Tim rWaor0 MaroonVOL. 76, NO. 12 FoundedIn 1892:SDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1967 12 PAGESPeace Marchers Storm PentagonMarshals U se Tear Gas. ClubsTHE MARCH: Students from theamong the 100,000 marchers The Maroon—DON ISBELLUniversity carrying a Student Mobilization Committee banner wererepresenting some 600 colleges at the demonstration Saturday.'Today We Mobilize...’Special to The MaroonWASHINGTON - Over 140,GOGdemonstrators gathered at the Lin¬coln Memorial Saturday in themost militant anti-war demonstra¬tion to date. Marchers lined bothsides of the reflecting pool, thenear side of the Washington Monu¬ment Park, and the steps of theLincoln Memorial.Clive Jenkins, British TradeUnion leader, tried to address therally. He was attacked by a Nazistorm trooper who overturned thespeaker’s podium and began beat¬ing .Jenkins. The Nazi was subduedby William Sloan Coffin, chaplainof Yale, who later addressed therally himself. adly swooped down over the crowdto drown out the sound of thespeakers. At their first approach aring of march marshals leaped totheir feet and linked arms to pro¬tect the speakers. At times asmany as twelve government heli¬copters could be seen in the skyobserving the march.Ella Collins, a sister of the lateMalcom X, asked the crowd iftheir government wanted peace.They roared “No!”. She asked ifi the people want peace. They| roared “Yes!”.Rev. Coffin offered sanctuary inbis church to opponents of thewar. He called young men to resistthe draft and resist the war. cross the Memorial bridge. On theVirginia side a handful of Nazi’sheld the march for about 15 min¬utes while march marshalls triedto protect them from the crowd.At the Pentagon a group of Nazi’swere attacked by toughs who had By JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterSpecial to The MaroonWASHINGTON — An attemptSaturday to storm the Pentagonfailed as government forces usedtear gas and rifle butts to driveback the attacking marchers.The attack came at 5:45 p.m.Saturday when the marcherssurged up the lightly defendeddriveway of the Pentagon mall en¬trance. Lead by two young menwith battery powered loudspeakers,the group attacked—not the Mallentrance, guarded by a solid phal-lynx of military police, but asmaller entrance provided for theuse of the press, unlocked and al¬most unguarded.Newsmen, photographers, anddemonstrators struggled to enterthe building as MP’s fought furi¬ously to lock the doors.A Maroon reporter, along with aphotographer and two Pentagon of¬ficials, was trapped in a corner ofthe vestibule between the beseigedouter doors and the quickly lockedinner glass doors.Marchers ClubbedAbout a dozen marchers squeezedinto the vestibule and threwthemselves on the floor. A handfulof MP’s fought a loosing battle toregain control of the outer doors.The sound of glass being smashedcould be heard in the background.Momentarily, the marchers werein a position to seize control of apart of the Pentagon.Then 200 heavily armed soldiersstationed in the press corridorburst through the inner glass doors.Running over the demonstrators onmarchers but had growntient for their arrival.originally planned to harass the the floor, they regained control oflmpa- the beseiged outer doors. In a lineten deep, with bayonets at theTurn to Page 3 1 ready position, they pushed through the outer doors and established aperimiter about 20 feet from thepress doors.Federal marshalls and MP’susing rifle butts and night sticksclubbed and beat the demonstra¬tors lying passively on the vesti¬bule floor and forced them out thedoors.One young man went stumblingdown the steps. A marshal caughthim and hit him on the head re¬peatedly. Blood ran from his longhair onto the cement steps.At the same time other marchersclimbed up onto the plaza andsurged against the line of troopsguarding the mall entrance. Theymet a barrage of tear gas from thegovernment forces. Girls ran downthe hall screaming and tearing attheir eyes. Men fell back coughing.McNamara WatchesSecretary of Defense RobertMcNamara watched the spectaclebelow from his window.Most observers called the con¬duct of the Federal marshalsdeplorable. Dr. Benjamin Spock,the prominent pediatrician whomarched with the demonstratorsSaturday, described the govern¬ment forces as brutal.Once arrested the marchers werewell treated. Through the efforts ofthe Mobilization Committee, theyreceived legal aid at every step oftheir arraignment. Those marcherswho were taken into custody withinjuries were treated and releasedto avoid charges of police brutality.Marchers VictoriousWhen the situation cleared themarchers found themselves in con¬trol of a third of the plaza. Al¬though the demonstration permitspecified that marchers beyond thetop of the stairs would be taken in-Turn to Page 3ARSON SUSPECTED11 Fires in Hutch-Mandel ComplexSpeaking through Linda Morse,the Student Mobilization Commit¬tee called for an immediate with-drawl of American troops fromVietnam, an end to the draft, andan end to government interferenceon college campuses across Amer- jica.John Wilson, New York directorof the Student Non-Violent Co-or¬dinating Committee, predicted thatthe marchers would soon learnwhat police in America are reallylike. “Today we mobilize,” Wilsonsaid. “Tomorrow we resist.” Itwas a theme echoed in almostevery speech. At the end of Wil¬son’s address over 100,000 marchsrs chanted in unison, “Hell no,we won’t go!”Government helicopters repeat- Over 600 college campuses wererepresented at the demonstration,the banner of the University ofChicago flying prominently alongthe mall. Washington newspapersreported it in their roster of cam¬puses present.At the end of the rally Peter,Paul and Mary sang a moving trib¬ute to the spirit of resistance.The marchers held a sit-in at theLincoln Memorial while the De¬fense Department tore down thefence restricting access to the Pen¬tagon. The Department had pre¬viously agreed to remove thisfence. The, sit-in repeated on theArlington Memorial Bridge.Nazis’ AttackedFrom the beginning to end themarch took almost three hours to The Reynolds Club-Mandel Hallcomplex will be closed from 6 p.m.to 8 a.m. every night until furthernotice in the wake of eleven firesset over the weekend, AssistantDeana of Undergraduate StudentsJames W. Vice anounced Monday.Fire and police arson units areinvestigating the series of fires,which were apparently set by anarsonist or arsonists.Fire Sunday destroyed $4,000worth cf costume? and records inthe third-floor ccstume room ofthe University Theater, JamesO’Reilly, director of the Theater,said.Earlier, ten small fires had bro¬ken out between about 6:30 p. m.Friday and 5:15 a.m. Saturday,scattered around Reynolds Club, Mandel Hall, and Hutchinson Com¬mons. The only area which suf¬fered any serious damage was theloading dock in back of the Hutch¬inson Commons kitchen.Commons was open for businessas usual Monday, after beingclosed Saturday. It had not beenscheduled to be open Sunday.May Have Had KeysJohn Sassman, chief of the FireDepartment’s eighth battalion, toldreporters he was sure an arsonistwas responsible. He indicated thesuspected arsonist may have hadkeys to some areas of the building,since some of the fires were setin closets and other lockedareas.The first fire, discovered 6:30p.m. Friday, was set in a wad ofi papers placed in the fireplace near the entrance to Hutchinson Com¬mons. A short time later, a smallfire was set in a small pile ofboards and papers in an attic a-bove the third floor of ReynoldsTurn to Page 11WORKSHOP| Students interested in aworkshop on newswritingare invited to come to The f§Maroon Office today at11 4:30 p.m. Today, ExecutiveEditor David L. Aiken willdiscuss the basics of news-| writing. For next week it §j|§ is hoped to > have KenTowers, city editor of The §jChicago Sun-Times.i 11We Don't Want ViolenceVIOLENCE:Pentagon. U.S. By MiCHAEL PRESSERI am one of the demonstratorswho sat outside the Pentagon inWashington from Saturday after¬noon until 6 am Sunday. I wasin the front line of those con¬fronting the soldiers at the en¬trance of the building. I wasamong those who later went tothe White House.The accounts of the demon¬stration I read in the New YorkI Times and the Washington PostThe Maroon - bill nowlin i have amazed me. These papersmarshal and demonstrators scuffle near the. describe a demonstration inI which governments officialsCoverage of March BiasedBy JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterSpecial to the MaroonWASHINGTON—“They marchedand marched and then went homeand nothing has changed.” So saidFred Hoffman, the AssociatedPress military editor at the Pent¬agon.He. along with most of the othernewsmen in the building, dismis¬sed the confrontation as the workof a handful of peaceniks. It’s hardto describe 140,000 marchers as ahandful but most newsmendid anyway. An obliging DefenseDepartment fed reporters ridicu¬lous crowd estimates—at first 20,-000, a figure even the Defense De¬partment had to revise upward.Many reporters seemed unwillingto go outside and see for them¬selves, and those who did wereusually accompanied by a “shep¬herd ” from the Department ofDefense Office of Public Affairs.Crowd estimates were only oneexample of how willing newsmenwere to accept the official line.Like sheep they would come run¬ning whenever Richard Fryklund,Deputy Assistant Secretary of De¬fense for Public Affairs, held abriefing. At these briefings Fryk¬lund repeatedly denied that gov¬ernment troops had used tear gasagainst the demonstrators, eventhough reporters in the room hadseen them do so.Betraying typical military think¬ing. Pentagon officials said that, News Analysissince they had not authorized theuse.Who’s to Blame?Reporters who should know bet¬ter began talking among them¬selves about how the hippieswere to blame—that somehow theywere behind everything. There wasa sort of tacit agreement amongmany reporters to portray thedemonstrators as young and naiveas possible—so America could dis- jmiss the march on those groundswithout thinking about its meaning, jIn keeping with this the spotters ;for the TV cameras outside made ,a point of picking out the young¬est and grubbiest members of thecrowd.That part of official Washingtonwho did not dismiss the march de¬nounced it. Friday afternoon I satin the Senate gallery and watchedSenators ranging from supposedly liberal Jacob Javits to seg¬regationist John Stennis denouncethe marchers as “unwitting toolsof the communist conspiracy.”Stennis claimed to have evidencethat the march leaders were card-carrying communists.What did the march do? Hoff¬man asked. What did it accomplishbesides alienating most of thepress, the members of Congress,arid the mothers of America?'•i the words of a second-year student in the College, “I was a-gainst the war before the march.I came with a position but I’mleaving with a cause.” Studentswho before were willing to marchare now willing to resist. Themarch marked a turning point inthe anti-war movement. From nowon the theme will be resistance.They’ve LearnedMiddle class kids are brought upto believe that cops are theirfriends. They’ve learned betternow. Rifle butts and tear gas arevery effective in turning whatwere “responsible critics of theadminstration” into committedradicals.Throughout the demonstrationthe conduct of the federal marshalswas deplorable. They seemed totake great pleasure in bashing inas many skulls as possible.The peace movement has splitinto two factions, just as the civilrights movement has. And the mil¬itant wing of the peace movementis going to receive the same treat¬ment at the hands of the press andpublic opinion that black militantshave.Marches such as the Spring Mo¬bilization are out. It is even doubt¬ful whether there will be anotherattempt at passive resistance suchas at the Pentagon. The next at¬tempt will be to drive the Demo¬cratic Convention out of Chicago.And the tactics will be violent. showed considerable restraintwhile demonstrators were vio¬lent. That is not a true picture.It was, indeed, a demonstrationof resistance rather than one ofloyal opposition. Yet virtually allof us agree with the tags thatmany wore: “we don't wantviolence.”Anxious to see what was hap¬pening and considering commit¬ting civil disobedience, I workedmy way to the front of the groupof demonstrators confronting acontingent of soldiers who wereguarding the Pentagon doorway.There was a nervous confusionamong the demonstrators, a lackof direction.One protestor grabbed at an M-P’s rifle and tried to pull it away;the MP, scared and almost hyster¬ical, shouted at him to let go. An¬other man who tried fighting withthe MPs was dragged awaybloody.Some of the protestors tried toincite others to attacking thetroops, but they were rebuffed.However the demonstrators did re¬spond to the attempt made bysome of their people to get themto sit down. The feeling was notone of obeying someone’s orders,but rather a collective sensing ofthe need for order.This was the start of a groupconsciousness and calmness,as demonstrators restrained theviolent ones among them. Event¬ually all of us joined in this non¬violent sit-in at the foot of the Pen¬tagon steps .blocked by the sol¬diers from the Pentagon in frontand from many thousands of dem¬onstrators behind.Feeling TenseI was in the front row now, cram¬ped and frightened as the soldiersstood above us and pointed theirrifles at our heads. The soldierswere nervous, as a loud speakeron top of the Pentagon rasped or¬ders to them to hold their fire. Wesat, facing the rifles and feelingthat tenseness.There were no leaders of these demonstrators. Individuals amongus stood up to talk to each otherand to the soldiers, who eventual¬ly were no longer abused by thedemonstrators. We tried to talkwith them, and have them shareour anger at their superiors whoordered them to aim at us. Manyof the military police, particularlythe blacks, eventually talked withus and accepted food and cigaret¬tes. Now the rifles were relaxed.Fierce ClubbingThe white helmeted Federalmarshal directing the soldiersdid not share our relief atthis loosening of tensions. Theygiving orders not to talk to us. Themarshals pushed the soldiers upwalked down the line of soldiersagainst us. When we edged back,the soldiers closed the gap. Whenwe did not move, marshals step¬ped from behind the soldiers, grab¬bed us, and arrested us one at atime. Those who resisted wereclubbed fiercely.One soldier, pushed from behindby a federal marshal, almost fellon top of a demonstrator.Another demonstrator who triedto stop the beating had his handbroken by just one of these blowsand a girl who tried to stop thiswas knocked unconscious by thesame marshal.The other demonstrators presentjumped to their feet and screamedat the marshal to stop the beat¬ing and to arrest the boy and girlso that they could be given firstaid. Many of us were crying andwe threw books and pieces of fruitat the marshal. When he finallystopped he looked rather pleasedwith himself.Sunday morning at six o’clock,most of the cold and tired demon¬strators left the Pentagon. About200 of us decided to go to theWhite House and “wake up LBJ.”Bitter from seeing so many of ourpeople hurt, we stood on the side¬walk in Lafayette Park acrossfrom the White House shouting in¬sults at the President.Introductory Offer:DOUBLES&HSTAMPSwith this couponOPEN 24 HOURSYour NameAddress. ;i r 3i ,i" (I i) > i ' 5' : ; t \ r £ t t 51st & Cornell60th & Cottage Grove56th & Cottage Groveor62nd & Dorchester1 {> TRY OUTSTONITE ONLY7:30-9:00INREYNOLDS CLUB THEATREFOR TONITEAT8:30Play to be directed byRICHARD VERTELi; f I' i t c! ! 1 l J U f i l»: I n j ca) • <i j t» j >s *<<2 THR'tfilCfiCO' M‘ar6on October "“21,‘ *1967*The Maroon — BILL NOWLINA BALMY DAY IN WASHINGTON: An estimated 120,000 protestors against U.S. policy in Vietnamgathered in the nation's capitol. Here they are massed along a reflecting pond.120,000 Attend March,Faced by 4000 TroopsContinued from Page 1to custody, students sat down in thearea of the plaza they controlled,thereby risking arrest.Thus began the teach-in DaveDellinger, march chairman, hadpromised at the Lincoln Memorial.Students attempted to discuss thewar with the troops that barredthem from the Pentagon.The Defense Department, antici¬pating this line of attack, instructedthe troops to reply to allquestions with “no comment.”Most of the troops parrotted thesewords or maintained a wooden si¬lence.Nevertheless the marchers couldsee the effect they were having onsome of the troops. Some weretrembling. Others nodded theiragreement.Soldier “Defects”At 11:30 Saturday night, themarchers welcomed their first“defector.” A soldier dropped hisrifle, took off his helmet, andturned away from the confronta¬tion. He was reportedly hustledaway under guard.Throughout the night other defec¬tors were reported. Robert Fryk-lund, Deputy Assistant Secretary ofDefense for Public Affairs, admit¬ted at his Sunday briefing that Pfc.Ferry V. Miller was with the dem¬onstrators and had been arrested.Fryklund refused to comment onother reports.As the night wore on the numberof demonstrators began to de¬crease. At his 9 p.m. press briefingFryklund announced that at thepeak of the demonstration the ParkDepartment, the Army, and theGeneral Services Administrationeach estimated the number ofmarchers at the Pentagon to beabout 20,000. However, on the basisof areal reconnisance photographsFryklund later revised his estimateto 35,000.Estimate of 120,000Individuals in the press room es¬timated that at its peak the crowdat the Pentagon numbered over120,000.Informed sources placed thenumber of troops within the Penta¬gon at slightly over 4,000. Troopswere rotated every four hours. Atthe height of the confrontation ai company of paratroopers in battledress and with rifles raised abovetheir heads were seen runningthrough the Pentagon to re-inforcethe troops outside.Throughout the night soldierswere sacked out in the hallwayscatching a few minutes sleep be¬fore they and their units returnedto duty outside.Inside the Pentagon newsmenwere summoned almost hourly forbriefings.Three tear gas incidents were ad¬mitted. However, Pentagon officialsmaintained that it was the demon¬strators who used tear gas, not thegovernment troops. General O’Mal-ly stated that the use of tear gashad not been authorized, despitethe fact that several reporters sawit used by government forces.Johnson on PhonePresident Johnson held frequentphone conversations with Pentagonofficials during the height of theconfrontation.After the attack on the Pressdoors, marchers were in the areaimmediately outside the Pentagon.Students peered through the win¬dows, smiling at reporters andraising their hands in friendship tothe military personnel. The shades,however, were soon drawn.Few of the marchers knew howclose they were to victory whenthey stormed the press doors. Nordid they know how tense the situa¬tion was inside the building duringthe seige.By 7 p.m. Saturday the confron¬tation had settled into a stalemate.For the next three hours the Ma¬roon reporter was trapped insidethe Pentagon, since the press doorswere locked and reporters weredenied entrance and exit.The reporter was, however, ableto observe what was happening out¬side on closed circuit television.Cameras stationed on the roof ofthe Pentagon acted as the eyes andears of the Central Command Postlocated just inside the mall en¬trance.Lt. Gen. John. L. Throckmorton,the man who was in charge of thefederal troops during the Detroitinsurrection, took command of thedefense of the Pentagon immediate¬ly after the main clash. McNamara remained in the Pen¬tagon all day except for brief tripto the White House—ostensibly togreet Prince Souvanna Phouma ofLaos. McNamara visited the com¬mand post from 10 to 11 Saturdaynight. At that time the governmentforces began using a tactic theywere to employ all night—pickingthe marchers off one by one.The number of demonstratorswas already greatly reduced by thecold, by the departure of the buses,and by arrests. By 11 p.m. onlyabout 1500 hard core marchers re¬mained. They sat with their backsto the troops, inches away fromarrest.Some marchers offered them¬selves for arrest and were refused.But anyone who nudged, bumped,or touched the line of troops in anyway was hauled away. Occasional¬ly federal marshals would dartthrough the line and make an ar¬rest — seemingly at random. Thearea in front of the troops wascleared in stages and the march¬ers were hauled away in vans.The number of arrests grew rap¬idly - 153 at 8:30, 174 at 11:30, 202at midnight. By morning arreststotaled over 450.Pentagon EscalationThe Pentagon strategy was oneof gradual escalation. First night¬sticks, then rifle butts, thensheathed bayonets. Unless the situ¬ation disintegrated totally, thetroops were forbidden to fire.During the night the marchersnearest the press doors linkedarms and withdrew to the top ofand were arrested. By morning theplaza was cleared and the line oftroops again stretched across thethe top of the stairs. Only a hand¬ful of marchers remained.However, the troops stoppedtheir advance because the permitwas still in effect. Under the permitthe plaza was restricted; the stairswere not.By noon Sunday the number ofmarchers had dwindled to under300. However, a relief column ofmore than 1,000 arrived at 2 p.m.Sunday to reinforce the number al¬ready there. Continued from Page 1Most demonstrators by-passed arally at the Pentagon parking lotand proceeded directly to the con¬frontation at the Pentagon. About35,000 remained behind to hearDonald Duncan, military editor ofRamparts magazine, denounce thedraft as a tool used to prostituteschools and regiment society.Carl Davidson, former president Iof Students for a Democratic So¬ciety, called on the marchers tofind the warmakers in their owncommunities. “Tear down the in¬duction centers,” Davidson cried.“Burn them down if necessary.”‘Out Demon, Out’Only a handful of march mar¬shals were present when the mainbody of demonstrators arrived atthe Pentagon. While the hippiesexorcized the Pentagon by wav¬ing banners and moaning “Outdemon out!” many demonstratorsdrifted through the defense lineimmediately in back of the exhor¬tation and thus unknowingly out¬flanked the strong defense line.Consequently the thin line waswithdrawn and regrouped. But theterritory vacated provided thestaging area for the attack on thePentagon itself.Although marchers violated theterms of the permit, Pentagonofficials did so as well. Two ramp-steps leading up to the plaza of theMall entrance were open to dem¬onstrators under the terms of thepermit. But time after time sweepsof military police tried to clearthe steps, pushing people to thebottom of the stairs—where theymet a line of military police threedeep on one hand and a stone wallon the other.There was no escape. Time andagain the sweeping line of soldierswould shove and club people to thebottom of the stairs. At the end ofeach sweep the soldiers would findthemselves with a handful and peo¬ple and nowhere to go.A solid phalanx of MP’s blockedthe exit to the stairs and kept thedemonstrators on the stairs fromrejoining the rest of the crowd.Consequently the MP’s wouldshove the people trapped on thestairs up tight against the stonewall, only to release them a fewmoments later. The repeated sweeps succeededin antagonizing the crowd. Eightscuffles broke out between march¬ers on the phalanx of soldiersfrom the thin sweeping line. Eachtime the soldier was rescued byother marchers and a path pro¬vided so thay he could rejoin hissquad.Hippies arrived to shower flow¬ers on the phallynx of soldiersthat blocked the exit to the stairs.MP’s continued their sweep behindthe phallynx but with less and lesssuccess.Then four marshalls leaped overthe wall and began beating demon-\ strators indiscriminately. A girlfell to the ground and a young mantrying to protect her with his bodywas torn away and beaten on thehead.Suddenly the phalanx of troopsblocking the stairs exit was with¬drawn while the crowd cheered.The marshals and the soldiers en¬gaged in the sweeps also with¬drew.The incident on the stairs was amajor provocation on the part ofthe government. The crowd,which had been good-natured, nowbecame agressive.Author Norman Mailer was ar¬rested along with Mrs. DagmarWilson, founder of Women Strikefor Peace, when he tried to walkthrough a police line at the riverentrance of the Pentagon. DavidDellinger, chairman of the march,was arrested when he sat down ona roadway with about 25 otherdemonstrators.Informed sources report thatStokely Carmichael and other mil¬itant black leaders were in Wash¬ington during the time for thedemonstration. About 800 Negroesmarched from the Lincoln Mem¬orial through the black communityin Washington in an attempt toeducate black people about themeaning of the war.Local black nationalist groupsurged Negroes to stay away fromthe march. They claimed it wasan attempt to“trap black peopleand have their skulls cracked in”at the Pentagon.The Maroon—BILL NOWLINFIRM STAND: Military police bayonets remain steady despiteattempts to persuade by marchers.October 24, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONPeace MobilizationIs Turned intoViolent MeetingWisconsin Students Await DecisionUniversity of Wisconsin studentssuspended their daily strikes yes¬terday to await faculty decision onlast week’s demonstrations.Student leaders warned of futureretroaction if the faculty does not“do their damnedest to pass legis¬lation favoring student rights interms of rule making and disci¬pline.”Five thousand students have boy¬cotted classes since Thursday to protest police brutality at an anti¬napalm demonstration directedagainst Dow Chemical Co. on Wed¬nesday. The anti-war sit-in haderupted into a bloody battle be¬tween 300 students and 140 riotsquad policemen when studentsblocked the Commerce Building,where the firm was holding inter¬views.Thirteen students were sus¬ pended and 58 injured, many se¬riously. Charges of police brutalitywere widespread.At an emergency meeting onThursday, 1500 faculty membershad voted 2-1 upholding Sewell’sdecision to call in riot police. Thefaculty also voted to suspend Dowinterviews.Then student leaders formed anad hoc committee demanding thatno disciplinary action be takenagainst those involved in the pro¬test. The weekend brought silentvigils by 2000 students marchingto the state capital with black armbands representing apprehension.The marches followed a rally inwhich student leaders voiced dis¬sent against a silent vigil. How¬ever, the majority of studentsvoted to hold demonstrations.The Daily Cardinal supported thedemonstrators, saying, “there canbe no peace on this campus untilthe present order is hauled down,taken apart, and built over.”SDS Leaflets ClassIn Anti-Boorstin MoveA YAWN FOR ARTMore than 60 students were already waiting patiently, and sleepily,at 6 a.m. Friday for numbers to be given out for the JosephShapiro paintings. The first art-lovers arrived around 11 p.m. thenight before. Students for a Democratic Soci¬ety (SDS) has again escalated itsattack on the University’s historydepartment.In a move designed to intensifysupport for ousted Assistant Pro¬fessor of History L. Jesse Le-misch, members of SDS leafleteda class taught by Professor of His¬tory Daniel J. Boorstin last week.Lemisch, whose contract was notrenewed last year, has chargedthat he was discriminated againstbecause of his political views.According to Christopher Hob-Grad Students Give Bookstore AdviceTwelve University graduate stu¬dents recently hired by the Uni¬versity Bookstore are trying to al¬leviate some of the Bookstore’spresent problems.The twelve, hired under a newpolicy following one recommenda¬tion of a student-faculty fact¬finding committee, are currentlyin the process of categorizing andorganizing books in order to makea trip to the Bookstore a less com¬plicated experience.The twelve, each of whom workstwo or three evenings a week, arecurrently rearranging the displaycategories in order to presentbooks in a way more familiar tostudents. Where once all books inpolitical science were grouped un¬der two headings, for instance,there now will be seventeen, suchas african civ and urban politics.File SystemOther changes being made in theBookstore include the initiation ofa card inventory system which,when complete, will be open to thepublic and will operate like a li¬brary file system in showing whatis available. This card cataloguedoes away with the old practiceof quarterly inventories.These changes are all recom¬mendations presented last springin a student-faculty committee con¬ sisting of Bernie Grofman, polit- jical science; Leon Glass, chem¬istry; Steven Curley, law; RichardWade, professor of history; JamesLorie, professor and director forthe Center for Research in Secur¬ity Prices at the Graduate Schoolof Business; and William Ringler,professor of English.Other recommendations whichhave since been implemented arethe removal of the clothing sec¬tion, and the stocking of textbooksin the general books section andthe removal of certain types ofbooks not of “interest to the aca¬demic community,” such as plotoutline books and data guides.Interim MeasuresOther recommendations, however,have not yet been implemented,including the report’s majorfinding—that as long as the Book¬store is housed in its present facil¬ities, any other improvements willbe merely interim measures, andthat construction of a new Book¬store is imperative.Grofman stated that when thePlanner’s Office was asked aboutthis, they replied, “It’s on our a-genda this year.” To this Grofmancommented, “It has been for thepast fifteen years.”Plans for the hospital to expandinto the site presently occupied bythe Bookstore, however, may make construction of a new one unavoid¬able.Other RecommendationsOther recommendations of thereport which have not been im¬plemented are the removal of thegift department to accommodatemore books and the institution ofa permanent faculty-student aca¬demic governing board.There are as yet no plans for astudent discount at the Bookstore.The Wade Committee recom¬mended institution of a 10 percentstudent discount, but only if theBookstore ever moves to adequatequarters.Grofman stated that changes tobe made in the Bookstore includethe eventual integration of hard¬back and paperback books and re¬moval of excessive copies singletitles on display.“Although these changes do notseem so radical,” said Grofman,“when taken together they makea big difference. The Bookstorewill be radically different sixmonths from now.” son, an SDS member who helpeddraft the anti-Boorstin petition,SDS is trying to “point out thatthe criteria officially cited for Le-misch’s dismissal are false andhave to be false, because if theywere true, Boorstin wouldn’t behere either.”The tenured members of the his¬tory department who voted not torenew Lemisch’s contract chargedthat he had allowed his convictionsto interfere with his scholarship.HUAC TestimonyThe leaflet quotes a part ofBoorstin’s testimony to the HouseUn-American Activities Committeein 1953. Boorstin is quoted as re¬sponding to a question about howhe expresses his opposition to theCommunist party by replying thathe made an attempt “to discoverand explain to my students in myteaching and in my writing, theunique virtues of American democ¬racy.”SDS asserts that this testimonyis proof that Boorstin has allowedhis convictions to interfere withhis scholarship. “We must note,”the leaflet continues, “that certainscholarly biases — mainly thosewhich favor the status quo — aretolerated, even praised by the pro¬fession, while others — mainlythose which question the statusquo — are excluded.”The leaflets were left on Boor¬stin’s desk before the beginning ofclass and distributed to studentsas they entered the classroom. Ac¬cording to Hobson, Boorstinshowed no visible response to theprotest.“We cite what Boorstin says notin an effort to discredit him,” Hob¬son asserted, “but to reveal thecontradiction between the valuesthe University cites and the valuesthey actually go by.” Matthew Fox, managing editor ofThe Cardinal, said,“ I do not thinkthe strikes have been effective.The silent vigil was totally a sym¬bolic gesture of protest and sym¬pathy for the student body.”The Wisconsin State Assemblyvoted 94-5 to set up an investiga¬tion reevaluating policies on stu¬dent discipline.Assemblyman Edward Merty(D-Milwaukee) called the students“long-haired greasy pigs.” StateSenator Leland McPharland (D.—Cudaht) stated he was “sick andtired of the students running theuniversity. We should throw theseguys out and shoot them if neces¬sary.”Sewell described the riot as re¬grettable and said that it shouldnot happen again.Similar demonstrations arefeared by the administration whenthe CIA is expected to send re¬cruiters to the campus in twoweeks. University officials are con¬cerned that a complete breakdownmay occur like the Berkeley move¬ment.SATURDAY BOOK SALE25< 25< 25< 25{ 25<LIT. JOURNALS GERMANHISTORY RUSSIANBUSINESS SCAND. LIT.POLITICS SYLLABIFICTION PAPERBACKS 10*STUDENT CO-OP12 noon - 5:30 GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELEDI"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559tBat More For LessITry Our Convenitnt Take-Out OrderstW WileAGO MAROON EXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryingcase! Provides hygienic,convenient carefor yourlenses. c \JOne 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, Inc....eye care specialist for 70 yearsOctober 24, 1967CORSO Has Final Spending Spree for GroupsThe Committee on RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO)spent over $13,000 Sunday night.The student-faculty committee,which is charged with making al¬locations to the more than thirtycampus organizations that annual¬ly apply for financial support,ended its marathon session Sunday after spending $13,429.50 in loansand outright grants. The totalCORSO budget is $29 thousand.CORSO failed to reach final de¬cisions on the allocations for anumber of key organizations suchas Student Government, The Ma¬roon, and SWAP. Moreover, theentire budget must be approved by the Student Government Assemblybefore it becomes final.The largest single allocationgranted Sunday was to WUCBwhich received all of the $2,385 ithad requested. The campus radiostation has made definite plans toexpand to FM broadcasting some¬time later this year.SWAP Uses VolunteersAfter OEO Funds CutThe U.S. Office of Economic Op¬portunity (OEO) has cut off fundsto the Student Woodlawn AreaProject (SWAP) forcing the dis¬missal of their paid executive di¬rector and the replacement of theposition with a volunteer staff.According to SWAP staff coordi¬nator Carlos Brossard, “Unless wecan mobilize students, parents, andindividuals to continue to give aneeded service to the community,we will be disbanded.”Brossard added, however, thatresponse so far has been encour¬aging. The project, he said, is con¬tinuing on a part-time basis.The immediate effect of theOEO decision, he said, is thatSWAP cannot afford a full-time di¬rector. SWAP is now drawingfunds from the money-raisingcampaign of last summer.Miss Patricia Brown, public re¬lations woman for OEO, said thatSWAP is classified as a “low prior¬ity” organization. Since Congress reduced grants to federal povertyprojects, OEO had to cut all fundsfor educational and cultural proj¬ects, she said.The Chicago OEO held a closedmeeting recently which may havedealt with SWAP, according to in-! formed sources. A possible reason| for the Congressional cutback ini funds for poverty programs inBrossard’s view is the Vietnamwar. “We are having guns,” saidBrossard, “and no butter.”Brossard also felt that the politi-; cal machine at city hall is dedi-| cated in keeping the status quo.SWAP is now being coordinated, by a committee of six tutors, six| tutees, and six Woodlawn parents,' thereby distributing control among| the University students and com-1 munity. Despite the fund loss,I SWAP is planning to expand itsprogram to include general coun-! seling, workshops on reading andmath, sport programs, and a col-! lege-bound workshop. Other large grants includedthose to Chicago’s National Stu¬dent Association delegation, whichreceived $1500, and to Cap andGown, which received $1700.Other, the University’s secondnewspaper, received an allocationof $600. They had requested $1400,the same amount they receivedlast year.IIn addition, CORSO an¬nounced a $54 grant to the Moun¬taineering Club, a $384 loan to anorganization calling itself MihonBunka Kai, and $300 in loan andoutright grant to an organizationlisted as “temporarily nameless.”CORSO refused to allocate anyof the $300 requested by the U.C.; Drinking Club, noting that “COR¬SO believes that institutions oughtto take moral stands. CORSO can¬not condone the immorality of al¬coholic beverages.”The committee, nominally a stu¬dent-faculty body, is in fact almost| exclusively under student control.Each year, the dean of studentsgives it a lump sum from the Uni¬versity’s student activities budgetwhich it in turn distributes amongthe various campus organizations.Envoy Speaks at Lutheran Ceremony“Saying there’s trouble in theUN is like saying there’s sicknessin a hospital, or that a woman inlabour is in pain,” said Lord Car-radon, British minister of state forforeign affairs and ambassador tothe United Nations, speaking inMandel Hall Saturday.The occasion was the academicconvocation at 4 p.m. of the newTheological Seminary for the Luth¬eran School of Theology, at 1100East 55th Street.The lecture by Lord Carradon,whose credentials in the field ofinternational relations are nothingshort of overwhelming, covered awide range of subjects, but had asits central theme a challenge tothe individual to appreciate fullyboth the problems that confrontworld civilization today and theimportance of man’s collective ef¬forts to overcome them.Millions of Americans watchedLord Carradon on television dur¬ing the recent Arab-Israeli war,when in the Security Council hefirmly denied Arab charges ofBritish participation in the war onthe side of the Israelis.Speaking FirmlySpeaking with the same firmnesshere Saturday, he defended theUN against the common conclu¬sion that it is “in trouble.”STAMP IT!IT'S THE RAGE~REGULARMODELANY S*3 LINE TEXT CTh# fin--'* |Nr**eTpi)CTIBLE METALPOCKET RUBBER STAMP. W « 2".Solid rhook or money order. B'sure to inch’'1' y»<ir Zip Code. Nrpostage or handling charges. Addsale* tux.Piompt shipment e»tN»«rfion GuaranteedTHE MOPP CO.P. O. Boi 18623 Lenei Square StationATLANTA, GA.. 30326 “We who work there are in thetrouble business,” he said, remind¬ing one perhaps of the late AdlaiStevenson’s speaking style andfaith in the UN. He even quotedStevenson that, “When the UNceases to reflect the troubles ofj the world, that will be the timeto start worrying.”iWhen the issue of Vietnam cameup in questions after the speech,Lord Carradon restated the tradi¬tional British policy of favoringuniversal representation in theUN, and indicated that the non¬participation of Communist Chinaand North Vietnam was a signifi¬cant barrier in the way of success¬ful peace negotiations. This was anote of polite dissension from theJohnson administration’s refusal toback Communist Chinese entryand simultaneous impatience withthe UN for not being able to takea concrete step toward peace inVietnam.Political TransitionAnother basic theme of LordCarradon’s lecture was the impor¬tance of a transition from what he termed the “bad old days of powerpolitics.” In sharp contrast tosome alarm which has been ex¬pressed about the gains of Afro-Asian nations, Lord Carradon wel¬comed a day when the whims ofthe United States, the SovietUnion, Britain and France wouldnot dominate world politics. Hesaid that the dangers the worldfaces are so great that there is“no hope that they can be effec¬tively dealt with by one nation oreven one bloc of nations.”Many times Lord Carradonmade reference to his own exten¬sive experience, describing himselfas “by upbringing, a nonconform¬ist, inclination, a politician.”Noting that he has been a colon¬ial administrator for most of hislife, he said he believed that “col¬onialism is evil.” However, he hadno apologies for the British policyof gradual preparation of coloniesfor self-determination, and de¬clared, “I take pride in my coun¬try that in 21 years we havebrought 750,000,000 people fromcolonialism to independence.”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 3-1715 CORSO ALLOCATIONS1966*67 1967-68Organization Allocation Request Spent AllocationBlackfriars 400. 400. 478.21 400.B-J Cinema 99. 99. — —Cap & Gown 1700. 1700. 7 1700Chess Club 148. 414. 155. 160.Chi. Lit. Rev. 300. 500. 1502.02 1500.Collegium Musicum Chorus 650. — —U. C. Concert Band a 300. 525. — —Conf. on City 8. Univ. a, b 611. 1206. — —Country Dancers 143.50 193.50 21.50 25.Dames Club 200. 300. 150. 150.U. C. Drinking Club f 300. — —U. C. Folkdancers (+ c 200) 120. 300. 210.10 190.Frumious Press C 400. c 400. — —History Club Speakers Program a 400. 500. — —India Association c 260. 260. — —Kent Chemical Soc. 175. 400. — —Mountaineering Club 54. 98. — —Nihon Bunka Kai a, d 384. 576. — —Other 600. 1400. 1337.46 1400.? ? ? e (+ c 250) 50. 300. 173.49 400.Phoenix 650. •650. 902.73 550.Rugby 300. 1168. 302.72 300.STEP 420. 420. 373.12 400.STEP Sum. Camp 500. 1150. — —USNSA 1500. 2040. 1387.21 1300.VISA 400. 495. 569.40 600.WUCB / WHPK 2385. 2385. 4565.45 4835.Organizations for which finalCORSO decisions have not been made:FOTA ? 771. 1500.Maroon a 9800. 2850. 2850.Renaissance Players — 300. — —Student Government a 500. 4370. 7715.37 7350.SWAP 7 — —Wash Prom a 1200. 1594.36 1000.a Minimum allocation; further allocations to be held,b Allocation covers first six months of operation only,c Loand Allocation covers first two quarters' operation only,e Oraanization temporarily nameless.f CORSO believes that institutions ought to take moral stands.CORSO cannot condone the immorality of alcoholic beverages.Two Researchers ReportRheumatic Fever VaccineAfter a year of testing two med-, ical researchers at the University ;of Chicago are issuing their firstpublic reports on the successful jimmunization of infants by a newvaccine which may solve the prob¬lem of rheumatic fever.Eugene N. Fox, an associate pro¬fessor at the Labida-University ofChicago Institute and in the De¬partment of Microbiology, and Dr.Albert Dorfman, director of the LaRabida-University of Chicago In¬stitute and professor and chairman of the Department of Pediatrics,will both address conferences thismonth on the results of their newvaccine.During the past year, twenty-five infants were immunized at theWell-Baby Clinic of the Silvain andAnna Wyler Children’s Hospital.None of the twenty-five childrenhad any reactions or side effects.“Twenty of the twenty-five re¬sponded to the vaccine by produc¬ing antibodies capable of destroy¬ing streptococcus,” said Fox.Tape Recorder Rental ServiceWollensack • Martel • PanasonicPortables and Office UnitsAll First Class like new EquipmentPHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.&HYDE PARK T.V. RENTS television lorS6.50 a week FMcordezs, etc.HYDE PARK T.V. SEUSs* ~^>j\ 1463 East 53rd Street~- radio lor $5.00 a jimonth.HYDE PARK T.V. services “,"a V“w• jMotorola jiGrundig|HYDE PARK T.V. offers J,mention this ad.PL 2-2700 1li— ... . —»•■)/■fr ■October 24, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5jiMSilliiHiHThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiejJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editors Roger BlackJohn WelchExecutive Editors David L. AikenMichael SeidmanNews Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor. Marc PoKempnerAssociate Editors. David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsLiterary Editors Ted HearneBryan DunlapEditor Emeritus David A. SatterRising TideTimes are changing, and the mood among protestorsof the Vietnam war is moving from one of in-systemdissent and passive civil disobedience to one of active,militant resistance, clearly indicated by this weekend’sconfrontations between the marchers on Washington andthe Federal marshals and MP’s. And the brutality com¬mitted by the government forces has crystallized thismilitancy and given it new acceptance.As a growing majority of the nation becomes dis¬enchanted with President Johnson’s persistent war policy,an increasing minority of the population is coming toview him as resembling the psychotic Captain Queeg ofHerman Wouk’s novel.The majority of the sector opposing the war wouldlike to see a change take place within the system. But agrowing faction, as was evident in the weekend’s activ¬ities, have all but abandoned hope of this taking place.It was this group that participated in the attack on thePentagon and which will doubtless play an increasingrole in future anti-war events.And like the first few dissidents who spearheadedthe war protest which has now reached what the JohnsonAdministration might call unmanageable proportions, itis not a farfetched possibility that these militants maybe the vanguard of what Eric Sevareid has said couldbe another civil war in America.That this projection has been dismissed by thosein control as unrealistic is hard to accept in view of thebehavior of Federal troops during the legal part of themarch as well as the attack on the Pentagon. There aresimply too many consistent accounts of excessive brutalityby Federal marshals and MP’s for the charges to be•egarded as unduly exaggerated or untrue. And observersuniformly attribute the most inhumane atrocities not tothe young MP’s — at least a few of whom actually brokedown emotionally when demonstrators talked with thembut to their more hardened superiors, the marshals.Further, sitting in his Pentagon office watching thespectacle was Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.And finally, in touch by telephone during the entireperiod was the President.It presents at the same time a neat and incredible pic¬ture. Despite all indications, it is hard to believe that thetotalitarian violence committed by the government forcesagainst the “peaceniks” over the weekend was directed,encouraged, or even condoned by higher officials. Butwhether this was the case or not, it has become clearthat the use of force against ideas and brutality againstforce may be the only ways those few who now controlthe power and insist on using it against the wishes ofthe many can maintain it.But just as this weekend was a significant turningpoint in the anti-war movement, so may next year'spresidential elections be a watershed. We would like tosee an end to the war take place before Mr. Sevareid’sprophesy is well on its way to fulfilment. We wonderwhether the 1968 elections will be soon enough; probablyso. But if Mr. Johnson is reelected and maintains hispresent course, the battering of skulls may very well beheard far outside the confines of the nation’s Capitol. ROGER BLACKPatient Generation:Moscow's Mumbo-JumboLast week readers of The Ma¬roon were treated to two of themost incredible columns everprinted, here or anywhere else.The first was, of course, thelatest installment in Ed Chikof-sky’s fanatic campaign to stopthe appointment of Berlin Phil¬harmonic Conductor Herbert vonKarajan as director of the Chica¬go Symphony.Chikofsky’s column may bedismissed as the lunatic mouth-ings of one, isolated crackpot,and the letters on Friday hadjust about dismissed it as suchwhen the second incredible col¬umn of the week appeared, thatof John Moscow.In case you were lucky enoughto miss it, the column containedMoscow’s somewhat condescend¬ing advice to what he called the“impatient generation” to stopmarching about and insteadmake a deal with Lyndon John¬son.No joke. That is exactlywhat he said: Join up with Lyn¬don in exchange for his promiseto get out of Vietnam and tobring about the Great Society.MOSCOW (who presumablysold out to the “patient genera¬tion” some time ago) has theidea of working through properchannels. Marching about willnever get you anywhere, he says.Nor will forming your own partyin desperation because two willnever come anywhere near doingthings you think they should. The answer is to make a deal withLyndon Johnson.Now he doesn’t say how sucha deal could be accomplished.He doesn’t say how Lyndonwould ever promise to repudiateall his past Vietnam policy andsquirm into a policy that wouldaccomodate the Left. He doesn’tsay how Lyndon would manageto keep whatever supporters henow has after making such anabout-face.NEITHER DOES HE say howthe impatient generation wouldcome to make this deal, how itcould ever be bamboozled intothinking old Lyndon would orcould keep his promise (andif he has anything like the Con¬gress he has now it is doubtfulhe could). As it is now the Pres¬ident makes almost daily assur¬ances that what he wants ispeace and he is ready to negoti¬ate any time but meanwhile themurderous war blunders on.The alternative Moscow pro¬poses is for the impatient gener¬ation to vote for the RepublicanPresidential candidate. So far noRepublican with a chance of get¬ting elected has advocated apeaceful solution to the war andit would be difficult to imaginea situation where a GOP candi¬date would feel compelled to sayanything more definite about thewar than that he would run itdifferently than Johnson.AS FOR A third party, Moscowis probably right. Provided that a candidate could be found, andthe anti-war people could pullthemselves together to supporthim, it is unlikely that he couldattract many independents. Anda poor showing at the polls wouldhurt the resistance very badly.This is why the generation isimpatient. It knows that workingthrough Normal ElectoralProcess is, at best, risky. Itknows that 30,000 Young Demo¬crats or even 30,000 voters in anational election do not have theeffect on decision making as 30,-000 people charging the Pentagonon national TV.Lyndon makes a show of con¬ducting business as usual, sittingon the White House lawn,chatting amiably with the princeof Laos.The resistance is offering theonly clear and consistant alter¬native to the moderate mumbo-jumbo on Vietnam. With everydemonstration more people be¬gin to ask what we are doing inVietnam. Lyndon is not going tobe able to ignore them forever.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 24, 1967 (>AViwvmU !?. :A> oS VO‘Letters to the Editor of The MaroonWisconsin AppealSeveral dozen University ofWisconsin students staged a pro¬test demonstration Wednesdayagainst Dow Chemical Corpora¬tion — manufacturers of napalm— who were recruiting futureemployees on the campus. Thesedemonstrators obstructed door¬ways in the Commerce Buildingand expected to be arrested (andindeed, it was their right to bearrested). The administration,specifically Chancellor Sewell,called and authorized the Madi¬son City Police to use any meansnecessary to disperse the grow¬ing number of protesters.The police arrived with riotcontrol equipment, entered thecorridor of demonstrators andbegan without warning to clubpeople indiscriminately with billyclubs, including women studentsand passing non-demonstrators.During the next few hours, stu¬dents gathered in the areaaround Commerce and the po¬lice exploded tear-gas bombs —again without warning.As a non-demonstrator affectedby the gas, I emphasize not onlythe intense pain but the masshysteria caused by this action tohundreds of innocent observersand passing students and profes¬sors (Even the hospital’s emer¬gency room was filled with tear-gas).BUT THE NOW enraged stu¬dents returned to the scenewhere more gas and violence oc¬curred throughout the afternoon.Sixty-three students and a num¬ ber of policemen were hospital¬ized. That evening a mass meet¬ing of thousands of students andover 300 faculty members votedto boycott classes until Chan¬cellor Sewell reinstated the thir¬teen students suspended for“leading the riot” and assuredall of us that police would nolonger molest us on the campus.Although the Teacher’s Assist¬ant Association supports us andthe class strike, the majority ofthe faculty still does not. Thestudents have been meeting, boy¬cotting and demonstratingagainst police brutality eversince. But we are still a minorityand need support.The issues at Wisconsin areno longer Vietnam or the DowCorporation. The issue is studentcivil rights. We, as students, feelthat an administrative policy ofpolice violence against studentsfor free speech and free assem¬bly is a flagrant violation ofmoral and constitutional rights.We need the support of other stu¬dents, professors and concernedcitizens all over the country.Please write to President FredHarrington, Bascom Hall, Madi¬son, Wisconsin 53706, expressingyour concern and support of thestudents’ position and/or theirclass boycott. For the sake oftruly free universities all overthe country, including the Uni¬versity of Chicago, please sup¬port us.ROXANNE FREYERMadison, Wise. Other SideThe letter from Mrs. NancyRenaud (The Maroon, October17) serves to amplify the prob¬lems in so complex a socio¬economic society and commu¬nity as exists in Hyde Park.There is not a single misstate¬ment in Mrs. Renaud’s letter.However, there is another sideto her housing coin which shedid not choose to disclose andwhich is an important facet ofthe total environment of HydePark housing.The building in which she livesis owned and one apartment in itis occupied by a Negro postalemployee and his family. An¬other apartment is occupied byhis widowed mother. Hence, asMrs. Renaud states, only occu¬pants of four of the six apart¬ments participated in Mrs.Renaud’s “strike.” Rents in thebuilding (each apartment is sixfull rooms with double plumb¬ing) are about 30 percent belowthe market for comparable HydePark housing and have not beenraised since 1959 when the pres¬ent owner took possession. Mean¬while, real estate taxes and oper¬ating expenses (including repairservices) have increased by atleast 30 percent and in manycases by as much as 100 percent.PRIOR TO Mrs. Renaud’s“strike,” the owner had at¬tempted to maintain and supportthe building within this un¬economic framework. Subsequentto her activities, the propertyhas been placed in the hands of a receiver, and the mortgage onit is currently in foreclosure. Asa result of this action the ownerwill, at best, have to pay a con¬siderable sum to redeem thisproperty; and, at worst, will losethe investment representing thesavings he and his family haveaccumulated during their life¬time. A further result has beenthe eviction of the owner’s moth¬er from the apartment which sheoccupied and which has re¬mained vacant since her evic¬tion.I sympathize with Mrs.Renaud’s problems in connectionwith this building, and I’m surethe landlord (what an archaicterm) is anxiously awaiting anote from her indicating her will¬ingness to have her rental in¬creased by at least $45 permonth so that proper mainten¬ance of the building can be re¬sumed.EWARD S. LOWE(Editor’s note: The writer is agraduate of the University, a res¬ident of Hyde Park, and a finan¬cial consultant currently tryingto cause the property describedby Mrs. Renaud to be retainedby its present owner, James F.Waddell.)Barber 'Bias'Today I was getting a haircutat the University Barbershopwhen a Negro boy about 14 yearsold came in and asked for a hair¬cut. After seating him in a chair,the barber and two others nearhim got into a long, serious, po¬lite discussion about how to give the haircut he had asked for. Thediscussion ended with the originalbarber admitting his inability todo what the boy had asked, andrecommending a barbershop on63rd St.After the boy left, my barber,assuming me sympathetic, toldme confidentially that, “We don’tcut any colored hair here. The(show) was because it is illegalto refuse them service. Usually,they just go away.” As soon as Iobjected, he became all smilesand explained carefully how itwas all because of the differenttechniques of haircutting and soon....This type of attitude seems tome a glaring example of “North¬ern-brand” discrimination! Morethan just feeling angry and pro¬foundly shocked, since I hardlyexpected to meet such out-and-out discrimination, complete withplacating hypocrisy so close tohome, I believe that this calls forsome action (my first impulse,which I restrained, was to senda brick through the window).Therefore I ask all those who feelsimilarly to join in in boycottingthe University Barbershop, 1435E. 57th St.HOWARD BARKANDepartment ofAnthropologyLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewitheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.AT THE PENTAGON, Franju's BLOOD OF BEASTSand Bunuel’s UN CHIEN ANDALOU are stillplaying in their record-breaking 25 year run!If you want to see THANANTOS '67, then bestride yourrifle and faster than you can say DR. STRANGE-LOVE, you’ll be there.BUT if you want to see EROS ’67, unbutton a bit and slinkinto AARDVARK CINEMATHEQUE, 1608 North WellsStreet, (in Piper’s Alley). PROGRAM TWO in theEROS '67 Festival plays Sunday, Oct. 29th only.Featuring (UNCUT) the films the Chicago Board ofCensors banned Oct. 20 and which the Film ReviewBoard sanely rescinded Oct. 23rd.George Kuchar’s HOLD ME WHILE I’M NAKEDBob Cowan’s SOULFREEZEBen Van Meter’s ACID CAMP and others.TODAY THRU SATURDAY - LENNY BRUCE“Others josh, snipe and rib, Lenny Bruce demolishes.’’Kenneth Tynan“Bursting with indignation. Devastating, hilarious,freshly irreverent.’’ New York Times.AARDVARK The Home of New Cinema in Chicago1608 North Wells — Call 337-4654.October 24, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7Food at New Dorms'Nauseous' to 'Severe' Calendar of EventsBy BARBARA HURSTStaff WriterForty-four students at NewDorms have signed a list postedin the Commons, complaining thatthe meal served Wednesday nightin the Woodward Cafeteria madethem ill. Adjectives students usedto describe their reactions rangedfrom “nauseous” to “severe” andimmediate and strong effects rang¬ing from twelve-seven hours werecited.The list was posted by second-year student Peter Mundy whosaid, “I personally donated mydinner to the drain that night, andspent all of Thursday twitching inbed. Now, six days later, my di¬gestion is cautiously and fitfullyreappearing.”No one knows for certain exact¬ly what in Wednesday’s dinner wasthe instigator of what Mundycharges was food poisoning.“Some say it was the Jell-o, otherssay detergent in the pans, or pointto the sedimentary silverware. Afew maintain that the recycling ofused grease did the trick, but Ifavor the poisoned potato theory,”he said. He did not, however, rule outthe possibilty that some of the foodserved at dinner to contract stu¬dents had been served at lunch¬time to paying customers. Any¬thing left over from lunchtime, ob¬served Mundy, must have beenserved again at night.“This means that some food hasbeen sitting for six or eight hoursbefore it gets to us,” he explained“If nothing else is happening toit, it gets a chance to increase itsbacteria count.”Into the Pans“It is true,” concedes SupervisorDavis, “that some food served inthe afternoon is served again atnight. But the food isn’t reheated.We put it into warming pans andnever let it get colder than it wasto begin with. Persons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toI The Maroon two days before the day beforel publication.Tuesday, October 24MEETING: CADRE. Ida Noyes. 7:30 p.m.MEETING: Committee for Women's Rights.Ida Noyes. 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: Dr. William Sturner, chiefcoroner's physician. County Morgue, "Foren¬sic Pathology." Billings Hospital M-137.12:30 p.m.FILM: (Dec Films) "Touch of Evil" byOrson Welles. 75c. Soc Sci 122. 7:15 and9:15 p.m.COLLOQUIM: (The James Franck Insti¬tute), Ivar Balsev, Bell Telephone Labora-1tories, Murray Hill, New Jersey, "Exciton jAbsorption in Strained Crystals," Research jInstitutes 480, 4:15 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Inter¬national House, 8-10:30 p.m.CAUCUS: SPAC. Ida Noyes. 7:30 p.m. |Wednesday, October 25SOCCER: Chicago vs. Lake Forest. NorthField. 3:30 p.m.FILM: (Doc Films) "Two Rode Together"by John Ford. 75c. Soc Sci 122. 7:15 and9:15 p.m.MEETING: Committee of Women HousePresidents. All current and former womenhouse presidents invited. Snell first floorlounge. 4:30 p.m.FACULTY AND UNIVERSITY BOARDMEETING: Physical Sciences, Eckhard 133,3:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of History and Center for Middle Eastern Studies), AllenCunningham, Department of History, SimonFraser University, "The Problem of Revo¬lution: Fair Greece, Sad Relic," SocialScience 122, 4 p.m.LECTURE: (Microbiology), Elvin A. Ka-bat, professor of microbiology, College ofPhysicians and Surgeons, Columbia Univer¬sity, "Structure and Heterogeneity of Anti¬body: Their Evolutionary Significance,"Ricketts Laboratory, Room 1, 4:30 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes, Cloister Club,7-10:30 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Ida Noyes, DanceRoom, 8-10 p.m.LECTURE: Warren Preece, Board of Edu¬cators of the Encyclopedia Britannica, LawSchool Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.LECTURE: (SHO Forum Series) JulianLevi, Professor of Urban Studies, "The Ur¬ban Crisis." Billings P-117. 4:30 p.m.MEETING: Pre-Med Club. Dr. StanleyBennett will talk about "Some PracticalApplications of Cell and Molecular Biologyin Medicine." All members and others inter¬ested are invited to attend. Billings HospitalM-137. 7 p.m.MEETING: Sociology Club. A panel offaculty members will participate in a dis¬cussion of graduate school and vocationalopportunities in sociology. Refreshments. IdaNoyes library. 4 p.m.MEETING: Student Government. Soc Sci305. 7:30 p.m.Thursday, October 26FACULTY AND UNIVERSITY BOARD IMEETING: Board of Precollegiate Educa¬tion. Hutchinson Commons. 12 p.m. LECTURE: (Graduate Training Program,Biochemistry), Phillips W. Robbins, Massa¬chusetts Institute of Technology, "O-AntigenBiosynthesis." Abbott 101. 12:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Social Sciences), RichardFlafhman, assistant professor. Departmentof Political Sciences and College, "ThomasHobbes," Kent 103, 1:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Zoology Club), Professor E.O. Wilson, Harvard University, "Experimen¬tal Zoogeography," Zoology 14. 4:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), Professor BrunoB. Rossi, Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology, "X-ray Astronomy." Eckhart 133,4:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of Chemistry),Professor Hardin M. McConnell, StanfordUniversity, "William Draper Harkins Lec¬ture." Kent 107. 8:15 p.m.FILM: (B-J Free Cinema), Academy Awardwinning film "Guiseppina." FREE. JudsonDining Room. 8:30 p.m.MEETING: Hyde Park Area Tenants Ac¬tion Committee. Ida Noyes Hall. 4 p.m.LECTURE: (Medicine) Dr. William Stru-ner, "Forensic Pathology." Billings HospitalM-137. 12:30 p.m.BEN MAY SPECIAL LECTURE: "Chemi¬stry and Physiology of Prostaglandins."Professor Sune Bergstrom, Karolinska Insti¬tute. Billings Hospital P-117. 5 p.m.“This food is offered as a thirdchoice. It isn’t even put on theboard. No one has to eat it.” Series of Dinners At Hutch CommonsStarting TroubleMildred Davis, supervisor of theWoodward kitchens, has a differentguess. “There is a lot of intestinalilu going around the campus.People could be getting sick fromthat. Personally, though, I thinkit’s a question of someone justwanting to start some trouble.”When asked to comment on Mun-dy’s poisoned potato theory, Mrs. jDavis replied, “Those potatoeswere fresh. I washed them myself.There was very little grease onthem.”But Paula Szewczyk, 71, onesigner of the list in the Commons, 1agreed with Mundy. “I got sickto my stomach. The potatoes wereraw.” She adds, “I have developedso many hatreds to the foods thatl used to eat over at that place.”“It was the potatoes,” says Mun¬dy. “They tasted pretty bad.” Mundy has gathered the namesof all those students who com¬plained about the meal and is sub¬mitting a list of these names andcomplaints to Edward Turkingtonat the Office of Student Housing.“We’re making no demands,”said Mundy. “We just think thatthe matter ought to be brought togeneral attention and we wantsomeone to investigate it. As part of a three-pronged effortfor continuing orientation of first-year students to college life, aseries of dinners in HutchinsonCommons will feature speakersfrom the campus.Professor of Psychology BrunoBettelheim will address first-yearstudents who receive invitationsstudents who receive invitationsfor the November 7 dinner; Deanof the Humanities Division RobertStreeter will speak November 14. The speaker for November 8 hasnot yet been chosen.Every first year student will re¬ceive an invitation to one of thethree dinners. An anonymousdonor provided funds for the din¬ners.Further opportunities for first-year students throughout the yearwill include an additional series oflectures and Saturday morningseminars on controversial topics,possibly two per quarter. Stevens AppointedDr. Jack Stevens has been ap¬pointed an associate professor ofsurgery and director of the Di¬vision of Orthopedic Surgery inthe Department of Surgery here.Dr. Stevens previously waschairman of the Department of Or¬thopedic Surgery at the Cook Coun¬ty Hospital, Chicago.Dr. Stevens, a native of Ingleton,Yorkshire, England, receivedhis undergraduate training at Cam¬bridge and his clinical training atthe University College HospitalSchool, London.ORSON WELLES’TOUCH OF EVILFat, sleazy Orson Welles tramples on civil liberties.With Charlton Heston, Janet Leight, and Marlene Dietrich.In Soc Sci 122 tonight at 7:15 and 9:15. 75<t Presented by Doc Films.“Collegians of America,PIZZAPLATTER ARISE!!!Pizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!u,1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 SJA Valuable Book inAny Library Is:My Religionby Helen Kellerwith an introduction byNorman VincentPealeLearn of her religion andphilosophy which has up¬lifted and sustained thisremarkable woman.For your free introductorycopy write: SwedenborgReading Room, 5710 S.Wood lawn Ave., Chicago,Ill. 60637 Fly Ozark Youth Fare at 1/3 off!”With an Ozark Youth I.D. Card*, you can turn traveltime into at-home time — fly at V3 off regular fare!For your Youth I.D. Card application form, writeOzark Air Lines, Lambert Field, St. Louis, Mo. 63145.(Travel under ptan not applicable during major holi¬day periods.)*Card costs $10. You must be under 22 to be eligible.go-getters goOZARK6733Y An Historic Event! Order Seats Now!GRAND RE-OPENINGof Chicago's MagnificentAUDITORIUM THEATREThe Auditorium Theatre Council presentsFestival Week of BalletNew YorkCityBalletCompany of 100—Full Symphony OrchestraGeorge Balanchine and Lincoln Kirstein, DirectorsAuditorium Theatre Grand Reopening BenefitTuesday, October 31st, 1967, 8:00 PJM."A Midsummer Night's Dream"Full-length BallotFestival PerformancesNovember 1 through November SWednesday No». I 8.30 P M"A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM" (Full-length)Thursday, Nov. 2. 8 30 P.M."JEWELS" (Full-length Bollet In ) Acts)Friday, Nov. 3, 8:30 P.MSwan Loke, Agon. Afternoon »f a Faun, Rovmo*doSat. Mat., Nov. 4, 2 30 P.M."A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM"Sat E»e , Nov. 4, 8:30 P.M.Roymonda. Agon, Stors A Strip*'Sun Mat . Nov 5. 2 30 P MSwan Loke. Afternoon of n Foirn. Pnj de Deu>, FirebirdSun Ev» . Nov 5. 7 30 P M."JEWELS" (Note Early CurfalnlPraqram Sublet t fa CbarqeTICKET PRICESBenefit Festival FestivalPeHormence Eveninqs MatmeetBOXES (4 teal.) SI, 500(H) 5100 00 *40 00MAIN FLOOR''Special Section''Parque* 750 OP700.00 13 50 8.00Parquet. Cirtl. 150.00 10.00 7.00Dress Circle mono 8 00 4 00LOWER BALCONYFirst Section soon 7 00 4.00Middle Section 3S.0O 4.00 5.00Re<rr Section 35.00 S.OC 4.00UPPER BALCONY ... . 15.00 3.50 3.00GALLERY 10.00 2.00 1 soTicket! on *al« al Tirk.l Central »l Lcw. t. 317 N Mir.ht|an and allMnntflomsry Ward sad Crawford Rtorpi. Dial T-l-C-K• F-T-S far yotjrnparp.st location-Box office open. Daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.50 East CongressV Mail Orrt.rt tn: Auditorium ThaatrnCminr.il, 70 E. Cnnorasi 8t- tiOflORPI,at. «n,ln«. t«l(-arldmu.d tlamp.il anv.lnp. J8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 24, 1967Educators Begin to Accept Student PowerBy WALTER GRANTCollegiate Press Servin'WASHINGTON — The nation’sleading educators are beginning toaccept the idea that studentsshould be actively involved in thedecisions which affect their edu¬cation. Dr. Allen Wallis, president of theUniversity of Rochester, said in apaper prepared for the conferencethat the student activist movementhas undermined the freedom topresent controversial views oncampus exists at few institutionsof higher learning.But they are undecided aboutjust how far this involvementshould be extended and worriedabout its effects on such practicalmatters as relations with trustees,legislators, the public, and thevery education which their insti¬tutions provide.Student involvement in academicdecision-making was a frequenttopic as some 1,700 administratorsof colleges and universities acrossthe country gathered here twoweeks ago for the 50 annual meet¬ing of the Americaln Council onEducation.And although most of the collegepresidents and other executiveswho participated in the programendorsed significant student parti¬cipation in the governing of aca¬demic institutions, there neverthe¬less seemed to be an undercurrentfear of the student activist move¬ment and of the cries for studentpower.This fear and concern about thefuture was evident from the verystart of the conference when Dr.Samuel B. Gould, chancellor at theState University of New York,warned in his keynote address thatthe “power of student activismcannot be minimized nor can itspotential for creating and main¬taining unrest be taken lightly.”‘Certain Elements’He added, “Unrest and tensionon a campus can and should bedynamic factors for universitygood, but there are certain ele¬ments of the current student imovement which openly advocate jsuch unrest as means toward total |disruption and destruction.”He said that some views circu- “lated by Students for a DemocraticSociety and the National StudentAssociation “reflect goals of ex¬treme negativism and even anar-1chy which, if assiduously pursued,could make the Berkeley episodes |seem like mere warm-up exer¬cises.” “Stokely Carmichael can speakwithout hindrance, but GeorgeWallace creates so grave a threatof disorder as to preclude the pos¬sibility that he would be listenedto calmly and fairly. Senator Ful-bright would be given a respectfulhearing on any campus; few woulddare invite Secretary McNamara,since his appearance would almostcertainly precipitate tensions,probably protests, and possiblydisorders that would prevent freeand open discussion. TimothyLeary enjoys freedom of speech onmost campuses, J. Edgar Hooveron few; Nelson Rockefeller andRobert Kennedy on many, RichardNixon and Hubert Humphrey onfew,” Dr. Wallis wrote. cides What?” David Fellman,Academic Community: Who De-University of Wisconsin and pastpresident of the American Associ¬ation of University Professors, rel¬egated the role of the student indecision-making to a footnote. Heexplained to the delegates that hedealt with the topic in a footnotenot because he doesn’t consider itimportant, but because he didn’tknow how to define it. I this country “incompetent, incap¬able of seeing past the existingstructures and traditions, incapa¬ble of devising new ways for mento relate to each other and theirsociety.” Dr. John Millett, chan¬cellor of the Ohio Board of Re¬gents, called Robinson’s paper“completely outrageous.” He said the American studenthas lost faith in the leadership ofthe colleges and universities andthus in the education they offer.He said the first step institutionsshould take is to “reorder the pro¬cess of decision-making.”Cause of Crisis“I’m not prepared to say howfar we should go with student in¬volvement, but I can tell you thatwe are going to get more andmore of the student voice,” hesaid. “Students should be admittedinto policy-making wherever theycan make a contribution, but notbeyond that point.”Leadership CriticizedDr. Wallis said administratorscannot take steps to preserve gen¬uine freedom of speech for unpop¬ular speakers “without incurringthe charge of suppressing freespeech.” The students on the ACE pro¬gram responded with calls formore student power and studentrights. There were frequent stu¬dent criticisms of the present lead¬ership in today’s colleges and uni¬versities. The leadership in academic in¬stitutions was criticized by RobertS. Powell Jr., former student body' president of the University ofNorth Carolina. “The crisis inhigher education in 1967 springsfrom the lack of strong and pur¬poseful leadership within our insti¬tutions,” he said. “The cause ofthis crisis lies within our institu¬tions — in the inability or unwill¬ingness of those now making de¬cisions to confront and answer thequestion: ‘What is this placefor?’ ” Powell said “our institu¬tions have truly lost any real senseof educational purpose.” The students participating in theprogram also suggested that stu¬dents should have more controlover research.Favorable ConsensusDespite these reservations, theoverall sentiment among the edu¬cators was that students shouldplay a role in the decision-makingprocess. But there were few defi¬nite answers as to just how stu¬dents should be involved, and noone came forth with a formula todefine how much actual authoritystudents should have. Former University of Michiganstudent body president Edward N.Robinson assailed the administra¬tors for their views on student par¬ticipation. Administrators “don’tsee the problem of student involve¬ment beyond how many studentsshould be on a certain committee,”Robinson said, while the importantdecisions are generally made “bya small group of presidents andvice presidents behind closeddoors.” In a panel on “The ResearchFunction and the Advancement ofKnowledge,” W. Eugene Groves,immediate past president of theNational Student Association, said“One way to give the student morecontrol over the rewards offeredthe faculty, and hence over hisown education, would be to makehim financially independent of hisparticular departments.” Grovessuggested the student be givenguaranteed fellowship paid direct¬ly to him by the government agen¬cy, foundation, etc., that supportshim.”Three Scientists Are NamedTo Plan Nuclear Anniversary| Three prominent scientists have' joined the committee designated to1 plan the 25th anniversary observ¬ance of the first self-sustaining nu-1 clear chain reaction here.In a bacKground paper on “The Robinson called educators in In addition, the University hasreceived a grant of $25,000 fromthe Commonwealth Edison Com¬pany of Chicago to assist in under¬writing the international event,which will be held on campus onDecember 1 and 2. The three scientists are:•Robert B. Duffield, who on No¬vember 1 will become director ofthe Argonne National Laboratory;•Winston M. Manning, who isserving as acting director of Ar¬gonne; and•Robert R. Wilson, director ofthe National Accelerator Labora¬tory, which is to be built by theU.S. Atomic Energy Commissionat Weston, Illinois.JOHN FORD’S TWO RODE TOGETHERJimmy Stewart! Richard Widmark! ride together in a Masterpieceby the Master of the Western.In Soc Sci 122 Wednesday at 7:15 and 9:15. 75<t Presented by Doc Films.CHICAGOBLUES3 Bands A WeekOpen 7 NightsTill 4a.m.MOTHER BLUES1305 N. WELLS You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today. Franklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd StreetPETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411IF 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. spray bad breath awayWHISPERnew aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Ave.. New York, N Y. 10017 Why Do YouHave A i*oorMemory?A noted publisher in Chicagoreports there is a simple tech¬nique for acquiring a powerfulmemory which can pay you realdividends in both business andsocial advancement and workslike magic to give you addedpoise, necessary self-confi¬dence and greater popularity.According to this publisher,many people do not realize howmuch they could influenceothers simply by rememberingaccurately everything they see,hear, or read. Whether in bus¬iness, at social functions oreven in casual conversationswith new acquaintances, thereare ways in which you can domi¬nate each situation by yourability to remember.To acquaint the readers ofthis paper with the easy-to-fol¬low rules for developing skillin remembering anything youchoose to remember, the pub¬lishers have printed full detailsof their self-training method ina new booklet, “Adventures inMemory,” which will be mailedfree to anybody who requests it.No obligation. Send your name,address, and zip code to:Memory Studies, 835 DiverseyPkwy., Dept. 164-811, Chicago,III. 60614. A postcard will do.October 24, 19(>7 THE »( ^—CHICAGO MAROON 9Russell War Crimes Tribunal May Come to CampusBertrand Russell’s War CrimesTribunal may decide at its currentsession in Stockholm whether tobring the next session of the tri¬bunal to the campus of the Uni¬versity.The tribunal was formally in¬vited to come to Chicago by Stu¬dent Government (SG). This, (SGVice-President) Jerry Lipsch said,is the first invitation the tribunalhas received from an organizationin an important American institu¬tion.Lipsch says that the chances ofthe tribunal accepting are “quitegood.’’Bertrand Russell, the Britishphilosopher, is sponsoring the tri¬bunal which was formed to exposethe alleged crimes of the United States against international law,particularly in Vietnam.The first meeting of the tribunal(May 2 to May 10) was supportedby a host of intellectuals through¬out the world, including Jean-PaulSartre (who is the executive pres¬ident), James Baldwin, PeterWeiss, Isaac Deutscher, Simone deBeauvoir, and Stokely Carmi¬chael.Stumbling BlocksEven if the tribunal does decideto come to Chicago, there are sev¬eral factors which could keep itfrom getting here. Lipsch com¬mented: “It will be interesting tosee whether the U. S. Governmentwill prevent its coming. Theremight well be a problem withvisas.”Jeff Blum, president of SG,thinks that “the official University will not be too happy” about hav¬ing the tribunal here either.Blum said that the administra¬tion or faculty would probably notactually interfere with the tri¬bunal’s holding a session here. He said that, theoretically at least, all | Lipsch said that Dean of Stu-student groups have the right to I dents Charles D. O’Connell wasinvite any speaker they want, but' aware that the SG had written toadded that this rule might not be : the tribunal, and that “the SG hasapplicable when thirty or more heard nothing about it from thespeakers were concerned. faculty.”Urge Undergrad Dean Head DormsJurisdiction over undergraduatehousing may be transfered to theDean of Undergraduate Studentsfrom the Dean of students if a pro¬posed plan is accepted. MarkHaller, associate dean of under¬graduate students, submitted theplan to the first meeting of theInter-House Council (IHC) andasked for suggestions.The proposed change is designedto bring the faculty into more di¬rect contact with the dormitories, Haller explained. Although he ex¬pected no great changes to occur,simply because of the financialproblems, Haller said that the ul¬timate aim was to make the housesystem part of the educational sys¬tem here.Also proposed at the meeting onOctober 17 was ac onstitutionalamendment for Student Govern¬ment (SG). Paul Burstein, ’68, for¬mer president of the IHC and anactivist in Pierce Tower politics for several years, proposed thatthe IHC institute a referendumcalling for a division of SG intotwo parts, graduate and under¬graduate. His suggestion wasadopted.In the elections held at the meet¬ing, Mitchell Pines, ’69, waselected president. He stated thatthe College’s social life had deter¬iorated over the pass few yearsand that the IHC should correctthis.Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.HOURS: 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. Actors-models, male and female for majorunderground film during November—excel¬lent salary—write to Project One, AARK-VARK CINEMATEQUE, 1608 N. Wells. Chi¬cago-60614. Photo Helpful.LAB SCHOOL MATH DEPARTMENT needpart-time typist capable of doing some ele¬mentary mathematical typing. Contact R.H.Muelder. EXT. 2547.MAINTENANC E-need two boys for yardwork. Call 643-1053.WANTEDPrivate guitar lessons for 9 yr. old boy.Any day but Wed. Anytime between 6 and 8P.M. EXT. 4517.TICKETS WANTED for Ali Akbar KhanConcert on November 3. Call 288-3851.Is there ever enof sex for "Guiseppina," alittle Italian girl? B-J free cinema, Septem¬ber 26, 8:30, Judson Dining Room.RIDE WANTED — Want ride to Bostonand back—over Thanksgiving. Share ex¬penses. Call 288-9459. Bruce Naegeli.LOSTENGLISH COLLEGE SCARF — red with 1vhite, 2 gold stripes, about 6 feet long.>15.00 Reward! Call Donald at BU 8-9459.MOVE OUT OF DORM?If you are a mature male living in Dormand are interested in switching accommo¬dations and sharing a 2 bedroom apt. inSouth Shore, call 374-1636.HOUSE FOR SALEDeluxe Ian stone/brick 2-story house w. 4bedrooms, 4'/j baths, rec, library, gas/radheat, auto spring system, air cond., 19years, many more features, must be seento be apprec.. For appt., call 643-1053.ANONYMOUSHer entrance only increases the euphoricfeeling, or rather confirms it, joining togeth¬er the inelcutable qualities of subjective,objective, somehow giving me the sensationof rightness felt in the guts, smooth withragged jitters, as if this woman—searchedfor so long—is a me-her, the vessel topour love in, the creator of our me-her,the it as yet unsexed but always implicitlike the fruit of the sweet-flower. Dressedin a yellow, lovely love expressible only inthe immersion of all hopes and joys, sorrowshared together, perhaps she the realizationof the one earlier fantasy love, the onewho signals our future work in joy, play inlove, youth aging, and children plenty.TWIST PARTYVIST!! !-with Chicago Blues artist Billyy Arnold and his South Side Blues Band,iday night in the Cloister Club.WORKAROON photographer needs female as-itant. Must be 5'8" or shorter. Prefersome light brunette willing to go to "newsents" on and off campus. Warmth andnsitivity considered. No previous experi-ce necessary .. . will train.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the resl. ** foreign cor hospital Whatsit liketo workfor a giant?Depends on the giant. If thegiant happens to be Ford MotorCompany, it can be a distinctadvantage. See your placementdirector and make an appoint¬ment to see the man from Fordwhen he visits your campus.We could grow bigger together.DATES OF VISITATION:NOVEMBER 8I'd like a big job please. LEARN TO fly FREE; Introduce the ideaof flying to your campus. Chicago—MidwayTravel Inc. 582-9400—ask for JAY.Will babysit in my home. Full or part-time.Call 538-3628.WAITER OR WAITRESS WANTED. Work3 days/week from 5 P.M.-9:15 P.M. VeryGood Income. Exp. Pref., Call GORDON'SRESTAURANT, 1321 E. 57th Street, after¬noons, at 752-9251.FOR SALE'55 FORD STICK — Call Phil at HY 3-3982.Findar stratogasser w. amp & speakers.$350.00 or best offer. 324-5751 eves.PERSONALSmmmmmm! mmmm! — HAM HOCKS 8.BEANS AGAIN!CELEBRATE midterms, Oct. 28, Ida Noyesat 8:30 P.M.UPPERCLASSMEN—come get to know usand our house.You can't lose and you have everythingto gain.ALPHA DELTA PHI.Organizational Meeting — STUDENT ZION¬IST ORGANIZATION — Tuesday, October24, 9:00 P.M., HILLEL at 5751 Woodlawn.All interested are invited.My life is a wet dream.TYPING — Reasonable rates — Call before10 P.M. — 731-5980.The MAROON needs a student with anautomobile for messenger service on Mon¬day and Thursday. Approx. 1 Vi hours eachday from 12 to 1:30 P.M. $5.00 each day.Call Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3266 or 324-5751.GAL FRIDAY. Std. and non-managingdirector of newly formed company seekspart-time aide. Ideal candidate should havesecretarial skills, arithmetic aptitude andflair for writing. Hours are flexible, ea.15 hours/week. Pay negotiable, but good.Begin week of 27th. Contact Mr. Niederhof-fer at Ml 3-0800, X4264 or 643-8992 late eve¬nings or mornings. FLOWER POWER — Mortar Board invitesall upperclass women. 304 Blackstone Hall,October 24-8:30 P.M. For info. Call 684-5037or 324-8590.UPPERCLASSMEN: come see for yourself!Investigate the Chicago Fraternity,ALPHA DELTA PHI - 5747 University,October 25, Wednesday, 8-10 P.M.FREAK FREELYFermentation Is one of Mother Nature'swonderous phenomena. It will occur spon¬taneously under suitable circumstances pro¬vided the following conditions are present:a liquid containing sugar in some form,yeast of vinous fermentation, oxygen, anda suitable temperature.Mary-good luck on exams!Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.NEW BOOKSThe History of the LaboratorySchools by Ida B. DePencier $4.95The New Romansby John Keats $5.95Memoirs 1925-1950by George F. Kennan $10.00The Manorby Isaac Bashevis Singer $6.95General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. GREAT PUMPKIN ARISES — MORTARBOARD invites upperclass women. October26, 8:30 P.M. at 5747 University.MEET GOLDSTEIN AT HILLEL-NOVEM-BER 5.Upper-Class RUSH SMOKER.Alpha Delta Phl-5747 University. Wednesday,October 25, 8-10 P.M.Girl with the warm sandals, who are you’RSVP—the GREAT COAT.Live, authentic Chicago Blues! Dance toBilly Boy Arnold and His South Side BluesBand, 7:30, Friday night at Ida Noyes.Confucius say: He who hangs loose hangsout at the Bandersnatch.Ah—let it all hang out-wlth Billy Joe-up on Wolvertine Mountain over thar.ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? En|oy the PhiSig Experience. Tonight. 5525 Woodlawn.U. of C. WHITE WATER CLUB MEETING.Wednesday, October 25, 7:30 P.M. INH.Mr. Kite smokes.BABYSITTING EXCHANGE — 375-3520.Where are my babies? M. PlusCITIZEN'S FORUM will be broadcastingfive minute programs twice a week againstthe War in Vietnam on radio station WTAQ.Persons are needed to write copy for theseprograms and to write literature for distri¬bution. MEETING: Tues., Oct. 24, ReynoldsClub South Lounge, 7:30 P.M.PHI SIGMA DELTA UPPERCLASS RUSHSMOKER. Tonight at 7:30 til 10:30. 5625 S.Woodlawn.^fou/erJ lART MILLER'S {BEACH FLOWER SHOP j !10% Discount to U. C. Students, «Faculty, Staff j& 1S5I Hyde Park Blvd. ]¥ FA 4-4200 — FA 4-4201—Ml 3-3361 fl8 ttia Want to learn to fly? (in an airplane) —call Jerry Levy, Campus Representative atMl 3-0600, ext. 3266 or 325-5751.one god,greatest among gods and men,in no way similar to mortals eitherin body or in thought.the real constitution of things is accustome*to hide itself.LOUIE —LOUIE 'The sun is new each day.''WRITERS WORKSHOP — PL 2-8377.Check out 1250 N. Wells.Wipe your ass with the New York Times.TO BE DECEIVED BY YOUR FRIENDS ISNO DISGRACE, TO DISTRUST THEM ISM. Bruce.Interested in theStudy of LawA representative of the Wash¬ington University School ofLaw (St. Louis) will be oncampus October 26, 1967 —9 a.m. to talk to studentsplanning to enter law schoolupon graduation, or thinkingabout it. Make appointmentswith the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement,5706 South University Ex¬tension 3282.SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT'LAYAWAYFORJUNENOW!! LAYAWAYFORJUNENOW!)PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS"67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: Jerry A. Levy-Ext. 3265 or^324-5751IDA NOYESA//9 7~Crf 5 30 p M - 1:00 A.M.CHEAPEST PRICES ON DINNERS,STEAKS& BURGERSOctober 24, 1967SDS Starts Other Others“I honestly can’t tell ... at thispoint,” said Martin Northway, ed¬itor-in-chief of the Other, whetherthe Other will come out ever.While the Other languishes, twonew campus papers are plannedfor release, both sponsored by stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS).The Other was established lastyear by a group of students dis¬satisfied with The Maroon. It ison the verge of extinction primar¬ily because of staff problems, ac¬cording to Northway. “The majordifficulty is with the editors,” saidNorthway. “They are not able togive enough time.” The reporter problem is acutealso, Northway said. But, he as¬serted, “We are busy contactingfreshmen .. . building staff.”Northway was reluctant to giveinformation whether financial dif¬ficulties were a part of the prob¬lem, although another Othersource admitted that advertisingrevenue when supplemented by aStudent Government allocationwould not have kept the paper inthe black for more than a half-dozen or so more issues.Billed as a weekly newspaper,the Other has failed to publishsince its Orientation week edition.“The first issue was a trial,” saidCops Raid CADRE PadOn Marijuana ChargeCity narcotics agents busted theChicago Area Draft Resistersapartment in Hyde Park Thursdaynight, arresting five people andbreaking up a meeting of studentsplanning for last weekend’s Mo¬bilization March on Washington.Charges of possession of mari¬juana are being pressed againsttwo of those arrested.The other three, who were heldbriefly for being “inmates of a dis¬orderly house,” have been dis¬charged.Charged for possession are JohnAdams, 19, and Julius Webster, 20,who live at the CADRE apartmentat 5225 S. Dorchester Ave. Theywere released over the weekend on$100 bond, and their case was con¬tinued until December 2.Two detectives of the ChicagoPolice vice control division enteredthe apartment with a search war¬rant Thursday night, and, aftercarrying out their search, claimedto find a small amount of mari¬juana in the bedroom occupied byAdams and Webster, two CADRE staff workers. The CADRE peopledeny having seen the drugs before.The demonstrators arrested ear¬lier Thursday in CADRE’s at¬tempted disruption of the ChicagoInduction Center are now prepar¬ing for the possibility of receivingmaximum fines. Among the 18people arrested are Heather To-bis Booth, Debby Brackman, Da¬vid Greenburg, Susan Munaker,Rene Schwartz, and Ronald Ver-trees, all associated with the Uni¬versity.According to Greenburg, allcould face fines of up to $200 fordisorderly conduct charges, and$300 for resisting arrest, for anaggregate possible fine of $9000. Northway, but he was unable tosay more than simply “the futureis uncertain” as a summary of theOther’s situation at present.Two From SDSThe Other appears almost cer¬tain to be supplemented or re¬placed as a counter-Maroon by oneof the two proposed radical news¬papers which have been approvedas projects by SDS. One of thesewill be a campus-wide paper witha “leftist” editorial policy, supple¬menting and adding to the cover¬age of events now given by TheMaroon.The second paper is planned tobe more of a newsletter type, hav¬ing a small circulation of 400 to500 students. This paper will con¬tain information on the progres¬sion of radical programs, factionaldisputes, and suggestions. A priceof 10 cents has been projected.The campus-wide paper isplanned bi-weekly, but if thepaper is successful the frequencyof circulation may be increased.The smaller, intra-left paper isscheduled to be a monthly.The papers will presumably befinanced from SDS funds andwhatever advertising they can get. The Maroon — MARC PoKEMPNERROBIE HOUSE: Headquarters of the Adlai Stevenson Institute.Peace Center OpensPENTAGON11 All who were at last week-| end's Pentagon action, orwho wish to hear eye-witness accounts of mili¬tary-police brutality, should|f come to the Swift Hall lawntoday from noon till one.|f Accounts of deaths, beat¬ings, gassings, and troopH defections will be dis-il cussed.Mandel FiresColumbia AdmitsCIA Funds UsedNEW YORK (CPS) - ColumbiaUniversity has confirmed that ithas been receiving funds from theCentral Intelligence Agency (CIA)since 1961 for a research project.The project, designed to studythe economies of countries in EastCentral Europe, has been in exist¬ence since 1955, but has been fundedby the CIA for only the last sixyears. The CIA has been givingColumbia $125,000 annually for theproject.The only secrecy regarding theproject has been the source offunds. Columbia has listed it in theschool’s catalogue, and a numberof students reportedly have beeninvolved in the research.The CIA funding of the projectwas disclosed by the Columbiachapter of Students for a Democra¬tic Society at a special news con¬ference recently. SDS memberswould not say how they found outabout it.SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1 fUPICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lakft Park« 493.5200 i l i'A& (Continued from Page 1)Club. Drums and amplifiers be¬longing to a rock-and-roll band,stored in the attic, were also bro¬ken.After the first fires, firemen andpolice were recalled to the sceneseveral times Friday night andearly Saturday morning, as fireswere discovered in other parts ofthe complex. Fire chief Sassmanpraised the work of University se¬curity guards for extinguishingmost of the fires before they coulddo much damage.Police and fire officials notedthat a program sponsored by Mid¬west Artists for Peace was sched¬uled for Saturday and Sunday eve¬nings. Sassman speculated thatsomeone may have “gone out ofhis head” on seeing the displaysof the peace show.Peace Program PerformedThe program was performed asscheduled both nights. There wasa more-than-capacity crowd Sat¬urday, about 800 persons Sunday.No incidents were reported duringthe shows, and none of the fires damaged any of the materials forthe program.Extra guards were stationed inthe Mandel Hall-Reynolds Clubarea during the performances.According to police, James Hick¬ey, manager of Mandel Hall, toldthem he saw a young man, dressedin blue jeans and a white knitsweater, leaving the building atabout the time the first fires werereported. Hickey could not iden¬tify the youth, however.Police and fire officials did notput an estimate on the amount ofdamage caused by the Friday andSaturday fires, since they were sosmall and scattered. Officials ofStauffer’s catering service, whichoperates Hutchinson Commons,were reportedly preparing an es¬timate of damage done to the Com¬mons kitchen. The first study program of theAdlai Stevenson Institute of Inter¬national Affairs for the academicyear 1967-68 was announced to thepress last week.Hermon Dunlap Smith, presidentof the organization, and Dr. Wil¬liam R. Polk, director of the Insti¬tute, called the move “a pioneerventure in international relations,”citing the goal of the program as“seeking practical solutions toworld problems, attempting to aidman’s progress towards a rationalworld order — as a continuation ofthe ideals of Adlai Stevenson.”The program consists of twoparts:• A study of the Migration of Sci¬entific and Medical Talent fromunderdeveloped countries to theUnited States (the “brain drain”),and• A fellowship program foreleven interns from around theworld who will pursue individualprojects on matters of world¬wide public policy, ranging fromeconomic integration in Africa tothe legal and moral problems con¬nected with military intervention.At Robie HouseBoth programs will be conductedat the Stevenson Institute’s head¬quarters, Frank Lloyd Wright’s his¬toric Robie House on campus.The “brain drain” study is ofparticular importance, Dr. Polkpointed out: “The flow of highlytrained talent to the U.S. has beensubject to criticism by personsfrom many nations and appears,in some cases, to stand at crosspurposes to American foreign aidefforts to underdeveloped coun¬tries.“So many foreign students in theU.S. never return to their owncountries that a large number ofnations must now function withoutthe top 25 per cent of their youngpeople.”The “brain drain” study groupwill be under the co-chairmanshipof Congressman John Brademas(D.-Ind.), a member of the HouseEducation and Labor Committeeand Senator Walter F. Mondale (D.-Minn.), a member of the Sen¬ate Aeronautical and Space Sci¬ences Committee. The discussionleader . will be Dr. Joseph P.Evans, a professor and former di¬rector of the Division of Neuro¬logical Surgery here, and the proj¬ect coordinator will be David Ros-sin, former nuclear reactor en¬gineer at Argonne National Lab¬oratory.Project Examines SpecialtiesThis project, which will meetfive times during the coming yearat Robie House, will involve astudy group of 20 distinguished in¬dividuals from the academic com¬munity, government and industry.It will examine in detail five highlyadvanced specialties, includingneuro-surgery nuclear reactortechnology, computer sciences,pediatrics and business adminis¬tration, to determine specifictrends and problems.The first of the five meetings isto start Thursday afternoon, andwill continue through Friday noon.The Institute’s eleven men andwomen enrolled in its first fellow¬ship project will be the “buildingblocks” of the program and willbe headquartered at Robie House,Polk noted.Exploring such diverse subjectsas control of river pollution, fam¬ily planning in India, the conceptof justice in modern China, andthe emergence of .violent politicsin the changing world of today,the fellows will be striving to im¬prove the quality of decision¬making on matters of public policythroughout the world.In addition to generating class¬room discussion, they will alsoevolve practical programs fromtheir ideas and will encourage in¬novative action on administrativeas well as judicial and legislativelevels.BAKLAWAH, MA’MUL,FALAFEL, TABBULEH...a very special bake sale ofMiddle East Delicacies.International House, Saturday,October 28, I I AM - 6 PM.Proceeds to the refugees of theJune War. MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OfTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent Discounts CORNELL ELECTRONICSERVICEFAST andDEPENDABLESERVICETV • RADIO • TAPE RECORDERPHONOGRAPH • ANY BRANDFOREIGN AND DOMESTICTRANSISTOR OR TUBECOMPONENT STEREO • HI FIPL 2-77301635 E 55th StMorgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weektor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd St.Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEi’ B, 2 S t M * IC l M C iffcpfcPM* *Ve.• — Ml 3-4020nhuu; SLp"FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS"1308 EAST 53RD STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60ul5DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSES.NEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESOctober 24, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11TFlower powerNazi's attacking Clive JenkinsOpposing forces: tough U.S. marshalls meet the gentle people12 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 24, 1967