/The Chicago Maroon FoundedIn 1M>2VOL. 76, NO. 9 66 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1$67 4 PAGESI WARMS TO NEW LEFTFriedman Hits Rigid PoliticsThe Chicago Maroon—PoKCOMMUNICATIONS GAP AT HUTCHINSONDeans O'Connell, Booth, and Isenberg II. to r.) wait for studentsin Hutchinson Commons. They have been conducting meetingsevery Thursday at I I a.m., but attendance so far has been low.Booth called this format of opening communications between theadministration and the students "not the only one possible" andsaid he welcomed suggestions.McConnell To ChairPoly Sc/ DepartmentGrant McConnell, a professorof political science here, has beenappointed chairman of the De¬partment of Political Science.McConnell, 52, a specialist inAmerican politics, will succeedLeonard Binder, who has beenchairman of the Department sinceOctober 1, 1064. Binder is currentlyon leave from the University.Binder relinquished the chair¬manship to study for a year in theCenter for Advanced Study in theBehavioral Sciences, Palo Alto, Cal¬ifornia. He will be doing researchon comparative politics in the Mid¬dle East.McConnell is an authority on in¬terest groups and public policy inthe United States.Among the books he has writtenare “The Modern Presidency”(1967), “Private Power and Amer¬ican Democracy” (1966) and “Steeland the Presidency” (1963).Born June 27, 1915 in Portland, Oregon, McConnell received his B.A.degree from Reed and was nameda Rhodes scolar in 1938. He studiedat Oxford in 1938-39 and taught atMount Holyoke in 1939-40.Business EconomistDuring the ne*ct two years he wasa writer for the U. S. Departmentof Agriculture and a business econ¬omist for the U. S. Office of PriceAdministration. He joined the Navyin 1943 and served through 1946.After studying at Harvard Mc¬Connell entered the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley where hestudied problems of labor, earninghis Ph.D. there in 1951. From 1950to 1957, he was an assistant pro¬fessor of political science.McConnell came to Chicago asan associate professor in 1957 andbecame a full professor in 1965. In1962-63, he held a Ford FoundationResearch Professorship in Govern¬mental Affairs. He is a member ofthe American Political Science As¬sociation. By JOHN SIEFERTMilton Friedman, economic ad¬visor to Barry Goldwater in the1964 Presidential campaign,speaking at an open meeting ofthe University’s Young RepublicansClub Tuesday, said it is neither pos¬sible nor desirable for Republicansto present a “Choice, not an Echo”to the Democratic Party."A major political party cannotbe a party of principle,” Friedman,Paul Snowden Russell, professor ofeconomics, said. "Jt must be a partyof expediency.” According to Fried¬man, if the Republicans were aparty of truly conservative princi¬ples, stable chance and orderlytransition of power between admin¬istrations would become impossible.Along with many Democrats,Friedman feels the policies of thepresent Democratic administrationhave not been very different fromthose urged by Goldwater. Butdespite the similarity, he urged achange to a Republican adminis¬tration. “A gradual change in in¬tellectual opinion is how changecomes about,” he added.According to Friedman, intellec¬tual opinion in America reflects agrowing disillusionment with col¬lectivist solutions. “The failure ofalmost every New Deal program isso obvious,” he said, "that I canfind almost no one to argue againstit.”Now It’s ‘They’The intellectual community isalso disillusioned with the govern¬ment in Washington, he pointedout. He said, “For 30 years intellec¬tuals referred to government pro¬grams as what ‘we’ are doing. Now'it is what ‘they’ are doing.” Nowthat their collectivist solutions haveproved a failure, Friedman said,the liberals are intellectually bank¬rupt.Friedman, taking a more dispas¬sionate position than most con¬servatives, described the programof the New Left as intellectuallyadmirable. Stressing the similaritiesbetween the position of the NewLeft and the position of libertarianconservatives, he pointed out thatboth favor the abolition of thedraft, an end to poverty, and free¬dom within the university commu¬nity. He expressed his admiration for their stress on individual free¬dom and participatory democracy.“When I hear the New Leftspeak,” Friedman said, “I find thatI agree with almost everythingthey say. We share the same ob¬jectives. The difference is that Iknow how to achieve them andthey don’t.”In reference to the academiccommunity, Friedman said ChicagowTas engaged in the business of pro¬ducing three major products. “TheUniversity produces schooling (Ihesitate to call in education), re¬search, and monuments.”Favors Student SayIn keeping with his economicviews, Friedman suggested that stu¬dents might have a greater educa¬tion if professors were paid di¬rectly by their students, ratherthan through a university adminis¬tration.He criticized zero tuition in stateuniversities as a hidden regressivetax. “Families in Watts are taxedso that families in Beverly Hillscan send their children to a stateuniversity free,” he said. Friedmancalled for students to pay the costof their education, with opportuni¬ties for students in financial needto borrow the necessary funds.Friedman said the Universityshould provide the maximumamount of freedom possible to stu¬ dents. “They must learn to maketheir own mistakes,” he said, “justlike anyone else.”In reference to the racial crisis,Friedman pointed out w’hat he saidmany liberals are unable to accept—that the majority of people in theUnited States are prejudiced. Thewisest thing black people could sayto the white majority, Friedmansaid, is to “leave us alone.”Friedman blamed a large part ofthe problem of urban poverty onbad government action. “With ourpresent government program,”Friedman said, “wre are creating apermanent class of the poor.”Friedman concluded his talk bysaying, "No intellectual should de¬clare ‘I am a Republican.’ An in¬tellectual should stand on principleinstead.”The Young Republicans an¬nounced at the meeting tentativeplans to hold a mock political con¬vention on campus some time dur¬ing late January. It is expectedthat 700 delegates from thirteenstates will attend the convention,which should provide a forum fora show'-down between the tradi¬tional Young Republicans and thenew'er civil libertarians from Chi¬cago.POLICY TALK HERENew British Role OutlinedWilliam T. Rogers, British un¬dersecretary of state for foreignaffairs, outlined two recent ma¬jor changes in Britain’s foreignpolicy at a lecture here Tuesdaynight at Breasted Hall.The shifts in policy, Rogers said,were caused by gradual changes inEngland’s conception of her role asa world power.The first major decision, in Rog¬er’s view, was made last May whenParliament, with the support of theBritish people, affirmed that Eng¬land would re-apply for admissionto the Common Market. WhetherDe Gaulle will accept England,Rogers said, w'as “no longer up tous.”The British government has alsodecided to reduce its commitmentsMAROON SPORTSChicago Booters Upset Notre DameBy JERRY LAPIDUSThe varsity soccer squad, bestat Chicago in several years, upsetthe Notre Dame team in a stun¬ning come-from-behind 4-2 upsetvictory Wednesday.After giving up two early tal¬lies, the University eleven ralliedbehind scoring ace Mark Manewitzand completely dominated thecontest.Manewitz, ’68, scored the first ofthree goals early in the secondquarter after the Irish hadjumped to a 2-0 lead; in the nextquarter he tied up the contestwith his second tally.Pete Richardson, ’70, scored thegame-winning goal in the closingminutes of the third period, whileManewitz put the game on icewith his third goal of the after¬noon in the final period.With that final goal Manewdtzcompleted his second three-goal hat-trick in as many games. Henow has a total of eight goals forthe season, only two under theall-time Chicago record.Picking up assists on Manewitz’sgoals were Mike McLean, ’69 andCaptain Mike Nemeroff, ’68. PaulDeGrazia, ’71 and Manewitz as¬sisted on Richardson’s tally.‘Couldn’t Be Happier’Claiming that he “couldn’t behappier with the game,” Chicago’sCoach Bill Vendl gave much ofthe praise for the victory to theeleven-man effort and the all-around team play. He gave spe¬cial credit to halfback Mark Mes-sig, ’70, fullback Mike Schecht-man, ’68, and goalie Dave Gadian,’71, who made eleven great savesduring the battle.Wednesday’s game marked thesecond time the booters havebeaten Notre Dame—the first wasin 1948. in the Far East by one half by1970-71, he said. England plans togive up its Singapore base, he said,and “not rely on land forces there”by the mid 1970’s.Rogers maintained that, “con¬trary to popular belief, Britain’sdecision to enter the CommonMarket did not govern her deci¬sion to lessen commitments in theFar East (or visa-versa).” Bothdecisions were, rather, results ofEngland's recognition of the newrole she must fill in world affairs,he said.European Ties CloseThis role is one of increased as¬sociation and identification withEurope, Rogers said. “We are partof Europe. . . . Our assoication isnot only necessary . . . but na¬tural,” he said. Rogers made itclear, however, that ties with theCommonwealth nations and closeassociation with Europe were not“alternatives.”“T h e Commonwealth is valu¬able,” he said. “We acknowledgeour obligations to it.” Neverthe¬less, he added. British and Com¬monwealth interests are in dif¬ferent directions and in order to“fill a useful, creative role in theworld, looking to the Common¬wealth is unrealistic.”I tpft >Ifcw.-.The ChicagoFAST GAME: Mike McLean, '69 (foreground) linesplay during Wednesday's hot contest with the Irish. M aroon— RERup for a NOTICEDue to a change in print¬ers and to financial diffi¬culties, The Maroon pub¬lishes today a four-pageissue omitting muchusual material. Adver¬tisements were selectedon the basis of their im¬mediate relevance to theUniversity community.The Maroon hopes to re¬sume more normal publi¬cation next week."■■ Sfe'v ' vs *" *8? ' "The Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChicfJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editors Roger BlatkJohn Welch * * S S ' “ <s.<Letters to theW. Executive Editors David L. AikenMichael SeidmanH§ News Editor John MoscowH Culture Editor Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor Marc PoKempnerEditorial Assistants David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsLiterary Editors Ted HearneBryan DunlapEditor Emeritus David A. Satter 11 Adequate FinancingIt seems very evident to methat a student newspaper is ab¬solutely essential to the studentcommunity: The Maroon is thecenter of information, debate, andwidespread student communica¬tion. It is the chief means to alively student involvement in thedaily life of the academic andlarger community. The better thequality of the student newspaper,the better the quality of studentinvolvement. Issues such as thefirst for this quarter illustratehow impressive a free (and ade¬quately financed) student news¬paper can be. Indeed, I can hardlythink of a student-body expendi¬ture more important than itsnewspaper.Furthermore I do not believethat a student newspaper shouldbe a primarily financial enter-price. Rather its staff should con¬cern itself with learning journal¬ism, thinking, writing, reporting,and not soliciting advertisement.If a student wants to learn sales¬manship or business managementhe would presumably enroll in abusiness course, not give his timeto an intellectual enterprise.Freedom of speech (and free¬dom from harassment or limita¬tion) is essential to a free univer¬sity. The Maroon deserves fulland adequate subsidization.MARLENE D. DIXONAssistant ProfessorCommittee on HumanDevelopmentFlying RightYour editorial of last Fridaymisrepresents the financial alter¬natives open to The Maroon, andgives the inaccurate impressionthat CORSO funds are necessaryfor The Maroon’s continuing pub¬lication.CORSO has $29,500 to fund alarge number of student activi¬ties. This includes the Folk Danc¬ers, WUCB, FOTA, Student Gov¬ernment, the Chicago LiteraryReview, the Rugby Club, andmany other diverse organizations.This year, requests for funds fromCORSO already total over $40,000,Last year The Maroon had a$4300 deficit. The Maroon wantsCORSO to cover that deficit in ad¬dition to allocating over $5000 forthis year’s expenses. The sum isabout Vj of CORSO’s entirebudget.Last year The Maroon lost over$8000 in printer’s penalties (in¬curred by failing to meet printer’sdeadlines) which CORSO consid¬ers unecessary; The Maroon busi¬ness manager was paid over $6000for working 20-25 hours a week.These and similar expenses makeit easy to see how The Maroonwas able to lose $4300 in the faceof a $9000 (23 percent) increasein advertising revenue.This year The Maroon projectsa $7000 increase in ad revenueover last year (this would pushthe business manager’s salaryover $7000 dollars a year).CORSO feels that with their$55,000 projected income, cuttingunnecessary and extravagant ex¬penses would allow The Maroonto publish a quality newspaperwithout CORSO support. This isthe alternative which The Maroonneglected in its editorial, and theone which CORSO has repeatedlyemphasized in discussions withThe Maroon staff.CORSO awaits, with LawrenceFerlinghetti, a rebirth of wonder.Two weeks ago we informed TheMaroon that CORSO would payoff last year’s $4300 debt in or¬der to give them a clean slate.The Maroon editorial did not per¬suade us to alter our decision. Westill hope that The Maroon andthe Amei’ican Eagle will reallyspi’ead their wings and straightenup and fly right.MARK JOSEPHChairmanLEO SCHLOSBERGED STERNHUGH WILSONJOE WOLFSONCommittee on RecognizedStudent Organizations Women’s RightsWe ax’e calling attention to theadvertisement that the Univer¬sity personnel office placed in theOctober issue of The Maroon for“student and faculty wives.” Weare concerned about it since itreflects the attitude toward wo¬men in the lax-ger society andthe University in particular.The Civil Rights Act has justruled that there shall be no dis¬crimination in advertising byrace, sex, religion or national ori¬gin, since women or men, non¬whites should have equal rightto equal work at equal pay.The University, in fact, is notan equal employer and certainlydoes not give equal pay for equalwork on the professional level.Its policy of anti-nepotism ef¬fectively denies full teachingpositions to wives of male teach¬ers. Thus women teachei's—equal¬ly qualified as their male coun¬ter-parts—are made “lecturers”instead of professors.This means that they:• Cannot apply for federalgrants and so are restriited intheir research;• Receive a “negotiable” (low¬er) pay, little future for ad¬vancement, no tenure and onlyone year contracts, and no votewith faculty members on univer¬sity matters; and• Have less status in piofes-sional cixcles and aie thereforeless respected.THIS IS A way for a schoolto become a “great university”by using the skills, intelligenceand stature of its female staffwithout paying equally for it—all in the name of not wantingto influence the internal politicsof the school.To us, this seems to create theself-fulfilling prophecy that wo¬men are unrealiable, will quittheir profession and get married,do not strive as hard as men, areintellectually inferior. Thei'e arestructural reasons for such char-actexizations. The discriminationin professional schools (e.g. law,medicine—where women appli¬cants must be twice as capableas men to be accepted), thescholarship criteria for certaindepartments, and most clearly,the University’s stand on nepot¬ism, set limits on women’s aca¬demic future and mold them toreact only within those limits.We would like a clear state¬ment from the personnel officeas well as academic departmentsclarifying their official policy onnepotism and academic treatmentof women.ANGELA KAPPNERDEIRDRE PECYLARMARLENE DIXONHEATHER TOBIS BOOTHSUE MUNAKERNANCY STOKELYFurther ChargesA short story for the believersin the enlightened and fair liber¬al University:I am one of the 58 studentssuspended for the Spring QuarterStudy-In in the AdministrationBuilding. The Office of Planningand Development hired me as aresearcher for the fund drive, andI had served in that capacity forfour weeks. On Friday, October6, the Supervisor of Office Serv¬ices, Mrs. Geraldine Trammell,told me to come and have a wordwith her. She informed me thatI was being dismissed “for beingiude on the telephone to an im¬portant pei'son with connectionsin this office,” and that I wouldbe given two weeks severancepay. Although I had not, to thebest of my knowledge, spokenon the telephone to anyone moreimportant than a secretai'y, norhad I been nide to anyone, Iwas willing to believe the chai'ge,accept my two weeks pay, andgo hunting for another job. Idid, however, request of Mrs.Trammel that she name the per¬son to whom I had been rude.She referi'ed me to the managerof adminstrative services, Mr. Al-bei*t Ostoya.The following paraphrase ofthat conversation is as accurateas memory seiwes. I first asked to whom I had been rude; andMr. Ostoya replied that he didnot know, but that a person high¬er-up had transmitted the olderto him. This person he would notname. I told Mr. Ostoya that Ihad a political past at the Uni¬versity, and that his refusal toallow me to confront my accusermade me suspect that this wasa political firing. Mr. Ostoya inturn told me that he knew ofmy suspension, that he hadcleared my hiring from above,and that this was indeed not thereason for my dismissal. He toldme to “accept it” and that hecould tell me no more. This wasthe end of the conversation andof my job.RATHER at a loss, I then wentto Dean of the College WayneBooth. When I asked him whatthe appeal procedure was in re¬sponse to being dismissed from aUniversity job, Mr. Booth sug¬gested that I go to the PersonnelOffice. I pointed out that I hadbeen fired by a person consider¬ably higher than anyone at Per¬sonnel, and that an appeal therewould do no good. Mr. Boothagreed. He then offered to in¬vestigate for me. I pointed outthat if someone who was “high¬er-up” had forced my dismissal,then Mr. Booth would also notbe allowed to name this person.The only thing such an investi¬gation would produce was know¬ledge of these reasons for me.Mr. Booth again agreed. End ofconversation and of avenues ofappeal.The whole disgusting episoderaises two basic points about theUniversity: 1) The general lackof due process in hiring andfiring (as well as in numerousother areas such as discipline),the lack of right to confront anaccuser, the lack of clear state¬ment of charges, and the lack ofright of appeal to an impartialand democratic body. 2) The Uni¬versity has moved a step furtherto the Right in firing even pettyemployees in a facistic manner.One more element is added tothe pattern of the University’srightward movement, a move¬ment which campus activists havetided to make apparent for near¬ly a year. This pattern has in¬cluded the firing of Jesse Lem-isch without allowing him to seethe record of the decision-mak¬ing meetings, the refusal to giveStaughton Lynd a job because ofhis bad judgement in refusing todemean Lemisch, Charles O’Con¬nell’s political discrimination inan admissions case, and the sus¬pension of 58 students for a poli¬tical demonstration.ALL OF THE above cases areclear examples of lack of dueprocess and of political discri¬mination from the Right. Whendue process is denied to me, Ican only assume that it is be¬cause 1 was fixed for politicalreasons.Getting fixed is not nice, andone wishes that the Universityhad the decency to tell me bywhom and for what reason I wasbeing dismissed. Even of theGreat Institution lacks the demo¬cratic conviction that due pro-cess is a basic right, common de¬cency and respect for its em¬ployees and students should causeit to grant that right.TIM NAYLORLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Maroonreserves the right to condensewtihout altering meaning. Typedcopy must be submitted by 11 a.m,of the day before publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Univer¬sity of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool yeat and intermittentlythroughout the summer, except duringthe 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 andin the Hyde Park neighborhood freeof charge. Subscriptions by mail 86per year. Second class postage paid atChicago, 111. Charter member of U.S.Student' Press Assn., publishers ofCollegiate Press Service.;V:: : ■ S . ;v:: jf: " \' ' - ' . <. ' l l'« > SViet ProtestWith criticism of President Johnson's war policy continuallymounting within the ranks of his own Democratic Party as wellas among Republicans and independents, another demonstrationlargely by dissatisfied college students—who don’t really matter,as response to last year’s petitions signed by hundreds of studentbody presidents and newspaper editors made clear—at this pointhardly seems like another drop in the bucket. But while the April15 Mobilization earlier this year was clearly not responsible by it¬self for bringing the water level to the “danger—spill” level, itcan certainly be said that it represented one of many drops thathelped.One unique characteristic of next week’s Mobilization to thePentagon is the promise of civil disobedience during the demon¬stration. If a massive sit-down blocking Pentagon entrances doesoccur, it will indeed be a signal that the times of relative passi¬vity are over with and that at least a small part of the nationalconscience is so disturbed that the risk of jail is no longer a de¬terrent to its expression. President Johnson can see the ugly con¬sequences of such civil strife as well as we can, but at present heis still convinced that the greater evil lies in accepting less thana definite victory for the United States.But as Chicago’s Richard Flacks and countless others withknowledge of Hanoi’s attitude can testify, a war of attrition canhurt only the United States; and major escalation carries therisk of Chinese involvement. The most practical—and moral—re¬course lies in stopping the bombing, entering into negotiationswith the National Liberation Front, and ultimately returning tothe provisions of the 1954 Geneva Accords, the only move thatboth sides have agreed must be taken to ensure peace.If next week’s Mobilization is only another drop in the buckettowards adoption of this policy by a frightened Johnson or possi¬bly his successor after 1968, it will be well worth the trip for any¬one who can afford the time to go.PrioritiesIn a letter to the editor published today, members of theCommittee on Recognized Student Organizations cite factors intheir decision not to fully subsidize The Maroon this year whichare valid but have little relevance to the immediate situation.Printer’s overtime charges, for example, are not expected to beas significant this year as last; and the business manager's com¬pensation will indeed be reduced for next year but cannot be doneuntil then since this year’s contract was formally agreed on bylast year’s editorial board.But despite reduced expenses projected for this year and next,and whether or not special fund-raising drives now being consid¬ered will be successful, the plain and simple high cost of publish¬ing a newspaper that resulted recently in the final demise of theshaky World Journal Tribune may force The Maroon to sell atsubscription and newsstand prices next year. Such a changewould be disastrous were it attempted in the middle of this yearand could easily be a fiasco in Autumn Quarter 1968 if not en¬gineered with the utmost of care. We dislike receiving supportbut need a full CORSO subsidy—at least for the remainder of thisyear—in order to publish the kind of newspaper described in an¬other letter today.ONE POINT THE MEMBERS of CORSO make, however, isall too painfully relevant to anyone involved in extracurricular ac¬tivities here—and that is the sorry state of the student activitiesbudget.’ CORSO has received in the past few years the same $29,-500 allocation from the Dean of Students Office despite annualincreases in number and size of student organizations here. Thatthis is woefully inadequate can be seen in the facts that Chicago’sextracurricular activities budget is per capita one of the lowestamong colleges and universities throughout the country and ridic¬ulously disparate with those of other so-called prestige schools;that despite requests from student organizations totalling over$40,000 this year, the administration denied a request by CORSQfor a $5000 increase in its own allocation; and that organizationssuch as The Maroon and the Forensics Society, which received al¬locations of $13,000 and $4000 respectively back when moneycame directly from the Dean of Students rather than throughCORSO, now receive a mere fraction of former subsidies if any¬thing at all.Recognition of the University of Chicago in a national sur¬vey as one of the most uncomfortable campuses in the country isdue only partly to lack of adequate housing facilities; anothermajor factor is the inadequacy of its student activities program(and, we might add, lack of a real student union building). Untilpriorities are reordered and more attention is paid to the cultiva¬tion of extracurricular life, Chicago will maintain its notoriety asa community of hermits and continue to fall short of the all-overexcellence which is so conducive to academic excellence.2 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 13, 1967I Calendar of EventsFriday, October 13SEMINAR (Biochemistry): “Aspectsof Mitochondrial Biogensis: DNA Bio¬synthesis Amino Acid Activating En¬zymes, and the Presence of SRNA."Dr. Melvin Simpson. State Universityof New York. Abbott 101. 3:30 p.m.MICROBIOLOGY CLUB: “Recom¬bination in Phage,” Dr. Ethan Signer.M.I.T. Ricketts 1. 4:30 p.m.PRE-NED CLUB: “New Directionsin Psychiatry,” Dr. Daniel X. Freed¬man. Billings Hospital MI137. 7 p.m.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FEL¬LOWSHIP: Ida Noyes Library, 7:30-9:45 p.m.MOVIE: “Ivan the Terrible 1. 11.”by Sergei Eisenstein. Mandel Hall.Part 1 at 7:15 and Part II at 9:15 p.m.Saturday, October 14MOVIE “When Comedy was King.'Admission 50c. Pierce Tower 5th floor,2 and 7:30 p.m.Sunday, October 15CROSS COUNTRY: Against U.C.T.C.5 mile. Washington Park.BUILD THE HILLEL SUKKAH:Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn. 10 a.m.NEAR NORTH UNITARIAN l'NI-VERSAI.IST FELLOWSHIP: “TheNew Politics in Chicago,” C. ClarkKissinger, independent aldermanic can¬didate of 49th ward and organizer ofthe Citizens for Independent PoliticalAction. Public invited. Near NorthUnitarian Universalist Fellowship, 1718North Northpark Ave., 11 a.m.C O N C E It T: (Humanities VisitingCommittee): Duke Ellington presentssacred music. Rockefeller Chapel, 3and 8 p.m.VARSITY-FRESHMEN B U F F E TDINNER: Sponsored by the Under¬graduate Order of the “C" for varsity team members and perspective fresh¬men athletes. Ida Noyes Hall, 5 p.m.A REPORT ON THE INTERUNI¬VERSITY SOCIAL RESEARCH ONCIVIL RIGHTS IN CHICAGO: Initialfindings of a ten-university study ofblack and white attitudes in the Chi¬cago area. Professor Richard J. Mc-Kinlay. Assistant Director of the Sur¬vey Research Laboratory at the U. ofI. Chapel House, 5810 S. Woodlawn,6:30 p.m.FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes Hall,Cloister Club. 7:30-11 p.m.CHESS CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, SunParlor, 3-6 p.m.Monday, October 16FOOTBALL: Against North Central.North Field. 3:15 p.m.PUBLIC FORUM: 7th Ward Inde¬pendent Voters of Illinois will presenta public forum on the Redmond Plan,a proposal for eliminating segregationin Chicago’s school system. St. ThomasLutheran Church, 8008 S. JefferyBlvd.. 8 p.m.FILMS: Indian Civilization Coursepresents “Indian Family Life, FiftyMiles from Poona. A Village in Tra-vanaiore, and A Family in Andhra.”Admission free. Rosenwald, Room 2.BENEFIT CONCERT —OCT. 20S.C.L.C. & Operation BreadbasketBelafonteAretha FranklinInf. AmphitheatreTickets: P. Heltne, Anat. 107 SOCIAL SCIENCE 125 MAKE-UPEXAM WILL >E GIVEN ON MON¬DAY, OCTOBER 14, 1447 from 4 to5:30 P.M. in Swift 208. SIGN-UPNOW IN GB 212. Test Administra¬tion Office by October 12. 1747 toregister for exam and pick up examticket. Shapiro "Art to Live With"exhibit opens Monday for browsing, in Ida Noyes Hall: Hundreds oforiginal works, available for loan fo students on Friday, the 20th.Details at Ida Noyes.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELUniversity Religious ServiceSunday, October 15, 1967, 11 a.m.The Reverend Howard Moody“THE SIGNS OF THE SILENT CHURCH”The Reverend Mr. Moody is Pastor of the Judson Memorial Church,Greenwich Village, New York City; Chairman of the Department ofSocial Relations, The Protestant Council of the City of New York;Delegate to the White House Conference on Narcotics Addiction;and a membert of the faculty of the New School for Social Research.Immediately following the close of the Duke Ellington Concert at 5:00 p.m.,Mr. Moody will lead a discussion ofJazz and Worshipin Ida Noyes Hall.TYPEWRITERSSale of name brand typewriters—Portable—Standard—Electric.Repairs done by Factory train mechanics on typewritersand adding machines.Rental by the month on Portable, Standard and Electrictypewriters, and also adding machines & calculators.Typewriter DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.SPECIAL MATINEE FOR THEUNIVERSITY COMMUNITYDuke EllingtonAND HIS ORCHESTRAAt Rockefeller Memorial ChapelCONCERT OF SACRED MUSICSunday, October 15,3:00 p.m.Members of the OrchestraStephen Little, Aaron Bell, Johnny Hodges, Russell Procope,Jimmy Hamilton, Paul Gonsalves, Harry Carney,"Cat" Anderson, Herbert Jones, Mercer Ellington,"Cootie" Williams, Lawrence Brown, Buster CooperCharles ConnerSoloistsJimmy McPhail, Dorothy King, Tony Watkins, vocalsBuster Brown, DanceTicketsAll seats $2, unreserved. Available at Student Co-op; Stu¬dent Activities Office, Classics 13, Chapel office. We live in a world of conflict and violence. The revolt of classagainst class — ideology against ideoolgy — individual againstosicety; revolt is a reality we live with. What does it mean?REVOLUTIONAND THE HATURE OF MANSunday mornings at 10:30October 15 through November 12MAN AND THE REALITIES OF POWER OCTOBER 15AGGRESSION IN MAN OCTOBER 22MAN AND HIS CULTURE OCTOBER 29MAN AND THE SEARCH FOR MEANING NOVEMBER 5THE DIGNITY AND FREEDOM OF MAN NOVEMBER 12atTH FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF CHICAGO5650 South Woodlawn FAirfax 4-4100Jack A. Kent, MinisterAbout Our Experiment . . .You will notice that our church service will begin at10:30 A.M.We invite you to come just as we are starting on experiment in timing. Thechurch service itself will run from 10:30 to about I 1:30.After church there will be time for people to exchange ideas with each otherand with the minister. Sermon "talk-backs" (what was your reaction to whatwas said in the pulpit?) — adult discussion groups — etc., etc., etc.Take your coffee with you and join the conversation of your choice! Most groupswill break up about 12:30, but those who would like to stay on and keep talkingare welcome.October 13t 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3g . - ' ;Maroon Classified AdvertisementsKATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-Universtty clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat.TO I*LACK AO: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, Ill. 60637.HOI KS: Weekdays 10 a m. to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINES: Ads must be in by 11 a.m.of the day before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.RIDES WANTEDGirl wants ride to October 21st WashingtonMarch. Will pay half expenses, drive part¬way. Room 2321. RICKERT HOUSE.VOLUNTEERS NEEDEDBLIND STUDENT of Business Administra¬tion is looking for volunteers to read tohim. The material will be both of aquantitative nature as well as of a morestraightforward literary type. Please con¬tact RAMI RABBY at 324 6508, 5519 S.Blackstone Avenue, Apt. 101.HOUSES FOR SALE4 Bedroom house located in South Shoreonly 10 min. from Campus. Two wood-burning Fireplaces. 2 car garage. Under¬ground lawn sprinklers. Also fully carpetedwith a finished basement. $30,000. For ap¬pointment, call 643-3168.LOSTGOLD AND JADE PIERCED EARRING.If found, call MU 4-1944.WIRE-RIM GLASSES. On Oct. 2, be¬tween New Dorm and Medici (along Wood-lawn & 57th). Call Marianne, MI-3-0800,EXT. 3266. REWARD. .WORKChurch Secretary needed. Part-time. Hard Iwork, low pay—manage office, type, some Idictation. Flexible schedule. Near NorthSide. Call for Appointment between 7-9PM at 528-6341.WAITER OR WAITRESS WANTED towork 3 days a week from 5 p.m. to9:15 p.m. Verv good income. Exp. Pref. |Call GORDON’S RESTAURANT, 1321 E.57th St., at 752-9251, afternoons. We need HELP! Box Office-Usher-BackStage . . . Second City Rep at the Har¬per. Call BU 8-1717.FOR SALETR 4A with wire wheels. Low miles . . .Toneau cover . . . white soft top ... inperfect condition. $2600 or best offer. CallTed at 285-0825.Findar Stratogasser With Amp & Speakers.$350.00 or Best Offer. Call 324-5751evenings.CHEVY, 1959, 4-door Bel-Air, Gd. Con.$300. Contact Bert Foer, Mathews House634.ROOMRoom for girl in private home. $40.00 permo. MU 4-5076, 5-9 p.m. or weekends.PERSONALSWriter’s Workshop. Call PL 2-8377.Lecture by Earl (MOLE HOLE) Segal ofOld Town “CAN HIPPIES MAKE A IHAPPIER WORLD?” Friday 13, 9 p.m j"l NITXABLE QUIZ GAME . . . every- Ibody plays” Saturday 14, College of Com- |plexes. 105 W. Grand, $1. Minors Welcome. IArticles and workers now being acceptedfor a new campus newspaper sponsoredby SDS. Drop a card to Wasserman, 6101S. Greenwood.WANTED-BLUEGRASS musicians to formband. Call Phil 324-0277.HEBREW POWER!Chug Ivri. Hillel, 4:30 Monday.Happy Birthday Isabel.Applicants now being interviewed forposition of D. U. mascot of the quarter.For appointment, call PL 2-9648. From the bottom of Frozen Niagara:say, are you by chance (or design) driv¬ing North? I need a ride to Chicago.Build the Hillel Sukkah Sunday. Oct. 15.10 a m. Hillel House at 5715 Woodlawn.Yes, there IS a modern dance group atU.C. If you're a dancer (male or fe-male) you're invited to call EXT. 3574for more information.DELTA UPSILON hosts the Noblemenat Ida Noyes. Oct. 28, 8:30 p.m. JAZZ, NEW ART FORMS, AND WOR¬SHIP. Discussion on “Jazz, New ArtForms, and Worship”-featuring HowardMoody, pastor in Greenwich Village andDean Hey. composer of Time-space artcompositions. Sunday. Oct. 15. followingDuke Ellington’s afternoon concert. IdaNoyes Hall. Refreshments available.Have grey kitten who is unhappy withmy one-room pad, if you have GOOD butlarger home for him. please call Cathyat MU 4-9035.NO — tomorrow.Help decorate the Hillel Sukkah on Oct. j16 A 17. Hillel House. I Sittler says: “Moody, blunt, and honestpreacher without lace or phony frills.”SORRY MR. L. DAVIS forgot your ad¬dress.Creating a new magazine: poetry, prose,pictures. Contact Susan BU 8-4910 or£llan, Apt. 7A. 5455 S. Blackstone.CHICAGO’S CIVIL RIGHTS ATTITUDES-Negro & White - Chapel House - Sunday,5:30-8:00 - Supper 75c.Sign up for meals in the Hillel Sukkaiinow. Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.Open-end Discussions onCIVIL DISOBEDIENCEOCTOBER 15—R. STAUGHTON LYND—ORIGINS & EFFECTSOCTOBER 22—EUGENE T. GENDLIN—THE NEW TEMPERAssoc. Prof of Psychology,University of ChicagoOCTOBER 29—AMERICAN FRIENDS—CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION7:30 P.M. Sunday Nights, Woolman Hall1174 East 57th StreetSponsored by Student Religious Liberals, First Unitarian Church57th Street and WoodlawnEisenstein's IVAN THE TERRIBLE (both puts)From Hie maker of POTEMKIN ami ALEXANDER NEVSKY, wilh munir by Prokofiev. In Mantlel Ilall tonight. Part I at 7:15,Part II at 9:15. $1.00. DOC. FILMS.Typist wanted for 50 page MA paper inEnglish with German sources and quota¬tions. Call 363-4841 after 5:30 p.m.WE’LL PAY YOU TO HAVE FUN: En¬thusiastic, energetic junior or senior towrite chapter for student guidebook. Ex¬penses and fees plus by-line and shortbiography. Tell us who vou are imme¬diately. Write: WHERE THE FUN ISU.S.A.. Simon and Schuster. 630 FifthAve., New York, New York 10020.JOYCE TREIMAN"THE BRANCH""THE FLAME"from Dante's Inferno *Shapiro CollectionOpens Monday. ?■ PHOTOGRAPHYWhat a beautiful seasonfor taking color pictures.See us for theproper film andfastest service atPhotography Dept.TheUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueNEW BOOKS IN SEVERAL FIELDSThe Dollar and World Liquidityby Robert V. RoosaThe Limits of Powerby Eugene J. McCarthy ...The Kennedy Readerby Jay David $y95$5’5kOO10General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.MIDWEST ARTISTS FOR PEACE“FESTIVAL OF PROTEST” ~against the war in Vietnam!ATMandel Hall—Sal., Oct. 21 si 8:30 p.m.Sun., Ocl. 22nd 7:30 p.m.Sponsored by University of Chicago Student GovernmentOutstanding Midwest Artists Performing inMusic (Classical & Jazz), Art, Poetry, Drama, FilmsStuds Terkel—M.C.Book Center, Harper Court s5.00, $2.50Tickets Available at s|.00 I ±JiiiiimiiimiiHiiiiiiiimiiimmiiiiiiiimiimitMiiiiMMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmi(;| THE STUDENT HOUSING OFFICES ANNOUCES §I THE AVAILABILITY OF SPACES IN THE UNIVERSITY I| HOUSE SYSTEM PRODUCED BY LAST MINUTE CANCEL- 1| LATIONS. ROOMS ARE AVAILABLE TO—UNDERGRAD- || ATE MEN AT PIERCE, WOODWARD, BURTON-JUDSON, |= GREENWOOD, BOUCHER; UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN == AT WOODWARD; GRADUATE WOMEN AT HARPER. I= SHARED APARTMENTS OFF CAMPUS ARE AVAILABLE TO I| GRADUATE MEN. |= INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD INQUIRE AT THE §STUDENT HOUSING OFFICE §ADMINISTRATION 201 1ifiiiiiiiimmiiiiimiimmmmiiiiimiMiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirUNIVERSITY THEATREwill present—in NovemberPirandello'sEACH IN HIS OWN WAYICiascuno a suo modoidirected by James O'ReillyOPEN TRYOUTSfor 30 roles — men and womenTODAY (FBI.), Ocl. 13-7 to 9 p.m.SATURDAY, Oct. 14—10 a.m. to 5 p.m.MONDAY, Oct. 16—9:30 p.m. ’til?Reynolds Club Theatre WHAT IS GOOD?j How does it happen?.Nobody seems to have enough,but people have ail kinds ofthoughts about it. Is it a thing?an event? an idea? Perhaps it'sjust being close to God.St. Paul said, “He be not far fromevery one of us."YOU CAN HEAR a searching lec¬ture on man's potential for good byFRANCIS WILLIAM COUSINS,c.s.b., an experienced teacher andpractitioner of Christian Sciencefrom Manchester, England,and member of the Board of ,Lectureship of The First Church ofChrist, Scientist, in Boston, Mass,NO COLLECTIONS ARE TAKEN,no registry to sign. This is not asermon or a church service, but tpublic lecture ranging from thanature of good as a divine force, >.to the practical rules for spiritualhealing. You will be most welcome.1TITLE: Christian Science Reveal!the Good That Is Available taMankind.Siinday, October 15, 3 P.M.Tenth Church of Christ, Scientist5640 S. BlackstoneCare Provided for Small ChildrenAdmission Free • Everyone is welcome4 TUI-: CHICAGO MAROON October 13, 1967