThe first-year students alsowanted more pow'er for the stu¬dents in the University decision¬making. Only 6 percent of thosepolled were satisfied with thepresent system under which theadministration and the facultyhave complete final power overUniversity decisions. More than 83 percent of thepollees disagreed, in many casesgiving multiple answers. Thelarger number felt that “studentsshould have some voice as non¬voting members of committees inquestions of policy-making.”Thirty-one percent of the stu¬dents polled felt that there wasnothing wrong with “makingthemselves heard by invokingdemonstrations or sit-ins.”A majority of those studentsanswering said that they “would. . . use marijuana,” and a muchlarger majority favored its legali¬zation. The women said that theywould use it by a majority ofonly 56 percent to 44 percentwhile the men favored it by 65-35percent.Favor Drug LegalizationThe results favoring its legali¬zation were 71-29 percent and 76-24 percent, but when asked ifthe University should allow its use on campus, the majority dis¬agreed entirely. The womenagreed 54-46 percent, but themajority of men (58-42 percent)felt that the University shouldnot allow drug use on campus.Whether the question presumedlegalization of some kind or not,however, was not made clear tothe respondents.The men were much more infavor of premarital sex than werethe women, while men favored itby a 69-31 percent vote, womenfavored it only 60-40 percent.Many women expressed no opin¬ion on the subject.When asked if they engaged init, however, the relationshipchanged considerably. Thirty-fourpercent of the women said theyhad, while 66 percent denied it.Of the men 32 percent said thatthey had engaged in sexual ac-Turn to Page 14College Has Unique, Distinguished HistoryAT DEDICATION OF HITCHCOCK HALL: Two of the University's most notable figuresD. Rockefeller (left) and William Rainey Harper. — John The City White hath fled theearth,But where the azure waters lie,A noble city hath its birth.The City Gray that ne'er shalldie.“. . . Even as the author of the‘Alma Mater’ called the Universitya city, he slipped into the meta¬phor of living things. A universityhad been born rather than con¬structed. and in the course of itshistory it was to escape deathrather than the disintegration thatlevels deserted cities.” So writesRichard J. Storr, associate profes¬sor of history, in his recent bookHarper's University.Even before the birth of thepresent University an earlier insti¬tution, now known as the OldUniversity, had been born, hadbreather, and had died. Incorpo¬rated in 1957 and located on a sitedonated by Sen. Stephen A. Doug¬las on Cottage Grove Ave. near35th St., it granted a total of 312degrees before it was forced byfinancial difficulties to close in1886.The American Baptist Educa¬tion Society resolved in 1889 toaid in the establishment of a new collegiate institution in Chicago,scribed $600,000 on condition that$400,000 more should be pledgedwithin a year. Eventually hewould contribute nearly $35 mil¬lion to the venture.Under the leadership of ThomasW. Goodspeed, president of theBaptist Theological Seminary, andFrederick T. Gates, secretary ofthe Education Society, the neces¬sary pledges were obtained. Mar¬shall Field presented a tract ofland as a site, and the Universityof Chicago was incorporated. Thephoenix on its coat of arms rep¬resents the rebirth of the Old Uni¬versity as the new one.A Precarious ExperimentWilliam Rainey Harper, a pro¬fessor of Hebrew at Yale whohad received his Ph.D. there at 18,was appointed by the Board ofTrustees as Chicago’s first pres¬ident. His insistence that the in¬stitution be envisaged as a realuniversity, with a faculty andfacilities adequate not only forundergraduate teaching but forthe pursuit of advanced studiesand research, placed the venturein the category of a precariousexperiment.Turn to Page 3LETTER FROM THE EDITOR STATUS FLUCTUATESThe Maroon& Some IdeasBy now you’ve probably heard all the cliches — how you’reabout to enter an exciting world of intellectual fernment, howyou’re going to re-appraise yourself and some ofyour firmest beliefs, how you’ll want to go outand change the world, and so on.A lot of bull?They’re true.I imagine there’s hardly an alumnus aroundwhose life was not shaped in some importantway during his years at Chicago.The University has quite a distinct atmos¬phere. But it’s not one that calmly envelopes the entering class,permeating through each student until he reeks of Chicago, aneasily recognizable stereotype. Rather it’s one of turbulence, inwhich opposing winds of controversial dialogue meet in freeinquiry of the truth.There’s only one kind of truth, but some times it’s particularlydifficult or painful to see, especially when one is too insecureor overconfident to consider changing old beliefs.• • •THE TRUTH CAN BE well known, even far from the academy.For instance, that to touch a hot stove is a bad thing to do; orthat to kill your brother is naughty. Few would disagree.There are some truths that are accepted, unfortunately, onlyby a group of people whom the remainder of the populace call“intellectuals.” For instance, that the fundamental cause ofNegro riots is not militant agitation but centuries of victimiza¬tion; or that a society without the freedom to protest audiblywhat is commonly accepted is doomed by eventual demagogueryand tyranny. You who are entering the University should knowthese already.But then there are truths which sometimes are disputed ormisunderstood by the most “reputable” of people. For instance,that the United States should at least sit down and talk with theNational Liberation Front; or that students deserve a say inUniversity policy to the extent that the policy affects them. Ifyou don’t already, I hope you’ll soon accept these and othersas truths.We on The Maroon do.• • •THIS IS NOT TO SAY that everything we call the truth reallyis. We do, however, believe it is, and have no doubt our beliefsare far more often true than not. If you know your Greek youhave an idea of how interchangeable the words can be.Our beliefs come through strong enough on our editorial page,but you may also find them lurking on our news pages—whatsome consider “overemphasis” of certain issues with much ofour own analysis thrown in.Call it non-objectivity if you like; we think of it more as cru¬sading journalism. If America,s established press had not stuckto “hard news” and had really educated the public to the truthabout ghetto conditions years ago, a sympathetic nation mighthave aided the black underclass before it exploded into rebellion.We may be more of a liberal-radical paper than an impartialone, but we never distort or omit the facts. And if the factsdon't add up the way we thought they would we’re an honestenough paper to change old beliefs and print the truth.If you disagree with us, you can always write a letter whichwe’ll try to publish.• • •AFTER A FEW Y’EARS HERE, you’ll all pretty much agreeon what’s wrong with the world and what should be done aboutit.Conformity?Hardly.You’ll have distinct personalities, different tastes, and in¬dividual goals. About the only things you’ll have in common willbe some knowledge of the truth, a desire to pursue it further,the tools with which to ferret it out, and the honesty to rejectformer opinions when confronted with it.You’ll take what you’ve learned and, damn it, you’ll give therest of the world a good fight.JEFFREY KUTAAMERICAN 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% dl$««wnl to Hudcnta with ID cards College Curriculum VariedContinued from Page 1Assuming his duties at the Uni¬versity in 1891, Harper devoted ayear to assembling a faculty ofbrilliant investigators attracted byhis conception of a university andby salaries that were then consid¬ered astonishing, developing edu¬cational and architectural plans,and completing the first building,Cobb Lecture Hall. On October 1,1892, the doors were opened tostudents.Thus the College was foundedas but one part of the University.Unlike many other universities,Chicago was born “full grown,”not just as an undergraduate col¬lege with which graduate andprofessional schools later becameaffiliated, but as a center of grad¬uate and undergraduate education.In the University’s early days,undergraduates attended two col¬leges: first a junior college andthen a senior college. The juniorcollege was regarded by Harperas merely an extension of second¬ary school. Under the somewhatfixed junior college curriculum, allstudents studied languages, sci¬ence, and mathematics; most wererequired to study English andhistory.Quarter SystemHarper introduced the innova¬tion of four graduation ceremonieseach year because he felt the stu¬dent should “receive his diplomanot because a certain number ofyears had passed and a certainday in June has arrived, but be¬cause his work is finished.”As administrators and facultywere loath to allow junior collegestudents into senior collegecourses, the junior college grad¬ually became regarded merely asa span between high school andthe senior college, where the stu¬dent could seriously specialize.Harper felt a student shouldknow what he wanted to studywhen he came to the University.The first dean of the College,Harry Pratt Judson, succeededHarper as president of the Uni¬versity. Judson envisioned a one-year general education college fol¬ lowed by a three year seniorcollege for specialization. Hisplan, however, was never enacted.Judson placed more emphasison vocational training than hadHarper. Agreeing with Harperthat there must be “no inflexiblebar against advancement,” Jud¬son thought it “quite possible toobtain a general culture in a col¬lege course and yet . . . plan agood part of the work so that itwill lead directly toward a pro¬fession already chosen.”During his administration, therewas almost no faculty concernfor the College. Attendance atCollege faculty meetings in thetwo year period following WorldWar I averaged less than ten. Thelack of an autonomous Collegehurt teaching standards. Judson,like Harper, considered researchof prime importance, and so grad¬uate students taught undergrad¬uate courses, and the annualturnover was high.Doldrums During 20’sIn the 1920’s a number of de¬partmental courses offered in thefirst two years were taken inmany combinations, and produced"no common foundation of basicgeneral education.”"Generally students didn't dis¬cuss intellectual matters becausethey didn’t have anything in com¬mon to talk about," said AaronBrumbaugh, a former dean of theCollege.It was suggested that theCollege be dropped altogether.Chauncey S. Boucher, dean of theCollege in the late 1920's, ex¬plained why the College contin¬ued: it provided the departmentswith an opportunity to selectpromising research students; itbrought in revenue which helpedpay for research and graduateinstruction; it attracted contribu¬tions from its alumni, who werewealthier than graduate schoolalumni.Judson's successor, Ernest Dc-Witt Burton, wanted to move theCollege south of the Midway withits own faculty, budget, dean,buildings, and equipment, and ac¬ cept students after their sopho¬more year of high school. His planwas stalemated in debate and itwas not until Max Mason tookover tiie presidency of the Univer¬sity that it was agreed that theCollege would remain a part ofthe University.Ernest Hatch Wilkins, dean ofthe College under Burton, intro¬duced Chicago’s first surveycourse. “The Nature of the Worldand of Man,” a two-quarter se¬quence featuring lectures by lead¬ing scientists. Its success promptedother departments to design sim¬ilar courses.Reorganization ProposedIn 1928, a faculty committeechaired by Boucher was appointedto study a reorganization of theundergraduate curriculum. Thecommittee’s report would haveabolished the credit system, underwhich students graduated aftercompleting a certain number ofcourse hours.It would have substituted re¬quirements that the student passcomprehensive examinations. Tograduate from the junior college,exams in English, a foreign lan¬guage, natural science and math,social science, and an electivecomprehensive which might in¬clude preliminary specializedwork, would have been required.A bachelor’s degree candidatefrom the senior college would facean exam in his major field andanother in his minor.The day before the faculty wasto discuss the committee’s report,however, President Mason re¬signed. Three years later, underChancellor Robert MaynardHutchins, a “New Plan,” some¬what similar to the Boucher com¬mittee report, was adopted forthe College.The Hutchins EraThe plan was preceded by anadministrative reorganization ofthe University, which created fivedivisions: the College, and thegraduate division of biological sci¬ences, physical sciences, human-Turn to Page tNICKY’S PIZZAAND RESTAURANT“Royal Pizza By Nicky, The Uncrowned Pizza King”INTRODUCING .. . Would you believe Koshex Pizza?FIORELLO PIZZAwith Kosher Salami and PepperoniWith each Fiorello Pizza a Coupon worth 10c towards a $1.00 ticket to "Fiorello".being presented October 27 & 28 by the Music Theatre of Hyde Park in the RaySchool Auditorium.WELCOME BACK SPECIAL1 Free Soft Drink with Small Pizza2 Free Soft Drinks with Medium Pizza3 Free Soft Drinks with Large PizzaFast Delivery Hot from the Oven1208 East 53rd Street FA 4-53402 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29. 1967/Some Greetings to FreshmenBlumThe University of Chicago is agreat university. That is thesource of manyof its finest vir-t u e s and i t smost disturbingdefects. Wehave many fa¬mous and dis¬tinguished pro¬fessors; but sad¬ly, few of themteach very oftenin the College,and then mainlyin large lecture courses. We havea strong system of general educa¬tion, but sometimes professors areteaching subjects that they ad¬mittedly know little about, andstudents have a narrow choice ofcourses. We have many excellentgraduate students; but few ofthem have an opportunity to testtheir learning by teaching or ap¬plying it outside the University.We are growing, expanding; butwe pay a price in increased redtape and decision-making by pro-fesisonal administrators. We area residential college, with moredorms being built all the time;but the University is tearingdown apartments suitable forgraduate students and those whodesire a different type of experi¬ence, while dorm regulations arestill restrictive and conditions stillcramped, inflexible, and dull.We are rich and prestigious; butwe are thus receptive to pres¬sures, explicit or implicit, fromour donors; and we align our¬selves against taking institutionalstands on political questions forfear of jeopardizing our safetyfrom society, but we acquiescein governmental programs whichimply a political position. We de¬sire a campus set off from thecity, and we destroy housing forpeople whose only recourse is tomove into slums.We can resolve contradictions.Similar problems are affecting' nearly all American universities,and changes are occuring inmany places. We are particularlyfortunate to have the resources,human and material, to experi¬ment in educational policy, infulfilling our responsibility to pro¬vide critical leadership for society,both in the community directlyaround us and on a national scale.We are small enough to benefitfrom intimacy and large enoughto benefit from diversity.Students are in an advantageousposition to lead this movementfor change. We are not com¬mitted to the status quo. Wehave an idea of what we wouldlike our education to be, of howit should relate to the socialworld. We must necessarily strivefor new frameworks in which toview learning when it is andmust be available to so manypeople. New frameworks to viewpolitics when war and racismdominate the actions of our coun¬try's leaders. We must strive forself-expression and self-definitionwhen faced with institutions thatlimit our choice and often leaveus powerless to effect what wechoose anyway.Inside the University is one ofthe best places to achieve thesegoals, and I urge students to ac-CAN'T AFFORD NEWFURNITURE?Try TheCATHOLIC SALVAGEBUREAUTruckloads, arriving daily10 E. 41st St.3514 S. Michigan cept the challenge to move theUniversity in the right direction.Student Government is availableto help us formulate, express, andact on our concerns, but it can dovirtually nothing unless studentsace for what they believe.JEFFREY BLUMSG PRESIDENTBeadleOne of the more pleasant tasksa university president has is thatof greeting theyoung and in¬spiring men andwomen whomake up theclass each year.Charles O’Con¬nell, our newly-appointed deanof students, saysyou are one ofthe "brightest”classes ever toenter the University of Chicago—that is, “brightest” in terms ofyour academic records to date.Your test scores and interviewsare the evidence for this objec¬tive judgement.You—especially the men—willbe interested to learn that theClass of 1971 includes a higherpercentage of girls than any pre-thritude and Plato are an appro-vious class in recent years. Pul-priate mix.The University of Chicago is aunique institution. It arose on theprairie 76 years ago as a full-fledged University at a time whenmost of our scholars went toEurope for graduate study.It was an exciting time. TheUniversity was an instant leaderand pioneered in facets of educa¬tion we now take for granted.You too are arriving at an ex¬citing time. The University is en¬gaged in one of the largest funddrives ever undertaken by a pri¬vate university, a campaign for$160,000,000.No construction is all aroundyou. Cobb Hall just south of theAdmniistration Building, as old asthe University itself, is being en¬tirely rebuilt except for its classi¬cal outer shell.The Henry Hinds Laboratoryfor the Geophysical Sciences, justnorth of the University Press, isstill rising and is of almost asmuch interest to architects as itis to the geophysicists who willuse it. Construction of theJoseph Regenstein Library onwhat is now Stagg Field is aboutto begin. The Searle ChemicalLaboratory is completed, as is anew $760,000 air-conditioned resi¬dence hall for students at 57thStreet and Dorchester Avenue.You are the second freshmanclass to benefit from a reorgani¬zation of the entire undergradu¬ate program devised by the pro¬vost and president-designate, Ed¬ward H. Levi.This undergraduate program is,we feel, one of the most excitingbeing offered at any college andwe hope you will take full ad¬vantage of the opportunities itoffers.GEORGE W. BEADLEUNIVERSITY PRESIDENT DaleyAs Mayor of Chicago, and per¬sonally, I am happy to havethe opportunity,through the col-u m n s of TheChicago Maroon,to welcome tothe local scenethe out-of-citystudents of theUniversity ofChicago.We’re all veryproud of thegreat Universityon the Midway and its standingamong the finest of the world’sinstitutions of higher learning,and we feel that the young menand women who are enrolledthere have every reason to con¬sider themselves fortunate. To allof them, Chicago offers many ad¬vantages and among these is theopportunity for the exercise ofthe training they receive at theUniversity.My very best wishes to thefaculty and to the student bodyupon the opening of the fall term.RICHARD J. DALEYMAYOR OF CHICAGODespresYou are heartily welcome tothe community which surroundsand includesthe Universityof Chicago. Al-though youyourselves as in¬dividuals mayfeel that yourhome is else¬where and thatyou are hereonly temporari¬ly, you are ac¬tually a perma¬nent, continuous part of our com¬munity. The residents accept youas permanent, because we alwayssee a continuous student body;and we view students as perma¬nent residents even though indi¬vidual students may come and goat their own intervals., Our community—your commu¬nity—includes both Hyde Parkand Woodlawn. Hyde Park is anestablished, predominantly middleclass neighborhood associated withthe University of Chicago and ispart of the remarkable HydePark-Kenwood urban renewalarea. It is an enticing living areawhich has always enjoyed a stim¬ulating, intellectual, artistic, andsocial ferment from the leaveningpresence of the University. TheUniversity has always drawn bothUniversity personnel and a coun¬ter-university community lured bythe University’s presence.Hyde Park’s independent polit¬ical action, consumers cooperative,K $ A K K ft $ & $ unusual community newspapers,Harper Court artisans’ center,civil liberties tradition, “Peacemovement,” exceptional churchesand synagogues, and parks andlakefront create an extraordinary,attractive area. It is becomingovercrowded; it is a little over¬priced; and it is a little under¬furnished with miscellaneous sup¬pliers such as pipe dealers, auto¬mobile servicemen, and fancy del¬icatessen keepers.Woodlawn, although it does notlook as beautiful as Hyde Park,has extraordinary social beautiesfor those who can see them. It ispart of the segregated black hous¬ing area, afflicted with more thanits share of unemployment andpoverty, but definitely on the wayup. It houses The Woodlawn Or¬ganization, the Blackstone Rang¬ers, the East Side Disciples, anda host of formal and informalsocial organizations. It includesthe greatest imagineable fermentof social activity. Whatever interests you—litera¬ture, art, integration, black power,health problems, youth develop¬ment, guaranteed annual income,family structure, public education,public aid, job training, linguistics,choral singing, good Chinese food(1318 E. 63rd St.), or just wildnames on buildings, you will findit in unique state and sometimesin its rawest state (except theChinese food) in Woodlawn.If you have time to take partin the community activities, thereis work for you to do. For ex¬ample, the aldermanic office al¬ways needs research and librarywork.Our community has problemsand challenges for you to shareand assets for you to enjoy. Bepart of us while you are here.LEON M. DESPRESFIFTH WARD ALDERMANTurin 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. SEDGWICK WH 4-8865M-F 2:00 • 8:30 SAT. & SUN. 10-8Closed Thursdays. CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER"A MAN & A WOMAN"In Color Anouk AimeeSun-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 1:30rFranklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd Street Get Chicago’s besttemporary jobs... andthe bestsalariestoo!We need skilled:SecretariesTypistsClerksationistseepersSwitchboard OperatorsKeypunch OperatorsComputer OperatorsOne North Wacker Drivet ChicagoPhone: 372-8352 (312):« domed ^foridt W.:<»: 1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO. ILL 60615 >:mt^aPhone: FA 4-1651j r/iu/iCe r a T-iwxSi M. Of. Hf. Si Hf. Si Si Si RMMMERDM.. if you read but one book this year, Dr. Frankl'sbook should be that one." —Lo* Angeles TimesMan Ts Search for MeaningVIKTOR E. FRANKLA famous psychiatrist vividly describes his ex¬periences In Dschau and Auschwitz and his formu¬lation of an existential psychotherapy based ona dynamic and humanistic view of modem man."A gem of dramatic narrative, focused upon thedeepest of human problem* ... a compelling in¬troduction to the most significant psychologicalmovement of our day."—Cordon Allport, HarvardUniversity• WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS paperback 60*Washington Square Press Is alto pleased to announcethe publication of the selected papers of Viktor E. Frtnkl:PSYCHOTHERAPY AND EXISTENTIALISM"Frankl expresses In an illuminating manner that which la properlyunderstood at the existential question.**— Gabriel Marcel$4.95 hardcoverWASHINGTON SQUARF PRESS. INC. n!w yorkVy^oo^o The new Plymouth RoadRunnernow at your Plymouth Vealeriwhere the beatgoes on.ffalter aui»» sw>...iw un, i»«.September 29, 1U7 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • 3Chicago Has Complex Power HierarchyBy DAVID L. AIKENExecutive Editor“The University is a vastbureaucratic labyrinth—.4 University of Chicago stu¬dent“This place is not a bureau¬cracy. As a matter of fact,power is so decentralized thatstudents don’t know whomakes decisions, so they thinkit must all be the administra¬tion—Former Dean of StudentsWarner A. W ickThe “power structure” of auniversity like the University ofChicago looks very little like theusual corporate chain of com¬mand, with neat lines going down¬ward into lower echelons.While decisions about businessmatters do tend to come out ofa neat, bureaucratic heirarchy,things that have to do with aca¬demic matters are decided at allsorts of locations of power—everywhere from the mind of anindividual faculty member, forsome things, to the meeting roomsof the top administrative pooh-bahs.Curriculum Set By TeachersFaculty within a departmenthave pretty nearly complete con¬trol over what courses are of¬fered in that department. Whois to join them as collegues onthe faculty, and who are to beaccepted as students. In thesematters, they work with andthrough the chairman of the de¬partment, who is the man pri¬marily responsible for the repu¬tation and quality of his depart¬ment.If a faculty member teachesone of the general educationcourses in the College, he willhave an equal say on the basicdesign of the course along withthe rest of the staff of thatcourse.He will probably also serve onone or more of a multitude ofcommittees which design pro-grams for each of the "CollegiateDivisions,” or “sub-colleges,” un¬der the guidance of the masterof each division < sort of an aca¬demic ward boss). Representa¬tives from the Collegiate Divi¬sions meet in the College Coun¬cil, which decides basic questions on the over-all structure of theCollege and its curriculum, suchas the number and nature of therequired generau education cour¬ses.Council at the TopFaculty members make themost far-reaching policy decisionson academic matters for thewhole university in the Councilof the Faculty Senate, a repre¬sentative body in which each de¬partment is given seats by pro¬portional representation.Acting as a sort of steeringcommittee for the 51-memberCouncil is the seven-member com-mitteee of the Council. The Com¬mittee considers everything that’sgoing to be discussed by theCouncil as a whole, and reportsits recommendations for discus¬sion.The overriding prestige of theProvost and of the President, whoare non-voting members of bothbodies and can initiate considera¬tion of matters by the Council,gives them a good deal of cloutwhen they have a proposal thatmust be approved by the faculty.Deans in Swivel ChairsTrying to co-ordinate some ofthe pullings and tuggings of de¬partments are the deans of thefour graduate divisions—SocialSciences, Humanities, PhysicalSciences, and Biological Sciences(which includes the medicalschool). These deans, plus the dean ofthe College and the deans of theseven professional schools, act asbuffers between the pressurefrom faculty members and de¬partment heads within each divi¬sion or school and the necessitiesdictated by pressures from thecouncils and administrators whofigure out how much can be spentfor what purposes, when a newbuilding is going to be built, etc.The deans, like the departmentchairmen, have a touchy position—they need to keep the peoplein their division happy, but theysometimes h^ve to step on toesto accomplish what needs to beaccomplished, such as perhapsrenovating a stodgy department,or setting up a new program.Provost as NucleusAt the center of the academicorbit sits the provost. WhenPresident Beadle appointed Ed¬ward H. Levi to this post, thepowers of the position were great¬ly expanded. Where formerly thejob was rather loosely defined—“The Provost shall have generalresponsibility under the Presidentfor the educational operations ofthe University”—a change in By¬laws in 1963 specified severalpowers, some of which had form¬erly been excereised, on paper atleast, by the president.The provost is supposed to"take the initiative in proposingplans and action in academicrFvc>Jl/lubic V1438 EAST 57th STREETTnnouncesFALL SEASON-1967-1968Starting September 18MODERN DANCE by JOANNA HALL, M.A.BALLET by SAMUEL KURKJIANMODERN JAZZ by LOUIS CONTEREGISTRATION BEGINS SEPTEMBER 6DAILY FROM 2:30 TO 6:00 P.M.For information and pre-registration call BU 8-3500PETERSONSUltra-Modern Storage Facilities Protect Your Possessions"CONTAINERIZED CARE"Our beautiful new warehouse features everyadvance in scientific storage . . alarm gong,anti-fire sprinklers, humidity control, insulatedwalls, dust-free floors ... to mention a few. Our "Containerized Care" eliminates piece-by¬piece re-handling . . . assures maximum speed,safety, economy. Each item is wrapped, andpadded then packed in giant, sturdy containers.PETERSON moving & storage co.DAILY PICKUP IN UNIVERSITY AREAphone: 646-4411 Authorized Agent for Unitod Von LinosServing the Greeter Hyde Pork Ares Since 1911III. MC 1991 matters, in reviewing and imple¬menting educational programsand policies, and in meeting andconsulting with Deans, Chairmen,Directors, and members of facul¬ties.”In effect, the Provost has finalauthority to approve recommen¬dations from departments and di¬visions on new faculty members,promotions, and fidings. He alsopasses on chairmen of depart¬ments when they are selected bythe faculty in their departments,though the president must form¬ally give the final seal of ap¬proval of these appointments.The Academic AdministratorsIn the 1963 changes, numerousadministrative officers were putdirectly under the supervision ofthe provost, rather than underthe president and the provost to¬gether.Among them were the dean ofstudents, whose office handlesmultitudes of matters that direct¬ly affect students.Dean of Students CharlesO’Connell supervises:1. The admissions office, di¬rected by Anthony Pallett, w'hichdirectly handles only College ad¬missions, but also keeps track ofthe people that graduate depart¬ ments and schools have admitted.A faculty advisory committee ineach department and in the Col¬lege goes through all the appli¬cations, though in the College ad¬missions process most of the data-gathering has to be done by theadmissions office staff.2. Student financial aid. Againeach unit has its own way ofparcelling out the loaves and fish¬es; in the College there’s a di¬rector of College a i d RobertBovinette, to hold the purse¬strings.3. Student health and studentmental health clinics. These of¬fer free medical and psycho¬therapeutic help for any stu¬dents who need them. Thoughstudent health director RichardH. Moy and mental health clinicdirector John Kramer are in fullcharge as professionals in theirTurn to Page 14SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"since m*PICKUP a DELIVERY SERVICE52 l Lake Park493-5200JESSELSON’SSIRVING NYM PAJLK POB ©VI* N VtA*Bwith thi vnrr boy andFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2170, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9184 1840 I. 9I>4Looks great...writes great...is great!EBERHARD FABER’SNOBLOFDESK SETwith your college emblemTwo famous N0BL0T Ball-PointPens—one black, one red—setin modern chrome holders ondeep-lustre black base.(Handsome, handy, perfect foryour desk. $298(with emblem)at college bookstore only; Pick up an Eberhard Faber TR 35<® writer, toe. With Parma-moist™ tip..Writes with a thin, strong line every time! Black, blue, red, green. 494,4 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29. 1947Hyde Park: An Intellectual NeighborhoodBEFORE AND AFTER: The view down 55th St. from Lake Park Ave. as if looked in the mid-1950's (left) and the same view after urban renewal..** ' *» ■** ' * ■By DAVID L. AIKENExecutive EditorWhat makes Hyde Parkstand out, not only amongneighborhood areas within Chi¬cago, but among communitiesacross the country?There is no single answer. Ob¬viously, not every neighborhoodin the country has a first-rateuniversity in its midst. But HydePark was a little out of the or¬dinary even before the Universitycame here in 1892.At that time the village ofHyde Park was inhabited by up¬per class professionals most ofwhom had a decidedly liberalbent. The community’s own co¬operative supermarket, now locat¬ed in the 55th St. shopping center,is a product of early traditions ofliberal thought.When Marshall Field gave theland for a new University of Chi¬cago campus in Hyde Park, theinflux of faculty, students, andhangers-on set a new tone of evenmore liberality and intellectualferment.The 1892 World’s Fair (calledthe “Columbian Exposition”),which was held along the Mid¬way area, bequeathed to theneighborhood an area called the“Art Colony,” which stood along57th St. between Stony Island av¬enue and the IC railroad tracks.This double row of small stores,noted for their candy-cottonGothic decorations, housed at var¬ious times such artists and think¬ers as Theodore Dreiser, CarlSandburg, Sherwood Anderson,and Thorstein Veblen.The small craftsmen who were“urban-renewed” out of the ArtColony have either gone out ofbusiness or moved to HarperCourt, a eulture-cum-commereecenter opened two years ago. Itwas pushed through in the inter¬ests of preserving such smallshopkeepers by a group of public-spirited Hyde Parkers led by Mu¬riel Beadle, wife of the Chicagopresident.Tourist AttractionLuckily for the craftsmen andshopkeepers, Harper Court hasbecome somthing of a touristattraction in itself. People of allsorts can be seen licking icecream cones from the Baskin-Robbins store while browsingthrough one of the bookstores orartsy-craftsy shops.People of some sorts can alsobe seen standing around on thecorner nearby—sometimes engag¬ing in spirited banter with the lo¬cal constabulary, which is ever onthe lookout for elements whichmight disrupt the placid, bour¬geois tranquility.While the “hippy” set is notentirely absent, craftsmen andpublic-spirited citizens are exam¬ples of the type of person forwhich Hyde-Park is noted. Most¬ly middle class, the neighborhoodis composed largely of profession¬als, artists, and university people.One way of observing the kindof people who are attracted to Hyde Park is to attend a form ofentertainment called the “HydePark party.’* Only at Hyde Parkparties can you choose among theactivities of dancing, getting ston¬ed, and discussing Plato, birthcontrol, Dostoevski, or urban re¬newal.Pot SimmersSupplementing the traditionalbooze-and-Beatles party in recentyears has been what can be call¬ed the "pot party,” which is reallyjust a few friends or friends offriends getting together in a darkroom and “turning on” with mari¬juana or, sometimes, LSD.According to a study done lastyear by Maroon reporter SladeLander, about 18 per cent of theUniversity people have tried pot atleast once—some, of course, turnon with pot as often as other peo¬ple turn on the TV.While the percentage wouldprobably be considerably higher ifonly students in the College wereconsidered, it still amounts toonly a small proportion of thetotal Hyde Park community.There is actually little in theway of a “hippy scene” in HydePark—most of those interested inpsychedelia as a way of life windup in Old Town—if they stay inChicago at all. Hyde Park pot-heads tend to look upon drugs assimply a pleasant form of enter¬tainment and escape, not as some¬thing central to their lives, andonly a few "cliques” of regularacidheads exist, not a whole turn¬ed-on subculture as one can findin Haight-Ashbury in San Fran¬cisco.Liberality Over AllAlthough some of the older andmore conservative residents of thearea may get upset about drugs, or bongo-playing at the lakesidePoint and similar youthful ex¬uberance, most Hyde Parkers arewilling to co-exist with all sortsof minor deviations. Middle-classis the predominant way of life,but liberality and tolerance is thepredominant ideology.The atmosphere of liberalism isin evidence in many ways. Poli¬tically, Hyde Park has alwaysbeen an ornery corner of inde¬pendence from the city machine.The present 5th ward alderman.Leon M. Despres, continues a longtradition of independent-mindedgadflies on the body of the citycouncil.Though Despres, a Chicagoalumnus, is white, he has consist¬ently pushed for measures forequal Negro rights, such as astrong city open occupancy ordin¬ance. (Wags have commented thatDespres wras the “only Negro onthe City Council” for many years.There are really ten Negroes onthe Council, but except for threeindependents they are part of theDemocratic machine and they donot make militant civil rights de¬mands.)Despres also espouses such fa¬vorite causes of Hyde Parkers asfighting Mayor Daley wheneverthe opportunity presents itself.One of the best shows in town,for sheer dramatic tension, canbe encounters between Despresand Daley's floor manager on theCity Council, Aid. Thomas Keane(47th).Since Keane controls the ma¬chine bloc of the council, andDespres has only one or two con¬sistent allies on the body, the re¬sults of these battles are usuallyforegone conclusions. He can putup a pretty good try, though. Among the 5th ward aldermenwho preceded Despres are one¬time Professor of Economics PaulH. Douglas, a long-time HydeParker who went on to the U. S.Senate and served with distinctionuntil last year’s defeat by CharlesH. Percy, a University trustee.Community SpiritThe Hyde Park “spirit” fea¬tures a strong sense of communi¬ty participation. Residents hereare noted for their active interestin their neighborhood, and thedozens of community organiza¬tions they have formed.This sense of interest and ac¬tion, plus the hetexogenity of thepopulation, was crucial during theperiod of the early 1950’s.At that time, Hyde Park wasexperiencing a decline in stan¬dards of housing. During the Sec¬ond World Wai\ Chicago industryexpanded greatly for the war ef-for; the availability of jobs at¬tracted large numbers of Negroesfrom the South, and other work¬ers into the city.Coinciding with this influx wasa decision by the U. S. SupremeCourt in 1947 barring racially re¬strictive covenants in sale of realestate. These factors resulted inbreaks in the borders of the“ghetto” area; many Negroesmoved into Hyde Park fiom thenorth and west, crossing whathad been the “natural borders”of 47th and Cottage Grove Ave.Post-War CrisisMany white residents fled forthe suburbs; fear of crime in¬creased. In 1949, some residentsmet to discuss the problem. Theyagreed that white families shouldnot panic, but stay in the neigh¬borhood.To dissolve inter-racial tension, and to work on problems of up¬keep in the neighborhood, suchas illegal conversions and lack ofadequate services, residents form¬ed the Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Conference (HPKCC) inFebruary 1950.Much of the Conference’s workwas at first done by block clubs.To reduce tensions, Negro fami¬lies moving into a block were in¬vited to the next meeting of theblock club.HPKCC thought of itself as atruly “grass roots” organization,and at its peak about one resi¬dent in five was in some way—•formally or informally—connect¬ed with it.But the Conference could notmarshall enough support and re¬sources to take action againstmany sources of decline. Whatwas needed was the support of theneighborhood which owned agreat amount of land, employedmany residents, had lots ofmoney—the University of Chica¬go.Early AttitudeChicago’s chancellor at thetime. Robert Maynaxd Hutchins,could not be bothered. WhenHPKCC leaders arranged a meet¬ing with him in 1951, Hutchins isreported to have greeted themcordially and then announced “Iam sorry to have to be abrupt butI have another meeting whichI'm obliged to attend. All I cansay is that I am personallystrongly in favor of a Universitypolicy of racial non-discrimina¬tion.”According to former Professorof Sociology Peter Rossi's book,The Politics of Urban Renewal,University real estate officersthen indicated clear disagreementwith the Confexence’s aims andpolicies.Most of the University’s actionin the neighborhood before 1952,aecoi’ding to Rossi, consisted ofsubsidizing organizations concern¬ed with enforcement of housingcodes, extension of restrictive eon-venants and (after 1948) “con¬servation agreements.”In 1952, however, Lawrence A.Kimpton successded Hutchins aschancellor, and made saving theneighborhood one of his primaryobjectives.The problem by then had be¬come ui-gent. Faculty memberswere leaving because they fearedfor the safety of their families.Parents often objected to lettingtheir children attend Chicago be¬cause of the neighborhood.Community leaders approach¬ed Kimpton for help; they sched¬uled a mass meeting in MandelHall for March 27, 1952.The night before the meeting,an instructor’s wife was kidnap¬ped; the resultant publicity forthe meeting produced an over¬flow crowd.At the meeting, a “Commit¬tee of Five” including Kimpton,was chosen to draw' up a pro¬gram. It met and proposed a neworganization to deal with crimeTurn to Page 14The Chicago MaroonAT THE POINT: Part of Hyde Park's hippie community gathers to commune with natureand enjoy the wholesome outdoors.September 29. 1967 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • S\ . ./Changes In College Never Cease'ontinued from Page 3ties, and social sciences."The College’’ was given controlinly over the first two years ofvork, formerly the period of thejunior college.” The graduateichools took over from the old'senior college,” and the third andourth-year programs were more*losely linked to graduate pro¬grams.A college faculty, largely au-onomous and divorced from thelivisions, came into being. A staff;ame into existence for each Col¬lege course and planned it. Syllabiivere introduced to encourage in-lependent study. Class attendanceivas made voluntary.The curriculum applied Hutch¬ins’ theory of a universal schemejf education: “Education impliesteaching. Teaching implies knowl¬edge. Knowledge is truth. Truthis everywhere the same. Henceeducation should everywhere bethe same.”What Should Be KnownThe course of study in the Col¬lege consisted of “the greatestbooks of the Western World, andthe arts ol' reading, thinking, andspeaking, together with mathe¬matics, tlie best explainer of hu¬man reason," said Hutchins. Sucha curriculum would “endure theelements of our common humannature.” This course of studycould help “prepare the young forintelligent action. . . . They willhave learned what has been donein the past and what the great¬est men have thought. They willhave learned to think for them¬selves. If we wish to lay a basisfor advanced study, that basis isprovided." In addition, the Col¬lege would serve as a terminusfor those students who would endtheir formal education in it.Graduation from the junior col¬lege was to be based on the com¬pletion of seven comprehensiveexams: English composition, biol¬ogy, physical sciences, humanities,social sciences, and two electivesequences which represented asecond full year of work in two ofthe four general subject matterareas.Mathematics and a foreign lan¬guage were also required, butthey were submitted by moststudents as having been completedin high school. Instruction inmathematics was not even offeredin the College; students could ful¬fill the requirement only throughthe home study division.Comp Exams IntroducedUnder the new plan, a stepwhich was to last in some degreeright up to the present was intro¬duced uniform comprehensive ex¬ams. Under the new system, stu¬dents could proceed at their ownrate and could take an examwhenever thev felt ready for it.AH courses were compulsory ex¬cept for English Composition,which could lie avoided by place¬ment.In 1933, jurisdiction over thelast two years of the Universityhigh school was transferred to theCollege faculty, but it was notuntil 1937 that the new four yearentity was recognized officially asthe “College.”Then in 1936, prior to this offi¬cial recognition of the College, afaculty curriculum review recom¬mended further undergraduatechanges. Fifteen comprehensiveswere required for graduation.HYDE PARKVALET SERVICE1429 E. Hyde Park Blvd.BU 8-8811CALL and DELIVER Three in humanities, three insocial sciences, three in reading,writing and criticism, three yearsof a combination of physical andbiological sciences, one year ofphilosophy, and two years of elec¬tives. In adidtion, students wereexpected to prove competence ina foreign language and in math¬ematics.W W II ChangesThen came World War II and agreat decline in enrollment. Fac¬ulty members took advantage ofthe paucity of students, however,to turn once again to the develop¬ment of undergraduate education.The result was another changedCollege in 1942. The two and fouryear programs were combined,and the “Hutchins B.A." wasawarded upon the completion ofthe general education require¬ment.Several course changes weremade at this time. Mathematics,History of Western -Civilizationand general language studycourses were introduced, and Hu¬manities III was changed so asto accommodate work in a foreignlanguage.As a result of this, by 1950 thetwo year B.A. program found it¬self in trouble. Other colleges,when considering applications forgraduate schools, could not lookon the two year B.A. as represent¬ing more than two years work.Thus, students who had spentthree or four years at Chicagowere not being given credit fortheir extra time. Enrollmentdropped as a result.Neighborhood DecayIn 1951, amid dropping enroll¬ment and a steadily worseningneighborhood situation, LawrenceA. Kimpton was named chancel¬lor. He commented-at the timethat the problem with the Collegewas that it was not relating to“the total American educationalprocess.” Furthermore, althoughhe felt that the Hutchins B.A.“was the finest system of generaleducation that the U. S. had everseen,” he finally decided to stopcontinuing to award it.Kimpton’s decision took con¬crete shape in 1954, when the Fil-bey Report, composed by thenVice President, Emery T. Filbey,added one year of specializationto the 14-comp B.A. program. TheB.A. according to Filbey’s reportwas to be awarded jointly by theCollege and the divisions thus re¬ducing the College’s autonomy.The College immediately coun¬tered with its still-existing tu¬torial studies and professionaloption programs.The Filbey Report met with agreat deal of opposition. Through¬out 1954 students demonstrated infront of the administration build¬ing, in front of Kimpton’s home,and outside of faculty senatemeetings. Nevertheless, the reportwas enacted, and four years laterthe College was modified stillfurl her.The New New CollegeA committee appointed byKimpton took over a year <1957-“Fall semester notes: AlgerHiss announces he wilt teach acourse on the New Deal (in which“7 was a participant and knewsome of the people who made im¬portant decisions'’) and also writea book about it. The course, sug¬gested by himself, starts October 5at the New School for SocialResearch and ends November 16.On November 11 Hiss will besixty-three. 58) to come up with its recom¬mendation, but the final resulthas great bearing on the Collegeof today. The comittee’s reportestablished the College as a com¬plete four year institution, devot¬ing two years of work to generaleducation, one year to specializa¬tion, and one year to “free andguided electives.” Concentrationrequirements, the report said,could in no case amount to morethan two and a half years of work.Perhaps more important, theCollege faculty was re-empoweredto determine the degree require¬ments for its various programsand to actually award the degrees,thus returning to it the autonomythat it has lost in 1954.Alan Simpson was appointed in1959 to administer this "New NewCollege” program as dean of theCollege. He said at the time that“we have balanced the claims ofspecialized training against thoseof general education. We haveweighed the claims of individualchoice against an earlier faith inuniformity. . . .”Simpson Cuts CompsSimpson’s first move was to re¬duce the number of comps to ten.This left two years for each ofhumanities and social sciences, oneyear for each of foreign language,English composition, mathemat¬ics, physical sciences, biologicalsciences, and two quarters of thehistory of Western civilization.Two years ago, however, Simp¬son resigned to take up a newpost as president of Vassar. Asuccessor was not immediatelynamed, but Provost Edward Levitook on the added duty of actingdean of the College.His main task wras to meet withfaculty, students, and other ad¬ministrators, to sound them outon their opinions of the College atChicago.As a result of his deliberations,Levi proposed a reorganization ofthe decision-making machinery ofthe College. The major singlerevision was breaking up the col¬lege into five “collegiate divi¬sions,” each under its own “mas¬ter.” This change was aimed atproviding a way for students’ pro¬grams in the College to be moreclosely related to graduate pro¬grams.Levi always felt there must beclose integration between generaland specialized education. Hewanted to provide a structure inwhich this integration would beeasy, and in which faculty whohad taught only graduate levelcourses would be attracted to un¬dergraduate courses.The Revolu¬tion will befifty.” J fer « free copy of thecurrent issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writeto Dept. CP-t, 150 E.35 St., N.Y., N.Y. 10016ATTENTIONMBA — EVENING STUDENTSTHE CONTINENTAL ILLINOIS NATIONAL BANK HAS A CHALLENGINGOPPORTUNITY IN THE COMPTROLLER'S DEPARTMENT. IF YOU ARE ANEVENING STUDENT WITH A MAJOR AREA OF CONCENTRATION IN:-FINANCE- -ACCOUNTING- - QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS-PLEASE CALL8:30 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. MONDAY - FRIDAY828-2440 With help from a faculty com¬mittee, Levi found a new dean ofthe college—Wayne C. Booth, whohad been professor of Englishsince 1962 and had won somefame with his award-winningbook, "The Rhetoric of Fiction.”Levi and Booth then appointedmasters of the collegiate divisions,and all set about to design a newcurriculum which would meet thegoal of greater integration be¬tween specialized and general ed¬ucation.The first task of the curriculum-planners was designing a newgeneral education sequence. TheLevi Plan called for "a year incommon,” to ensure that all stu¬dents shared some common coreof experiences, but did not specifyjust what should be common.Booth and the masters came upwith a rather radical plan, callingfor all students to take somethingto be called "Liberal Arts I” intheir first year. While the basictypes of learnings that the studentshould acquire in the course wouldhave broad latitude in the materi¬als to be covered and the teachingmethods to be used.This proposal ran into trouble.It was submitted December 1965.just a few weeks before the Col¬lege Council, the policy-makingbody of the College facully, wasscheduled to meet and act uponit. It was also too radical formany faculty members. A num¬ber said that the old curriculumwasn’t really all that bad, themore they really thought about it.The College TodayEventually, the decision waspostponed until the spring. A Col¬lege-wide conference on liberaleducation in late January inter¬vened, during which students andfaculty got together to discussideas on what a College educationshould be and do. Finally, the Col¬lege Council, in effect, reached acompromise based largely on thestatus quo.Presently four common corecourses—social sciences, human¬ities, biological sciences, and phys¬ical sciences—are required of en¬tering students. The collegiatedivision in charge of rach of thesecourses has the task of decidingjust what will be offered.In most cases, little change wasmade from previous courses. Thephysical sciences course, for ex¬ample, remains essentially un¬changed with the exception of itstwo new variants. For humanitiesand social sciences, entering stu¬dents are given a choice betweenDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6666EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT IINSISNEWEST STYLING IN PftAMK courses that very closely resemblethe old Humanities 1 and II andSocial Sciences I and II.However, a relic of the radicalBooth proposal remains. LiberalArts I is now taught as an ex¬periment to a group of enteringstudents randomly selected fromthe general population who re¬ceived and accepted invitations totake the course. If this experi¬ment continues to be as successfulas many have called it, presum¬ably it will be a strong contenderfor permanent status.Together with the common corecourses are other core courses re¬quired by the collegiate divisionin which the student is enrolled.Courses within the student’s ma¬jor field and electives make upthe remainder of the requirementsfor his degree.Last year the College’s gradingpolicies came under lire by a spe¬cial committee appointed byBooth. Grades at Chicago aresignificantly lower than at com¬parable schools, the committeeconcluded, and recommended al¬terations in the College’s practices.Specifically, it called for the Im¬plementation of a number ofmeasures involving pass and no¬credit grading in courses on alllevels. The College Council hasnot yet decided whether to effectthe changes this year.Much is still in flux with regardto the programs of the collegiatedivisions as the third year of studyapproaches for the students newlyentered into the brave new ex¬periment in curriculum designing.But v. hatever new programs areinitiated, one thing is certain:they will be changed, sooner orlater.KLHCOMPACT PHONOS &STEREO-FM SYSTEMSTHE FRET SHOP“in Harper Court"AUDIO CONSULTANTS’60“Two Macintosh BasicMC 30. EachTwo Macintosh C • SmaOOPro-Amps. Sack ZUPERFECT CONDITIONCall 254-4785 or 521-0440VTT SALOttExpertPermenent WevingHeir CuttingendTintingl Mad ft. m ft-Welcome Back ...Our Best Wishes ...THE BOOK CENTERis Harper Court5211 So. Harper Ml 3-1880Your “CENTER” for Boooks* South of the Loop♦Widest Selection of Quality Books and Magaiinet In The Area.Great Posters ToolSee us 7 days a week fill 1J p.m.4 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29, 1967Woodlawn: University's Black NeighborOUTSIDE AGITATORS? Maybe so, but a more fundamental rea¬son for summer riots lies in scenes like this.f ' * •-?" - i \ ■ - -By DAVID L. AIKENEiecufive EditorWoodlawn, the University’sneighbor south of the Midwayis clearly on its way up.Its problem is that it has sofar to climb.While this practically all-Negroarea has all the qualifications ofa full-fledged urban black ghetto,it has developed a form of com¬munity organization which maybe able to help Woodlawn resi¬dents lift themselves to betterlives.East Wood lawn’s northernboundary is 60th St. It runs toabout 70th St. between CottageQrove Ave. to the west, andStony Island Ave. to the east.(“West Woodlawn,” from CottageGrove to State St., is not as over¬crowded as East Woodlawn.!Eighty-six per cent of East Wood-lawn’s 60.000 residents are Negro,and three per ceht are PuertoRicans. ' vWoodlawn residents suffer fromall the ills of a Negro slum ahigh proportion of dilapidated, un¬healthy and overcrowded housing,inadequate schools, lack of fairjob opportunities, and infectionfrom vandals,, prostitutes, andother criminal' elements.Beset with ProblemsRetween 1950 and 1960, Wood-lawn’s population underwent amassive exchange of Negro andwhite population; just under 40,-000 whites left, and were re¬placed by almost 40.500 non¬whites. With this change came amuch higher proportion of chil¬dren, putting a tremendous strainon the neighborhood’s schools.In East Woodlawn, 12.2 per¬cent of the non-white male popu¬lation w'ere unemployed in 1960,compared to 3.8 percent of themale white labor force in Chica¬go. Estimates of unemploymentamong Negro youths in areassuph as Woodlawn run as highas 50 percent for high schoolgraduates • and 70 percent fordropouts.While the bulk of Woodlawnresidents are law-abiding, t h eWoodlawn community ranks asone of the highest arrest rateareas in Chicago. Most adultcriminals from Woodlawn havehad very little education, andsome may, in desperation, turn toshoplifting, burglary, or pettyracketeering.The most obvious problem tothe eye in Woodlawn is the over¬crowded housing. Virtually halfof the housing units are dilapi¬dated, deteriorated, or lack basicplumbing, compared to less thanone quarter of the units in thecity as a whole. The average rentin 1960 ranged from $26 to $33per room in Woodlawn, com¬ pared to $22.43 in the rest of thecity.Forces in Its FavorWhile the neighborhood clear¬ly has a lot going against it,there are several forces workingin its favor.Primary among these is TheWoodlawn Organization (TWO),probably the first and still one ofthe strongest community organi¬zations in an all-black communi¬ty of any American city.A fairly new ally of TWO, butone that has always been inter¬ested in the state of Woodlawn,is the University. _Sinee the earlydays of battle with TWO over theUniversity’s efforts to take overall of the South Campus area,between 60th and 61st Sts. alongthe Midway, several co-operativeventures have been started inwhich University resources arebeing used for Woodlawn.Finally, some progress is attri¬butable to programs of public andprivate social agencies. These in¬clude, notably, the Woodlawn Ur¬ban Progress Center, a multi¬purpose social agency supportedby the war on poverty, and thecity and federal urban renewalprograms, which are funding theredevelopment of sizeable chunksof Woodlawn territory.Rangers Keeping CoolSurprisingly, perhaps, one oftho- forces that must be countedamong the positive factors inbringing some form of organiza¬tion to Woodlawn is tlie vastgang, or group of gangs, knownas the Blaekslone Rangers.Arising in the past three orfour years out of a hodge-podgeof neighborhood gangs, the Rang¬ers amount to a sort of super¬gang. Chieftains of each of theseveral small gangs, such as the“Apache Rangers” and “ManiacRangers,” each with its own sec¬tion of the area, gel together inregular “councils” usually heldat the First Presbyterian ’Churchat 64th and Dorchester.The church has lent its facili¬ties to the Rangers, without try¬ing too hard to interfere in theiractivities. “We recognize the in¬tegrity of the gang and its lead¬ers,” says the church’s associatepastor, Harold Walker.In the last year, several de¬velopments have indicated thatthis policy is paying off.Opportunity KnockingUsing the “First Presby’s faci¬lities for a theater. Ranger mem¬bers last spring organized a musi¬cal show, called “Opportunity,Please Knock,” which attractedcity-wide attention and received-'enthusiastic reviews for its spiritand verve.The show, originally producedby entertainer Oscar Brown, ,Tr.,has since been organized into Only Woodlawn people, how¬ever, in the opinion of many, canprovide their own sense of “self¬determinal ion.” of a kind of pridewhich can pass as a form of“black power.”BUT THINGS DO CHANGEwas dosed down last year. The Chicago Maroon"Baby Skid Row," pictured here, While TWO probably attractsonly a small proportion of Wood¬lawn residents into active partici¬pation in its meetings and de¬cisions, it still offers a really lo¬cal structure for Woodlawn peo¬ple to do somethng about Wood-lawn’s problems. It may be de¬veloping signs of middle-aged bu¬reaucratization, bul it’s probablythe strongest thing Woodlawnpeople have going for themselves.OPK. Incorporated, and went onthe road during the summer. Itwon notice in the CongressionalRecord of August 21, in whichSecond Congressional DistrictRepresentative Barratt O’Harainserted a report from a Lutherannewspaper on the show’s visit toValpariso University in Indiana.The Rangers took the show toValpariso on “Bud Bijliken day.”August 12, which i,s a traditionaltime in Chicago for a parade em¬phasizing “black power,” and of¬ten features some form of vio¬lence.Help in a PinchDuring a tense situation August1, in which a crowd began mill¬ing around a liquor store whichhad been the scene of a fatalshooting the day before, theRanger leaders were reported tohave given crucial help to thepolice, by pointing out trouble¬makers in the crowd.During the entire summer, ob¬servers credited Ranger leaderswith passing around7 instructionsfor gang members to “keepcool.” There were even indica¬tions that a tentative, still touchytruce may be in effect betweenthe Rangers and their traditionalenemies, the Disciples, a similarsuper-gang which generally occu¬pies territory to the west ofWoodlawn.In the views of many peoplewatching the Woodlawn scene,the church’s w'ork with the Rang¬ers is not really as important asis the job-training p r o g r a mwhich TWO is operating, w’ith a$927,341 grant, from the Office ofEconomic Opportunity.The program will involve r.ntonly TWO but also the Univer¬sity, which will analyze the re¬sults of the program as it pro¬gresses, and the Chicago UrbanLeague, which w-ill help place the800 trainees in jobs.Allies out of EnemiesThis project is a good exampleof the kind of activity whichTWO is ifow emphasizing, nowthat it has passed out of itsmarching and picketing stage, forthe most part.Although it still holds to theline of “self-determination” forWoodlawn residents, and is jea¬lous of anybody’s attempts to in¬terfere in the community fromoutside, TWO has shown in¬creasing willingness to quietly co¬operate with its former “en¬emies.” These include notably theUniversity, and some parts of thecity government bureaucracy.In addition to its job-trainingprogram, TWO works with theUniversity’s Department of Ed¬ucation and the public school sys¬tem in council which oversees ed¬ucational research and action pro¬grams taking place in Woodlawnschools.Even the former-arch-enemy,Julian Levi, who led the Univer¬sity’s forces as head oT the Uni¬versity-supported South East Chi¬cago Commission when the squab¬ble was raging with TWC), hasbeen accepted as an ally.He and a group of law studentsin one of his seminars broughtlegal action against the owner ofa slum apartment building inWoodlawn, on behalf of tenantswhom TWO had found andpromised to support. The casehas been successfully settled, andthe city’s Chicago Dwellings As¬sociation completely rehabilitatedthe structure early this year.From Pickets to LandlordsPossibly the biggest step away THEY STRIKE BY NIGHT: The Blackstone Rangers is one of anumber of teenage gangs making life south of the Midwayhazardous.from its old stance of pure op¬position has been TWO’s assump¬tion of the new role of real es¬tate entrepreneur and landlord.The issue which startedthe whole University-Woodlawnsquabble was the University’s ef¬fort to buy up whatever land itdid not already own in the mile-long strip from Stony Island Ave.to Cottage Grove Ave., between60th and 61st Sts.This effort, announced in July1960, quite naturally perturbedWoodlawn residents, since manyof them lived in the area, andsome still resented the Univer¬sity’s role in displacing manyfamilies from Hyde Park to makethat area safe for the middleclass.Brickbats to BricksAfter three years of more-or-less acrimonious debate the Uni¬versity and TWO, which had beenformed primarily around theland-grab issue in the first place,agreed that nobody would be dis¬placed from the South Campusarea, as the stretch of land wascalled, until housing for most ofthem was ready somewhere else.This year, TWO took upon it-self the task df providing that“somewhere else.”In co-operation with the KateM a r e m o n t Foundation, a non¬profit coropration which has spe¬cialized in finding innovative waysto alleviate slum housing prob¬lems, TWO will build 540 town-houses and apartments on astretch of land along CottageGrove Ave., from 60th to about63rd St.The TWO- K a t e MaremontFoundation partnership was ap¬proved as developer of the areaby the city’s Department of Ur¬ban Renewal this summer. Theproject will be built with a low'-interest federal loan, and will of¬fer homes for moderate rentals.Skid Row RoutedOne of TWO’s more conspicu¬ ous successes has resulted inprogress toward renewal of an¬other area of the neighborhood,along 63rd St. from Kenwood toDorchester.Formerly known as the notori¬ous “Baby Skid Row,” this one-block stretch used to feature 14liquor stores and bars. It doesn’tnow, thanks to a successful localoption election campaign Iasi No¬vember, in which residents of thelocal precinct voted to ban liquorsales in that area. TWO and lo¬cal churches were mainly respon¬sible tor the anti-liquor campaign.The blocks on both sides of63rd along that stretch are now'awaiting completion of plans foranother urban renewal project.I diversity Offers ServicesNow' that co-operation is the,byword in University-Woodlawnrelations, people at the Universityare moving toward more activeinvolvement in W ood lawn's re¬newal, and fewer “study themand get out” projects.For -example, in the lasf year,three departments have stalledwork oh sendee centers for peo¬ple in Woodlawn:• The medical school’s denart-ment of Psychiatry is running amental health center, along withthe Chicago Board of Health,under grants from city, state, andfederal agencies;• Again within the medicalschool, the Pediatrics Depart¬ment is setting up a child healthproject for complete medical careof Woodlawn children, with agrant from the U. S. Children’sBureau;• A variety of services, suchas a dav care center for chil¬dren. will be available at theSchool of Social Service’s newWoodlawn Social Services Center,now being built with federal andUniversity money.Self-Help or ServicesThe University and the citygovernment can provide services,even some jobs, such as tho^e of¬fered under the NeighborhoodYouth Corns program of the Ur¬ban Progress Center.September 29. 1967 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • 7By MIC fAEt SEIDMAN1 ' ' VA ' 1' ' ' Ai ,i • ' ■ ■ / '. '/. ■' . ’ , i • ■ - ■■'■ ■. ! ■: ’ : A'-: ' 'r'"Oa-O■ ■ ' o ^ , . ■ ■ " - .’ .7 ■ ' :-.'v '7 ' " ',’■yy y y, ' y r;;'w;'yy ■ ->y ■ 1 ‘ " .■ ^ y ■ / y.NG yry ■ ■ y y ■ y .y _,•' -A ' A^A' v.;: ,7; A //.-.'FA ' /.y'■■ .! '. ■■ ;• " A 7 ■' , o' M A■... yr //A' / ’•7. I ■ y. / y :, , y.y / ? -g' y:. • ' ■ ' y' ,. >; . / ■■ > y -■ / ■ ' - yj?f' FA...■■•y' 7";" ■ 'OvO" ■ y : 7 . ;1 ■''' 1 ■ a i ^ yy> 1 ’ - 'ICrtiii II III Norn ill ’ yy1 ' ■ !i) I’ ’"!!■ ■ .-I ,1,11.1 a ; yy m yv . yr-• i>- i ,ii i "< •' , 'Mil ,i ;'t u-if Jim • ,1' * I ■ I1 ions ,,f t iM,oi n nnext day, the last of the <7strntors trudg. d u.-auly •building, and the Universi-tba-.f o i, n<ih 1 \ 11 turn* d toAt the time it o onicd hk- nginning, NM ol thoee who watch¬ed jpa |ii!;• i, itid in tin 1966 i ••ill thrOUghl ol It a- a, -.1.!!’ ..point for a ppoctl that Wt Ult <tunlly change the l'nn*i "■indeed, inpf | -year later that sa¬in still looms as a turning point ofsorts, and it is oitain that ,will which d< \ I k q < d dui tagdemonstration and the hidd !tntl(rations v. Inch were l • veehive already permanently changedthe vocabulary ol Qhi<ago• tdent politiesVet viewed from another ptsi'eet; v<'. the rank ait-iii was a lpoint rather than a starting ptAlth, Ugh no (He i < aii/od it thCOand many Would dl pute tt «now, the political momentum gain¬ed during the sit-in could .notmaintained and while the teeming*ly irreconcUttde difft n net1 bt tv • •the Unner.dty loo < s and hui - ■ >remain, the fniMi aiimis ha'e t-channelled into quite differentructions Utah ow vh md hat - ipeeled in .tune 1Dubious \ ietoryAs fill the rank issue It-*,alternately sizzled and h.throughout much of last \i ai ,then dn d quite sudd* nly onannR.-i ary of Hie RitlH -it-in iwith a whimper, but with a bang.If t lie year ot si udy. ih bate."cor,11 oin.it o ,n !Vi d an \ 'Mng at nM it v arati nal menyy n ;.y • .. V / y :■ . ■ Ay. .yy. •.// .. y ' y ;;y ^ ■_'.■/ u,. M ' ■yy \yy "■ ■ ■ ■ ■. ■. ■■..yy y ; , y -'.r yy. : A y y yyy . ;A/yy '-y-n'yy;>y -'A ■,d ■ . yv y. ,... y: - / y■... ,;/v . iy y.;, :yy • .y; y '■ yy. ' yy-v y-./:. ;/■'.y ;. yv-. ■ y .- / . y 'y y ■ yy yy ; yyyy -yy yy"... ; y y. :■ ■ y yy x.. y, ;yy. .yyyy y ..'v A- As. -s , -.5; ■>. .. .y S y ' y-y.'-vM y"'. ;y'' s. .y v ", yyy ,. y ■. yr ■ y.../.., : yy '.yyyy My //' ;y(: yyyy.''. ' y vA .yyynv-.yv uy. vs ■■ y: , yy.y;<y / v gy yy yy. . .,»'v«'yj,y yyy.., ;s:. y y-. y;yy y yy y yggt\y; yy . yy y„ y : y* y-y ’ /■.■ ' As ■ y yy.s. '■y;-yi-y y '.Ayyu;.AyA#. fi: a yy.y.y '... • . y .. ■ yy'.; ’,y; ■ ,-y. yya- ? '.a ms ■ aa, Ay A Ays y'-. yy ny- , , - • ■ ■ ■ :n ■yyA vAyy :y yyy • y;,yyy-..y •,/•i». h iterating BtUtlamy ■ „ ',• * - y, ■ ■y>tuining point in student' - admin¬istration relations or. to trace an* dh teilota-■> • iwere still demonstrating half in funagain I e i rt ned thanreal threat of creeping footballism,and tht admin ti iti n still main¬tained enough flexibilitji to dealwith potentally more serious dis¬putes, such as a sit-in over allegedUniversity support to segregatedI ’Mg ■ i - '‘ matie • : -vm. i : a*’ r- . a :■ '.. •: a bj Simpljlti di er Hie entire housing fileto Student Government <SG) toy.s . a a 'aj 4> / |avv; |:<i;~ tThen, < iti uddi nlj th< ongoingn< •! '■ ■ imon-lous, charges of ' fail h a ere'h^intti'* a ei it ion rowand before you could say “studentpi a- , H*” tht 11 !"1 > t, , ,Has ftttt aa .. ■ .y yy:A1But although it marked no realnet It a nru lar • l)after the fact nor an authentice it waa realtylittle m ■ tha ■ particulartydramatic manifestation, one can!y iii i i *.• ■ *tait1anh pr< test inJune 1966 as the most, significant ’•, I '.S'!dinary demonstration, and among plume in the Admissions (ufice toialond heuiid.-rid parents umi the1 nr- ei \it\ u as e h >- ♦•<! d.iwti today,and-gady mingling u n h tlu- sud¬denly ubiquitous canu ru nu n andreporters.But the first euphoric hours ofthe rank sit-in baldly -uggesledthe bttter let Ihti | timf were togrow out of the student emip. —fel lings that would avaatually cul¬minate a year later in the first.-.pension of student demonstratorsat Chi'ugo m recent m« m-.ry,A Night Out.Tust a wi-ek bMOfi tin s.i -m Hieadniine 11 at ion reaeied to a nu-reroutine demonstration about hous¬ing conditions la vM had bepoinecustomary fashion. Administration■-officialsdet it he known that wom¬en would be allowed to “sign outto the flag pole” ' presumably withall the phallic implications this en¬tailed* '-o that they could paitici-pafe in the housing rally and“sleep-out’’ in the Central Quad-iaitgie. Moreover Wide, ■-•olid asever, submitted Mmeell to merctei.-ss heckling and checi I ally ad¬dressed the meeting. %’\.,w, a V ■ • k lati i the adminis¬tration chose not to challenge thestudent hold on the huiidmg. Theretoil' no police ealli d no eifurts toenter the building; iiulei d, lor the■ for da| ■ them n9A id adminis-’t) at ion !' - pon si - at all.Yet in that week thing] had•• ,■ 11 ;> . I an 1 d l m he-came clMtry jtteM : h.descef., but nlv. ,A ■ 'patiolit killi ' • ." : • ' >" ; . ;:y. 'A II"' t ‘ ■ ’ '( I o), I■ ■ ' to p a- , lie* ; . m ; v i v ■ o.. . '- <!’• ; ■ ' . : .■•at ■ A I. '' 1 - m ■ ■. . y . 1;; .I a ■ aity in ‘enst d. Although' i :1 1yy. i. " • ■ y y ■ . ■ . , •• > • ' y _. y.v:,; : „y • • •■, - ■ ! , ■ ' :' ', ... • ' ' *: ' ' rI Ilf lli/;i rrc I in ishA-el ! Men 11 II uni d, am. • ' 1 'm all '<< )n'j«- the fat ulty 1, it'!■!.' kl> di-p< lli fi a Ie\i mi i kslater when the University Senatevoted overwhe'mingly to dwcipliiK-students should the Mt-in cut berepeated rii-arly the protest, hadpo|nri/<a) pu-ition-;. - .‘-eared olfmany of those Who en-iomauiyHCted a* iniermodtui ifs ,This polarization and almosttotal tat > ol communication becamemost ObVioUS at the tail end of thedemonstration in what proved tobe a bizarre anti dimax to one otthe most bazarre affairs in the Uni-versit > ’s v'iniN-f:\e \ . nr hi-toiy.By the fourth day of the demon-i . . 1 n 11n .' 1>y ■ .'sA Ay.y ji'.i iv-'Hii ■ .yy ."y yy-;.For wteka the Uoe fettered, aloosely organlaed coahtatioa ofleft-wing groups. Students Againstthe Ranks (SAR) was quicktyi form¬ed and began to bombard the ad*ministration with treats and com¬plaints; administrators respondedfirst calmly, but then with grow¬ing impatience11 he Building Is Ours!Finally, after what seemed likeendless haggling and Ideologicalnitpicking, SAR acted On a Wed¬nesday afternoon late In the SpringQuarter, 290 students entered theAdministration Building and rivmained for four days, thereby ef¬fectively shutting down the opera¬te n of the Univei sit v.In the beginning, the rank sit-insuggested something of a carnivalatmosphere. Stum ntS gt od natur-cdly cheered with only the faintesthint of sarcasm, as then Dean ofStudents Wariui Wick, lookinghaggard but nevertheless managinga wave, emerged from tile building.They then excitedly spread them¬selves throughout the six - Mnrystructure like children exploring nforbidden ease.“The building is ours,” someoneshouted, and exhilerated studentsbegan lounging on the pluahty car¬peted fifth do II. an * ' ; ing' Mis upo p.,nicipated In theday protect, it still excites-Along . mot ionsV < imipli \ IssueThe l sue a self m as obscure endoomph x in response to new Sel¬ective Service guidelines Issuedfrom Washington, the faculty’sCount U of the University Senateelected t i unu the al andom dpractice of forming a male classank foi ■ i bent t if I ift-eli¬gible men. Those who wished toa < uM 11 alkm * d to i ubmit theirrank to draft boards in defense oftheir 2-S student deferment class¬ification. The administration assert-,ed that this procedure protectedacademic freedom while iea> ingib< i in i e of coopt i atlon or non*cooperation up to the individual.But for at least some students,the qut stmii was .not, that simple.The decision to rank brought, to ahead a number of complaints v hichhad prevh n anifested them¬selves only in sporadic and disor¬ganized outbursts. Disgust withVitena with tl on 1 w hichmen wen eh -■ ; to fi ht ! here,.disi hantmi nt w ith a I 'no- ei mi vdi cii l< n -- ma kin| bureauera • thatseemed to exclude students ehtire-j a King 11 ng d stesti foi thi' gi ad-m/ m as a whole, and a grow-i lg fear over governmt nt encroach¬ments on the sanctity of the Uni-iNT HOUSING; In the spring of 1966 there were two demonstrations. The first was’ ? " ted me University, a few weeks before the first ranking sit-in,ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29, 1967 UNPERTURBED: A secretary rabout her duties during the lc^A Point in the Cycle?lanting Days Arely came, the protest died for lackof an essential prerequisite. ToHeagy’s acute embarassment, no¬body was willing to disobey.Yet a few months later, whatHeagy failed to achieve throughfiery rhetoric more moderate stu¬dents seemingly achieved throughcalm negotiation. Although cynicsargued with considerable force thatthe University was ready to revampits policy on social rules anyway,the stark fact remained that outof protracted negotiations betweenthe Dean of Students’ Office andmoderate student groups grew avast liberalization of social visitinghours.These moderate groups, muchlike their analogues in the civilrights movement, are widely de¬spised and laughed at—frequentlywith good reason. But they never¬theless represent a sizable segmentof student opinion that puts adamper on left-wing activities.Moreover, the administration’s abil¬ity to manipulate its decisions so asto make them appear concessionsto moderate forces certainly doesthe Left no good.shown here at a student protest, bore the brunt of student gripesmore than any administrator.their differences in a rational man¬ner.Two student-faculty committeesstudied the issue and eventuallyproduced two voluminous reports,each containing a wealth of infor¬mation ; a nationwide conference onthe draft brought to the Universitythe foremost authorities in the fieldarmed with a host of schemes formaking the system more equitible;the Committee of the Council metto decide the fate of the male rankand eventually came up with acomplex and nebulous formulawhich SAR first interpreted as avictory, then as a defeat. And whenthe year was over, nothing hadbeen changed.Spring '67 StyleThen in June of this year, SARmoved into the building again.Armed with the results of a stu¬dent refrendum that seemed to sup¬port their position and frustratedby their long year of waiting, theymade a desperate effort to recap¬ture the momentum. This time, thedemonstration was labeled a study-in. It was envisioned as a non-ob¬structive but around-the-clock oc¬cupation of the now embattled Ad¬ministration Building. But thetie Administration Building goesi »it-in. wmmm mmmmmmmmmm meuphoric sense of victory which hadarisen so spontaneously during thefirst demonstration proved strange¬ly elusive a year later, and thestudy-in resulted in fiasco beforeit even got a chance to start.On the appointed day, no morethan a fourth of the throng thathad defied the powers-that-be ayear before showed up to defy themagain. Many students had simplybecome bored by the whole argu¬ment—an argument which with theimpending changes in the SelectiveService laws, appeared to be losingrelevance daily. Others chose thebetter part of valor and decided in¬stead to study for final examina¬tions. And still others were nodoubt frightened by the UniversitySenate’s promise of disciplinary ac¬tion against future sit-ins.The SuspensionsEvents quickly confirmed thefears of the last group of non¬participants. For no sooner hadthe demonstrators begun to settledown in their home-away-from-home than they were given an ul¬timatum, quickly followed by sum¬monses to appear before a dis¬ciplinary committee. A virtuallyunprecedented public “trial” of theoffenders followed, and after daysof anxious waiting the verdict wasannounced: disciplinary actionagainst 26 students with one-quar¬ter suspensions for all except fresh¬men and graduating seniors.It is of course too early to assessthe magnitude of the defeat SARsuffered last June or to determinehow it will effect campus politics.But it seems certain that withmany others demoralized or simplyno longer interested, the organiza¬tion has bleak days ahead.WHat is happening to Chica¬go’s political Left? In one sense,its weakening can be attributed toflaws which it acquired at birth.Despite its sporadic but excitingdisplays of power, the movementnever had unanimous support fromthe students, and throughout mostof last year, it is doubtful whetherit even attracted a majority.Attempted AbolitionA revealing case in point wasformer SG President Tom Heagy’s“emancipation proclamation” in Oc¬tober of last year. With much fan¬fare, Heagy announced to enteringfreshmen that he was abolishingwomen’s hours on his own author¬ity, and that as of Winter Quarterwomen should simply stop obeyingthem. For several weeks peopletalked excitedly about the prospectsof this massive display of dis¬obedience, but when the time final¬ The Chicago MaroonTHE NEWEST LEFT: Countless numbers of students across the nation have retreated from activistisminto the world of the hippy, and Chicago is no exception.It can be argued of coursethat while the moderate forces oncampus explain the Left’s weak¬ness, they in no way explain itsdecline. After all, moderates havealways been around, but it has onlybeen in the past few months thatthe more radical forces here haveseemingly gone into a tailspin.Looking at the problem in broaderperspective, it may be more fruitfulto view the decline of the Left asa manifestation of a correspondingdecline in the forces which firstgave impetus to the movement.While it is impossible to pinpointsure causes for the growth of stu¬dent activism on this campus, it ispossible to discern at least some ofthe' early catylists. A cyclic re¬action to the student quietism ofthe 1950’s, growing student involve¬ment in the civil rights movement,the massive demonstrations at Ber¬keley, the attractiveness of a youngand vigorous administration inWashington, and the emotional ap¬peal of a few select issues likeVietnam and the rank all played arole in the escalation of studentpolitical pressures at Chicago thepast few years.But it now appears as If theUniversity has come full cycleagain with the return of a sort ofpolitical quietism—albeit of a dif¬ferent kind. Moreover, the blackpower movement has destroyedmuch of the white student’s rolein the civil rights movement, thepolitical scene at Berkeley has beenrelatively quiet for the last fewmonths, the present administrationin Washington is neither young nor END ALL RANK: Ending male rank was not enough for some, asthe 1967 study-in proved.MHmm iiHMMmMB mmmm mmmmmmm mvigorous, and finally, the rank issuetoday is largely anacronistic andthe war in Vietnam to many be¬yond the point where political pres¬sures will make any difference.Hiding in Argentina?Perhaps, then, Chicago’s politicalLeft has died simply because thereis no longer any reason for it tolive. But, in broader perspectivestill, this analysis too must fail.For, in fact, the Left is not deadat all.To be sure the political Left, re¬sponding to the cyclic nature ofstudent politics and a sudden dearthof issues, has been forced into tem¬porary eclipse. But in the last fewmonths of Spring Quarter the rad¬icalism reemerged in a new form—.a form that might best be describedas the “quietist Left.” In a shiftthat seems sudden only in retro¬spect, the dominant concern oncampus became not the University’s handling of the rank issue, but itshandling of the pot issue, and Tim¬othy Leary just as suddenly in¬herited the mantle of student Mes¬siah once worn by Staughton Lynd.It is hard to say what will hap¬pen to student politics as the cam¬pus discontent turn from the worldoutside to the world within. Al¬ready there have been a few mildskirmishes—a few police raids onHyde Park parties and a smatter¬ing of expulsions and suspensionsfor possession of “dangerous” drugs.But it seems almost certain thatthese are but preludes to a largerconflict, and it is likely as well thatif the Left wing has succeeded inmaintaining its impetus during itsshift from politics to quietism, theUniversity may well yet be meta-morphisized by its second-classcitizens.OverSeptember 29, 1967 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • »,Interdisciplinary Approach in the Graduate DivisionsBy HAROLD SHERIDANStaff WriterInterdisciplinary cooperation isthe key to the University ofChicago’s concept of graduateprograms of instruction and re¬search a concept that has, in theUniversity’s pioneering tradition,invited both praise and indiffer¬ence.More than any other majorschool in the country, Chicago hasintroduced interdisciplinary fieldsthat have destroyed barriers be¬tween the biological sciences, thehumanities, the physical sciences,and the social sciences usuallyfound segregated at other institu¬tions. Although such programs aredescribed by scholars around thecountry as "the wave of the fu¬ture,” in last year’s report by theAmerican Council on Education(ACER these new innovationswent virtually unnoticed.In overall scores, Chicago wasrated fifth in the nation followingCalifornia at Berkeley, Harvard,Michigan, Wisconsin, and followedby Yale. Stanford, Columbia.Princeton and Cornell. AlthoughChicago was rated distinguished orstrong in most disciplines includedin the report, many authorities feelthe report is inaccurate since itdisregards the University's idea ofan interdisciplinary graduate edu¬cation.Biological SciencesThe Division of Biological Sci¬ences includes the Departments ofAnatomy, Biochemistry. Biophy¬sics, Botany, Medicine, Microbiol¬ogy, Obstetrics and Gynecology,Pathology, Pediatrics, Pharmacolo¬gy, Phsiologv, Psychiatry, Radiolo¬gy, Surgery, and Zoology, the sec¬tion of Biopsvchology. the Commit¬tees in Genetics. Mathematical Bio¬logy, Paleozoology, and Virology,the Zoller Memorial Clinic, the BenMay Laboratory for Cancer Re¬search, the Section on NuclearMedicine, the LaRabida-Universityof Chicago Institute, and the Ar-gonne Cancer Research Hospital.Work in the Division of Biologi¬cal Sciences leads to B.S., M.S.,M.D., and Ph.D. 'degrees. The B.S.degree is awarded jointly by theCollege and the Graduate Division.Richard C. Lewontin, associatedean of the Biological SciencesDivision, feels that the ACE re¬port is not grossly unfair to thetraditional departments in the bio¬logical sciences at Chicago, butthat “the academic pie here is notcut that way.”Aspects Interrelated“All aspects of biology are so in¬terrelated that sharp separationinto distinct fields is impossible toachieve and foolish to attempt*” H.Stanley Bennett, former dean ofthe biological sciences, has said.“For this reason, the loose, illogi¬cal and overlapping oragnizationat Chicago is nevertheless one inwhich almost any kind of biologi¬cal effort can find a congen-ialbase.”The University’s Biological Sci¬ences Division, headed by Dr. LeonJacobsen, director of the ArgonneCancer Research hospital, andJoseph Regenstein. a professor ofbiological and medical sciences, hasbeen vastly strengthened underPresident’s Beadle’s administration.Seven new department chairmen,including five who were broughthere from other universities, havebeen appointed.Dr. Albert Dorfman, a professorof biochemistry and chairman ofthe pediatrics department, whichstaffs the new Wvler Children'shospital, was promoted to hischairmanship. He has, been soughtunsuccessfully by the University ofRochester to be dean of its medi¬cal school.'LSI) AuthorityDr. Robert B. Uretz, chairmanof the University’s Biophysics Deyparment, also held previous ap¬pointments on the medical faculty.Dr. Daniel X. Freedman, chair¬man of the Department of Psy¬chiatry, came here from Yale,which has been trying to get himback as chairman of its psychiatrydepartment. Dr. Freedman is prob¬ ably best known here for his out¬spoken attitudes toward hallucino¬gens, especially LSD.The National Institutes of Healthhave made five grants, each of$40,000 to $50,000 a year, for aseven-year, nation-wide study ofthe results of cardiovascular sur¬gery, and two of the five medicalcenters where this work is beingdone are in Chicago.One award was granted to Dr.C. Frederick Kittle, chairman ofthat department. Dr. Kittle andhis staff perform three or fouropen heart operations a week. Theyare developing a new type of mem¬brane oxygenator, which does thework of the lungs during cardio¬vascular surgery, and are alsomaking studies of the. amount ofenergy generated by the heart.Physical SciencesThe Division of the Physical Sci¬ences has academic jurisdictionover the admission of students andthe awarding of degi*ees in the De¬partments of Astronomy and As¬trophysics. Chemistry. Geophysical•Sciences, Mathematics, Physics,and Statistics, and in the Commit¬tee on Information Sciences. Alsoincluded in the Division are theResearch Institutes consisting ofthe Enrico Fermi Institute for Nu¬clear Studies, the Institute forthe Study of Metals, and the In¬stitute for Computer Research. Ad¬vanced degrees are offered onlyby the departments, but Researchmay be done in either the depart¬ments or the Institutes.The departments cooperate withthe College in offering the special¬ized portion of the undergraduateprograms leading to the Bachelor’sdegree in all areas except astrono¬my and information sciences. TheB.S. degree is awarded jointly bythe Division and the College.The Solar System“We are concerned with theearth, the oceans, the atmosphere,and at least those regions of outerspace that interact with our plan¬et.” explained Dr. Julian R. Gold¬smith. associate dean of the Physi¬cal Sciences Division. “The earthis a member of our solar system,so planetary responses to solar ac¬tivity are in our baliwick.“It seems logical,” he continued,“that the research and teachingprograms should reflect the cir¬cumstance that all of these thingsare interrelated and should bestudied jointly. This is preciselywhy research at the graduate levelis frequently pursued via an inter¬departmental route.”Currently, the Division is en¬gaged in a major building pro¬gram, financed in part by the Uni¬versity’s Campaign for Chicago,that will integrate existing andnew teaching and research facili¬ties and probably make interdisci¬plinary bonds greater than at pre¬sent.New Faculty HereThe Physical Sciences Division,headed by Dr. Abraham Albert, oneof the University’s distinguishedmathematicians, also has beenstrengthened by acquisition of newmen. Dr. Roger Hildebrand, direct¬or of the Enrico Fermi Institutefor Nuclear Studies, belives theUniversity is now at a point whereit can regain its pre-eminence inhigh-energy experimental physics.Chicago has been outstandingfor many years in theoretical phy¬sics, but following World War IIthe giants of experimental phy¬sics left for other Universities orANDERSON’S BULKOSERVICE STATIONHighest Quality Gasolineat Lowest PricesFeaturing theBULKO PANTRY government posts. Among themwere Dr. Glenn Seaborg, HaroldUrey, Willard Libby, Edward Tel¬ler. and Leo Szilard. The death ofEnrico Fermi in 1054 was a tragicloss to science and the University.The 25th anniversary of twoevents at the University that ush¬ered in the atomic age will be com¬memorated this year. Seaborg, aNobel Laureate and now chairmanof the Atomic Energy Commission,was the leader of a group of sci¬entists who, on August 18, 1942,isolated the first plutonium seenby man and who, on September10, 3942 first weighed this raremetal. The isolation and weighingof plutonium was a milestone inthe development of atomic energycomparable to the much more pub¬licized achievement of the firstself-sustaining nuclear chain re¬action, under the direction of En¬rico Fermi, on December 2. 1942.In high-energy physics, the Uni¬versity boasts such personnel asDr. Albert Crewe and Dr. Hum¬berto Fernandez-Moran, both ex¬perts in electron microscopy. Inthe field of geophysical sciences,experts such as Dr. David Atlas,meteorologist; William Morgan, as¬tronomy and astrophysics; and S.Chandrasekhar, theoretical astron¬omy.Chicago’s Chemistry Department,boasts such faculty members asNorman Nachtrieb, departmenthead; Stuart Riee. head of the In¬stitute of Metals; and Edward An¬ders and Leonard Wharton.Humanities DivisionThe Humanities Division con¬sists of departments representingthe various fields of the humanitiesand of committees coordinating thework of various departments. Thestudent must fulfill the divisionalrequirements for the degree thathe seeks, and he must satisfy anyadditional requirements that hisdepartment or committee may setup.The aim of the Division is three¬fold: to train for research, to pre¬pare for careers in teaching, andto assist students toward a generalunderstanding and appreciation ofhumanistic studies. To help ac¬complish this aim, most of theclasses, particularly those at anadvanced level, are kept small sothat much attention can be givento the needs of the individual stu¬dent.“Research is certainly the domi¬nating motive of the humanitiesdivision,” said George Bobrinskoy,dean of students in the Division,“and much research is done in in¬terdisciplinary fields. In this way,departments even other divisions—combine the talents of theirleading scholars.”Such fields as general studies,comparative languages and litera¬tures, history of culture, ideas andmethods, Far Eastern civilization,archeological studies, and medievalstudies give the student an oppor¬tunity for studies in several hu¬manities departments as well asin other divisions.Recently, the Division’s work innon-Western studies was recog¬nized by the Ford Foundation,which awarded it an $8.5 milliondollar grant.Students Teach LaterAccording to Robert E. Streeter,dean of the division, a high per¬ centage of humanities students goon to teach in colleges and univer¬sities.While strengthening its Divisionsof Biological and Physical Sciences,the University has not neglectedthe humanities. Under the admini¬stration of Dean Streeter, new’ de¬partments such as Far Eastern andSouth Asian Languages and Civili¬zations, and a Center for MiddleEastern studies has been formed.There has been a great increasein the study of Sanskrit as w’ellas modern Indie languages.Islamic history and literature,modern Arabic, and contemporarymiddle eastern history are taughtin the new Center, headed by Wil¬liam Polk, and Arabic scholar, his¬torian, and former member of theSlate Deparment’s planning cen¬ter.The new Center is a logical sup¬plement to the University’s dis¬tinguished department of Orientallanguages and civilizations and itsfamed Oriental Institute.New ScholarsConstantine Trypanis, one of theworld’s leading Greek scholars anda noted poet, has left an appoint¬ment at Exeter College, Oxford tobecome a professor of Greek atChicago. Francisco Ayala, a disting¬uished Spanish novelist, has beenappointed a University professor inthe Romance Language Depart¬ment. The University’s dis¬tinguished department of SlavicLanguages and Literatures, headedby Hugh McLean, has beenstrengthened by the appointmentof scholar Edward Wasiolek. nowworking on the translation of the'notebooks of Dostoevsky.In history and English, Chicagois highly distinguished. It has oneof the best nonconservatory musicdepartments in the country, offer¬ing instruction in the history ofmusic, composition, and theory.Ralph Shapev. director of the De¬partment’s Contemporary Chambergroup, and Easley Blackwood, pro¬fessor of music, are successful com¬posers. Social SciencesThe Division of the Social Sci¬ences is that part of the Univer¬sity especially concerned with thenature of man, the ideas and in¬stitutions that he has built andthat in turn have helped to shapehis nature, the relation betweenhim and his fellows, and the in¬teraction between man and thew’orld in which he lives.The Division welcomes as stu¬dents potential researchers andscholars, as well as those who wishto equip themselves in the socialsciences for careers of public serv¬ice in teaching* administration, di¬plomacy. or other professions. Italso welcomes those win* seek inthe social sciences the enrichmentof their cultural preparation forthe appreciation of life.The Division aw’ards M.A. andPh.D, degrees. It also cooperatesin the undergraduate programsleading to the B.A. degree award¬ed by the College.Degree programs are offered bythe Departments of Anthropology,Economics, Education. Geography,History, Political Science, Psychol¬ogy, Sociology, and Statistics; andby the Committee on Far EasternCivilizations, Human Development,Turn to Page 13Special! *For Back-to-SchoolStyle Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8A Complete Grocery StoreOpen 24 Hours57th & Cottage GroveJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODIAWN AVE. LENSINEby M1IRJNEEXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryingcase! Provides hygienic,convenient carefor yourlenses.One solution forcomplete lens careLensine’s special propertiesassure a smoother, non irritatinglens surface when inserting your“contacts.” Just a drop or twowill do it. When used for cleaning,a unique Lensine formula helpsretard buildup of contaminantsand foreign deposits on thelenses. It's self sterilizing andantiseptic. Ideal for wet storageor "soaking’’ of lenses. Lensinereduces harmful bacteria con¬tamination./ • • •FREE CARRYING CASE. Exclusiveremovable carrying case withevery bottle of Lensine. Thescientific—and convenient—wayto protect your contacts.LENSINE fromThe Murine Company. Ine.•,.ay* car* specialist far 79 year*10 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29, 1967iaccent’sfall;ialsellingFURNITUREA handsome loungechair and matchingottoman . . . arms,back and seat up¬holstered in black,soft, tufted vinyl. . .sturdy walnut-finishedfrome. . .reg. Si 29 now S110.95Similar upholstered lounge chair with wal¬nut-finished arms and matching upholsteredottoman. . .in black onlyreg. *89.95 now S84.95mmAccent s campaign chair . , . strong black metalframe - washable canvas slings in your choiceof orange, yellow, blue, white, olive, green, red,or black . .19.95. , .replacement slings only S4.95Folding chair . . . woven hemp seat and back. ,,sturdy walnut-finish beech framereg. S30. now S24.95Matching lounge chair with self-adjusting back...well-constructed walnut frame and armsreg. $34.95 now S29.95•si?#'I ?Sturdy teak occasional tables with drop leaves.,,folds for eosy storoge. reg. * 10 eachnow S5.95 each set of four .. .S20Teak dining or game table . . . 39" x 39" withself-storing leaves. . . opens to 39" x 76"reg. *170 now $149Teak refectory table . . . 34" x 51" .. . beautifulself-storing leaves, open to 92" long . , . seats10 comfortably ... reg. *150 now $ 129.95__36" Round Dining Table daponite top and blockmetal pedestal... the table with 4 Lido ebonychafes with rush seats . . .$69.95... with 4 teaker walnut Donna choirs ........ .... .$97.95•, , table only $29.95lido chairs.,. reg. $15.95 ... .now $12.95 eachDonna chairs,, ,reg. $24.95... now $19.95 each GIFT1/ Fine quality, closely woven straw hampers. . .small (14" dia., 21" high). . $4; medium (17"dia., 23" high). . .$5; large(21" dia., 25" high) *6Our own Contempo glassware . . . 8 five-ouncecocktail or juice, 8 nine-ounce old-fashioned, 8twelve-ounce tumblers . .. Sot of 24 •.reg. *5. . .... now $3.95Famous Cora pattern 18/8 stainless steelflatware from Holland. 5-pc place settingreg. *7.95 now $5.95Fine quality white porcelain dinnerware .. .withcoupe or cylinder cup . . . 20-pc starter set in¬cludes 4 cups and saucers, 4 dinner plates, 4salad plates, 4 soup or cereal bowlsreg. *20 now *15.95 set.Salad sei from Haiti . . . oil-finished walnut largesalad bowl ... 4 individual small bowls, andservers. .. 7pieces... reg. *19 .. . .now $15.95Half-price sole of paperware.. . 20 napkins with20 matching coasters. . .gift boxed. . .choice ofthree designs. . .reg. $1. ..now50427 plocemots11" X 17",.. choice of three designsreg. *1. . . now 504 .. . napkins, coasters, guesttowel in assorted potterns reduced 50%.IOur entire lamp stock reduced 20%-30%. . . floor lamps, fable and desklamps, swags and ceiling fixtures,tree lamps, high-intensity lamps, allfrom some of this country's finestmanufacturers. . .One-of-a-kind sam¬ples reduced 50%. , .lamps for aslittle as $5.95.i * 1 .Desk lamp.,. excel¬lent design. . .givesperfect flow of lightreg. $7.95now$6,50Matching floor lampreg, *11 now $8.95 BACKDOOR SALESALK BEGINS TODAYSales hours: Mon-Fri, 10-8; Sat, 9-6.Open Sun., Oct. 1st - 10 to 4.Save as much as 50%-60% on our stockroom clearance of chairs, tables, cabinets. . .slightly damaged merchandise or show¬room samples. (Use delivery entrance at5305 Blackstone).LAMP SALEHi-lntensity desk lamp. ..withflexi¬ble polished brass cable andbrightness control switch. . , inbrown, green or coralreg. *6.95 now $5.50Fluorescent desk lamp with metalshade and white plastic shield,complete with I 4-watt bulb. . . .reg. $7.95. '.now $5.95larger size with I 7-watt bulb. . . .reg. $11.95 now $9.75Floor lamp with 700 watts of light¬ing. . . a polished chrome baseand stem, and linen shade.. .takesfour 100-watt bulbs for direct light¬ing and a 300-watt flood lamp forindirect lighting. ,,,,,,reg. *65. .now $52.00One-of-a-kind table lamps. . .withceramic, teak, rosewood orwalnutbases all 40%-50% offWall lamp with natural rattanshode and walnut extension arm.reg. *10. .... , ,, ,«.now *8.95Chrome finish folding high-inten-"E# •" sity lamp. . . in black,reg. *14... .now $10.95Pre-Chrisfmas Gift Specials18/8 stainless salt & pepper set.reg. *3 now $2.5018/8 stainless relish server from Denmarkreg. *3 .now $2.50Stainless.corving and bread knives.reg. *3.95 now $2.50Knife sharpener... reg. *3.95..now $2.506 Lobster forks from Hollond .reg. *7.95 . . , . .now $5 set6 'Coro' demitasse spoonsreg. *6.95. now $4.50 set20% off on all Christmas Cards, includingimprinting.Donsk ‘Flowerpetal* block wrought iron candle-holder for 12 small tapers. . . holder with can¬dles. . . reg. *6 .now $3.95Dansk 'Fanfare* or 'Harlequin' black wroughtiron candleholder. . . reg. $6.95. . .now $2.00Earthernware and Ironstone dinnerware fromFinland, Norway, Swedan, and Denmark.. .cups,saucers, plates, casseroles, bowles, teapots.. .allin open stock for this sale 40% off (as long asthey last).Norwegian stonewa/e 6 pc. tea set... teapot,creamer, sugar, plate, and cup and saucer...reg; $23.50 . . .new $16.95. 15 pc. teasetforfour: teapot, creamer & sugar, 4 dessert plates,and 4 cups and saucersreg $42.25 new $29.95Mailing service for your convenience. . .No charge for gift wrapping. . .No saleis ever final until you are satisfied.accent/1437 E. 53rd St.... Ml 3-7400September 2». 1M7 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • ItChicago's Professional Schools Emphasize QualityBy HAROLD SHERIDANStaff WriterThe professional schools atUniversity of C b i c a g o are re¬spected across the nation fortheir excellence and endless in¬novation. Seven schools preparestudents for profesisonal work inbusiness, divinity, education, law,library science, medicine and socialservice.The Law SchoolThe goal of the Law School, asstated in its first Announcements,was “to afford adequate prepara¬tion for the practice of law as aprofession in any jurisdiction inwhich the common law prevails,and to cultivate and encourage thescientific study of systematic andcomparative jurisprudence, legalhistory, and principles of legisla¬tion.”An education in law. said Wil¬liam Rainey Harper, first presi¬dent of the University, “implies ascientific knowledge of law and oflegal and juristic methods. Theseare the crystallization of ages ofhuman progress. They cannot beunderstood in their entirety with¬out a clear comprehension of thehistoric forces of which they arethe product, and of the social en¬vironment with which they are inliving contact. A scientific studyof law involves the related sciencesof history, economics, philosophy—the whole field of man as a socialbeing.”Interdisciplinary CurriculumThe Law School is distinguishedby the close student-faculty rela¬tions that result from small size, avaried student body, and an inter¬disciplinary curriculum which em¬phasizes the relations between law,society, and the federal system ofgovernment. The Law School publishes, for example, the only pro¬fessional journal in law and eco¬nomics in the country.The usual, although not exclu¬sive, form of instruction in the LawSchool is the case method. Em¬phasis is also placed on individualinstruction through a tutorial pro¬gram in'the first year and throughseminars and supervised independ¬ent study in the second and thirdyears. The program of the firstyear is prescribed and provides allstudents with a common foundationin the basic legal subjects. Theprogram of the second and thirdyears is elective. The total studentbody numbers about 450 students,including approximately 25 graduate students each year, and is de¬liberately kept rather small tomaximize the opportunities for closecontact with the faculty and forindividual or small-class study inthe second and third years. In re¬cent years, however, there havebeen very slight increases in enrollment. Along with the College,the Law School has an unprece¬dented number of women in its en¬tering class—there are 17.Outside Work OpportunitiesThere are also various oppor¬tunities for students to do outsidepractical work in the Edwin F.Mandel Legal Aid Clinic headedby Lee Mitchell, the public defenders offices, and through brief writ¬ing in criminal cases. Researchopportunities are provided by theCenter for Criminal Justice—nowin its second year—established by Ia Ford Foundation grant and theComparative Law Research Center,which is devoted to the field ofinternational legal relations and }comparative private law.A breakdown of figures on pre- Ivious years’ graduating classes showthat a little less than half of thegraduates went into private lawfirms, with the balance being di¬vided up among judicial clerkships,federal, state and local govern¬ments, corporations, teaching orfurther study, military service, andthe Peace Corps. George Fee Jr.,dean of students, estimated thatless than 70 per cent and possiblyless than 65 per cent of the School’salumni were practicing law atpresent.School of MedicineThe School of Medicine estab¬lished in 1927, is unique in severalrespects.Emphasis is placed on the scien¬tific basis of medicine and on theskillful application of scientific prin¬ciples to human problems. Eachentering class is now’ limited to 79students, in order to maintain ahigh teacher-student ratio. Dr.Leon Jacobsoiv, dean of the Divisionof Biological Sciences and directorof the School of Medicine, told TheMaroon that he is “planning a 25percent increase in the immediatefuture. In order to accommodatethese new students, however, wewill have to build more facilities.”The Medical School is the onlyone in the country with its ownfull-time clinical staff. All facultymembers practice medicine entirelywithin the University’s Hospitalsand Clinics with no outside prac¬tices. This is particularly useful tothe students as it makes the staffreadily available for help and con¬sultation.In Biological SciencesThe School is also unique in thatit is an integral part of the Divisionof the Biological Sciences and isadministered through this division.Thus, students have academic ac¬cess to related graduate depart¬ments in the biological sciences.Students in their last two years re¬ceive their clinical training exclu¬sively in the University’s Hospitalsand Clinics. These ten intercon¬nected units, with a total bed ca¬pacity of 723, provided clinicalteaching and research facilities forboth stddents and staff. Thus, theUniversity Hospitals and Clinicsconstitute a basic part of the Med¬ical School.Last summer, under the leader¬ship of Robert Page, and with a$250,000 grant, Chicago MedicalSchool students did field work inthe Chicago slums, examining everyhealth aspect imaginable. The find¬ings of the project, which is na¬tionally known, will be releasedshortly.Social ServiceThe School of Social Service Ad¬ministration became part of theUniversity in 1920. It endeavors totrain professional social workersthrough classroom theory and fieldwork, the latter being particularlyemphasized through actual experi¬ences in agencies in Chicago two orthree days per week under closefaculty supervision.Students obtain an M.A. degreeupon completion of a two-year pro¬gram. The curriculum leading tothe degree has been designed toprovide the student with a founda¬ tion of knowledge, philosophy, andskill on which he may continue tobuild the professional competenceneeded to help sustain and enhancethe social functioning of individualsthrough work with individuals, withgroups, or with communities, andto participate responsibly in the ad¬ministration, interpretation, and de¬velopment of social welfare policyand services.Other goals include the ability toappraise critically such policies andservices, to recognize gaps in theprovision of social services, and tocontribute to social action towardproviding services and preventingsocial problems. Finally, it is hopedthat the graduate of the School ofSocial Service will promote andparticipate in scientific study to en¬large and verify knowledge for theprofession.Community WorkUpon completion of their degree,many students go into caseworkand groupwork with agencies. Re¬cently there has been a greater at¬tempt to prepare students for workin federal poverty programs andother similar projects. This year,the School is offering two - yearmethods sequences in social case¬work, social groupwork, communitywork and field instruction for stu¬dents with or without previoussocial work experience. In additionto the recent interest in communitywork, students continue in the'orientation toward psychiatricsocial work where the second yearis spent in a psychiatric field set¬ting. This year, the SSA School isorganizing a Social Services Cen¬ter, with 25 students accepted.There are 399 M.A. and Ph. Dstudents in the School this year.There are 209 M.A. candidates,compared with 186 last year. Evenwith this relatively large increase,pointed out Dean of Students Mrs.Margaret Strozier, “manpowerneeds are much greater than train¬ing facilities.” Most social workersdeplore this situation, because itnecessitates some agencies hiringof inadequately prepared people.Graduate Library SchoolThe Graduate Library Schoolwas established through a grantfrom the Carnegie Corporation in1926 and was formally opened inOctober 1928. Like the other pro¬fessional schools of the University,it is closely integrated with the di¬visions and other schools, and stu¬dents’ programs of work withinthe School and in other units of theUniversity are planned to insuregreatest effectiveness. The Grad¬uate Library School provides anopportunity for basic and advancedprofessional study and research inlibrary science.The purposes of the LibrarySchool are to prepare students forprofessional practice in librarian-ship with emphasis upon basic prin¬ciples and with attention to the im¬plications of future technology onthe handling of information in lib¬raries and special centers, and toprepare students for responsibleroles in the planning of future lib¬raries and information systems.Along with this, the School hopesto inculcate the desire to advancethe state of the art of communica¬COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking ting record knowledge through the¬oretical, historical and experiment¬al research, and finally to providea philosophy for education in lib-rarianship.A Demanding ProgramAccording to an article by DeanDon R. Swanson, the School pro¬bably has a longer and more de¬manding degree program than anyother library school in the country.In recent years, the School has be¬gun to increase enrollments withthe present entering class the larg¬est ever.The faculty of the School isdrawn from many different fields.Swanson is a physicist by train¬ing, while other members work infields such as philosophy, classics,anthropology', linguistics and math¬ematics.At present, particular emphasisis being placed on the role of tech¬nology and the increased use ofcomputers in such areas as dataprocessing, systems analysis, infor¬mation retrieval, cataloguing andmechanical translation of langua¬ges. Several National ScienceFoundation grants have been re¬ceived supporting research in theseareas. It is these grants that givestudents their major research op¬portunities.Most of the graduates of theschool became professional librar¬ians, either in colleges, public lib¬raries, research institutions, or in¬dustrial settings.School of Education“We strive for incomplete per¬fection rather than complete im¬perfection,” remarked Keith Elkins,assistant director of the Master ofArts in Teaching program, and thismight well be the model of theUniversity’s Graduate School of Ed¬ucation.The School was established in itspresent form in 1958 after more than 50 years of experimentation.It offers an MAT upon completionof a two year program includingone year of classroom preparationand practice teaching and one yearof internship often in an urbanschool situation.Kevin Ryan, director of the MATprogram who came here from Stan¬ford, describes the duel goal of theMAT program as the production of“scholar-teachers” and the advance¬ment of knowledge in the field ofteacher education. He stressed thatthe School attempts to equip itsgraduates for continual study intheir chosen academic fields andfor a continuing examination ,if thelearning process.Urban School TrainingRecently, there has been muchinterest among the students andgreater emphasis within the MATprogram on training for urbanschool situations. Last year, 40 per¬cent of the second year studentsserved their internships in innercity schools, and it is expected thatfirst year practice teaching in ur-Ijan schools will expand also. Ryanattributed some of this interest andemergence of a “Peace Corps” typeof student to the growth of thecivil rights movement and thepoverty programs.Last year 24 of the School’s 80students obtained teaching fellow¬ships from the U.S. Office of Ed¬ucation. It was the first time thatMAT students have received moneyTurn to Page IXCHICAGO PREMIERE“TRUDY and the MINSTREL"Rollicking New Metical for ChildrenOpening October 7Weekends Performances thru Dec. 10Sat 10:30 a m. 2:30 |».m. Sun. 2:30 p.mGOODMAN CHILDREN'S THEATRE200 S. Columbus Drivo • CE 4-2337CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL212 N. MICHIGAN AVE.For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY— MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE!HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715RANDEL<&3eauly and (PosmeUc G^a/t5700 HARPER AVENUE! onFAirfax 4-2007Hyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am - 9 pm, 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E. 53rd St.) * v '*** \vo.r<\ v' ' * u r»: :>:t/’/•yv.-v*'Styx --sII • IRRIll • illr . . you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitx beer on tapTHF FACT FJl 11 JU JU XX VJ JO JOcocktails . * , luncheon . . . dinner , , . late snacks , t %air conditioned5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-193312 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29, 1967GraduateContinued from Page 12from this source and the Univer¬sity received a very substantial pro¬portion of the total U.S. allotment.At present the MAT program isthe major source of qualified teach¬ers from the University. Since thecertification course for undergrad¬uates is gradually being phased out.In comparison with certificationprepared teachers, more MAT grad¬uates assume leadership positionswithin schools such as departmentheads, curriculum coordinators andactive members and organizers ofteacher’s unions. Also more MATgraduates than certification pre¬pared teachers actually do go intoteaching and they tend to stay long¬er in the profession.The Divinity SchoolThe Divinity School has the dis-inction of having founded the Uni¬versity of Chicago and of havingeducated two of the first three pres¬idents of the University, includingWilliam Rainey Harper. It pro¬duces more professors than any ot¬her divinity school in the countryand in the last thirty to forty yearshas educated more professors, writ¬ers, and scholars than ministers.The School is internationally fam¬ous for its History of Religion De¬part ment.A few years ago, the Doctor ofDivinity degree was discontinuedand the first professional doctoralprogram for the training of minis¬ters in the United States was es¬tablished. The program awards aDoctor of Ministry degree afterfour and one-half years. The newdirector of the program is ColinWilliams, from the New York Na¬tional Council of Churches. The Di¬vinity School today also has thelargest Ph. D. program of all theprofessional schools in the Univer¬sity.Increased EnrollmentIn the past few years there hasbeen a slight but steady increasein enrollment in the School. Thisyear there are approximately 400students with an entering class ofabout 125.The Divinity School has veryclose relations with the rest of theUniversity, particularly the HistoryDepartment and the rest of thesocial sciences faculty. Dean JeraldC. Brauer describes the faculty asquite active in publication, even“without our asking them.”One of the school’s current pro¬jects is the preparation of the Chi¬cago Encyclopedia of Religion andTheology, expected to take abouteight years to complete. The first$50,000 for this work was obtainedfrom the West German Govern¬ment. Last year marked the 100thanniversary of the Divinity school.Part of the centennial celebratedincluded a series of six conferencesat which alumni who obtained M.A s and Ph.D.s presented papers.These will eventually be compiledinto an eight volume work calledESSAYS IN DIVINITY. The firstvolume of the work, edited by pro¬fessor Joseph Kitagawa has alreadybeen published by the University ofChicago Press and the secondvolume will be released soon. Thefaculty of the Divinity School isalso working on the WestministerDictionary of Church History, alsosoon to be released.More Roman CatholicsDean Brauer described this year’sentering class as having a higherKARATEINEXPENSIVE,EXPERTINSTRUCTIONU.C. KARATE CLUBDINE AT FULTONIANatural and Organic Haalth Food,Vitamins, Minerals, Food Suppla-mants. Fresh Fruit and VegetableJuices. Also Special Dietary Foodsand Baited Goods.Eat Well in a BeautilulI to pit al SellingFULTONIA HEALTH FOODCENTER A RESTAURANTOpen Daily B a.m. to B p m.U1 fast 63rd Street *84-5700Alveraia M. FultonNutritionist, Food Consultant. School Enrollment Steadily Increasingproportion of Roman Catholics thanin previous years and he added thatthe Divinity School probably hasthe highest proportion of RomanCatholics of any Protestant instit¬ution. The influx of Catholic degreestudents is a comparatively recentphenomenon, according to DeanBrauer.Probably the school’s most dis-inguished faculty member was PaulTillich, world-renowned theologian,whose chair is still unfilled. Thereare however, some professors beingconsidered for the post.School of BusinessThe University’s Graduate Schoolof Business, founded in 1898 as thesecond oldest business school in thecountry, is described by Dean ofStudents with the perspective andanalytical tools to define and solvenew kinds of problems.”Its graduates, he says, are pre¬paring for a continuing lifelong pro¬cess of learning and are lookingfoward to a long career in business.The School has always empha¬sized the scientific approach, draw¬ing upon the discipline of the phy¬sical and social sciences and is morethoroughly integrated with the restof the University than is the casein many other business schoolsthroughout the country. There areparticularly close relations with theEconomics Sociology, and Geo¬graphy Departments and studentsare encouraged to regard them¬selves as graduates students in theUniversity, not as “prisioners of thebusiness school.”There are about 90 faculty mem¬bers and 600 students in the Schoolof which about 100 are Ph.D. cand¬idates and about 500 are M.B.A. candidates. Most of the former in¬volve themselves in academic andresearch while the latter generallygo into business. According to Met¬calf the faculty are “quite researchoriented and are scholars ratherthan businessmen.”Applications HeavyThe growth rate in the numberof applications each year is largerthan in any other business schoolin the country. At Chicago, mostentrants are directly out of collegewhereas in other graduate businessschools the entrants have often been out of school for some years.There are vast research opport¬unities also. The Center for Re¬search in Security Prices, headedby Professor of Business Adminis¬tration James Lorie and AssociateProfessor of Finance LawrenceFisher, has compiled computerizedinformation concerning the stockmarket. The Institute for Profes¬sional Accounting, headed by Art¬hur Young, Professor of Account¬ing Sidney Davidson, combines thestudy of accounting with the studyof behavioral science. The Centerfor Mathematical Studies and Busi¬ ness and Economics, headed byHenri Thiel, a University professor,is one of the strongest interdiscip¬linary centers of its kind.The Business School is noted forits interdisciplinary work acrossthe country. For example, GeorgeStigler is on the faculty of the Eco¬nomics Department as well as inthe School and is president of theAmerican Economic Association, aposition unusual to say the leastfor a member of a business schoolfaculty.AMONG NATION'S STRONGESTSoc Sci Has Many StarsContinued from Page 10International Relations, SocialThought, and the Divisional Mas¬ter’s Program.Interdepartmental ProgramsPrograms of study are also of¬fered by interdepartmental com-mitees on Industrial Relations,South Asian Studies, and the Pre¬paration of Teachers. These pro¬grams are administered jointly bythe committee concerned and thedepartment in which the degree issought.“The Division of the Social Sci¬ences is oriented mainly towardsresearch with some emphasis onteaching,” according to D. GaleJohnson, dean of the Division.“When we try to attract teachersfrom other institutions, we are pri¬marily interested in what theyhave produced and what they hopeto produce. Some weight is given to how good they are in teaching,primarily in helping students pre¬pare dissertations.”Although five disciplines—anth¬ropology, economics, political sci¬ence, psychology and sociology-are considerel to be the core ofthe social sciences, Johnson be¬lieves history, statistics, and geo¬graphy provide methods of greatimportance to the disciplines,though aspects of each field maymake legitimate claim to beingboth social and scientific.Distinguished FacultySome of the more distinguishedfaculty members in the Social Sci¬ences Division, itself perhaps thebest in the country, are Sol Tax,a professor of anthropology andeditor of Current Anthropology;Hans Morgenthau, the Albert B.Michelson distinguished serviceprofessor of political science anddirector of the Center for the Study of American Foreign andMilitary Policy; Tang Tsou, a pro¬fessor of political science and re¬nowned authority on China; Rich¬ard Wade, Julian Levi, TheodoreLowi, Philip Hauser, and MorrisJanowitz, a 11 experts in questiesdealing with cities and urban life.Milton Friedman, a distinguishedclassical economist, is an experton monetary policy. Bruno Bettel-heirn, a professor of psychologyhere, is the director of the worldfamous Sonia Shankman Ortho¬genic School.In the History Department Dan¬iel Boorstin, John Hope Franklin,William McNeill and Eric Coch¬rane are among the faculty mem¬bers that make this Departmentdistinguished. Gilbert White, for¬mer president of Haverford Col¬lege, is a geography expert andhead of the Department of PublicAffairs.BANDERSNATCH"Chicago Kick: Old Movies at the Bander snatch9 5 Esquire Magazine6 p.m.-l p.m. — Fine Foods . . . Old MoviesTOAD HALL WELCOMES new and refuringstudents and faculty,andTOAD HALL WISHES ALL a successfulscholastic year.TOAD HALL SERVES both your academic andpleasurable pursuits.TOAD HALL RENTSSELLS ANDSERVICES High Fidelity ComponentsTypewriters (new and rebuilt)Tape Recorders and TV Sets(Battery and A.C. Operated)Phonographs—AM-FM Radios.TOAD HALL GUARANTEES its prices for 30 days.TOAD HALL SELLS records atsuper discountprices.1444 E. 57th ST.- BU 8-4500September 2f. If 17 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • 13Top Chicago Names Head University TrusteesContinued from Page 4fields, policy about who can usethe services, what is done withclinic records, etc., is set by thedean of student’s office.4. The undergraduate housingoffice, which is watched over byEdward Turkington, comes un¬der the dean of students. He hasdirect control only over what theresident heads and assistant resi¬dent heads do. Complaints aboutthe lousy food or maid servicego to Lvlas Kay, director of Resi¬dence Halls and Commons, whichIs under the “business side” ofthe administration.5. The office of Career Coun¬selling and Placement-which runssmoothly under the guidance ofAnita Sandke, provides all sortsof useful services, such as help¬ing bewildered undergraduateshelp figure out what sort ofcareers they might want, help-' ing graduates get jobs, and twist¬ing the arms of Washington bu¬reaucrats to put UC students insummer internship positions.Athletics and Activities6. Men’s and women’s athleticprograms are under the Dean ofStudents, who, it is reported wish¬fully, hews to Robert MaynardHutchins’ line: “Whenever I get*n urge to exercise, I lie downuntil the feeling passes.”7. Student activities. Skipl*andt and Sue Munaker, withthe able and cheerful assistanceof Mary Collins, can give all sortsof help and advice to ''ampus or¬ganizations through the studentactivities office. Money for or¬ganizations which need it is par¬celled out by a student facultycommittee, the Committee onRecognized Student Organiza¬tions. (CORSO) which is runmostly by Student Government appointees, but gets the moneyit distributes from the dean ofstudent’s budget.8.The task of disciplining un¬dergraduates is handled mainly bythe dean of undergraduate stu¬dents, who this year is MeyerW. Isenberg, substituting forGeorge Playe. Final decisions ondisciplinary measures for violat¬ing rules against smoking pot inthe dorms, etc., are made by astudent-faculty disciplinary com¬mittee, appointed half by Stu¬dent Government and half by thedean of students.Public Affairs, Money GrubbingA key man in the team of aca¬demic vice presidents is crew-cutCharles U. Daly, former legisla¬tive liaison man for PresidentsKennedy and Johnson. His maintitle is vice-president for publicaffairs, a nebulously broad field.This puts him in charge of suchthings as the Alumni Office, di¬rected by Ranlet C. Lincoln; thePublic Relations Department,which is presided over by genialformer Sun-Timesman Carl W.Larsen; and other publicationssuch as Chicago Today, a journalfor “friends of the University,”put out by jocular Mike Claffey.Daly last year took on the ad¬ded burden of directing the Uni¬versity’s special money-grubbingcampaign, in which they hope tohave a total of $160 million inthe bag by the end of next year.A whole new batch of peoplehas been hired in the Develop¬ment Office and all sorts of com¬mittees of big-wigs have been setup, to help in the big push.Generally, matters on the “aca¬demic side,” including the deanof students office, are handled bypeople who are distinctly not bu¬reaucrats-—that is, the deans of the divisions and even the deanswithin the administration do notgive up their status as facultymembers when they take ontheir onerous duties.Businesslike BureaucratsWhen we look at the “businessside," however, the pattern fitsperfectly into the traditional defi¬nition of bureaucracy set by so¬ciologist Max Weber: the office¬holders do nothing but take careof their bureaucratic duties, andhave a definite place in a heir-archical order of decision-making.At the top of the “businessside” bureaucracy sits the VicePresident for Administration Gil¬bert Lee. Before coming to Chi¬cago, he was in charge of bud¬get matters for the University ofMichigan. He is top dog foreverything that has to do withthe physical plant and businessactivities of the University.Basic policy decisions which af¬fect both business and academicinterests of the University aremade by the AdministrativeCouncil, which consists of thedeans of the divisions and schoolsand the top administrative offi¬cers. This council has primaryresponsibilty for cutting up thepie when the budget hes to beprepared.Faculty are also able to influ¬ence business decisions on howclassroom and lab buildings aregoing to look, and faculty com¬mittees have from time to timemade recommedations about pri¬orities for new building projects.Even so, final decisions, and theproblems of finding money foreverything, are left up to theadministrative echelons.Parade of VPsUnder the vice-president foradministration are: 1. The vice-president for spe¬cial projects William B. Harrell,who handles special contracts forgovernment-sponsored research,especially the operation of Ar-gonne National Laboratory.2. The treasurer, J. ParkerHall, who keeps track of invest¬ments and real estate from hisoffice in the heart of the Loop’sfinancial district.3. The comptroller, who keepstrack of money flowing into andout of all accounts, and tells theadministrators how much theycan probably play around with foreach year’s budget.4. The business manager forcampus operations, Eugene L.Miller, who supervises such thingsas the Bookstore, ResidenceHalls and Commons, Buildingsand Grounds, Security, the cam¬pus bus service and all sorts ofother nitty-gritty operations thatkeep the University fed, watered,cleaned up, transported, etc.Then there are the bureaucratspar excellence—the keepers offiles and changers of money, su¬pervised, respectively, by Regi¬strar Maxine Sullivan and Bur¬sar A. Wayne Gieseman.When you’re standing in lineto do business with the bureau¬crats, just remember—not every¬thing in the Universoity is quiteso orderly (?).Brain-TrusteesOverseeing the whole schmear is the University’s board of trus¬tees, which is legally the bodyresponsible for the existence ofthe corporation known as theUniversity of Chicago.While the trustees would prob¬ably never attempt to interferein the academic operations—they wouldn’t have a faculty verylong if they did—Chicago’s boardhas traditionally taken an activerole in planning and fund-raising.More so than other private uni¬versities, this board is c. "work¬ing board”—people serve on itwho are willing to put in timeand effort, not just people whowant to have their names on ev¬ery committee of social elites.Nevertheless, the names on theboard are definitely big-time onthe Chicago scene. Included areSen. Charles H. Percy, a Chicagograd who joined the board whilepresident of Bell and Howell;Fairfax M. Cone, chairman of theboard, who heads the mammothFoote, Cone and Belding ad ag¬ency; Ben W. Heineman, whobuilt the Chicago NorthwesternRailway into a thriving enter¬prise; David M. Kennedy, boss ofthe Continental Illinois NationalBank; and Fred Kramer, of Dra¬per and Kramer, the real entre-pernuers who have flung upmany of the nation’s more gigan¬tic developments. The rest of thelist is equally big-time in thebusiness and financial game.Greater Percentage of Male VirginsContinued from Page 1tivities but 68 percent said thatthey had not. Thus there are ahigher proportion of male virginsthan female virgins.The Maroon poll, however, is by no means defintive. Some stu¬dents probably did not answer thepoll seriously, typified by one girlwho admitted in premarital sexyet disapproved of it strongly.(Perhaps she’s married.)University's Historic Backyard in H yde ParkContinued from Page 5and other problems, the Sov.thEast Chicago Commission (SE¬CC).According to Rossi’s book, an¬other organization besides theHPKCC was thought necessarybecause the Conference had fail¬ed to gain the support of thebusinessmen and merchants in thearea.Julian Takes OverSECC would get much of itstnoney from the University; itwould represent the “political ac¬tion arm of the University.”A few months after its forma¬tion, Julian Levi was asked byChancellor Kimpton to becomeSECC’s executive director. Broth¬er of Provost and next PresidentEdward H. Levi, Julian Levi wasa corporation lawyer, son of aprominent rabbi, with life-longroots in Hyde Park.Known as an aggressive admin¬istrator, Levi soon whipped up astaff, and began an energeticprogram aimed at eliminatingcode violations and personalcrimes.SECC was to investigate allsuch crimes, adding its own re¬sources to those of city agencies,and sometimes giving those agen¬cies a push when needed.Don T. Blackiston, a profes¬sional criminologist, now worksfor SECC, keeping complete rec¬ords of all crimes and code vio¬lations in Hyde Park. He is saidto have data on all persons inthe area who have been arrestedor convicted, and can sometimeshelp police faster than their owninvestigators.The University’s connectionswith insurance companies, banks,and other businesses were used tomake real estate speculators toethe line.Make Renewal Plans1953 and early 1954 were de¬ voted to preliminary planning bythe SECC and HPKCC on ^ thecommunity’s needs, and to get¬ting support for a renewal pro¬gram from City Hall. It wasagreed that the University andSECC would co-operate with thecity, working closely with HPK¬CC, in drawing up renewal plans.Th;s unusual arrangement gaveduties to these semi-public agen¬cies that have since been assum¬ed by city governmental agencies,which were then still understaff¬ed.Through a $100,000 grant to theUniversity from the MarshallP'ield Foundation in 1954, the SE¬CC set up a full-time planningunit whose director, Jack Meltzer,had offices on the University cam¬pus.To get things done quickly, theUniversity decided to undertakethe responsibility for drawing uprenewal plans, and made a con¬tract for this task with the city,to let its Planning Unit do thework. Meltzer, now head of theUniversity’s Center for UrbanStudies, worked closely with lo¬cal institution, community organ¬izations, and private citizens.Transmission BeltHPKCC’s role has been describ¬ed as mainly a “transmission beltfrom the planners to residents,and, more important from resi¬dents to planners. The conferenceprovided an actively interestedpopulace a way to influence plansin several instances.Meltzer was ready three monthsafter his appointment with a plan for 55th street, which then waslined with seedy-looking anart-ments with mostly rundown storefronts.The first step was to tear downthe buildings on the corner of55th and Lake Park Avenue alongthe Illinois Central tracks.A new shopping center, a hmh-rise “luxury” apartment develop¬ment, and rows of twro-story townhouses were then built in thearea Since then, the complete de¬struction of most of the rest ofthe buildings fronting 55th streethas proceeded apace; now PierceTower stands almost alone on thesouth side of the street whereonce the Compass tavern stood asa neighborhood cultural institu¬tion.While the urban renewal pro¬gram has been successful inreaching its goals of a stableneighborhood, success was not ac-chieved without costs.One of the problems of urbanrenewal in Hyde Park is summedup by the phrase of comedianMike Nichols, an alumnus: “HydePark—white and Negro, should¬er to shoulder against the lowerclasses.” In the process of renew¬ing the neighborhood, the sub¬standard housing was cleared, ofcourse.The buildings that sooner orlater replaced the cleared build¬ings, however, were almost uni¬formly designed for occupancy bymiddle or upper income families,not the low-income families thathad been cleared out. Hundredsof Negro families were forced back to the ghetto, especially toWoodlawn just to the south.Even the much-vaunted resi¬dential integration in Hyde Parktends to take on the appearanceof a checker-board—an area ofblack next to an area of white,with maybe some gray in themiddle.Even so, there seems to be noproblem about keeping HydePark a “viable” neighborhood—the real estate market is one ofthe tightest in the city, as innum¬erable students who have desper¬ately tried to find Hyde Parkapartments will tell you.The housing shortage was ex-axcerbated two years ago by clear¬ance of a full block along 55thSt. between Greenwood and Uni¬versity Aves. for the new Luther¬an Theological Seminary, nownearing completion.Families seeking Hyde Parkhousing may find it easier in acouple of years, when the areaalong thesoutli side of 47th St.from Ellis to Lake Park Ave. isdeveloped. This is the last fron¬tier of Hyde Park urban renewal,and its development was until re¬cently bogged down in squabblesover the best way to ensure aheterogeneous mixture of people. After several months of com¬plex discussion about condomin¬ium ownership versus co-ops, andvarious means of financing, acompromise between two develop¬ers’ plans was worked out lastJune, and the groups which hadsubmitted bids for the land willsplit it up.With luck, students looking forplaces to stay may eventually findit easier, if the University’s planto build a rather elaborate com¬plex of housing and recreationfacilities along the south side of55th St. from Greenwood west toCottage Grove Ave. is ever real¬ized.Meanwhile, the people who havefound palace to stay—students,faculty, and normal people alike—will continue to continue to en¬joy the atmosphere which hasmade Hyde Park somewhat dis¬tinctive.;f <7/ 9f~jrt on ers lART MILLER'Sl BEACH FLOWER SHOPfl07« Discount to U. C. Students,Faculty, Staffft 1551 Hyde Pork Blvd.f FA 4-4200 —FA 4-4201— Ml 3-3341STAi*P IT!IT'S THE RAGERFftULA*MODEL.AMY SI P*^S LIME TEXT CSTha fln«*» IHn*sr»ncTI«U METALPOCKFT RUBBER STAMP. %” * 2”.S«nd check or money order. B»«ure to inch’*- ymir 7,lr Code. Nopostage or handling charges. Addsales tax.Prompt »Mp****t R*f*FacH«*G«arwttoodtmm MOPP CO.P. 0. Baa 1M23 Lamm SoonMUMTA.CL.Mm mwwMwmtwMtwwwfn era eta sp* swfrepa m\ "See you at Jimmy's" has been a byword| around the University community for 28 years| now. Stop by (if you're 21 or over), relax, and ]enjoy yourself. We know what you expect fromyour tavern, and we have it.JIMMY’S AND THE UNIVERSITY ROOM TOAD HALL RENTS AND SELLS TYPEWRITERSNEW - REBUILT - USEDIBM EXECUTIVE Reconditioned and painted$199.95 90-day warranty on labor5 year warranty on part*SMITH-CORONA Changeable keys—Repeat KeysELECTRIC PORTABLES Power Space—Pilot LightFROM $139.95 Choice of 10” or 12" CarriageHERMES MANUALS Best portable or full-sizeFrom $54.95 manual machines on the marketOUR PRICE GUARANTEE: If within 30 days of purchase youcan buy for less, we will refunddifference. the1444 E. 57th $t. BU 8-4500FIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE. Ml 3*551614 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29. 1467 m welcome Iona hair,We Jon t cut it all offo&anief ouchetIfVjen J *J4air Cutting and Styling C1541 £ JJyJe Park Bltd. PJH 2-9255 CappointmentA gPick a Winner Tonight at Ida Noyes HallStudent activities night, theannual bacchanalia where first-year students are introduced toChicago’s motley collection ofstudent activities, will take placetonight at 7:30 p.m. in Ida NoyesHall, the campus’ most establishedmeeting place for student organi¬zations.A list of the participating or¬ganizations follows.PoliticalW. E. B. DuBois Club is a youngsocialist alliance acquainting stu¬dents with the principles of social¬ism and trying to win adherentsto it.Students for a Democratic So¬ciety has as its aim, educationand action for a more democraticsocial order. It engages in protestand educational action on a rangeof campus and off-campus issues.Citizen’s Forum is a groupwhich desires to end United Statesinvolvement in the war in Viet¬nam by using public media ad¬vertisements.Conference on the City and theUniversity studies the relationshipbetween the University as a partof the power structure of the city,and the neighborhood surround¬ing it.U. S. National Student Assn.(NSA) is a national organizationof college student governmentswhich makes policy statementsand initiates programs on a widevariety of relevant issues.Council for a Volunteer Militaryis organized to fight the presentdraft system by proposing a well-paid volunteer service.Student Mobilization Committeeis mobilizing for the October 21March in Washington.Politic's for Peace is organizinganti-Vietnam war sentiment inthe South Shore community.Student Political Action Com¬mittee (SPAC) seeks a society inwhich all men can participate inthe significant decisions that af¬fect their lives. SPAC joins withother radical groups around thecountry to change the structureof a society which encourages theunjust rather than the free. Itholds a majority of seats in theStudent Government Assembly.Student Government seeks tofurther the interests and providefor the welfare of the studentsat the University, cooperatingwith University officials in han¬dling such problems as may affectlarge numbers of the student body.It serves to represent the studentbody and to foster a Universitycommunity.Voting Republicans offers a pro¬gram of speakers and other activ¬ities representing Republicanpoints of view to the campus. Ittakes an active part in the Re¬publican primary election and be¬longs to the Illinois Young Re¬publican College Federation.Independent Voters of Illinoisendorses candidates who are run¬ning for political office and worksfor their election.Chicago Area Draft Resistors(CADRE) proposes to help thosewho wish to resist the draft andattempts to disrupt the selectiveservice system.Committee for Women’s Rightshas initiated a program to fightdiscrimination against women atthe University of.Chicago and inthe nation as a whole.Students Against the Rank (SAR) was foundned May 1966to protest the University’s decisionto rank male undergraduates forthe Selective Service. SAR hassince taken stands opposing allclass rank student deferments andthe War in Vietnam.ReligiousChristian Science Organizationpromotes the spiritual growth of1 hose in the University communitywho are interested in ChristianScience. It conducts weekly meet¬ings and presents two free publiclectures during the year to meetthe needs of an academic com¬munity.Intervarsity Christian Fellow¬ship (IVCF) is affiliated with thenationwide IVCF which is an in¬terdenominational, evangelical or¬ganization designed to evangelizein universities and to provide op¬portunities for Christian prayeron campus.Quaker Student Fellowship pro¬vides informed fellowshilp meet¬ings to discuss questions of re¬ligious and social importance. Itmeets twice monthly in homes ofQuaker faculty.Ecumenical Christian Council,an inter - religious programplanned and carried out by theEcumenical Student Council incooperation with the Council ofChaplains, publishes the journalChristian Perspectives and seeksto manifest the unity of Christiansin Jesus Christ.Calvert Club, the Catholic Stu¬dent Center at the University,provides religious, intellectual, andsocial opportunities for Catholicsto deepen their religious sense andconviction. Calvert House collab¬orates with other religious groups.Lutheran Church—University ofChicago welcomes Lutheran stu¬dents who wish to further theirspiritual interests at the Univer¬sity.Student Religious Liberals ex¬amines the functions of the churchin a time of social and ethicalambiguity.Social OrganizationsQuadranglcrs is a women’s clubwhich provides cultural and socialactivities for its members.Mortar Board is a women’s clubwhich provides members with so¬cial and cultural activities.Wash Prom Committee plansthe year’s biggest dance and thecrowning of Miss University ofChicago.PerformingOrganizationsChange Ringing Society per¬forms carillon music in Rocke¬feller Chapel.Balkanske Ingre is an interna¬tional dance group.Folkdauccrs do folk dances fromall over the world for enjoymentand edification.Collegium Musicum was formedto perform music of earlier timesin as authentic a manner as pos¬sible. Its programs include medi¬eval and Renaissance as well asBaroque music for voices and in¬struments. The Madrigal SingersSTATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS******THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount—— -TODAY! ACADEMY AWARDTHE WAR GAME,• “IT MAY BE THE MOST IMPORTANTFILM EVER MADE!"- tondon Observer |• “EXTRAORDINARY. . see it!"-New Yorker J WINNER!fpj(%££& GEORGE ORWELL MASTERPIECEnnimm farihi '‘^AOVINTUK- IN FILM, MAKING!I'VE GOTTHISPROBLEMWORLDContinuous from 11:45 a.m. REDUCEDSTUDENTPRICESCity Parking at Door 1 performs with the Collegium.University Symphony Orches¬tra affords students with instru¬mental backgrounds an opportu¬nity to play major symphonicworks. Public concerts are pre¬sented, including some composi¬tions of students in the Universityand Chicago area.Musical Society fosters the play¬ing and performance of chambermusic and sponsors concerts bystudents throughout the year.University Theatre is a nation¬ally known university theatregroup under the direction of aprofessional staff which sponsorsacting workshops, TV and radioproductions and play reading inaddition to stage productions.Blaekfriars is dedicated to theproduction of original musicalcomedy. Their productions arewritten, directed and acted bystudents.University Concert Band per¬forms band music at Universityconcerts.University Jazz Band rehearsesand performs large jazz band ar¬rangements.Folklore Society sponsors con¬certs by traditional folk artists,lectures and regular programs offolkdancing for the enjoymentand propagation of folk music onand off the Quandrangles.Country Dancers specializes inEnglish and Welsh dances—similar in form to Americansquare dancing.Athletic GroupsWomen’s Athletic Associationprovides a varied extracurricularsports program for women stu¬dents. It sponsors intramuraltournaments and intercollegiatetournaments and intercollegiatemeets as well as some socialactivities.Undergraduate Order of the ‘C’promotes the cause of Collegeathletics at the University of Chi¬cago.Karate Club pursues the prac¬tice of karate.University White W’ater Clubintends to further white watersports in the Midwest.Publiations andBroadcastingThe Chicago Maroon, the stu¬dent newspaper published semi¬weekly, is the University’s mostpowerful medium for the dissem¬ination of news and opinion. Freefrom censorship, The Marooon at¬tempts to present all facts of is¬sues relevant to the Uuniversity,Community and its own judg¬ments.The other is a news-magazinewhich endeavors to do what TheMaroon fails to do in reportingnews, although it specializes infeature articles.Particle is a student journal of science and mathematics publish¬ed quarterly in conjunction withBerkeley students. It includesnon-technical editorials and fea¬tures as well as results of originalresearch.WUCB & WHPK-FM (radiostation) broadcasts on a closedcircuit frequency of 640 kilocyclesto the University Residence Hallsand International House from theMitchell Tower Studios. Program¬ming includes recorded classicalmusic, folk music, jazz, campusconcerts, and dramatic presenta¬tions.Cap and Gown, the Universityyearbook, records the events ofthe past year and reflects enlight¬ened student opinion in thought¬ful analyses and critiques of theyear’s happenings.New Individualist Review, a bi¬monthly journal, is sold at overforty other colleges and universi¬ties and publishes essays by out¬standing conservative scholars aswell as from students and recentgraduates.Chicago Literary Review is astudent-run, quarterly publica¬tion publishing articles, fiction,poetry, drama and book reviewswritten by students, faculty mem¬bers and other contributors.Frumious Press promotes stu¬dent interest in the publication ofpoems with accompanying grap-h ics.Social ServiceOrganizationsElizabeth Qordon Hair Designers, inc.1620 East 53rd StreetBU 8-2900-01-02 literary endeavor.Bandersnatch Student SnackShop is a student-managed eat¬ing place in Ida Noyes Hall.Forensics Association offers acomprehensive program of speechand debate activities to all under¬graduate students. University de¬bate teams attend numerous tour¬naments in addition to hosting aNational Debate Tournament oncampus.Society of the Iron Horse is de¬dicated to nostalgia for the oldsteam locomotives.Pre-Med Club, an undergrad¬uate organization presenting acomprehensive program for pre¬medical and biological sciencesstudents, sponsors speakers, filmsand demonstrations to cover awide range of topics.Astronomical Society seeks tofurther interest in astronomy; theSociety has access to a six-inchtelescope and optical shop oncampus.University Chess Club playschess and participates in tourna¬ments.Parapsychology Club investi¬gates psychic phenomena.Documentary *T.ns Studiesmovies in an aesthetic,and social pcrspectlv* v -r-'WSffilms of interest to tfeIndian Association brlifgn together Indians, Americans andstudents of other nations to sharein the appreciation of the Indiancultural and national festivals andpromotes understanding betweenthem.University Friends of the Inter¬national Voluntary Service sup¬ports and promotes the goals andactivities of International Volun¬tary Service.Student Tutors ElementaryProject tutors elementary chil¬dren. STEP also includes enrich¬ment excursions to museums andplaces of interest in the Chicagoarea, and has operated a muchpraised summer camp for Wood-lawn kids.Student Woodlawn Area Pro¬ject tutors students of South Sidehigh schools and tries to establishclose relationships between Col¬lege students tutors and this timewith high school tutees.Volunteer Institutional ServiceActivities, which provides recrea¬tional therapy for mental patientsat Chicago State Hospital, triesto establish a one-to-one relation¬ship between student and patientin order to give a sense of mean¬ing to the lives of the patients.MiscellaneousPsychology Club is a group ofstudents interested in psychology.Natty Bumpo Society is a so¬cial club based on the principlesof James Fenimore Cooper andHarriet Elizabeth Gross Dukes,giving students the opportunityto unite creatively in a more than Ml 3-31 IS5424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest _foroign cor hospitalCAMPUS CERTIFIED FOODSGROCERY and DELICATESSENOPEN DAILY 9 AM til 6:30OPEN SUNDAYS 9 AM til 3:001327 E. 57th STREETMl 3-7919EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptomatrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreotHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount=^SHUTCHINSON COMMONS DINING Hfti.iLand COFFEE SHOP ARE NOW OPENHutchinson will be open for:Breakfast 7:00 —10:00Lunch 11:00-2:00The Coffeeshop will be open 10 AM. to MidnightJrSeptember 29, 1947 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • ISJoin iis.The Maroon staff in the 1920’s.The Maroon is looking for people who like to write. A newspaper,like any organization, is only as good as the people who make it up.But unlike some organizations, a neivspaper offers unique opportuni¬ties for people who are willing and able to take advantage of them.These opportunities include the opportunity to say something and tosay it to a relevant audience. If you like to write and you think youhave something to say, why not come up to The Maroon Office andtalk to the editors tonight? We’re looking for good people ivlio areivilling to learn.Room 303 of Ida Noyes Hall, anytime after 7:3ft.16 • ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29, 1967After the Riots, What?Continued from Page 1mestic peace is to be achieved,present Great Society projectsmust be supplemented by twomajor programs which wouldget at the heart of the NegroAmerican’s unrest. One pro¬gram would be aimed at theNegro’s economic problem —poverty; the other at the Ne¬gro’s social problem—accept¬ance.The basic cure for povertyremains money. There must becreated an adequate and sus¬tained income flow into the Ne¬gro community under condi¬tions of human dignity.TWO SPECIFIC PRO¬GRAMS could bring this about.First, as advocated by theUrban Coalition, the govern¬ment must become the “em¬ployer of last resort.” That is,the government must provideevery unemployed person whocannot obtain a job in the pri¬vate sector with useful employ¬ment suited to his educationand skill at an adequate wageand under conditions of dig¬nity.Second, a Family Allowanceprogram should be institutedto replace the present out¬moded and barbaric ADC pro¬gram. Such a Family Allow¬ance program would provideevery mother, rich or poor,white or black, with a childallowance—without a need testand without hypocritical moralprobings demeaning to the per¬son and to society.Such programs would pumpadequate and sustained incomeinto the Negro community andwould begin to close the gapbetween economic expectationand reality. THE NEGROES’ PROBLEMis more than economic, how¬ever, and it cannot, as can thepoor white’s problems, be curedby economic measures alone.The Negro is confronted withthe stupendous social problemof racial prejudice — the curefor which is social acceptance.To be sure acceptance can¬not be achieved by law alone.But it can be furthered by leg¬islation which, in the circum¬stances, constitutes a necessaryif not a sufficient condition. TheNegro must be given evidencesof complete acceptance—atleast as a national goal if notas an immediate reality. Howcan this be done?IT CAN BE achieved in anumber of ways. First andforemost, the Negro must begiven the evidence of accept¬ance afforded by national openhousing legislation. Ironically,such legislation would prob¬ably produce no major changesin the Negro residential pat¬tern for at least a generation.But even this has been deniedthe Negro community — withthe leadership of Senator Dirk-sen and the employment of thefilibuster to thwart the will ofthe majority in both the Houseand the Senate of the 89thCongress. As long as this na¬tion is not prepared to give atleast this evidence of accept¬ance the Negro American will,understandably, remain alien¬ated and embittered.Second, there must be an un¬equivocal declaration on thepart of the governmental ele¬ments involved—legislative, ju¬dicial and administrative—thatde facto segregation, in everysphere, is as incompatible with the American ideal and systemas de jure segregation. Andsuch declarations, in their re¬spective appropriate forms,must be followed by vigorousimplementation with “due de¬liberate speed.”It would be naive to assumethat the above proposals forachieving social acceptancewould constitute an instantsolution to America’s racism.But government leadership inthe suggested direction couldgo a long way toward convinc¬ing the Negro American thatthis nation intends to live upto its creed—that democracyand equality of opportunity infact as well as in word are forblack-skinned as well as white¬skinned Americans.THE UNITED STATESstands at a significant crossroad. We must chose between acourse which would remove thecauses of the riots or thecourse which would merelysuppress them. The first courserequires a tremendous invest¬ment in our Negro human re¬sources which would sustainthem under conditions of hu¬man dignity while preparingtheir children to assume thefull obligations and rights ofAmerican citizenship. The sec¬ond course requires a great in¬crease in the strength of ourpolice, national guard, andarmy and, perhaps, the erec¬tion of concentration campsand eventually even genocide.In brief, after the riots mustcome national sanity or nation¬al insanity.Mr. Hauser is Professor of So¬ciology, Director of the Popu¬lation Research and TrainingCenter and Chicago Commu¬nity Inventory, and Chairmanof the Faculty Committee ofthe Center for Urban Studies. Ida NoyesContinued fiom Page 4an’s Club Breakfast. Other im¬portant events include meet¬ings of the DAR (“AnniversaryGreeting”), the MidlothianCountry Club Dinner (“OurHeroes”), and the Boston“Brown Bread and BakedBeans” Luncheon (“Beans andBrain”). And on runs the listof poems commemorating everyunimportant event imaginable.Mrs. Noyes’ poetry was of me¬diocre quality and her wit mi¬croscopic and intolerably cute.And yet her poetry was exceed¬ingly popular, seeing as sheconstantly received more andmore invitations to various so¬cial affairs.A poem which combines allthe bad elements of Mrs. Noyes’poesy under one title is Hochder Kaiser, prepared for theKaiser’s birthday dinner of theIllinois Manufacturers’ Asso¬ciation, on board the “FuerstBismarck” (1912). Let us en¬joy the excerpts together:As Monte Cristo, famed of old,Exclaimed ‘'The World is mine!”These manufacturers, my friends,Aboard the Hamburg Line,Though modest each as maidencoyAnd quite averse to fame,Are of that stuff, without alloy,Which ‘‘gets there just the same.”They typify thus land, so free,Of opportunity;Where workers may grow scarcerthanCaptains of Industry.They peacefully assimilateThe products of the plainOr of the deep, like BuccaneersWho sailed the Spanish main.These fourteen days upon thedeepWith manufacturersOf Illinois, are f illed with joyThat we shall nlwuys keep.And though we women never canExpress our thanks in speeches,Each one will say, in her ownCHEETAH, a magazine born lookinglike today, speaking the languageof today. A magazine written, editedand designed by the mostaudacious, irreverent andprovocative talents of our time.A magazine that will blow your mind!Don’t miss: America’s 11 hippestcolleges ... An inside report on thedrug scene through the eyes of anunconventional young psychiatristwhose uncommon appraisal will infuriate the AMA ... A piercingstudy of head Beach Boy BrianWilson .. .The story of collegebasketball’s flesh peddlers ... PaulKrassner’s latest put-ons ... Thescene in Boston ... and much muchmore including the most fabulous4-color pull-out poster ever created“Mama Cass Elliott” and theby-now-famous flower power pin-uppose to end all pin-up poses.1» i aiooi aCNow at your newsstandsijMllMig way,“It beats ice cream and peachesYou men can’t be more gratefule'enThough you are much the wiser;We are appreciative andAll join in—“Hoch der Kaiser!”Here we are once again con¬fronted : 1) with primitiverhyme schemes which jump be¬tween abeb, abab, and abca;2) a total lack of poetic de¬vices usually designed to tan¬talize the reader; 3) a subjectentirely removed from the titleof the piece (written in honorof one of history’s greatestfools!). In other words, it isdifficult to find any positivequality about the poem, saveone, which is really not thepoet’s doing.—it is amusing toread about the “peaceful man¬ufacturers,” who only threeyears later, were reaping suchmarvelous profits, thanks tothe Kaiser (it’s no wonder theysaid, “Hoch der Kaiser!”) andthe other participants of WorldWar I.That Ida Noyes’ admirerswished to flatter the lady andtherefore endure her poetry isunderstandable, but to call herefforts “witty" or “endearing”seems to be gross expansionsof the meanings of those terms.May she be lor.g remembered,but not as a poet!Mr. Harding is a fourth-yearstudent in the College major¬ing in English.Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Dowrites first time,every time!Bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst ball-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic’s “Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamicbic Duo at yourCampus store now.v®/TrWAUAMANBtC PEN COR3Marono. conn.filC Fine Point ?5C PointSeptember 29, 1967 • WEEKEND MAGAZINE SJoin ns.The Maroon staff in the 1920’s.The Maroon is looking for people who like to write. A newspaper,like any organization, is only as good as the people who make it up.But unlike some organizations, a newspaper offers unique opportuni¬ties for people who are willing and able to take advantage of them.These opportunities include the opportunity to say something and tosay it to a relevant audience. If you like to write and you think youhave something to say, why not come up to The Maroon Office andtalk to the editors tonight? We9re looking for good people who areivilling to learn.Room 303 of Ida Noyes Hall, anytime after 7:30.ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT • September 29. 1967After the Riots, What?Continued from Page 1mestic peace is to be achieved,present Great Society projectsmust be supplemented by twomajor programs which wouldget at the heart of the NegroAmerican’s unrest. One pro¬gram would be aimed at theNegro’s economic problem —poverty; the other at the Ne¬gro’s social problem—accept¬ance.The basic cure for povertyremains money. There must becreated an adequate and sus¬tained income flow into the Ne¬gro community under condi¬tions of human dignity.TWO SPECIFIC PRO¬GRAMS could bring this about.First, as advocated by theUrban Coalition, the govern¬ment must become the “em¬ployer of last resort.” That is,the government must provideevery unemployed person whocannot obtain a job in the pri¬vate sector with useful employ¬ment suited to his educationand skill at an adequate wageand under conditions of dig¬nity.Second, a Family Allowanceprogram should be institutedto replace the present out¬moded and barbaric ADC pro¬gram. Such a Family Allow¬ance program would provideevery mother, rich or poor,white or black, with a childallowance—without a need testand without hypocritical moralprobings demeaning to the per¬son and to society.Such programs would pumpadequate and sustained incomeinto the Negro community andwould begin to close the eapbetween economic expectationand reality. THE NEGROES’ PROBLEMis more than economic, how¬ever, and it cannot, as can thepoor white’s problems, be curedby economic measures alone.The Negro is confronted withthe stupendous social problemof racial prejudice — the curefor which is social acceptance.To be sure acceptance can¬not be achieved by law alone.But it can be furthered by leg¬islation which, in the circum¬stances, constitutes a necessaryif not a sufficient condition. TheNegro must be given evidencesof complete acceptance—atleast as a national goal if notas an immediate reality. Howcan this be done?IT CAN BE achieved in anumber of ways. First andforemost, the Negro must begiven the evidence of accept¬ance afforded by national openhousing legislation. Ironically,such legislation would prob¬ably produce no major changesin the Negro residential pat¬tern for at least a generation.But even this has been deniedthe Negro community — withthe leadership of Senator Dirk-sen and the employment of thefilibuster to thwart the will ofthe majority in both the Houseand the Senate of the 89thCongress. As long as this na¬tion is not prepared to give atleast this evidence of accept¬ance the Negro American will,understandably, remain alien¬ated and embittered.Second, there must be an un¬equivocal declaration on thepart of the governmental ele¬ments involved—legislative, ju¬dicial and administrative—thatde facto segregation, in everysphere, is as incompatible with the American ideal and systemas de jure segregation. Andsuch declarations, in their re¬spective appropriate forms,must be followed by vigorousimplementation with “due de¬liberate speed.”It would be naive to assumethat the above proposals forachieving social acceptancewould constitute an instantsolution to America’s racism.But government leadership inthe suggested direction couldgo a long way toward convinc¬ing the Negro American thatthis nation intends to live upto its creed—that democracyand equality of opportunity infact as well as in word are forblack-skinned as well as white¬skinned Americans.THE UNITED STATESstands at a significant crossroad. We must chose between acourse which would remove thecauses of the riots or thecourse which would merelysuppress them. The first courserequires a tremendous invest¬ment in our Negro human re¬sources which would sustainthem under conditions of hu¬man dignity while preparingtheir children to assume thefull obligations and rights ofAmerican citizenship. The sec¬ond course requires a great in¬crease in the strength of ourpolice, national guard, andarmy and, perhaps, the erec¬tion of concentration campsand eventually even genocide.In brief, after the riots mustcome national sanity or nation¬al insanity.Mr. Hauser is Professor of So¬ciology, Director of the Popu¬lation Research and TrainingCenter and Chicago Commu¬nity Inventory, and Chairmanof the Faculty Committee ofthe Center for Urban Studies. Ida NoyesContinued from Page 4an’s Club Breakfast. Other im¬portant events include meet¬ings of the DAR (“AnniversaryGreeting”), the MidlothianCountry Club Dinner (“OurHeroes”), and the Boston“Brown Bread and BakedBeans” Luncheon (“Beans andBrain”). And on runs the listof poems commemorating everyunimportant event imaginable.Mrs. Noyes’ poetry was of me¬diocre quality and her wit mi¬croscopic and intolerably cute.And yet her poetry was exceed¬ingly popular, seeing as sheconstantly received more andmore invitations to various so¬cial affairs.A poem which combines allthe bad elements of Mrs. Noyes’poesy under one title is Hochder Kaiser, prepared for theKaiser’s birthday dinner of theIllinois Manufacturers’ Asso¬ciation, on board the “FuerstBismarck” (1912). Let us en¬joy the excerpts together:As Monte Cristo, famed of old,Exclaimed ‘'The World is mine!”These manufacturers, my friends,Aboard the Hamburg Line,Though modest each as maidencoyAnd quite averse to fame,Are of that stuff, without alloy,Which ‘‘gets there just the same.”They typify this land, so free,Of opportunity;Where workers may grow scarcerthanCaptains of Industry.They peacefully assimilateThe products of the plainOr of the deep, like BuccaneersWho sailed the Spanish mam.These fourteen days upon thedeepWith manufacturersOf Illinois, are f illed with joyThat we shall always keep.And though we women never canExpress our thanks in speeches,Each one will say, in her ownCHEETAH, a magazine born lookinglike today, speaking the languageof today. A magazine written, editedand designed by the mostaudacious, irreverent andprovocative talents of our time.A magazine that will blow your mind!Don’t miss; America’s 11 hippestcolleges ... An inside report on thedrug scene through the eyes of anunconventional young psychiatristwhose uncommon appraisal will infuriate the AMA ... A piercingstudy of head Beach Boy BrianWilson .. .The story of collegebasketball’s flesh peddlers ... PaulKrassner’s latest put-ons ... Thescene in Boston ... and much muchmore including the most fabulous4-color pull-out poster ever created“Mama Cass Elliott” and theby-now-famous flower power pin-uppose to end all pin-up poses.Now at your newsstands way,*lt beats ice cream and peachesS’You men can't be more gratefule'enThough you are much the wiser;We are appreciative andAll join in—“Hoch der Kaiser!”Here we are once again con¬fronted: 1) with primitiverhyme schemes which jump be¬tween abeb, abab. and abca;2) a total lack of poetic de¬vices usually designed to tan¬talize the reader; 3) a subjectentirely removed from the titleof the piece (written in honorof one of history's greatestfools!). In other words, it isdifficult to find any positivequality about the poem, saveone, which is really not thepoet’s doing.—it is amusing toread about the “peaceful man¬ufacturers,” who only threeyears later, were reaping suchmarvelous profits, thanks tothe Kaiser (it’s no wonder theysaid, “Hoch der Kaiser!”) andthe other participants of WorldWar I.That Ida Noyes’ admirerswished to flatter the lady andtherefore endure her poetry isunderstandable, but to call herefforts “witty” or “endearing”seems to be gross expansionsof the meanings of those terms.May she be long remembered,but not as a poet!Mr. Harding is a fourth-yearstudent in the College major¬ing in English.6iC Fine Point ?5( Point II*OespiUtefiendish tortur®dynamic BiC 0mwrites first time*every time!Bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst bail-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic’s “Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamicbic Duo at yourCampus store nowWAURMANBlC PIN COR?.MUIORD. CONN./September 29, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE SThe City SceneBy TODD CAPP Culture VultureThe summer is over. I'vebeen away from the West Coastonly three weeks, and alreadyit’s hard to reconstruct thedream that was this summer inSan Francisco.Each city has a different setof vibrations. If you're therelong enough, and are sensitiveenough, you find yourself mov¬ing and thinking in rhythm toit.TIIE VIBRATIONS of Chi¬cago are particularly strong.They are, as the Beatles havesaid, within you and withoutyou. They start in the stomachand filter through your diges¬tive system until they pervadeyour whole bodily sense. Theystart in the air, enter throughyour ears, and travel downfrom your hrain until they takeover your entire nervous sys¬tem.In Chicago, they come frompork chop sandwiches, barbe¬cued ribs with hot sauce, andcheap wine — Richard’* WildIrish. They come from thesound of the elevated trainsroaring over 63rd Street, fromthe voices of men on MaxwellStreet hawking hot wrist-watches.San Francisco is a differentscene altogether. The vibra¬tions are more delicate andgentle, perhaps, but equallypervasive. You can pick themup from avocadoes, brown rice. and jasmine tea; from blithelyjumping on and off cable cars;from the mellow, kaliedescopiccolors of a sunset; from thefog rolling gently in from theocean; from the ocean itself.(OF OUR TWO great coast¬al cities, New York, the finan¬cial center with its shrines tothe almighty dollar, is builtupon the Atlantic. Atlantic —Atlantis—city of buried treas¬ure. San Francisco, birthplaceof the Love-In and home of theDiggers’ Free Store, rests onthe Pacific. Pacific—passivity-peace. )The vibrations are alwaysthere, but there are many dif¬ferent ones, too many to be ab¬sorbed in their entirety. It isits musicians that give a citya clearer definition by pickingup these natural vibrations,separating, ordering, thentransmitting and bringing intoview these ordered, refined vi¬brations.ONE DAY THIS summer Iwent to hear Moby Grape givea free concert in Golden GatePark. The sun was shiningbrightly, the air crisp andclean. It felt good just to beoutdoors, especially good to bein the middle of a park.People had told me thatMoby Grape manifested whatwas probably the “purest” SanFrancisco sound, whatever thatwas. What was it? That after¬noon, at least, it was the sound Editor Ed Chikofskyof a group’s being together,having tight arrangementsvoiced in close harmony; of be¬ing original, playing their owntunes with fresh soundingchanges and novel rhythmicshifts. Most of all, it was thesound of having fun. The Grapesang, “Listen my friends,” andwe listened, and felt as friends.The Grape danced and jumpedaround the stage, and wedanced and jumped around,too.It was fun listening to MobyGrape that summer day. Youcould listen, look around at thetrees, look up at the sky, andfeel at peace. At peace with themusic. At peace with the sky.At peace with the smilingflower children and with theflowers themselves. And atpeace with the fog. rolling gen¬tly in from the ocean.Mr. Capp is a fifth-pear stu¬dent i-n the College majoringin the humanities <GeneralStudies). Continued from Page 2ing attractions include WesMontgomery, Jimmy Smith,and Mose Allison, from Tippo,Mississippi. Sunday aft. no agelimit.LONDON HOUSE; If you’vegot lots of money, lookstraight, wear a tie, and don’tmind listening to lots of dinersplay knife-and-fork obbligattito the music, then the LondonHouse is for you. Currentlymaking himself heard abovethe din is Earl “Fatha" Hines,a pioneering giant of jazzpiano, who is set until October15. Jonah Jones (10/17-29) andthe ebullient Dizzy Gillespie(11/1-12) will follow.LINCOLN CENTER: “Jazz,as we know it, is dying,” saysguitarist Gabor Szabo in thecurrent issue of Downbeat. Cer¬tainly, it is true that the newgeneration of musicians isturning to newer forms of ex¬pression. A good indication ofwhat some of these forms aremay be gleaned by attendingany of the weekly concerts,held every Sunday at 6 p.m. atLincoln Center on the SouthSide. These concerts, in fact,may represent not only whatthe new Chicago jazz is allabout , but also what much ofthe music of the next ten yearswill sound like.This Sunday’s concert fea¬tures The Trio—Fred Ander¬son, tenor saxophone Alvin Fielder, drums, and virtuosoLester Lashley, bass, cello, andtrombone. Next week’s spot¬lights the quintet of one of thefounders of the new music,Richard Abrams. Weeks tocome will see concerts by thegroups of Roseoe Mitchell,Joseph Jarman, and other visi¬onaries.BLUES: Many people main¬tain that the music that bestcaptures the spirit of Chicagois blues-dirty, nasty old blues.One of the best places to catchthe sound of blues these daysis SILVIO’S, where transplant¬ed Mississippians Muddy Wa¬ters and Howlin’ (300 poundsof heavenly joy) Wolf bringtheir bands to play on week¬ends. Little Junior Parkeris currently holding forth atTHE CLUB, and other leadingChicago bluesmen play regu¬larly at such South and WestSide clubs as THERESA’S,PEPPER’S, and the I SPYLOUNGE.MOTHER BLUES not onlyfeatures local talent but occa-sionly brings in groups fromelsewhere. Currently featured.Wednesday through Sunday,is Canned Heat, an L.A. group,with the great Junior Wellsand the Siegel-Sdhwall aggre¬gation to follow. Otis Rushholds down the Monday nightslot, with Howlin’ Wolf ap¬pearing regularly on Tues¬days.NEW TEXT BOOKS USEDSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS—NOTE BOOKS—STATIONERY—ATTACHE & BRIEF CASES—SPORTING GOODS—STUDY LAMPS—GRAPH PAPERS—NY TIMES—MAGAZINES—GIFT ITEMSTYPEWRITERS SOLD—RENTED—REPAIREDPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH'SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREET2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALLSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM Sunday 10 AM to 4:00 PM4 WEEKEND MAGAZINE • September 29. 1947It takes about threeweeks to discover usFirst:You've got more important thingsto do now.Second:You bought some of your newclothes before the term began, (but,cleverly, not all)Third:You must give yourself enough timeto make a judgement about theright thing to wear at the Univer¬sity of Chicago. Soon our name and/or label willbegin to turn up frequently.When (if) you do come, we thinkwe know what you'll be looking forand we have it in vast array.We carry every worthwhile nameyou've seen in Playboy, Esquire,Gentlemen's Quarterly and a fewunpublished numbers that are ex¬clusively ours.We look like this from the outside.{ykfiiMOPEN DAILY TIL 6, THURSDAY & FRIDAY TIL 955th & LAKE PARKm the HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERSeptember 29, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE • 7Please note carefully the follow-ing error and correction in route'N' below. This error appears inall maps available.MAP SHOWS East on HydePark Blvd. from Dorchester Ave.to Harper Ave.; South on Har¬per Ave. to 53rd Street.CORRECTION Route continuesSouth on Dorchester Ave. to53rd Street; East on 53rd Streetto Harper Ave. South Shore Single25cTickets ea.Monthly Commutation%ysoTickets THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCAMPUS UUS SERVICEEFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 25, 1967Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS."Upon signal from a patron, buses will stop to take on or dischargepassengers at any intersection. Buses will operate as stated be¬low, Monday through Friday, except on official University holi¬days. Schdules are subject to change without notice.WHO MAY RIDEBecause of legal restrictions, use of the above transportationservices is limited to members of the University faculty, staff, andstudents. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle upon sur¬rendering a ticket to the driver. The driver will not be permittedto accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as a student, facultymember, or employee will be required when purchasing tickets.One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and Monthly Commutationtickets at $4.50 each for the "N", "E" and "C" routes and at25 cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50 eachfor the "S" route are sold at the following Locations:Bursar's Office 15801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office 1950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Avenue)Blaine Hall, Room 105 ( 1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets. "S" routetickets are accepted on all routes).ROUTES AND SCHEDULES(N) NORTH-SOUTH(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normal drivinq conditions. Stopsat all intersections upon signal from patron)SCHEDULE:A.M. Starts at 48th A Greenwood"N"—1 "N"—21 Bus 1 Bus7:01 7:307:31 8:008:01 8:308:31 9:00 Ends at 59th A Ellis.P.M. Starts at 59th A Kimbarlc"N"—3 ”N"—41 Bus 1 Bus12:00 2:4012:30 3:261 :00 4:001:35 4:302:05 5:002:41 5:30 Ends at 58th A Dorchester.3:25(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEW(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normal driving conditions. Stopsat all intersections upon signal from patron)SCHEDULE:A.M. Starts at 59th A Stony"E"—I "E"—2I Bus I Bus7:00 7:157:30 7:458:00 8:158:30 8:45Ends at 57th & Stony.P.M. Starts at 59th & Stony•E"—3 "E"—4I Bus I Bus2:30 4:153:00 4:453:30 5:154:00 5:45 Ends at 57th A Stony.4:305:005:30(C) COMBINED EVENING ROUTE(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normal drivinq conditions. Stopsat all intersections upon signal from patron)SCHEDULE:P.M. Starts at 59th A StonyI Bus6:006:307:007:308:00 ,8:309:009:3010:0010:3011:00 Trip ends at 57th & Stony about 11:25 P.M.(S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUS(Approximately 60 minutes round trip under normal driving conditions. Stops atall intersections upon signal from patron)SCHEDULE:A.M. Starts at 67th A Jeffery"C" I "C" 1"S"—1 •'S"—21 Bus 1 Bus7:00 7:308:00 8:309:30 Ends at 60th A Stonyabout 10:15 A.M.P.M. Starts at 59th A StonyMS"—3 ■•S"—41 Bus 1 Bus2:303:30 4:004:30 5:005:30 — at 68th A Stonyabout 6:15 P.M.Letters to the Editor of the MaroonAn 0-Week DissentTO THE EDITOR:I was just sitting at work to¬day and, feeling a little more bit¬ter than usual, thought for awhile about all of the enteringfirst-year students. I was oncefirst-year, that was some timeage?.. I remember what I thoughtabout Chicago then and what Iknow it to be now.This, then, is a letter to first-year students and those whodon’t know the scene, written byone who was politically exiled inNew York for awhile and who is,as I said, feeling pretty bitter.In case you haven't guessed, allthe orientation talk about a freecommunity of scholars at theUniversity is bullshit. First, thereis no community. The Universityis divided up into hostile bandsof faculty and administrators whocan stop hustling for their ownpersonal advantage only whenfaced by an exterior threat totheir ill-gotten and misused se¬curity, i.e. when faced by a stu¬dent body that wants to governitself. Second, the University isnot free. Talk to someone inSDS about the 1966 demonstra¬tions, try to accomplish somethingthis year, it is all the same. Aca¬demic freedom at Chicago meansthe right to teach what Leviwants you to teach. Talk toJesse Lemiseh about that one ifyou want. A dialogue here meansthe action of talking to brickwalls.NOW THE old man is going togive you some tips on personnel.1 don’t know if Beadle is stillpresident there or not; maybesomeone disconnected his artificialkidney. It doesn’t really makemuch difference; he is senile andnever made any decisions for theUniversity anyway. Then there isDean (ex-Dean I understand)Wick. He is a flunky. His func¬tion is to be shat upon by mem¬bers of the student body. He isthe administration’s scape-goat.He doesn't make any decisionseither, or at least none that aren'tchecked out with Boss “Tweed”Levi. Wick has a whole series offlunkies himself; don’t trust any¬one over 25 (except for Lemiseh)and be careful under 25 too. Thenthere is my pride and joy, Levi.Do you remember the N.ast car¬toon of Boss Tweed, That’s Levi—let us prey. He is a heavy, auto¬cratic bastard who will stop atnothing to prevent any studentfrom gaining anything remotelyresembling power to decide ques¬tions under his fat thumb, whichis to say all questions. Nevertrust him; he lied to the entireschool on the rank issue, he willand has lied on other occasions,and is never to be trusted. Spitat him for me if you see him.NOW7 THIS is the way it is. Ifyou want to save the University(which incidentally will be a sec¬ond - rate school in ten years,untold millions or no) these men,and all the other, faculty and ad¬ministration alike, will have tobe checked or eliminated (mypersonal preference leans tow'ardthe latter). They cannot be trust¬ed to handle the affairs of stu¬dents because they are not stu¬dents. They are a slimy affair atbest, and no progress will bemade toward any sort of freedomthought at the University untilthey are gone.KARATEINEXPENSIVE,EXPERTINSTRUCTIONU.C. KARATE CLUBBe Practical!Buy Utility ClothesComplete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas, ten¬nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Slore1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-100Student discount with ad Now I was at the ’66 and ’67demonstrations, and the waythings stand now, the fastest wayto accomplishing this seems to me,and I grow more and more seri¬ous about this, political assasina-tion of some 13 or 14 administra¬tors (the faculty could be handledwithout violence ami might in¬deed be able to reform itself ifthese men were eliminated. Thebest way to stop the flunkiesfrom increasing in power is tokill off their leaders. This is aproblem the students do not havebecause the Left on campus isamazingly democratic in its de¬cision-making (at least it is forthose who care enough, love theschool enough, or hate the admin¬istration enough to participate init) and therefore doesn't need theauthoritarian controler that theAd. personnel do.When they exiled the 57 (theydid mention us, didn’t they?) theythought that they had the cam¬pus; but 1 think they guessedvery wrong. 1 think that thisyear’s class will smarten up fast¬er than 1 did, admittedly I'mpretty slow, and will laugh in thefaces of the administration. 1think that the leaders exiled arenot necessary, just as they werenot sufficient. And I think thatsomeday . . .But as I said, I’m feeling prettybitter and the old lies are toodifficult to swallow these daysand the new ones aren't muchgood either. If someone will getsome bottles and gasoline, maybethe Phoenix will have somemeaning for the "University asan Idea" once again.NAME WITHHELDBY REQUESTNew York City(Editor's note: The author isone of the 57 students suspendedfor one quarter by a Universitydisciplinary committee for parti¬cipation in the spring of 1967“study-in” against the rank.) An ApologyTO THE EDITOR:In an article in the May 25 Ma¬roon dealing with drugs and und¬ergraduate discipline, my quota¬tions gave the impression that theCommittee on Undergraduate Dis¬cipline dealth harshly and almostInquisition-like toward students.I wish at this time retract thosestatements as being exaggeratedand non-objective, at points. Myapologies to the Committee forcreating such an impression.NAME WITHHELDBY REQUESTBourgeois PresidentTO THE EDITOR:This morning it was announcedthat Mr. Edward Hirsch Levi wasappointed president of my almamater. Mr. Levi, though not aWASP, but rather an honorarymember of this clan, is a perfect¬ly safe choice for the Establish¬ment. For, he is an incubatedbourgeois intellectual, nurtured atthe Laboratory School and at theUniversity of Chicago itself. Neverfrom him a word of protest ordissatisfaction with the systemsuch as came from the mouths ofBrandeis and his own grandfath¬er, Rabbi Emil Hirsch.As Sean O'Casey said of De-Valera, never did he strut downthe street as a young blade, witha saffron shawl over his shouder,criticizing the Halves and theInns. For, he is an adopted WASPendowed with all the suavity andintellectual charm of his group.UNDOUBTEDLY, he is a stan¬dard liberal who recognizes thatthe oppressed have some legal sta¬tus but no real human rights thatcould endanger the safety andcomforts of his own class of intel¬lectual elites. Certainly, he wouldsay that they have not the rightof revolution. He would reasonthat in revolution, we, the intel¬lectuals, would be rendered help¬less.As it is, we can make delightful psychologic and sociologic studiesof the underprivileged and dissat¬isfied and even emit an occasion¬al sigh and shed an occasionaltear over their plight. But, if al¬lowed to rebel and possibly gainpow’er, a wonderful reservoir forstudy will disappear.How can we study the effectsof starvation and malnutrition, ofthe deprivation of education andordinary human rights if thesepeople begin to assert themselvesand begin to solve their own prob¬lems? No more would candidatesfor the Ph.D. in sociology, eco¬nomics, political science, phy-chology, and law (sic) have thenecessary material to study theunderprivileged, the Hoi Polloi,the men cast in iron. The curri¬cula would have to be radicallychanged.THERE IS nothing more an¬noying to a liberal intellectualthan to see people in the lowerDepths begin to assert them¬selves. For, after all, the poorhave always been with us andaren’t they just charming in theirignorance and simplicity — eventhough sometimes annoying?Tolstoy was so right. They arereally not worthwhile writingabout except in derision. Only thenobility, the educated, the afflu¬ent— those who do not soil their they who are the favored chil¬dren of the Christian God—ori¬ginally, by the way, of Jewishorigin.Yes, Mr. Levi understands allthis on a conscious or subconsci¬ous level. He is therefore a verysafe choice indeed. With his su¬perb training in bourgeois hu¬manities (which also contain allthe elements of inhumanity), withhis unfamiliarity with or, at best,with a superficial acquaintancewith the role of the basic sciencesin the present rapid evolution ofthe human mind, he is hardly fit¬ted to make a dent in humanhistory.NAME WITHHELDBY REQUESTEvanstonTAhSAM-A&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 9 P M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.5 RELAX FROM YOUR STUDIES — PLAY BILLIARDS fat cool comfortable 'MISTER Q BILLIARD LOUNGE \15 minutes away in South Shore221-7734 7727 S. EXCHANGE Hrs. 10 a.m.-l a(10% Discount With This Ad) .m. S5 hands in labor— are capable oflofty thoughts and feelings. It is Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062... Bun Life Insurance Is a sure wafto financial independence for youand your family.At a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYUniversity Symphony Orchestra1967-68 SEASON BULLETIN!OPENINGS IN ALL SECTIONS1st Rehearsal Tues., Oct. 3, Mandel Hall—7 p.m.Auditions at Music Dept., 5835 University— Ext. 2615 or 2611 —IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALE,HAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. THE BOOK STORE IS NOW FEATURINGTHE ONE BOOK YOU’LL USE FORALL COURSES!Save yourself from crippling errors in reports andtheme writing. Save time and avoid the tedium ofcorrecting mistakes.Equip yourself now with a permanent lifesaver bybuying the one desk dictionary that won’t let youdown. It's Webster's Seventh New Collegiate — re-quired or recommended by your English department.This is the only Webster with the guidance you needin spelling and punctuation. It’s the latest. It in¬cludes 20,000 new words and new meanings.Owning your own copy is much easier and avoids thehazards of guessing. So pick up this new dictionarynow at the bookstore for just *6.75 indexed. It willStill be a lifesaver ten years from now.GET YOUR OWN COPY TODAY.WEBSTER’S SEVENTH NEW COLLEGIATEYou’// recognize it by the bright red jacket.September 29,1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON • 9NSA: DisagreemBy DAVID L. AIKENExecutive EditorEfforts by members of Students jfor a Democratic Society (SDS) ito persuade National StudentAssociation (NSA) delegates to dis¬band their organization did notsucceed as expected, but did serveto highlight the differences in tac¬tics preferred by liberals and radi¬cals in trying to foster educationaland social change.A rather motley variety of poli¬tical outlooks was representedhere, at the NSA Congress heldat the University of Maryland.In terms of NSA’s internal ac¬tivities and structure, there werethe SDS radicals, who came toorganize their own "counter-con¬gress,” drawing away such speak¬ers as Andrew Kopkind and JamesRidgeway of the New Republicfrom NSA programs and gettingthem to speak at SDS-sponsoredprograms instead.They distrusted protestationsthat NSA had completely purgeditself of all ties with the CentralIntelligence Agency (CIA) (an¬nouncement that NSA had finallygotten the CIA to sell the town-houses that had been provided freefor NSA's Washington headquar¬ters was made just as the NSA jcongress was beginning).Even if there were no ties withthe CIA, they felt, NSA was stilla "government front.” because ittook money from other govern¬ment agencies such as the Officeof Economic Opportunity, and hadno real autonomy to challenge poli¬cies of the government.Radicals on XSA StaffMany of the NSA staff mem¬bers came across just as radical asmost of the SDS people, but theychose to work within NSA, notoutside of it.There was Mike Vozick. for ex¬ample, upbraiding James Ridgeway! for not knowing about NSA’s ef¬forts to help set up “experimentalcolleges” which serve as “counter¬institutions” to big, impersonaluniversities.Vozick, who said he was one ofthe students who helped foundSDS — which was itself originallyan outgrowth of the Liberal StudyGroup formed at NSA Congressesduring the early sixties —pointedout that NSA has taken a leaffrom the radicals’ book by promot¬ing these “free universities” and•experimental colleges.”There, too, was A1 Milano, whowas running a seminar on draftresistance at the NSA Congress,and was interested in finding waysfor NSA to get involved in coun¬selling men who were “up tight”about the draft — the same thingSDS is doing, but presumablyreaching students on campuseswhere SDS does not have anychapters.Even Gene Groves, last year'sNSA president who managed tosteer the association through theCIA rupture, talked about how hispredecessors’ “sell-out” to the CIAwas just another example of thepowerlessness of students and otheroppressed segments of society.Most Delegates ModerateA fairly sizeable proportion ofthe rank-and-file delegates — per¬haps about 20 percent or so •—probably thought along these sameradical lines about the need forfundamental shaking-up in “ thesystem,” even though they choseto do their shaking in NSA ratherthan in SDS.Most of the rest of the delegates,however, did not seem to be par¬ticularly concerned with issuesmuch broader than gaining con¬cessions on social rules, or perhapscurriculum matters, from the ad¬ministrations of their own campus¬es.These were the moderates, those m xNews Analysi:_»uowho looked for ways to Jjustments in the NSA mto make it work better.“structural changes to ^«greater cohesion between trtal campuses and then na«: ^9 « r~*fice.”They were not as into* * fthe kind of drastic sepa iNSA into a “union” . J-alongside a “research »» m msices” agency, wrhich ever**iovFelected president Ed Schwas, v/rfbacking as a long-term 1Liberals Miss Politiols- -Finally, there were theout liberals, and the onconservatives (many of t.group probably call thnineteenth-century liberalthese groups were there t_<in the annual legislativeseeing who can put throueral resolution without L*emasculated by the consei*They had less opportuni*gage in this sort of politick ithe national staff had desiyear's congress more fordiscussion of substantive issfor drafting sessions on leThey almost were dei:»any legislation to fight abo’a proposal was made toprogram mandates, and mlaration and principle” sta tThis was beaten down, but — 9 t~*port it attracted showed tlwl S Mis moving away from itsas passer of resolutions to- Tmore active involvement i am. iand educational problems.There does not seem tosolution in sight for the lit*sus-radical hangup, howevewho think they can work e*ly within the ongoing **seven change the system w— MR. 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TO PIT M -.50 .50 I.CD. >Prices subject to change witho ~ <z>10 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • September 29, 1967NS A: Disagreement on TacticsBy DAVID L. AIKENExecutive EditorEfforts by members of Studentsfor a Democratic Society (SDS)to persuade National StudentAssociation <XSA) delegates to dis¬band their organization did notsucceed as expected, but did serveto highlight the differences in tac¬tics preferred by liberals and radi¬cals in trying to foster educationaland social change.A rather motley variety of poli¬tical outlooks was representedhere, at the NS A Congress heldat the University of Maryland.In terms of NSA’s internal ac¬tivities and structure, there werethe SDS radicals, who came toorganize their own “counter-con¬gress,” drawing away such speak¬ers as Andrew Kopkind and JamesRidgeway of the New Republicfrom NSA programs and gettingthem to speak at SDS-sponsoredprograms instead.They distrusted protestationsthat NSA had completely purgeditself of all ties with the CentralIntelligence Agency (CIA) (an¬nouncement that NSA had finallygotten the CIA to sell the town-houses that had been provided freefor NSA's Washington headquar¬ters was made just as the NSAcongress was beginning).Even if there were no ties withthe CIA, they felt, NSA was stilla “government front,” because ittook money from other govern¬ment agencies such as the Officeof Economic Opportunity, and hadno real autonomy to challenge poli¬cies of the government.Radicals oil NSA StaffMany of the NSA staff mem¬bers came across just as radical asmost of the SDS people, but theychose to work within NSA, notoutside of it.There was Mike Vozick. for ex¬ample. upbraiding James Ridgeway for not knowing about NSA's ef¬forts to help set up “experimentalcolleges” which serve as “counter¬institutions” to big, impersonaluniversities.Vozick, who said he was one ofthe students who helped foundSDS — which was itself originallyan outgrowth of the Liberal StudyGroup formed at NSA Congressesduring the early sixties -—pointedout that NSA has taken a leaffrom the radicals’ book by promot¬ing these “free universities” and‘experimental colleges.”There, too, was A1 Milano, whowas running a seminar on draftresistance at the NSA Congress,and was interested in finding waysfor NSA to get involved in coun¬selling men who were “up tight”about the draft — the same thingSDS is doing, but presumablyreaching students on campuseswhere SDS does not have anychapters.Even Gene Groves, last year'sNSA president who managed tosteer the association through theCIA rupture, talked about how hispredecessors’ “sell-out” to the CIAwas just another example of thepowerlessness of students and otheroppressed segments of society.Most Delegates ModerateA fairly sizeable proportion ofthe rank-and-file delegates — per¬haps about 20 percent or so —probably thought along these sameradical lines about the need forfundamental shaking-up in “ thesystem,” even though they choseto do their shaking in NSA ratherthan in SDS.Most of the rest of the delegates,however, did not seem to be par¬ticularly concerned with issuesmuch broader than gaining con¬cessions on social rules, or perhapscurriculum matters, from the ad¬ministrations of their own campus¬es.These were the moderates, those News Analysiswho looked for ways to make ad¬justments in the NSA mechanismto make it work better, such as“structural changes to guaranteegreater cohesion between individu¬al campuses and then national of¬fice.”They were not as interested inthe kind of drastic separation ofNSA into a “union”. structurealongside a “research and serv¬ices” agency, which even newly-elected president Ed Schwartz wasbacking as a long-term goal.Liberals Miss PolitickingFinally, there were the out-and-out liberals, and the out-and-outconservatives (many of the lattergroup probably call themselvesnineteenth-century liberals). Boththese groups were there to engagein the annual legislative games ofseeing who can put through a lib¬eral resolution without having itemasculated by the conservatives.They had less opportunity to en¬gage in this sort of politicking, sincethe national staff had designed thisyear's congress more for informaldiscussion of substantive issues thanfor drafting sessions on legislation.They almost were deprived ofany legislation to fight about, whena proposal was made to pass onlyprogram mandates, and not “dec¬laration and principle” statements.This was beaten down, but the sup¬port it attracted showed that NSAis moving away from its past roleas passer of resolutions to one ofmore active involvement in socialand educational problems.There does not seem to be anysolution in sight for the liberal-ver-sus-radical hangup, however. Thosewho think they can work effective¬ly within the ongoing "system,”even change the system with pro¬ gressive reform measures, will con¬tinue to work with NSA. Thosewho don’t will probably wind up inSDS.A great deal of common groundwas found between the two groups about what is wrong with Ameri¬can society. What to do about it isthe problem, and “frustration”seems to be the word that was onthe lips of a lot of people in Col¬lege Park last month.FOUNDED CHICAGO SCHOOLProfessor Emeritus R. S. Crane DiesRonald S. Crane, one of thefounders of the Chicago schoolof literary criticism, died Sun¬day, August 27 at his homeafter a long illness. Crane was81 and had held the title of dis¬tinguished service professor emeri¬tus of English since 1952.Crane helped form the Chica¬go school in 1940 when Americanscholars were turning away fromliterary history and toward criti¬cism. Together with William ReaKeast (now presidenet of WayneState University), Elder Wilson,Bernard Weinberg, and RichardMcKeon, Crane would hold week¬ly meetings.The Chicago school emphasizedthe action and emotions of char¬acters in literature. It was opposedby the New Critics lead by CleanthBrooks who stressed the symbolicrelations in novels.In an article entitled “CleanthBrooks — The Bankruptcy ofCritical Monism” Crane attackedthe New Critics for dealing onlywith language and overlookingpeople.Known for RigorHe was known for his scholarlyrigor and his insistence that ail as¬pects of a problem be explored be¬fore an opinion was reached.Crane felt that critical dogmas— such as the idea that consistencyof point of view must be main¬tained — were not sacrosanct. Hesaid, “. . . no rules of techniquecan have universal validity.”Wayne Booth, who dedicated hisbook The Rhetoric of Fiction to Crane, has said about him,“. . . his skepticism made him agreat scholar.”"Of course it is not enough tobe a skeptic,” Booth told The Ma¬roon. “It was his creation and re¬vival of a new critical and scholar¬ly approaches that made the great¬est mark on the intellectual world.He never rested satisfied with anyformulation of any position and heoften left us students panting farbehind.”Crane’s essays and lectures weregothered together this year into atwo volume work. The IcLJa of theHumanities published by the Uni¬versity of Chicago Press.Came Here in *35Crane was born in Tecumseh.Michigan, obtained his B. A. deg¬ree from the University of Michi¬gan and his doctorate from theUniversity of Pennsylvania. In 1911he began to teach English atNorthwestern and in 1935 he joinedthe faculty here, becoming headof the English Department.Last month Crane was elected acorresponding fellow of the BritishAcademy. His books includeNew Essays by Oliver Goldsmith,The Language of Criticism and theStructure of Poetry, and Criticsand Criticism Ancient and Modernwhich he wrote with others.Crane was a short, trim manwith a small mustache and eyesthat an associate described as apenetrating steel gray. He wasmarked on campus for his briskwalk and in the lecture halls forbis deep voice and incisive speech.MR. PIZZA'SFamous PizzaCALL HY 3-8282DELIVERY SERVICECARRY-OUTS1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.HOURS — OPEN 7 DAYS4:00 P.M. to 2:00 A.M.FRIDAY and SATURDAY4:00 P.M. to 3:00 A.M.SUNDAY2:00 P.M. to 2:00 A.M. — MR. 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Administrative and educationalpolicies of universities should bedetermined jointly by students; al°ng with faculty and administra-i tion, the NSA resolution contin-I ued.The delegates voted to set up afund for legal defense of studentschallenging university authority incivil cases. A conference, handbook,and adviser on student power andlegal rights will also be establishedby NSA.Not forgetting their allies on thefaculty, the students set down theprinciples that “the teacher . . .should be free from the institu¬tional censorship and discipline un¬less through due process it can beproven that his actions are detri¬mental to his academic responsi¬bilities” and that “the faculty hasthe right to a collective voice inthe policies and position of theiruniversity.”Retain Demand for De-escalationIn debate on Vietnam, the dele¬gates decided not to consider a mili¬tant resolution which called for theU.S. to "cease immediately to par¬ticipate in the self-defeating blood¬shed of both the Vietnamese andAmerican peoples,” by withdraw¬ing all troops and political supportfrom Vietnam and Laos.Instead, the Congress chose toconsider an alternate resolution ad¬vocating UN involvement in nego-toward de-escalation and final set¬tlement.In the end, however, most dele¬gates decided that these alterna¬tives were either too strong or tooweak, and a resolution passed atlast year’s Congress was allowed tostand as official policy.It urged an end to bombing ofNorth and South Vietnam, de-es¬calation of other military measures,and recognition of the NationalLiberation Front of South Viet¬nam as a party to negotiations.Announce Anti-LBJ DriveRecognizing that the NSA staffhad not done much to activelypush for this policy, however, anumber of delegates expressed adesire for a more concerted effort to bring the issues of wrar to theattention of students on local cam¬puses.Sam Brown, a Harvard DivinitySchool student who was chairmanof the association’s supervisoryboard last year, decided to cam¬paign for the NSA presidency witha promise to emphasize the anti¬war effort. He received a greatdeal of support on this issue, as wellas on the basis of critisisms ofSchwartz’s handling of some as¬pects of the break with CIA.In the final vote tally, Schwartzreceived only five votes over amajority, out of 450 votes cast.About fifteen votes were counted asabstentions.Shortly after the election, how¬ever, Brown received a standingThe soccer, track, and footballsquads are practicing, and the in¬tramural programs will start onOctober 5, according to ChesterMcGraw, head of the intramuralathletic department.The soccer team is largelymade up of returning lettermen,including captain Michael Nem-eroff and Mark (center forward),Manewitz. The outlook is goodfor a better year than last year,when the team lost to almost allthe teams it faced, but there aresome holes, notably at goalie andhalf-back.Coach William Vendl declinedto assay the team’s chances, asnone of the freshman candidateshave had a chance to come outfor practice. He was happy, how¬ever, with the upperclassmenwho came out for the first timethis year as a result of the inter¬mural soccer tournament heldlast spring. He said that prac¬tice time was short, and that theteam would be hampered by nothaving Stagg Field to play on,but that the team should win itsfirst game, scheduled for nextWednesday against Kendall Col¬lege. ovation when he announced hewould devote next year to co-or¬dinating a “dump-LBJ” effort, tobe carried on by students who haveorganized the “Alternative Candi¬date Taskforce” (ACT ‘68”).About 500 NSA delegates signedthe statement announcing forma¬tion of the anti-Johnson effort,which will organize students tohelp in state primary campaignsfor candidates who oppose John¬son’s war policy.Outgrowth of Earlier TryThe ACT ‘68 movement is anoutgrowdh of earlier efforts bystudent body presidents and cam¬pus newspaper editors to expressopposition to the war through let¬ter to the President.THE TRACK TEAM is rebuild¬ing this year, following the grad¬uation of a core of senior distancerunners, including all-AmericanPeter Hildebrand. It has a tradi¬tion of successful seasons, butwith the heart of the team re¬moved, the coach anticipates onlya few victories, compared withth; past. The first meet is tomor¬row, against Northern IllinoisUniversity.But over the years the chiefathletic interest of Chicago hasbeen in the intramural leagues.Last year there was a recordnumber of football teams enter¬ed, 67, which the intramural de¬partment views quite happily. Thechief increase in the number ofteams came in the graduateschools.The Social Sciences team, theEagles, will still be the team tobeat in intramural football, butVincent House is favored to re¬tain the Turkey Trot crown ithas held in cross country overthe past two years.Other intramural events in thefall include the pre-Christmasbasketball tournament, a swim¬ming meet, wrestling, squash, and "Our predecessors tried in goodfaith to reason with the admini¬stration,” the statement said. “Weare now convinced that it is neces¬sary to obtain a new administra¬tion.”The ACT ‘68 effort is not offi¬cially sponsored by NSA, whichcannot engage in political activitydue to its tax-exempt status. Notall delegates at the NSA Congressfelt that working within Democra¬tic and Republican primaries wasfeasible, moreover. Many expressedgreater interest in some form ofindependent politics, such as athird party or local "peace candi¬dates.”the fall tennis tournament. Thatwill be held indoors this year, dueto the destruction of the courtson Stagg Field.McGraw also announced thatthere would be a weight-liftingtournament some time this win¬ter. He further stated that theintramural office could use offi¬cials for the football season, at$2 an hour.Chamber MusicThe Department of Musicwill present six concerts as its1967-68 Chamber Music Series.All of the concerts will bepresented at 8:30 p.m. in Man-del Hall.Tickets for the entire seriescost $4 each for students, whiletickets to individual programscost $1 each. They may be pur¬chased or ordered by mail fromthe Concert Office, 5831 S. Uni¬versity Avenue.MAROON SPORTSChicago Teams Set To GoUNIVERSITYREL GIOU VISUNDAY ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELOctober 1, 1967E. SPENCER PARSONSDean, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel 11:00<6 The Hiding Place of the SacredSeptember 29, 1967 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • 11 /Hodgson: Lemisch Was Not a Factor in Lynd CaseContinued Ironi Page 1to hire or not to hire, certain per¬sons in the appointing process onwhose support he had counted de¬clined to give that support afterreading in the University of Chi¬cago student newspaper a commentI had made about the case of JesseLemisch."(Hodgson! said that some feltmy comment showed such ‘badjudgment’ that my appointmentwould be inappropriate. After thestory in The Chicago Maroon be¬came general knowledge, the chair¬man said, it became apparent thathis effort to secure my appointmentwould not be successful."Lynd then explained that Lemischhad not been given a second three-year appointment last year, al¬though he has been allowed to re¬main for this year to enable himand his wife to make other ar¬rangements. He continued:“I consider Lemisch’s work onthe seamen and, more generally, the common man during the Amer¬ican Revolution to be the mostbrilliant and original research yetdone by an American specializingin the eighteenth century on whatin Europe has been termed the‘history of the inarticulate.’ . . .When I learned that Lemisch wouldnot receive the second three-yearappointment which ought certainlyto have been expected for a scholaras promising as Lemisch, I couldonly wonder what other factor wasinvolved.Reason for Lemisch Dismissal‘‘The obvious answer was thatLemisch had taken part in a stu¬dent sit-in in the spring of 1966directed against the practice ofsending male’ students’ class ranksto draft boards; moreover, in con¬trast to certain other professors in¬volved, he had supported the moreradical students who wished toprolong the sit-in rather thanleave the university’s administrationbuilding. . . .“Accordingly, when after my non¬ confirmation at Chicago State Col¬lege I was asked by a communityorganizers’ newsletter to write apiece on ‘Why I was Fired,’ I statedthat I considered the Board ofGovernors’ action not an isolatedaccident, but part of a pattern ofharassment of opponents of theVietnam war."One of the illustration’s of thatpattern, I suggested, was the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s failure to re¬appoint Lemisch.”Hodgson Corrects InterpretationHodgson told The Maroon thathe had made an effort to securea one-year appointment for Lynd.but disputed Lynd’s interpretationthat the statement on Lemisch wasthe “decisive” factor in the failureof this effort.Donald Levine, Master of the So¬cial Sciences Collegiate Division,also confirmed that his unit is con-! sidering a possible one-quarter ap-j pointment for Lynd to teach a sec¬tion of Social Sciences 125 nextI spring. This matter is still pending. Levine said, and will be consideredby the faculty of the CollegiateDivision in the next quarter.Both Hodgson and Levine ex¬pressed puzzlement and some bitter¬ness over L.vnd's charges.Hodgson explained that he gotthe idea of finding a place for Lyndin some department—not neces¬sarily with the Committee on So¬cial Thought—after Chicago Statehad rejected Lynd. but that thiswas after the University’s budgetfor the coming year had been set.‘Special Effort’ FailedSuch an “extraordinary” appoint¬ment at such a late time wouldhave required a special effort onhis part, Hodgson said. After sev¬eral conversations with other facul¬ty members, he commented, itbecame apparent that any such“campaign” would require morespecial effort than he could give.Commenting on Lynd’s version ofhis conversation, Hodgson said:“Aside from the fact that itmakes me look like an idiot and a bastard, the impression he conveysis that the thing was about to besuccessful, then it wasn’t. Therewas no assurance at all that itwould be successful.“The one person I mentioned tohim explicitly had not declined togive support, because I neverpushed for it. . . . He had remarkedthat he had read several of Lynd’sthings, but the only thing he hadread of Lynd’s in which he knewpersonally what was involved washis comment on the Lemisch case,and this had lowered his estimateof Lynd’s pudgment.“This person was responding neg¬atively not because of Lynd’s pol¬itics, but because Lynd was notshowing good judgment in one caseof evaluation on a matter whichthis person had personal knowledgeof."The person he had mentioned inconversation with Lynd was neitheron the Committee on SocialThought nor in the History Depart¬ment, Hodgson indicated.WUCB Going FMWUCB. the student-owned andoperated radio station, will openits circuits by going FM beforeNovember.Previously the station was re¬stricted by its antiquated equip¬ment and could only be heard inthe dormitories. Now, with newFM power the station will be heardanywhere within a six-mile radiusof campus.Everything to MokeYour Child's Partya SuccessMEXICAN PINATAS1,000 PARTYFAVORS OMLYWE HAVE ALL MATTEL'STALKING TOYS, DOLLS,BOOKS. GAMES, RECORDS,BALLET SHOES, LEOTARDS,SCHOOL SUPPLIES,EDUCATIONAL GOODSWE ACCEPT AU MIDWESTCHARGE CARDSuje&dytkb,Toys, Hobbies \ Juvenile Furniture1708-1710 \ East 79th St.RE 4-4510 ES 5-9664Free Parking Next Door247, 248, 249, 250...there are 250 breath fresheningsprays inWHISPER'new aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Ave . New York. N V. 10017 If Matthew Thornton had signed his namewith the Scripto Reading Pen, he’d be remembered today.Scripto’s new Reading Pen makes what you write eas¬ier to read. That’s why Scripto calls it the Reading Pen.It’s a new Fiber-Tip pen that writes clear and bold.Not a fountain pen, not a ball-point, this is an entirely new kind of pen with a durable Fiber-Tip. Get the re-tillable Reading Pen for $ I. Refills come in 12 colors.Av ailable in a non-refillable model for 39^. Write withScripto’s new Reading Pen. You’ll be remembered. New fiber tipfrom• THE CHICAGO MAROON • September 29. 196712lr CJjp SMC coupons IMffib ft?SOJJOW SMC CPOWCb KIM BARKPLAZA53rd Street at WoodlawnD CELLFLASHLIGHT BATTERY|<| LIMIT TWOPAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53rd ST.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 1*WITH COUPONRegular $1.25CARA NOMELIQUID FOUNDATIONAssorted Shades5t LIMIT ONEPAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53rd ST.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16 WITH COUPON15c OFF ONGALLON OFMILKMr. G Certified Super Market1226 E. 53rd St.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16 ° |o •a WITH COUPONRegular 75cPOPULAR SHADESCARA NOME MASCARA-^ LIMIT ONEPAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53rd ST.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16tmmmmm JWITH COUPONSCHILTZREAL DRAFT BEER6-12 oz. No Deposit BottlesOOF !j< I2 I WITH COUPONIMPORTED FROM FRANCEBEAUJOLAIS BURGUNDY'64 VintageQQc70 FIFTH. . i |53rd Kimbark Liquors, Inc. ! « 53rd Kimbark Liquors, Inc.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16 ! ! ' GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16mmmmJ 1 J ! PUBLIC CLEANERS; 1310 E. 53 ■ 1380 E. 53 ■ 1451 E 51» GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16■i iWITH COUPON ■ ■ WITH COUPONONE SWEATER CLEANED j j FREE DUPLICATE KEY1|C* ) | BUY ONE KEY AT| ! ! REGULAR PRICE 35c §2nd Sweater Cleaned FREE 5 1 1 ' . „ 52 J | 2nd Duplicate Key FREE 2KIMBARK PLAZA ! ! ... u..„m.DCLAUNDERETTE & CLEANERS ! ! ANDERSON ACE HARDWARE1218 E. 53rd Sr. j | ,3M E‘ 53rd *•GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 14 \ 1 6000 THRU FRIDAY OCT. It l| WITH COUPON! Up to 36“ White Pbstic| WINDOW SHADE; onAa (Cut to Measure O^0 25c Extra 1] ANDERSON ACE HARDWARE: 1304 E. 53rd St.B■ GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16WITH COUPON | S WITH COUPONo9t«2LJ»t«»v i • FREE DELIVERYTRANSISTOR BATTERY ; j QN TAKE OUT ORDERS6 for *1.00 °! ■ Phone FA 4-5340 |Regular 39c each 1! j NICKY’S RESTAURANT |AMERICAN RADIO & TV | \ ft PIZZALABORATORY ! , “ “ ,1300 E. 53rd St. ■ ! 1208 E. 53rd St.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. It ! 6000 TH,U ""°*r OCT' '* | WITH COUPONj TURKISH HAND TOWELJ Regular 79c25* < I■ <; LIMIT THREE 3BRESLAUERS; 1236 E. 53rd St.> GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 161 WITH COUPON500 COUNTNOTEBOOK PAPERLLtUU LIMIT ONEPAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53rd ST.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16WITH COUPONBeautifully Cleaned and PressedTROUSERS or SKIRTSReg. 85cJ-Q£ — SECOND FREEM Limit 4 Pieces Each ..Jl‘"1 #>WITH COUPONTOP COATS, OVERCOATS,LEATHER COATSAND JACKETS20% Off Regular PriceGABE S INC.1216 E. 53rd St.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16WITH COUPONPAY REGULAR PRICEFOR CAR WASHGET SECOND ONEFREEHYBE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd St.GOOD THRU FRIDAY OCT. 16STUDENTSTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORESWELCOME YOU BACK TO THE CAMPUSOur clerks will be glad to assist you in our:SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENTand Red Carpet Area••I--?? .I Please use package drops or free lockers)•.. - > "TEXTBOOKS: All required and recommended Texts.GENERAL BOOKS: Follow the Red Carpet to over 23,000titles in a wide range of interests.SCHOOL SUPPLIES: To meet your needs.^STATIONARY & OFFICE SUPPLIES: For work-room . -or office.^RECORDS: A wide choice among hundreds of titles.(Will be back on sales floor, Oct. 13)^NEWSPAPERS & MAGAZINES: Including any ofacademic and cultural interest.CLERK SERVICE DEPARTMENTS^TYPEWRITERS: New, used and rentals in standard, 'portable or electric.*TAPE RECORDERS: New, used an'' rentals."PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES: Many types, camerasand services.'' GIFTS: Many gifts suggestions, U. of C. items and cardsin color."'TOBACCO: A representative assortment of items"SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, coffee, cold drinks and candy.*Main Store: 5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.— Saturday8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. — Open 8-5 Saturday, September 30.DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCH:65 E. So. Water St.Hours: Monday thru Friday I 1:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Education Branch: 5821 Kimbark Ave.(In Belfield Hall)Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Open Eve.nings as necessary to accomodate Evening Program Students!190 E. Delaware Branch:190 E. Delaware Place'Hours: Monday thru Friday 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.IUniversity Construction Centers on Ellis AvenueBy ALFIE MARCUSStaff WriterThe sweet melodies of con-,struction work can be heard allover campus this year. New andrejuvenated buildings aresprouting up in every corner.Out of 186.84 acres of Univer¬sity property over 100 have boon, or are in the process of being de¬veloped, says ,]. Lee Jones, Univer¬sity architect.Most of the new constructioncenters around Ellis Ave. At thecorner of Ellis and 5.1th St. is TheHenry Hinds Lab for GeophysicalSciences which is scheduled forcompletion by June 1068.Just off Ellis is the new High Energy Physics Building on 56thSt. between the Accelerator Build¬ing and the Lab for Astophysicsand Space Research. It will beready for use at the beginning ofthe present school year.Further south, The Fermi Mem¬orial, a sculpture by Henry Moreentitled "Nuclear Energy" will bededicated on December 2 on the edge of what was once StaggField.Library Replaces StaggStagg Field itself, the last rem¬nant of Big Ten Chicago, is goneforever, hut in its place will risethe giant Joseph Regenstein Li¬brary, the most immense of thenew construction. The new librarywill be done in contemporary stonemmMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty, andstaff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,AOc per line repeat.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E 59th St.. Chicago, til. 4QA37.HOURS: Weekdays 10 a m. to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINES:Ad$ must be in by It a.m. ofthe day before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Phone Midway 3-0800. Ext. 3 266RIDES WANTEDDESPERATELY NEED RIDE TO BEAUTIFULSAN FRANCISCO FOR TWO Will sharecost and driving. Want to leave anytimebetween now and 10th of October. CallJONES 343-3933—all hours.HELP WANTEDWAITRESSES wanted to work evenings atBAROQUE LIUNGE, ISI0 E. 53rd St. Applym person after 8 p.m. and ask for BOB R.Hyde Park family wants student to babysit2 morn week or one morn and one after¬noon week. Salary $1.00. Children—5 yr.girl, 3 yr. boy, and IVi yr. girl. CallMrs. Harry Whiteley at DO 3-4981.Two bartenders needed. No exp. necessarybut apply only if you plan to stay thrusummer 1948. Apply in person to 1155 E.57th Street.Baby sitter wanted. Experienced, reliableperson for part of Mondays and Thursdaysregularly. For little boy, 9 months. Call288-32 10. Ideal home for member of the Universitycommunity. 8 room Georgian with 3 bed¬rooms, I'/i baths, 2 fireplaces, full com¬pleted basement, gas heat, and 2 cargarage. Excellent condition and in fineneighborhood 15 min. from Campus. Rea¬sonably priced for sale by owner. ESsex-5-4938.ROOMSROOM and board in exchange for baby¬sitting 3 evening/week and washing dinnerdishes. Either male or female but maturestudent. 554S S. Kenwood. Call Mrs. Mikvaat BU-8-7522.Female student wantedroom. Call 484-1349. in exchange forWILL GIVE AWAY 4 MONTH OLD FEMALEPUPPY — FRIENDLY AND ACTIVE. CALL343-4100. After 4 pm 728-2077.PERSONALSDedicated to the one I love.—JK.PEACE ON OCTOBER 14.Come Underground—CO OP.Part-time job for senior (4th year) student.Arrange appointment with our representa |five. $75.00 week. NO selling involved. !Call Mr McWilliams at 283-0412.Need experienced Beautician. Female. CallFA-4-9479.Ideal part-time job for student. Possibility jup to $1000 monthly. Choose your own jtime, clients, territory. 50% commission for Igetting advertisements and memberships in !a real estate newspaper and organization INo minimum, unlimited maximum. CallCE-4-4314.FREE-LANCE WRITERS WANTED MARQUISWHO'S WHO, INC. needs part-time, free¬lance writers to do short biographies offamous people in an interesting narrativestyle. Remuneration is attractive. No ex¬perience necessary tho ability to write es¬sential. Call SU-7-2001, EXT. 4 Iwkdys.9-4) for appt. and details. SOCIAL SCIENCE 125 MAKE-UP EXAMWILL BE GIVEN ON MONDAY, OCTOBER14, 1947 from 4 to 5:30 P.M. in SWIFT 208SIGN-UP NOW IN GB 212, Test Administra¬tion Office by October 12, 1947 to registerfor exam and pick up exam ticket.CONGRATULATIONS GRANT AND NORMA!PLUS—WELCOME HOME J. JONES.Physical Fitness, Mental Alertness, MoralCourage. U. C. Karate CLUB.rxy@oeldBc alVoVETA SHRD SHTRDARMY RESERVISTS Paid positions availablein Army Reserve Unit meeting on campus.Students or faculty interested in joining,phone Mr. Keats at 527-0700, Ext. 253.Learn Self-Defense—KARATE CLUB.PLATO'S back and he's still eating anddrinking (fine imported beer) and smokingIwhat are you smoking NOW boys?) atSAUER's 311 E. 23rd.Guess who plays pool at Mister Q and eatshealthfully at Fuitonia Health FOOD CEN¬TER ON 43rd Street???Need good Public Relations Man.time. Call John 447-9779. Part-HOUSES FOR SALE4 Bedroom house located in South Shoreonly It min. from Campus. Two woodburn¬ing Fireplaces. 2 car garage. Undergroundlawn sprinklers. Also fully carpeted witha finished basement. $30,000 For appoint¬ment, call 443-3140.Calendar 1* mPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toThe Maroon by II a.m. of the day beforepublication.Friday, September 29REGISTRATION: Come join the fun at Bart¬lett Gym and assorted other places, 8:30am.-12 midnight. No appointment neces¬sary.Saturday, September 34SHAKESPEARE: Macbeth. presented b yCourt Theatre. Hutchinson Court, 8 p.m.Will be outside if weather permits.FILM: Noya Daur, prize-winning Hindimovie with English sub-titles. Sponsored bythe University's India Association. JuddHall, • p.m. Admission: $1 for members,$1.50 for non-members.Sunday, October 1TELEVISION SERIES: Charlaada. a Spanish-language program on WGN-TV, Channel 9,8 a.m. and after the Sunday night latemovie.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity Carillonneur, 3 p.m.EXPERIMENTAL FILMS: An Evening of Ex¬perimental Film: Super Up, Two Men onda Wardrobe, The Magician, A Movie, fol¬lowed by panel discussion. Law SchoolAuditorium, 7:30 p.m.Monday, October 2CLASSES: Meet those illustrious professorsstarting at 1:30 this morning, all over thecampus.CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL CONFERENCE:Biological Sciences and School of Medicine,P-l 17, 5 p.m. HYDE PARK DIGGERS??? RICH-752-5383.We love YOU, KARATE CLUB—Ludmann, Varga, O'Donovan.CORSO EATS.Happy Birthday Fred Gordon.THE KARATE CLUR WANTS you.WRITERS and PHOTOGRAPHERS needed onMaroon Staff. Call MI-3-0100, Ext. 3245or come to office Room 303 on third Boorof Ida Noyes Hall."He's MAD! But . . . I'm Powerless toStop Him! So long as this Vacuum RaySurrounds me . • • I can't become . . .the HULK!"BURN FLAGS, NOT BABIES.___See weekend magazine in THE CHICAGOMAROON for review of IDA NOYES'POETRY.___SMOKE POT, NOT BABIES."I would like to speak to anyone who at¬tended W. Wash St. College." Call 484-4577._____Why notKARATE CAN BE FUN or not?FIND OUT?Make Love, not Poetry, Ida Noyes.T.C.B. LOUIERUSSIAN taught by highly experiencedteacher . . . rapid method . . . triallesson at NO charge , , . Call CE-4-1423,9-5 PM.NEWS RELEASE: PRESIDENT INFORMS NEWSTUDENTS—"IF YOU DO NOT CON¬FORM . . .""A free University in A free Society."(SIC. SIC, SIC. SIC. SIC, SIC)SUPPORT MAROON ADVERTISERS—an ex¬pensive newspaper in a free University . . .REYNOLDS CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IP DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY, EXT. 3573M-F C a.M.-S p.M.. Sat. • m.m.Al p.M. SAVE 40-50% on texts-CO-OP.THIS is the third year the KARATE CLUBis in existence. FOR RENTNearby, economical, clean, quiet, warm,unfurnished apt., 3'/z rooms, private porchand bath, elec., and frig., $92.50. Freeutils. Also waiting list for coming vacan¬cies. $77.50 and up. 4043 Woodlawn. Wil¬liams. MU-4-2300.We are equally unhappy when wedeeply in love and when we have no Iat all.Worst Hicks in town at the FOR SALEBANDERSNATCH.. : __ LEAVING TO GO . . . Selling beds, tables,.ic... ... I, L . , . - o ! chairs, chests, desk. CHEAP—Everything.,s,°1Pv,f°B%- * k ■ M p ain: B“vt kun' most go before October 1st. Call MU-4usual varieties to brighten up your kitchen s|7|and Bathroom"—The Chicago Tribune. *~„ T “ RECONDITIONED UPRIGHT PIANOS FOR50-50% off is our regular book price—| SALE. PHONE Mr. Hobnik at 523-4144.Student Book Co-op—Reynold's Club Base- —ment—between the pool tables and the ! Twin matt, t springs—$10 each. Phonebarbershop. i BE-3-7388.POSTER PRINTER URGENTLY NEEDED ATHILLEL. 11.50/HOUR. PL-2-1127. ANTIQUE REED PUMP ORGAN. ElevenStops . . . Five Octaves . . . needs minorComing—'' LEATHER"—Michael1 Bruce.Don't miss the portrait gallery in the base¬ment of the LAW SCHOOL.TENANT REFERRAL SERVICEReasonable Rentals, Desirable Apartmentsfurnished and unfurnished. Lake Front Com¬munity with Excellent Transportation. Ef¬ficiencies from $85. One Bedroom from$100. Also large deluxe apartments. CallNO-7-7430. South Shore Commission. ANon-profit Community Organization. repairs . . . $150.00.evenings. Call VI-2-3494Double bed spring, base—324-8350. $10.00 . . . CallTR 4A with wire wheels. Low miles . . .Toneau cover . . . white soft top ... inperfect condition. $2000Call Ted at 285-0825. or best offer.WANTED TO BUYWill BUY your used Drum Set if reasonablyIsay what?) priced even if IT is a mess.Call Jones at 343-3933 . . . All Hours. architecture by Skidmore, Owings,and Merrill,A new alhletie field, for the newChicago football team will he builtsomewhere between 51th and f)6thfrom Inglcside to Cottage GroveAve.Towards the Lake, at 57th St.and Dorchester Ave., the exclusivenew air-conditioned residence forwomen — "baby Pierce” —■ hasbeen completed in record time andis now ready for occupancy.In February 1068 Searle Chemi¬stry Lab, a graduate research andoffice building on the edge lof theQuadrangles, will be ready for oc¬cupancy.Cobh Almost CompletedVery close to completion is therenovation of Cobb Hall at 58thSt. and Ellis. The first three floorswill be occupied starting October1 and the rest of the buildingshould be ready very soon after¬ward. The interior of the buildinghas been entirely redone in Gothicmodern while the classical outer-shell remains intact.Across the street between Abbotand Billings Hospital a new Ani¬mal Quarter will be constructed byMay 1968. The Quarter will serveas a receiving room and quaran¬tine for experimental animals.Also, on the other side of theQuadrangles between Walker andBeecher Halls on University Ave.an International Studies Buildingwill be constructed by the fall of1969.Across the Midway the only planfor a new building is the SocialService Center at 61st St. and| Ingleside scheduled to be complet-I ed in the fall of 1969.» • • deska tableis a deskThe three-drawer tier of this deskconveniently moves on a concealedtrack to either the right or left for thauser's convenience. You con raise th#drop leaf for additional workingspace, or use the expanded "desk"os a dining table, comfortably seat-fng four. In matched grain, oil fin¬ished teak or walnut.An exceptional value at FORM, In^ teak, $73, in walnut, $77.ee-era p»i_JF>aeum_JF»4«*£2nd and Harper, in Hyde Park324-9010Mon.-Fri. W-9; Sat/til 6 pmSeptember 29.1967 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • 15CHICAGO’SMost FabulousRestaurantPHONEBU 8-7400 OVERLOOKING LAKE MICHIGAN AND SOUTH SHORE DRIVE ON LAKE SHORE DRIVEFine art, like good food, excites theappetite of the discriminating connoisseur.In 1932, right in the heart of the depression, Mr.Morton started a little bar at 5487 Lake Park Ave.The bar featured no food as such, but offeredpretzels and potato chips to its customers with theirdrinks. Mrs. Morton, however, thought4that somefood should be served as to bring the customers in,'so a very limited menu was offered featuring herown recipe for spaghetti and meat sauce, a ham¬burger and barbecue beef sandwich. Checkeredtablecloths,'candles.in old wine bottles, and saw¬dust on the floor was the atmosphere of the day forthat period of the 30 s.In 1941 a catastrophe hit the restaurant — it wasdestroyed by fire down to the ground. The restau¬rant was rebuilt and an adjoining store was leased,enlarging Morton's allowing it to serve completedinners featuring outstanding European recipespassed on from Mrs. Morton’s mother. It immediatelybecame recognized as one of the finest eatingplaces on the South Side of Chicago. The restaurantcontinued to flourish and for some 23 years cateredto University of Chicago faculty, sports personali¬ties, and many celebrities.★******★★*★***★*★★★★★★In 1955 the Hyde Park Kenwood Urban Renewaldecided to tear down Lake Park and create anewer and finer Hyde Pork area. Luckily, at thistime the Shore Drive Motel was being built behind the Old Palm Grove Inn Restaurant and the oppor¬tunity was offered to Mr. Morton to lease the areafor. his restaurant.This is our- 10th year at this location and we hope, God be willing, we will be here to serve-youthe kind of food you want as our patrons in an everimproving, culturally stimulating Hyde Park area.I StetujAtfatI StiinAd| BEFORE DINNER:I MANHATTAN .85i WHISKEY SOUR .85 I.831 SCOTCH .8.5 j1 BOURBON .85 1| BACARDI .85I DAigi IRI .85 II CHAMPAGNE1 COCKTAII1 C.R ASS HOPPER .1.10 i1 WITH DINNER:I SAI TERNES (Domestic!| 1.75-1/2 3.00 -1/58 SAUTERNES iIniporliil i1 2.25-1/2 4.00 -1/5 IBURGUNDY I Domestic!1.75-1/2 3.00 ■ I/S IIII RC.UNDY lImported!2.25-1/2 4.25 • 1/5 j1 BEER * l)omeRl»c*i , .SO IAFTER DINNER:brandy 1.00 1I COGNAC 1.00 9BENEDICTINE 1.00 1COINTREAU 1.00 1| DRAMBUIE 1.00 I| MltKTREl'SEiGr.vn i.r Yellow) 1.10 Ij CREME DE MENTHE .05 jCREME l>E COCOA .95 1j AI.B'AYS:MORTON S FAMOUSMORTIM 85 |[ ihc Martini iImI >i«* no K ivjl JSANDWICHES TO SATISFYthe hungry maleHot H**rf or Turkey jmimIhm-K :»er** *l Iwill. ^ Potato**.*,-ill a. I. Roll* ,TU;| Hiltter 1.75MORTOVS .specialSUMMER SAMVRIUHCorned Beef i piled high l JMrr, •tmtleil Ikill. pun* errant anil imim IT t)*in I1 itnioiK on 4|i* ri.il M.trK l>r* ,n| 1.50 j Fine Fool Takes Time Us Frtparf, , %U^ll done chopped steaks. doier 'ole,lamb chops, lobster tail and JrictlALASKAN KING CRAB 1.75Arno*# DraftingMARINATED HERRING 85 SHRIMP COCKTAIL 1.50RIBS iBaby Bjcki 1.63 fki. It.it arc nil pri/vnd lo itrdrr. i30 Minutra Prrporntion Time Mull Be Allotted!TOMATO JUICE 40SOUP DU JOUR 40CHOPPED LIVER 65 FRENCH ONION SOUP 40SPAGHETTI .60 CrmitonSn/teedPRIME CHOPPED STEAK 0<* ox.) 2.95• PRIME CHOPPED STEAK 2.95Muffed with Creen Peppers and OnionsBAKED LASACNA in Casserole .................i.. m. 2.95CASSEROLE OF SAUTED CHICKEN LIVERS ........... 2.95with Mushrooms in Wine SameONE-HALF BATTERY RAISED ROAST CHICKEN .' 2.95ONE-HALF BATTERY RAISED FRIED CHICKEN 2.95SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE 2.95CREAMED CHICKEN AU CRATIN 2.95SPECIAL PETITE LADIES SIRLOIN STEAK 3.95FILET MICNON SHISH-KEBAB 3.95with Mushrooms, Tomatoes, Green Pepper and OnionsFRIED SHRIMPS 2.95BROILED FRESH LAKE SUPERIOR WHITEFISH 4.25LOBSTER A LA NEWBURG on bed of rice, Kumquat 4.502 DOUBLE LAMB CHOPS 4.50FILET MIGNON 4.50with or without a delicatecovering of pur Special Bleu.Sauce — Garlic Bread e_4(ci/onSf t/fecia/fy.. .SUCCULENT MEATY BABY BACK RIBSServed with our Famous King: Edward 1 Gourmet Saurc3.95STRAWBERRY CHEESE CAKE 60FRESHLY BAKED PIE SOMRS. MORTON'SWHIPPED CREAM CAKE 50STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE 85Top|>etl with fresh Whipped CreamICE CREAM OR SHERBETS SOFRESH FRUITS IN SEASON .SOTOASTED COFFEE CAKE SOSTRUDEL... 50 LOBSTER TAILS 4.95ROAST DUCK 3.95with Dressing and Orange SaucePRIME SIRLOIN 5.95PRIME ROAST BEEF 4.50SPetveduhIA a//ettAeetSALAD BOWL A LA MORTONS•rOUR CREAMY COLE SLAW ar OUR NEW Gelid*I SALAD•r OUR NEW CREAMED GARLIC DRESSINCBaked Potatoes with Sour Cream and Chive*, Special Potato Pancake withApple Sauer or our own drlieioua Spaghetti with Meal Sauce • Carden FreakVegetable * Our Daily Bread ... hot from our OvenNO SUBSTITUTIONS ALLOWEDFor g real E/ticureon Might try our Note Flaming Dr tier IISTRAWBERRIES ROMANOFFIce Cream aurrounded with alrawberrirs, covered withracial cognac, served flambe.#1.50CHERRIES ROM/ANOFFIce Cream surrounded with cherries, covered withapecial cognac, served flambe.*1.50MORTON'STEA 25 AL BLEND COFFEEMILK 25 tfBevebaoed■r M <7.25SANK A 25SPate PPn acted(Serroi only ofier 10:00 PM.)♦ROUND STEAK♦FRIED SHRIMPS♦STEAK SANDWICH'BARBECUED RIBS♦CREAMED CHICKEN....all gratia'SPAGHETTICHICKEN SALAD ...... ,SHRIMP SALADMortons Sai.ad ....... fOlOQ'SAI HAMRllPfi! iON BLACK BREAD. Served withpotato pancake, apple sauceand cole slaw. $1.68 POOP ROY SAMU/IPHON A WHOLE LOAF OF FRENCH BREAD.Served with potato pancake, applesauce and cote slaw 81.18SALAD JULIAN 1.75 CHOPPED 1JVERSANDWICH 1 30CLUB SANDWICH 1.75 ARNOLD’S SPECIAL 1.65. 3.50. 1.75 JUNIOR CLUBHAM AND CHEESESANDWICHHAMBURGER SANDWICH .. 1.501.401.36 Lettuce, Turkey, Su its Cheese,Sliced hardboiled egg. coveredWilli 1000 Island DressingTHIN PANCAKES 1.10. 1.60. 1.75 with French Fries 4 Cole SlavBEEF AND CHEESE DENVER OMELET.HAM or PORK SAUSAGES 1.40. 1.50 SANDWIt II 1.40 1.60 SCRAMBLED EGGS ANDCHIVES 1.40Sliced Tomatoes,ToastSAUTED CHICKEN LIVERSAND ONIONS 1.50with Scram! <cd EggsCOFFEE CAKE...... . .... .30COLD CEREAL with Crrant .60THE CHICAGO MAROON September 29, 1967