1The Chicago Maroon FoundedIn 1192VOL. 76, NO. 14 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1967 8 PAGESConferenceHits Vietnam. RaceThe Maroon —MARC Po KEMPNERJACK'S TIME TO SHINEToday is Halloween, and Jack here is all lit up about it. When heand a few friends first appeared on campus yesterday afternoon,they had some rather pithy problems. But solutions were quicklycarved out by helpful students, and tonight is Jack's time to shine.Lewontin RelatesEvolution, Society“Science is after all a socialactivity,” concluded Richard C.Lewontin, leading population gene¬ticist, in his analysis of “Evolu¬tion as a World View,” last nightin the second lecture of the Mon¬day Series.Just as scientific discovery is apotent influence in the social andNSA Will HostDrug Confab HereThe National Student Association(NSA) will hold a drug conferenceon the University of Chicago cam¬pus over the Thanksgiving week¬end, it was announced today.Legal, medical, and sociologicalaspects of campus drug use will bethe theme of the meeting, whichwill feature some of the mostknowledgeable experts on drug usein the country, according toCarolyn Chave, NSA coordinatoron campus.Approximately 150 delegates areexpected to attend the three-daymeeting with additional spectatorsfrom Chicago welcome at the plen¬ary sessions.Among those speaking will beDaniel X. Freedman, Chicago pro¬fessor and chairman of the Depart¬ment of Psychiatry; Joseph Oteri,a Boston lawyer who is currentlyinvolved in narcotics litigation;and Howard Becker, a sociologistat Northwestern University.Jerome Jaffee, assistant profes¬sor of psychiatry and director ofthe Drug Abuse Program in the Il¬linois Department of MentalHealth, will attend some of theworkshops but will not speak.The conference is being spon¬sored by the NSA under a grantfrom the National Institute of Mental Health. economic world, social and eco¬nomic world views permeate sci¬ence, he said.“Darwin’s Origin of the Specieswas the percussion cap for changeilready set,” according to Lewon¬tin, an associate professor of zo¬ology here. Darwin was the inher¬itor of the concept of the world aschange rather than the creator ofthis view.“Evolution is not a fact or atheory but a way of organizingknowledge,” he continued. Heclassed evolution with those con¬cepts that encompass many areasof thought and involve numerousprinciples.Utopian ConceptOrder is the outcome of evolu¬tion and notions of progress andperfectability naturally follow.Nineteenth century evolutionistsemphasized this progress aspectbut “most modern evolutionaryconcepts do not contain this uptop-ian concept.”Lewontin described 19th centuryevolutionism as “bourgeois sci¬ence.” Change characterized soci¬ety at the time and change wasestablished in science. “The Ori¬gin of Species” establishing thisidea in biology only after changehad already revolutionized the phy¬sical sciences.A period of “dynamic stability”within a framework, rather thana complete framework of completeoverturn, is the basis of libertariandemocracy, Lewonltin said. Themodern evolutionist is “preoccu¬pied with stable equilibrium ratherthan with change.”“Men reason by analogy fromtheir society to the cosmos,” Lew¬ontin said. A static society sees astatic cosmos. “Twentieth centuryman in his evolutionary view pre¬sumably sees the best of all pos¬sible worlds,” he concluded. By TIMOTHY S. KELLEYStaff Writer“This city should be cleanedbare of all its contribution to themaking of war,” demanded RennieDavis, director of the Center forRadical Research, in Judd HallFriday night.The speech marked the open¬ing of the Conference on the Cityand the University (CCU) confer¬ence on “Black Liberation: WhiteResponse.” The other scheduledspeaker was the historian Staugh-ton Lynd, formerly of Yale andnow at Chicago State College, butLynd was unable to attend.The CCU is a permanent organ¬ization devoted to informing themembers of the University com¬munity about various area affairs.Davis based his remarks on theassumption of a continuing U.S.policy of Vietnamese escalation,and concerned himself mainly withthe course of action to be takenby the peace movement both instrategically hindering the Ameri¬can war effort and establishingmeaningful contacts with NorthVietnam.Sister ProvinceDavis, who was a student herefor a short time, proposed that“This University should have a sis¬ter province in North Vietnam,”and compared the organization ofthe National Liberation Front to apossible resistance organization inAmerica. He told of his arrival inHanoi and of discussions withNorth Vietnamese people about theanti-war movement in the UnitedStates.Davis said that he had “neverseen a unity so genuine and pas¬sionate” as that among the NorthVietnamese, who, he said, have or¬ganized into decentralized group¬ings, each with a purpose in thedefensive structure of North Viet¬nam. He added that he felt “themovement in Vietnam has beenstrengthened by U.S. escalation.”The Movement BeginsDavis then briefly traced the his¬tory of the revolutionary move¬ment born of opposition to racism.He said that whites could no longertake a guiding part in what was ofnecessity a black movement.Stressing the North Vietnamesetheory of each member of the re¬sistance working with those withwhom he is most familiar, heurged whites to work against thewar among whites and called forneighborhood projects and tacticslimited to the war potential of thecity of Chicago.Davis described the “clusterbomb,” which sends out small pel¬lets as it explodes and is used incombination with the heat-producing magnesium bomb, andsaid that a major goal would beto stop “by whatever means” theproduction of this weapon in Chi¬cago.He also said that the NLF was See related stories, Page 2M <" Vftmsfzssm 'VWtMM Ianxious to receive any written ma¬terial and could use young childrento spread leaflets to G.I.’s and that“Hanoi Hanna,” as she is calledby American soldiers, was equallyanxious to broadcast material re¬ceived from Americans.Finally, he called for informa¬tion on the American war effortto be sent to the North Viet¬namese.Resistance to Democrats“There’s a Democratic Conven¬tion coming to this city,” said Da¬vis. “It’s my opinion that this cityshould not allow Johnson to benominated here.” Each delegate,he suggested, should be assignedthree movement workers “who arehis conscience.” Finally, he expressed hope thatthe movement would ensure that“no delegate will leave until a manis nominated who will get out ofVietnam.”Despite these proposals for forcedirected against the DemocraticConvention, he said that this Con¬vention resistance was “a nice fo¬cus for us, but not one which isfundamentally what we’re aboutin Chicago.” This reaffirmed theidea that it was not American pol¬icy which was to be the primaryobject of attack, but the physicalwar effort of the nation.When asked about the degree ofpolitical democracy allowed in thewartime framework of North Viet¬namese society, Davis admittedthat the actual structure was notdemocratic, but indicated vaguelythat popular pressure could have1 an important effect on the party“line.”Seven Faculty MembersNamed to Policy CenterSeven faculty members herewere named today to the Centerfor Policy Study, a major Univer¬sity group devoted to intensive,broad-based examinations of majornational issues.The new appointments, an¬nounced by President Beadle,bring to 35 the total number offellows in the Center, which wasfounded in February 1966.The Center, directed by CharlesU. Daly, is currently planning ayear-long investigation of urbanproblems.The new fellows are:• Jerald C. Brauer, professorand dean of the Divinity School;• John Hope Franklin, professorand chairman of the Departmentof History;• Jacob W. Getzels, professor ofeducation and psychology;• Morris Janowitz, professorand chairman of the Depart¬ment of Sociology and director ofthe Center for Social OrganizationStudies.• Julian H. Levi, professor ofurban studies and executive direc¬tor of the South East Chicago Com¬mission.• Hans J. Morgenthau, AlbertA. Michelson distinguished serviceprofessor of polictical science andhistory and director of the Centerfor the Study of American Foreignand Military Policy.! • Stuart A. Rice, professor of chemistry and director of theJames Franck Institute.The Center for Policy Study’s in¬augural project during 1966-67 wasan intensive study of China, whichdealt with issues ranging from thecultural revolution to Vietnam.More than 70 scholars and non-academic experts from Asia,Europe, the Middle East, and theAmericas assembled on campusfor the meetings.Among the guest speakers whoaddressed the Center during its in¬augural year were A. DoakBarnett, professor of governmentand acting director of the EastAsian Institute at Columbia; Sena¬tor Robert F. Kennedy, Democratof New York; Charles Lucet,French ambassador to the UnitedStates; Lucian W. Pye, professorof political science at MIT; Theo¬dore C. Sorensen, former specialcounsel to President Kennedy;U.S. Representative Morris K.Udall, Democrat of Arizona; Hen¬ry Hall Wilson, then administrativeassistant to President Johnson;and Kenneth T. Young, presidentof the Asia Society and formerU.S. ambassador to Thailand.mMAROONKen Towers, city editor ofThe Chicago Sun-Times, willbe the guest at a Maroonstaff meeting tonight, at 8p.m. in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303. New peoplenot yet on the staff areencouraged to attend.m» ' m I \Murray Charges that Chicago is Racist InstitutionThe Black Liberation/White Re¬sponse panel discussion on Satur¬day lashed out accusations of rac¬ism against the University and themilitary machine.About 70 people attended a dis¬cussion headed by Richard Flacks,a professor of sociology, Marlene Dixon, an assistant professor of so¬ciology and human development,and Linda Murray of SPLIBS, inwhich attempts were made to de¬fine the failure of American soci¬ety to respond to a racist — mili¬tary government.Miss Murray denounced theUniversity as a “racist institution whose official policy is to removeblack people from Woodlawn justas it removed poor, black peoplefrom Hyde Park.”She further stated that “whenyou have situations where studentsat this University in an attempt tohelp poor undereducated people inWoodlawn set up tutoring projects,CHICAGO TARGETSchwartz Predicts Trouble for DowWASHINGTON (CPS) - The un¬restrained and brutal use of policeto disperse campus demonstrationsmay be the cause of the most seri¬ous crisis higher education hasfaced in this century, according toEld Schwartz, president of the Na¬tional Student Association.Schwartz predicted last weekthat at least 25 major protests willbe held this year on college cam¬puses across the country, and hewarned college administratorsagainst calling the cops.NSA will “support and assiststudent strikes growing out of theunwarranted use of police tobludgeon student demonstrators,”Schwartz said.His remarks came in the wakeof major student strikes at theUniversity of Wisconsin andBrooklyn College. In both cases, *the strikes were called after police jwere ordered onto the campusesto break up student demonstra-1tions. Police also broke up a dem¬onstration at Princeton last week.The initial demonstrations at!Wisconsin and Brooklyn which |brought in the police were against Iunpopular campus recruiters. “In¬formation we have received duringthe past few days indicates pro- jtests against campus recruiters!will not end with Brooklyn andWisconsin — they will spread,”Schwartz said.A New Urgency“The reckless use of police on campuses last week has merelyhighlighted the lack of concernthat administrators feel towardstudents and has lent new urgencyfor our drive to encourage studentpower on campuses,” he added.He predicted that a confronta¬tion between Central IntelligenceAgency recruiters and demonstrat¬ors may occur at Brandeis be¬tween now and mid-November. Healso mentioned Chicago, Fordham,Columbia, Michigan, Wayne State,the City College of New York, andOberlin as institutions where ma¬jor student protests may takeplace.Schwartz announced NSA issending a list of guidelines to stu¬dent governments across the coun¬try to be used when confrontationsare expected on their campuses.Demonstrations reach serious pro¬portions “because student govern¬ment leaders frequently fail toplay a creative role before the in¬cidents occur,” he said. He em¬phasized that NSA does not sup¬port attempts to block studentsfrom attending job interviews, forexample, but “this does not meanthat student leaders should sit ontheir hands until a group of stu¬dents is beaten by police.”Used Stereo - hi-fi equipment$10.00 and up.Fully guaranteed521-0460 and 256-4785 NSA will assist student govern¬ments to insure that they obtaina voice over policies affecting re¬cruiters and that they exercise aconstructive role during the dem¬onstrations themselves, Schwartzsaid.Boat Is MissedHere at Chicago, however, theLeft missed the boat when recruit¬ers from Dow made a visit to cam¬pus October 20 which was un¬marked by demonstrations.“We flubbed it,” admitted Jeff¬rey Blum, president of StudentGovernment. “We just didn’tknow.”Blum said that organizationssuch as Dow and the CIA “shouldbe opposed” but that mere protest“might no longer be the most ef¬fective means of doing this.”He cited “the growing fear ofmilitarism around the country” asa factor in the trend towards dis¬ruptive demonstrations.MBA INTERVIEWSUNIVERSITY OFNOTRE DAMETHURSDAY (AM),NOVEMBER 2CAREER COUNSELINGAND PLACEMENT«/>*c4)aco"O4)v>D TOAD HALL SellsNew as Well as Used EquipmentFisher R200 Tuner (Stereo)Motorola FM-AM Table Radio (Mono)Zenith Table Radio (Transistor)Knight Amp & Tuner (Stereo)Shure 555 SW Mike with CableKnight Stereo ReceiverGarrad Turntable with Shure CartridgeRek-o-Kut Turntable with Rek-o-Kut ArmGrado Arm with Shure Cartridge D«: «• — *■> c^ oC oo DJ.OTOAD HALL RentsT.V. Sets, Tape Recorders, Typewriters, etc.Stop in and see our redesigned studio loaded with the latest in current 1968 Equipment.Browse through our vast collection of Records,Browse through our vast collection of Records. If we don't have what you desire,pleaseBrowse through our vast collection of Records. If we don't have what you desire,place a Special Order and have the merchandise in about a week. and try to figure out ways to pre¬vent young black children to notbe violent, and try and figure outways to prevent young black chil¬dren from looking up to their old¬er brothers and sisters who are inthe Blackstone Rangers — theseare racist organizations and wehave such organizations on cam¬pus.”‘The 500 Or So’Flacks upheld Miss Murray’sviews, saying, “Politics in Amer¬ica exist to further the 500 or socorporations that dominate the ec¬onomic system. Politics in Amer¬ica is concerned with how to pre¬serve, enhance, and develop the500 corporations that control thecountry.“The main way the corporationscan be enhanced is through a pol¬icy of repression internationallyand through a policy of repressionof insurgent groups, particularlyblack people domestically.”The panel agreed that if Amer¬ican society is to survive a blackrevolution, whites must organizethemselves to help themselves.“I don’t believe white people canbuild a movement designed just tosupport black people,” Murraysaid. “I don’t believe your sym¬pathy will go this far. The real!reason why the white radicalshould build a radical constituencywould be to save himself.”% $ ft .ft! ft! ft! ft! ft! ft! ft£:« CornJf 3Lu(‘42 1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO, ILL. 60615 MgPhone: FA -1-1651 !KKx Flacks stated that the Left ispowerless to resist the constantdrift of the government towardmilitarism because it too is con¬fronted with racism. But Miss Dix¬on felt a direct confrontation withthe military machine by resistancewould immobilize it.Workship SuggestionsAlready on the defensive in Mad¬ison and Urbana, the Dow Chemi¬cal corporation may soon find it¬self in trouble in Hyde Park.Participants in a workshop on“The War and the DemocraticConvention” held last Saturday inconjunction with the “Crisis inWhite America” conference sug¬gested pressuring Hyde Parkstores to remove Dow productsfrom their shelves. War critics as¬sert that Dow is the largest manu¬facturer of the napalm used inVietnam.Participants at the conference al¬so suggested boycotting the HydePark Coop and launching a SouthShore petition for an anti-war can¬didate at the Democratic Nation¬al Convention.CORNELL ELECTRONICSERVICEFAST andDEPENDABLESERVICETV • RADIO • TAPE RECORDERPHONOGRAPH • ANY BRANDFOREIGN AND DOMESTICTRANSISTOR OR TUBECOMPONENT STEREO • HI FIPL 2-77301635 E 55th StNOW! BISMARCK THEATRETICKETS NOW AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL!THEIVIOSTBEAUTIFULMUSICALLOVESTORYEVER!* REDGRAVE ORIGINAL SOUND TRACK ALBUMON WARNER BROS RECOROSFRANCO LIONELFIS LAURENCENAISMITH 'jo«* t*usco"TECHNICOLOR® RANAVISI0N® FROM WARNER 8R0S.-SEVEN ARTSSPECIAL STUDENT GROUP RATESCONTACT MARGE ROVIN, 726-4675BISMARCK THEATRE Randolph at LaSalle. Chicago. III. 60606 • RA 6 5400Box Office Open 10 A M. to 9 P.M. Mon. thru Sat., 11 A.M. to 8 P.M. Sun. & Hols.MAIN FLOOR BALCONYEVES.: Sun. thru Fri.Sat., Eves, before Hols.MATS.: Wed., Sat. except Hols.Sun., Hols.NEW YEAR'S EVE.: 7 P.M. & 10:30 P M.EVES.: Mon.-Thurs. 8 P.M.; Fri. and Sat.8:30 P.M.; Sun. 7:30 P.M. MATS.: 2 P M(Please Print)PLEASE SEND ME TICKETS ATCHECK ONE: □ MAIN FLOOR □DATE MAT. □ALTERNATE DATESNAME !ADDRESSCITY STATE 2 854.002.502 85500EACH TOTALBALCONYEVE. □ 2 253001 852 254 00ZIPPHONE NOENCLOSE CHECK OR MONEY OROER PAYABLE TO BISMARCK THEATREEnclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. No cash or stamps.FOR THEATRE PARTIES CALL MARGE ROVIN, 726-4675THE CHICAGO MAROON October 31, 1967Visit Comm. Reaches New Level of ActivityThe Visiting Committee on theCollege held its first on campussession Friday.Members of the Committeeattended various classes in themorning, heard reports on thestate of the College during lunch,and discussed their observationsand recommendations during anafternoon meeting. At a later date,they will publish a summary oftheir findings and choose which as¬pects of the College program theywill most strongly support.Jeff Blum, president of StudentGovernment (SG), and Ed Birm-baum, chairman of the Undergrad¬uate Academic Affairs Commtteeof SG, discussed campus issueswith the Committee.Blum stated that originally theVisiting Committee was not tomeet with any student organiza¬tions to discuss matters pertainingto student life. Blum felt that sincethe committee was here to makea study, it should have met withstudents in order to get a totalview of the University. On academic proposals such asclass ranking and pass-fail grades,the Committee, according toBlum, found the ideas as “vision¬ary or not a good idea or both.”Blum further stated that he feltthe committee is for “student andadministration discussions on Uni¬versity policies, but when it comesdown to the final thing in decisionmaking policies, the faculty, theadministration, and the trusteeswill make the decisions not thestudents. They were not in favorof significant student participationin policy-making, he said.The Committee had little or noreaction when the issue of housingfacilities was mentioned.“This visit marks a new level ofactivity for the Committee,” com¬mented Dean of the College WayneC. Booth.“From such visits we expect theCommittee to come up with signifi¬cant ideas and suggestions as tohow we can become a better Col¬lege,” Booth said.The Visiting Committee on the College is an advisory body con¬cerned with matters — education¬al, financial, and physical — perti¬nent to the functioning of theCollege.Formed in September, 1960, theCommittee was reorganized in thespring of 1967, to make it a moreeffective adjunct to the College. Among the 27 members of theCommittee are the dean of theHarvard Medical School, the deanof Columbia College, the presidentsof Pomona College and WayneState University, a vice-presidentof the Ford Foundation, and a No¬bel Prize-winning biophysicist. The chairman of the VisitingCommittee is Emmett Dedmon, ed¬itor of The Chicago Sun-Times anda University trustee, who was ap¬pointed in October 1966. Four otherTrustees are also members of theCommittee. They are Robert P.Gwinn, Charles H. Percy, AlbertPick, Jr., and Sydney Stein, Jr.DORMS GET FIVETen SG Seats Open FridayMAROON SPORTSSoaked Soccer a JokeBy JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterThe Chicago soccer team defeat¬ed Principia College 3-2 on Satur¬day in a game Coach Vendl called“the funniest athletic event I haveever seen.” The field at Principiawas covered with nearly twoinches of water, and merely kick¬ing the ball was a major opera¬tion.John Ryan led off the Maroon at¬tack with a goal early in the firstperiod; he was assisted by MarkManewitz, who played his first fullgame since Notre Dame.After two Principia tallies,Manewitz finally broke loose andscored his ninth goal of the year at18:30 in the third period. Nick Ko-vacs was credited with the assist.Just moments later CaptainMike Nemeroff booted a hardthirty-yard kick past the Principiagoalie for the winning marker.With both Manewitz and DaveSchectman now back in action, theMaroons should do well in their re¬maining contests. Tomorrow theChicago eleven goes up againstGeorge Williams College at NorthField at 3 p. m. The cross-country squad droppeda close decision to the Universityof Wisconsin at Milwaukee on Sat¬urday, 21-37.Pat Murray was the top Maroonrunner and took third place over¬all. Jeff Melby was only six sec¬onds back in fourth spot. Finishing9, 10, and 11 in the competitionwere Mike Rauworth, Steve Kurey,and Joe Frank.The harriers’ next regularlyscheduled meet comes on Novem¬ber 8 against the University of Il¬linois at Chicago at home.The University football clubdropped a hard-luck decision to theLake Forest varsity on Saturday.Although Chicago built up an early12-0 first quarter lead, the relative¬ly inexperienced Maroons were un¬able to keep control and lost 28-12on two L.F. touchdowns in thefinal quarter.Quarterback iiob Conway ac¬counted for both Chicago TDs; hepassed to Mike Berger for the firstand to Pat Whelan for the second.The club will play its final game ofthe year on November 9 atWheaton. By JOHN RECHTStudent Government (SG) willhold elections this Friday for tenassembly seats.Five of the newly elected repre¬sentatives will be first-year stu¬dents in the dorms and the otherfive seats will be occupied by up¬perclassmen in the dorms, fillingthe vacancies existing at present.Only two representatives from thedorms are presently in SG.The polls will be open from 11:30a.m. to 7 p.m. in three locations— Pierce Tower, Woodward Court,and Burton-Judson Courts. Stu¬dents living in dorms other thanthese will vote at the dorm wherethey eat.Twelve noon Thursday is thedeadline for submitting candidacyforms to SG. Forty signatures areneeded on the forms, but these sig¬natures can be obtained from anyregistered student whether he iseligible to vote for the candidateor not. Forms are obtainable inthe SG office and may be returnedthere.In other SG developments, SGrepresentative William Phillips an¬nounced plans to bring a suit tothe Student-Faculty AdministrationCourt (SFAC) over the allocationof $611 to the Conference on theCity and University, arguing thatit is either an academic or a poli¬tical group and is thus ineligibleto receive funds under the bylawsof CORSO.SG ResolutionThe SG Assembly has passedparts B and C of a resolution en¬titled Student Government Exec21-18. Part B demands that theUniversity “open its books” toSAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE IruPICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lak« Park493-5200ANDERSON’S BULKOSERVICE STATIONHighest Quality Gasolineat Lowest PricesFeaturing theBULKO PANTRYA Complete Grocery StoreOpen 24 Hours57th & Cottage GrovePIZZAPLATTERPizza., Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!(460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 MILL...'Oeauhf an5700 HARPER AVENUE 1& sineh'c Ofa IonFAirfax 4-2007i For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARdaily — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per DayIINCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCEIHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 make available information aboutany land held by or for it, that theUniversity provide equivalenthousing “for people displaced by. . . expansion,” that a student-faculty committee be establishedto review the University’s longrange plans, and that “studentsand faculty should make the finaldecision on whether Barat Collegeshould move near the University.”Part C proposes that the Univer¬sity implement recommendationsof last year’s Page Committee onstudent-faculty relations “thateach department, division, andprofessional school . . . should re¬ view with its students ways of im¬proving” student-faculty relationsin the academic area, that “theBoard of Trustees consider meansof establishing communicationswith students,” and that the Uni¬versity make public informationrelating to University matters andpolicy decision.Other provisions include guaran¬teeing students privacy in theirrooms, ability to see documents intheir personal files of students andfaculty, “significant vote in disci¬plinary rules,” and equal voteswith faculty on all disciplinarycommittees.LEARN FOUR RELATEDLANGUAGES SIMULTANEOUSLYEnroll in TEUTONIC GROUP Iand use and compareDanish-God dag min herreGerman-Wie geht es ihnen?Swedish-Mycket bra,tack,Och Ni ?Dutch-lk ook.dank U.Totziens.. Enroll in ROMANIC GROUP Iand use and compareFrench-Bon jour monsieurSpanish -Como esta usted?Portugese-Muito bem.obrigado.E o Sr.?Italian-Anch'io grazie.Arrivederci. *• small classes, two-hour sessions: 13 sessions: once ortwice a week..•new comparative method.Slovonic l-(Russian,Polish,Czech,Serbo-Croat)may be given next yearCourses specialize in: correct pronunciation, new internationalphonemic alphabet, basic vocabulariesof 800-1000 wordsWritten material furnished to students: comparative vocabulary,basic grammatneal aids,special texts.SPECIAL STUDENT RATES: $2.50 an hour for classes offive or more.GROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTEJim Langdon PresentsA TRIBUTE TO NEW ORLEANSNOVEMBER 3, 8:30 P.M., CIVIC OPERA HOUSEONE NIGHT ONLYMAIL ORDERS NOWMAIL ORDERS TO OPERA HOUSE, 20 N. Wacker 60606Please enclose self-addressed stamped envelopeOR ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE, 20 N. WACKER10 A.M. to 7 P.M.AND CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL, 212 N. MICHIGAN AVL$6.50 $5.50 $4.50 $3.50October 31, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiejJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor .‘.Roger BlackExecutive Editors Michael SeidmanJohn WelchNews Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor.. .Marc PoKempnerAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsLiterary Editor David L. AikenEditor Emeritus David A. SetterStaff: Eric Borg, Carolyn Daffron, Carolyn Heck, Barbara Hurst, Don Isbell,Timothy S. Kelley, Richard Kimmel, Randy Klein, Slade Lander, Jerry Lapidus,Judie Resell, Robert Rice, Harold Sheridan, John Siefert, Jessica Siegel, PaulaSzewczyk.imps ' ' > & m wmmmmmmRecruitmentThe news that has come out of Madison, Urbana, andBrooklyn College in the last few weeks is hardly surpris¬ing. These campuses each have a long tradition of strongstudent power movements and opposition to the establish¬ment.But when demonstrators greeted Dow Chemical re¬cruiters at staid, aristocratic Princeton last week, it wasa sign that war-connected industries may have touched amore sensitive nerve than they could have ever imaginedwhen they launched their campus recruiting program.We are glad to see that our friends at Princeton arefinally beginning to free themselves from the shackles ofYoung Republicanism and consider issues more pressingthan the arguments for and against a single-wing footballteam. But while it is becoming increasingly obvious tomany that the Great Society is rotten to the core, theissue that has recently arisen carries with it a dilemmathat some of the staunchest activists find difficult to face.This newspaper has long made clear its oppositionto the massacre in Vietnam, and we will take this oppor¬tunity to add that we also oppose the role of Dow Chem¬ical—through the manufacturing of napalm— has playedin it. We, of course, further condemn the needless policebrutality that was met with by Wisconsin students in theirprotest against Dow and their subsequent suspension foressentially political reasons.The students active in disrupting Dow’s recruitingprogram, however, are demonstrating a shortness of mem¬ory usually associated with their elders. It was a scantfive years ago that activists at Berkeley touched off anationwide campus revolution by demanding the right ofoff-campus organizations to solicit members on Univer¬sity property. Leaders of Berkeley’s Free Speech Move¬ment insisted at the time that students in college wereold enough to decide for themselves which organizationsthey wished to associate themselves with.Today the off*campus organizations engulfed in con¬troversy are Dow and the CIA rather than SNCC andCORE, but the arguments so eloquently advanced byMario Savio during the Berkeley protest have not losttheir relevance. It was not then and is not now the job ofuniversity administrations to determine for its studentswhich organizations are and which are not “respectable.”Students themselves must decide this.The question is whether students should decide asindividuals or collectively. If the former alternative ispursued, the University will remain an institution devotedto the maintenance of the status quo—Johnson’s war andthe rest of it. If the choice is the latter, students who to¬day would ban Dow and the CIA will tomorrow entertainthe risk of being the victims of their own creation.The horns of the dilemma are equally sharp ones. Randy Kleint tf Ar* MICHAEL SEIDMANChicago's Discipline:Some Changes DueIt is surprising that amidst allthe recent controversy on thiscampus about impartial due pro¬cess for junior faculty membersand college applicants there hasbeen almost no criticism of thelack of due process for Chicagostudents themselves. Yet the bit¬ter and continuing conflict be¬tween the University and its stu¬dents over a score of different is¬sues makes the variety of “jus¬tice Chicago’s disciplinary com¬mittee choses to mete out of vitalimportance.To be sure, the lack of criti¬cism, at least in the past, hasbeen largely a reflection of thefact that there has usually beenvery little to criticize. With onlya very few exceptions, the disci¬plinary committee, as it hasoperated under Dean of Under¬graduate Students George Playe,has been fair, reasonable, andand compassionate. Even disci¬plined students frequently comeaway from their “trial” moreimpressed with the workings ofthe committee than bitter abouttheir punishment.Yet the fact remains that al¬though the committee has func¬tioned adequately to meet thedisciplinary problems of the past,its machinery was simply not de¬signed to deal with the situationas it now extsts. The committeeoperates under a loose system ofshifting rules and precedents thatwere evolved in the days whenstudents implicitly trusted theadministration to deal with themfairly and the administration re¬ciprocated by depending on stu¬dents for support of their deci¬sions.This mutual sense of trust hasbeen one of the first casualitiesin the protracted “student power” battle, and now that ithas been destroyed, it is ab¬solutely necessary that what waspreviously only assumed be setdown in writing as forming guar¬antees.IN THE PAST, the administra¬tion has usually responded tosuch requests by pointing out thatthe disciplinary committee func¬tions more like an informal coun-ciling service than a court, thatits function is more to straigh¬ten wayward students out thandispense hard justice. But coun¬seling agency or not, the fact re¬mains that the sanctions whichthe committee imposes are veryreal, and in a society such asours where a disciplinary expul¬sion from the University of Chi¬cago may ultimately mean deathin the jungles of Vietnam, thosesanctions are frequently far moreserious than anything imposed bya court of law. As the judicialcircus put on for the benefit offaculty hawks after last year’ssit-in demonstrations, a few non¬voting student observers simplyare not enough to insure the vi¬tal process that is due to any stu¬dent charged with an offence.What then should constitutedue process in the academic com¬munity? University officials as¬sert quite correctly that the cam¬pus is not a microcosm of theoutside world and that rightswhich are essential to a societymay be wholey inapplicable to aUniversity community. Yet sure¬ly even the most rudimentary no¬tion of due process as it operatesanywhere includes the right to aclear and public statement ofwhat the rules are before some¬one is prosecuted for their viola¬tion. The recent confusion aboutthe University’s policy on illegaldrugs and about the rights of a student arrested for a crimedemonstrate how very far wehave to go in this area.MOREOVER, even after therules are clearly stated, a stu¬dent charged with their violationshould have other rights as well.The institution of adversary pro-cedings before a rotating and im¬partial jury of students and fac¬ulty members, for example,would constitute at least a steptowards fair disciplinary proced-ings.The administration argues thatreforms such as these would har¬den the disciplinary process,making it more severe than it isnow. But guarantees of fairnessare not in themselves incompati¬ble with compassion, nor are dueprocess and what committeemembers like to call “firm gui¬dance” mutually exclusive.Moreover, recent prosecutionsfor what really amount to poli¬tical violations give a particularurgency to the need for reform.As the disciplinary committeeshifts its concern from hours vi¬olations to sit-ins and from pantyraids to pot parties, it is becom¬ing increasingly clear that theUniversity will have to begintempering its mercy with justiceor give up its title as a free in¬stitution.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.4 I V T •THE CHICAGO MAROON October 31, 1967 <: i * ; /1Letters to the Editor of The MaroonWastelandHaving done my undergradu¬ate study in New York City, Ifind the contrast between book¬stores in New York and Chicago,to say the least, striking. Therewere not more than one in a hun¬dred times when I could notsimply walk across the street tofind any paperback or hardcoverbook in print, whether the bookwas actually used in a course ornot. And on that one occasionwhen the book was not in stock,I could usually get it in from oneday to a maximum of one week.Certainly one difficulty in theChicago area is the geographicseparation from most of the ma¬jor publishing houses. But onewould think that such a handicapwould induce the dealers tocarry larger stocks. Untrue. Andfor a store such as Kroch’s andBrentano’s to claim to be theworld’s largest bookstore is sheerincredulity. Their academicselection is at best spotty. Andthey require, as do all the otherstores in the area, a minimum ofthree weeks for special orders.IN MANY intellectual centersthe inadequacy of city bookstoresis made up for with the existenceof a bonafide university book¬store. The University of Chi¬cago’s bookstore is a universitybookstore in name only. And itsproblem is one of courtesy aswell as stock. A typical reactionSTAMP IT!(py’sQl IT'S THE RAGEKE64JLABMODELANY3 LINE TEXT CmTht fin--* IHP*«T|»l)CTIBLE METALPOCKH RUBBER STAMP. V4" * 2".Send fheck or money order, fi¬gure to indi’'*' y or Zip Code. Nopostage or handling charges. Addsales tax.Piompt shipment X»ti.»«<-tinn GuaranteedTHE MOPP CO.P. 0. Bo» 18623 Lenoi Square StationATLANTA, GA.. 30326Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411Franklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-3113*5424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest1t foreign cor hospital of the salespeople is “If youdon’t see it on the shelf, we don’tknow anything about it” with a• and I could give a damn”look in their eyes.Most incredible is the man¬ager’s admission that the levelof profit is so high that they arequite content to continue opera¬tions in their present slipshodmanner. It seems intuitively ob¬vious to me that a great univer¬sity rests firmly on the availabil¬ity of knowledge, and this meansaccess to important publicationsfor personal ownership as wellas library use.How a university such as Chi¬cago has managed to subsist ona short quarter system and a long book acquisition system isthoroughly beyond my compre¬hension.R. ALAN CARLEconomics DepartmentOnly JokingI believe Mr. Moscow (The Ma¬roon, October 20) would be welladvised to make his humor moreexplicit. It was only as I reachedthe conclusion of his column—thepart in which all the Liberalsband together and pull a fast oneon Daddy-Bird by getting Reaganor the like elected—that I real¬ized he was joking. ... He wasjoking wasn’t he?ROBERT COUZINDepartment of Psychology Stories SoughtIf any of you were on oraround the Pentagon Mall, andwitnessed any “brutality” byMP’s, soldiers or Federal Mar¬shals, and are willing to docu¬ment such, I would appreciateyour sending a full account tome. I will collect these accountsand forward them to the Ameri¬can Civil Liberties Union, andthe major national newspapersand news magazines, in the hopethat something may be done tocorrect the bad impression the American people have of themarch; and that something canbe done to prevent this violencein the future. Thank you.NORMAN G. KALINA17 College StreetBrockport, New York 14420Morgan’s Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor yout Convenience1516 E. 53rd St. Letters 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.<uc2<6s *x o<U -QC TOo -X>cretot-treo. STUDENTS - FACULTY - STAFFA perfect gift anytime - now or Christmas!Smith Corona Electric Portables featuring:All metal construction • Four repeat keys •Three position ribbon selector • Half spacingbar • Changeable type bar • Touch selectorkeyboard • In colors: Blue, Green, Gray •Several type styles available.Typewriter DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis H5Q.rt>Q>nnn>■ortn>CL. Howtointerview.130 companiesin half an hour.Talk to the man from General Electric. He repre¬sents 130 separate GE “companies” that deal ineverything from space research to electric tooth¬brushes. We call them product departments. Eachone is autonomous with its own management andbusiness objectives. That’s why a job at GeneralElectric offers the kind of immediate responsibil¬ity you might expect to find only in a small busi¬ness. Right from the start you get a chance todemonstrate your initiative and individual capa¬bilities. And the more you show us, the faster youwill move ahead. As you do, you’ll find that you don’t necessarily have to spend a lifetime workingon the same job in the same place. We have opera¬tions all over the world. Chances are you’ll get totry your hand at more than one of them. Our inter¬viewer will be on campus soon. If you’re wonderingwhether it’s possible to find challenging work in bigbusiness, please arrange to see him. He speaks for130 “companies.”GENERAL® ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employerOctober 31, 1967 THE CHICAGO MARpON 5Maroon Classified AdsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat. Count 35 characters andspaces per line.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.FOR SALECHEVY '59. Four door, A.T., Radio, Exc.cond. . . . Best Offer. Ml 3-6000, Room 634.ROOM WANTEDRoom wanted by female undergrad withsame. Reasonable rent. Call 643-6803.WANTEDGrad Students to substitute in mathmaficsat University High School. $5.00 per hour.Call Mr. Cobb mornings at Ext. 2514.'Older Model VW. Any Condition. 643-2738.YOUNG MOTHERS, Exchange babysitting,Mornings/Evenings. Call Jenny, 375-3520.Want Student Tickets to ALI AKBAR KHANConcert. Call 288-5414.APARTMENTS AVAILABLETO SHARE — Young Woman Grad Studentwishes to share Modern Furn. Hyde ParkApt. with same. Call 677-0543 after 10 PM.Studio Apt. in Sherry Apts, now available.Call 288-5211.Sublet 6 Room apt. in South Shore for $127/month. Day: 684-5600, ext. 317. Eve: 667-5273.Nearby economical, quiet 2 & 3 room apart¬ments—$77.50 S. up. Free Utils. ContactWilliams 6043 Woodlawn. ... MU 4-2300.ROOMS AVAILABLESingle room in Pierce Tower available nowfor male undergrad. Call FA-4-9500, Room1521.Two sleeping and study rooms available inquiet home, near campus, 5475 S. Ellis,Phone DO-3-1918. Males Pref. Rent—$32.00and $40.00.STUDENTS—PRIVATE ROOMS IN HOME¬LIKE ATMOSPHERE. 61st & university. CallMrs. Cannon at 667-2591.LOST AND FOUNDBlue Grippe containing Photographic Nega¬tives, Prints, Recording Tape, 8, LightMeter. Please Call 493-8340. Reward.PERSONALS$160 MILLION FOR A GREAT UNIVERSITYAND NOT A CENT FOR ITS NEWSPAPER! Got some ideas but can't quite seem toget going? Need a sounding-board, an audi¬ence, some suggestions, some helpers? Jointhe presently forming Gathering of MutualSelf-Actualizers. Call 378-8837.HISTORY MEETING for students interestedin Graduate School, Wed., Nov. 1, 3:30-5 PMin Classics 10.FLY HOME FOR THANKSGIVING Campus/O'Hare/ New York—Round Trip $80.00. Spacevery limited. Call Charter Flight ProgramExt. 3272 between 12 8. 3:30 P.M.Want to learn to fly? Call Jerry Levy,Campus Representative, MI-30-800, Ext. 3266or 324-5751.WANTED: Males, 18-35, to serve as subjectsin Sleep Lab Experiment. Those subjectsselected will be well paid. Poor sleepersas well as good sleepers are invited toreply. Call MI-3-0800, Ext. 2341 (or 2353),9 AM-5 PM, Monday thru Friday.WRITERS WORKSHOP—PL-2-8377.Handsome—Friendly—Tomcat seeks winterhome. Call 643-3627.Nothing but sincerity as far as the eyecan see—at the Bandersnatch.Good at defining necessary resources andorganizing them? What types of talents arenecessary for holistic creations? Gatheringof Mutual Self-Actualizers. Call 378-8837.LAWYER, 25, working on advanced degreein criminal law would like to meet attractive,hip soc. or psych grad student or senior.Call Richard 337-0659.GYMNASTS NEEDED! (No experience nec¬essary)Coach Simms: M 8. Th-6:30.Tu, W, F-4,-30.SAT-10:00.Bartlett Gym.It's coming—a mindbending encounter be¬tween SAUL BELLOW, JAMES E. MILLERJR., AND NATHEN SCOTT — discussing''Character and Belief in the Modern Novel,"SWIFT COMMONS ROOM, November 1, at8 PM.TYPING—Reasonable rates. Call before 10P.M. 731-5980.FLY NEW YORK AT THANKSGIVING.$80.00. Ext. 3272 between 12 8. 3:30.Know how to do things but don't presentlyhave any worthwhile ideas/? Why not com¬bine your talents with those of others andaccomplish something for once? Call THEGATHERING OF MUTUAL SELF-ACTUAL¬IZERS. CALL 378-8837.Russian taught by highly experienced teacher. . . rapid method . . . trial lesson at nocharge . . . Call CE-4-1423. 9-5.ELIJAH COMES TO CHICAGO.I AMonly a part of an amwhich is part of a partso then there isMANY IN ANYbut. . . .WHO IS YOU?Part of youWhich is part of themWho comprise the wholeWHOM ARE THEY?Part of a partbut feels it is all partswhich it is, except—you.Renee Shoulders Ken Towers, city editor of The Chicago Sun-Times, 8 p.m. tonight in The Maroon Office.F.U.C.K. almost censored the Keystone Copsin "Teddy at the Trottle," bj cinema, Judsondining room, 11/2, 8:30 FREE!Israeli Folk dancing resumes Thursday,November 2 at 8 O'Clock, Hillel House.POLITICS FOR PEACE: Meeting for forma¬tion of committees on Congressional Candi¬date and on Peace Delegates for DemocraticConvention. Thursday, Nov. 2. Cars leavefront of Ida Noyes 3:45 PM. P.S.—We con¬tinue to need financial support; please sendchecks to POLITICS FOR PEACE, 2446 E. I75th STREET.F.U.C.K.—fornicating U. of C. Kids!If you didn't make the staff this time, don'tgive up. Just try harder. We need you,sweeties.BOB DYLAN IN "DON'T LOOK BACK"JEAN-LUC GODARD'S "MASCULINE FE¬MININE"MARYELLEN BATE'S "FINNEGANSWAKE"ANDY WARHOL'S "I, A MAN"YOU WILL RECEIVE A TICKET GOODFOR ONE ADMISSION AT ANYTIME (RE¬GULAR PRICE $1.75) AND A MONTHLYBULLETIN FOR A YEAR LISTING AARD-VARK'S FEATURES AND UNDERGROUNDPROGRAMS FOR $1.00 CHECK OR MONEYORDER. YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE, DO ITNOW. AARDVARK CINEMATHEQUE, 1608N. WELLS, CHICAGO 60614.Wanted at Hillel—An Audience for Goldsteinon Sunday, Nov. 5, 7:30 and 9:30 PM.BEWARE1 I am letting M.R.X. play THEGAME.SEE Elijah come out of the Lake. Be atHillel Sunday night.ACTOR-MODELS, male and female formajor underground film during Nov. Prin¬cipals paid $30.00 per day. Preference givento those who have read Norman O. Brown'sLIFE AGAINST DEATH. Photo Helpful. Pic¬tures will be returned and scripts issued toall those who are suitable.Write to PROJECT ONE, AARDVARK CIN- jEMATHEQUE, 1608 N. Wells, Chicago 60614.Learn to fly FREE? Introduce the idea offlying to your campus. Contact Chicago-Midway Travel Inc. at 582-9400. Ask forJay.GAL FRIDAY. Std. and non-managing 1director of newly formed company seeks ‘part-time aide. Ideal candidate should havesecretarial skills, arithmetic aptitude and jflair for writing. Hours are flexible, cq. |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.Will babysit in my home full or part-time.Call 538-3628.Like to wear HIGH STYLE FASHION???Part-time help needed for modeling andsales. Apply PLUS INC., 5225 S. HarperAvenue, between 12-6 p.m. NO telephonecalls, please.MALE WORKER NEEDED to teach negroboys, ages 7 to 10 at Children's Center, 11143 E. 46th. Hours 3:30 to 6, Monday thruThursday. Call Sue Duncan after 7 PM.BU-8-6003.Student wanted for Occasional Lite Typingand secretarial work, home research. OwnHours. Call 285-0825.fe, presents a COOiedy SpeCfel:6=30 the marx brothers *spend a night at the opera8:00ae west in i’m no angel9:30 w-c- fields « the bank dickmandel hall sat. nov.4 $1006 THE CHICAGO MAROON ' October 31, mV"v,n Divinity School StudentsCall for War ResistanceBy RON HAMMERLEGrowing church militancy sur¬faced here last Thursday as divin¬ity student groups, including twodraft resisters, unexpectedlybrought the issues of Vietnam andthe urban crisis to the floor of theDivinity School’s Alumni Centenni¬al Conference on Ministry.Following national and interna¬tional church protests against thewar in Vietnam and heightened byrecent draft resistance statementsby Yale chaplin William SloaneCoffin and Stanford theologianRobert McAfee Brown, Universityof Chicago divinity students PaulRupert and Richard Virgil joined incalling for open resistance and to¬tal disengagement from the warpolicies of the United States.Tool of DestructionVirgil, who caused a campus up¬roar at Valparaiso University Oc¬tober 18 by turning in his draftcard during a campus worship ser¬vice, stated that he was “con¬vinced that the Selective ServiceSystem is a tool of destruction.“This system is a means of de¬monic force in a war that is impos¬sible to justify. The U.S. Armyhas been, is and will be used to suppress the hopes of people inAsia, Africa and Latin America.“It is this army that will becalled upon to suppress the poorand the black in this society. I donot want to be a part of this.”Berkeley HeadGoes to PotBERKELEY, . Calif. (CPS) -The official residence of the chan¬cellor of the University of Califor¬nia at Berkeley is one of those su¬per-stately mansions set on a littlehill and surrounded by meticulous¬ly manicured shrubbery.The unique feature of the houseis an outdoor clock that lies in themiddle of a beautiful garden area.Various flowers make up the faceof the clock.On Monday a new flower wasdiscovered in the garden, a flowercalled “cannabis sativa,” occasion¬ally known as marijuana.Said Mrs. Roger Heyns, thechancellor’s wife, “I don’t think I’dknow it if I saw it.”Said campus police Sergeant Jo¬seph Halloran, “It wasn’t blownin by the breeze.”Library Duplicate and DiscardSaleThrough Novombor 3rd25{ 50< $1.00 and UpTables refilled every dayGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.f The November issue of Cheetah,the most talked about new maga¬zine of the decade, is now at yournewsstands. It’s more colorful,more audacious, more provocativeand irreverent than the first issueof Cheetah was. And that first issuesold off the newsstands nearly allover the country.The November Issue of Cheetahtalks about the New Heroes onCampus, about the Flower Fuzz, theCommunal Living Thing, the To¬ronto Draft Dodgers, about Jam'sIan, the half-pint Baez. It’s got someof the great posters and fashionart of our day and a spectacular“flower fuzz” full color pull-out ofthe well known law enforcer andman-about-ladies, Woody Allen.It’s funny! It’s exhilarating! It’sexciting! It’s the November issue ofNow at your newsstands.(P.S. For an annual subscription toCheetah, send $5.00 In check ormoney order to Cheetah Magazine,1790 Broadway, N.Y., N.Y. 10019.) IiwmmmMmmmmmCalendar of Events Peace March Cost Over $1 MillionPersons or organizations wishjng to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toThe Maroon two days before the day beforepublication.Tuesday, October 31COLLOQUIM: (The James Franck Institute),p.M. Rentzepis, Bell Telephone Labora¬tories, "Ultrashort Lifetimes of OrganicMolecules," Research Institutes 480, 4:15SENIOR MATHEMATICS CLUB: ProfessorMaurice Auslander, Brandeis University,"Some Comments on the Functor Ext 1(C,—)," Eckhart 206, 4:30 p.m.DISCUSSION GROUP: (Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute of International Affairs), JosephHandler, Doctor of Jurisprudence, "TheNew Geographical Dimension of Health,"Robie House, 5 p.m.DOC FILMS: "The Lady from Shanghai" byOrsen Wells, Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING:Assembly Hall, International House, 8-10:30 p.m.CROSS COUNTRY: Frosh-Soph vs Wright Jr.College, Washington Park, 4 p.m.MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR:"Some Two-Process Models for Memoryand Learning," Professor Atkinson, theCommittee For Mathematical Biology, 5753S. Drexel Ave. 4-5:30 p.m. Tea will beserved at 3:30 p.m.WORKSHOP: (The Maroon), Ken Towers,city editor of The Chicago Sun-Times, willdiscuss the basics of newspaper writing.All interested students are invited. MaroonOffice, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 p.m.Wednesday, November 1SOCCER: George Williams College at GeorgeWilliams, 3 p.m.FACULTY AND UNIVERSITY BOARDMEETING: Divinity School, Eckhart 133,3:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Divinity School), Jurgen D.Moltmann, Doctory of Theology, Professorof Systematic Theology, Tubingen Univers¬ity, Tubingen, Germany, "Resurrection asHope," Swift Commons Room, 4 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of History and theCenter for Middle Eastern Studies), AllanCunningham, Simon Fraser University,"The Problem of Rivals: The Imprint ofCossack Feet," Social Science 122, 4 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, Cloister LECTURE: (Roosevelt University), "1917,"by Henry L. Roberts, professor of history,Dartmouth College, former director ofthe Russian Institute at Columbia Uni¬versity. This is the first of three lectureson "The Russian Revolution Perspective50 Years Later." Altgeld Hall, 8 p.m.MEETING: CADRE, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30p.m.MEETING: For history students interestedin graduate school. Classics 10, 3:30-5 p.m.Thursday, November 2LECTURE: (Biochemistry Graduate TrainingProgram), H. W. Siegelman, BrookhavenNational Laboratory, "Function, Structure,and Properties of Some Tetrapyrrole Pig¬ments in Plants," Abbott 101, 12:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Social Sciences), James Nyman,instructor, Social Sciences, and RalphLerner, associate professor. Social Sciences,"Discussion of Locke," Kent 103, 1:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), Norman E. Booth,Enrico Fermi Institute, "Pion-NucleonScatterin," Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.ZOOLOGY CLUB: Daniel H. Janzen, Depart¬ment of Entomology, University of Kansas,"Density Regulation in the Ant x acaciaMutualism: A Study of Plant Density Reg¬ulation by a Herbivore," Zoology 14, 4:30p.m.LECTURE: (Anatomy, Graduate TrainingProgram), S. N. Salthe, Department ofBiology, Brooklyn College, "GeographicVariation of Lactate Dehydrogenase in the Rana pipens Complex," Anatomy 104,4:30 p.m.DISCUSSION GROUP: (Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute of International Affairs), JosephHandler, Doctor of Jurisprudence, "AStrategy for World Health," Robie House,5:00 p.m.POETRY MEETING: (The College of Com¬plexes), Selections for Anthology, 105 W.Grand Ave., 9 p.m.REHEARSAL: (University of Chicago Con¬cert Band), open to all students, facultyand employees. Laboratory School, Belfield244, 5-6:30 p.m.MEETING: (Politics for Peace), for theformation of committees on congressionalcandidate and on peace delegates forDemocratic convention. Cars leave from infront of Ida Noyes at 7:45 p.m.FILM: (B-J Cinema), Two Keystone Cops'films: "Teddy at the Throttle" and "Des-parate Scoundrel." Judson Dining Room,Burton-Judson Courts, 8:30 p.m. Free.CareersRecruiters from the following schools willbe in the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, to inter¬view prospective graduate students. Comein, or call extension 3282, for appointmentswith these recruiters:October 31: University of Virginia GraduateBusiness School.November 2: University of Notre DameCollege of Business Administration.November 3: Duke University School of Law. The Defense Department an¬nounced last week that the Octo¬ber Mobilization against the Warin Vietnam cost the governmentover $1 million.The largest single expenditure onthe government budget for the twoday demonstration was paid by theJustice Department for overtimecosts and salaries of marshals,U.S. attorneys, federal correctionpersonnel, and U.S. commis¬sioners.In addition, the statement listed a $194 thousand expenditure by theDistrict of Columbia largely forovertime and salaries to D. C. po¬lice and maintenance men.The Defense Department listedamong its own expenditures$149,000 for airlift of troops,$114,000 for D. C. National Guard,$131,000 for operation of trucks,busses, and other vehicles, and$33,000 for operation and mainten¬ance of helicopters.The government paid $12,000 fora “clean-up” operation afterwards.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESAnthony Mann’s THE FAR COUNTRYJimmy Stewart in a far-out western set in Gold Country. In Soc. Sci. 122, Wednesday at 7:15 and 9:15. 75<t. Doc. FilmsClub, 7:00-10:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: "The Far Country" by AnthonyMann, Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15p.m.ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA LEC¬TURES: Clifton Fadiman, "Literature inthe Ice Age," Law School Auditorium,8:15 p.m.' '. v-T a" tv mf.-'f ■» am w «g *MOBILIZATIONStudent Government Presi¬dent Jeffrey Blum has an¬nounced a meeting for to¬day at 3:30 p.m. in Rey¬nolds Club South to discussideas to be presented to theStudent Mobilization Com¬mittee at its meeting nextweekend. Blum, who is onthe national board of theCommittee wants to be ableto present the views ofChicago students on howStudent Mobilization canbest function. He has askedthat interested studentswho cannot attend themeeting write down theirideas and leave them in theStudent Government office.mmmmmm t sft*Norman Mailer'The Deer Park”HARPER THEATREBU8-1717STUDENTSHALF-PRICETuesday, Wednesday,Thursday 8:30Sunday 4 and 7:30!i MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OfTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent DiscountsThere is no placelike home fortaking pictures.We have a full lineof flash guns andelectronic flashes.PhotographyDepartmentTho Universityoff ChicagoBookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. M HATHAWAY'S OXFORD TWEED COLLECTION COMES IN BITTERSWEET, EVERGREEN, CLARET, AND BRISTOL BLUE. ABOUT $10.00 EACH,Oxford Tweed—the latest from HathawayHathaway’s weavers threw up theirhands when we told them what wewanted in the Oxford Tweed.“Can’t be done,” they said, with ahuff of finality.“Can be done,” said Hathaway,showing them an ancient swatch ofhand-woven English fabric dug out ofthe fabric archives.And done it was. Resulting in the bright, warm colors of Oxford Tweedthat are perfect for class and dates.Hathaway’s Oxford Tweed collec¬tion is made in cool cotton for softness and durability. The Club Button-Down collars have a soft roll. The backhas a box pleat. The body is tapered forneat fit. (By Hathaway standards, allother shirts are mass-produced. EveryHathaway shirt is hand-tailored. That’swhy they cost a little more.)C. F. Hathaway, Waterville, Maine.Hathaway® is a division of The Warnaco Co.In cooperation with the Cotton Producers Institute.October 31 , 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONlV (‘ . 'i ‘ 7COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free ParkingII| Special!For Back-to-SchoolStyle Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 CARDS FOR ALL SEASONSEveryone appreciates being remembered, and greetingcards have become a customary means of expressingour interest in our friends. You will find cards for alloccasions and all holiday seasons in our selection.Currently being featured are Thanksgiving cards and anearly assortment of boxed Christmas cards. Orders forpersonally imprinted Christmas cards are being takenGiftDepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. I |TEXASINSTRUMENTSTina's Beauty Salon1329 East 57th StreetConvenient LocationNear UniversityOpen Mon. thru Sat.DO 3-7330 INTERVIEWINGON CAMPUSNOV. 6Orson Welles' LADY FROM SHANGHAIRita Hayworth, Everett Sloan, Orson Welles, and the amazing Hall of Mirrors sequence. Tonight in Soc. Sci. 122 at 7:15and 9:15. 75<t. Doc Films.for wetting, cleaning andsoaking contact lenses?Lensine is here! It's an all¬purpose solution for completelens care-, made by theMurine Company.So what else is new?Well, the removablelens carrying caseon the bottom ofevery bottle, that'snew, too. And it’sexclusive with; Lensine, the; solution forall your contactlens problems.for contactsi: . . ■; Career opportunities for basic and applied chemical researchand development in diversified fields.ORGANIC-Structure, synthesis, derivatives; basic and applied research.PHYSICAL-Polymer structure; solution and solid state properties.BIOCHEMISTRY-Proteins, enzymes, natural products; isolation, structure, andproperties.• ■ ■ •Sign up for an interview with our representativeNovember 8, 1967Northern Utilization Research and Development Division1815 North University StreetPeoria, Illinois 61604An Equal Opportunity EmployerU.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 31, 1967