VOL. 76, NO. 15 licago MaroonCHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1967 FoundedIn 189224 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSDow, IDA Controversies FlareUniversity-IDA TieComes Under FireBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorPresident Beadle has appoint¬ed a faculty committee to in¬vestigate Chicago’s role as amember of the Institute for De¬fense Analyses (IDA).The appointments were madepublic just as the Students fora Democratic Society (SDS)started action designed to per¬suade the University to with¬draw from the IDA.Julien Goldsmith, professor ofgeophysics and associate deanof the Physical Sciences Division,was made chairman of the com¬mittee. Also appointed wereHans J. Morgenthau, Albert A.Michelson distinguished serv¬ice professor of history andpolitical science; Gwin Kolb,professor and chairman of theDepartment of English; JohnSimpson, professor of physics,and John Law, professor ofbiochemistry.The committee will examinedemands by the campus chapterof SDS that the University dis¬affiliate from the IDA on thegrounds that it is part of thewar effort of the United States,and the University should donothing to advance these aims.‘Doing Their Duty’‘We feel that these men aredoing their duty as their inter¬ests show it them, but theyaren’t our interests, or those ofthe students and faculty here,”said Steve Kindred, one of theSDS leaders.The SDS has offered, throughDean of Students Charles D.O’Connell, to make their files onthe IDA available to the Com¬mittee. Yesterday they expressedthe hope that they would ad¬dress the Committee of theCouncil of the Faculty Senate See related stories on Page 2and an editorial on Page 8.at its next meeting on Tuesday.No one from the Committeecould be reached for comment.<n the past it has been difficultfor students to address the Com¬mittee.There was remarkable un-!animity between the leaders ofSDS and the faculty members!connected with the IDA on most 'of the facts about the institute !and the University’s role in it. ;They disagreed however, whenthey came to attach moral val-1ues to the facts.Lending Its PrestigeBoth SDS and A. Adrian Al-1bert, dean of the Physical!Sciences Division, professor of jmathematics, and Chicago’s del¬egate to the IDA, agreed thatChicago, by being a member ofIDA, does little more than lend iits prestige to the Institute. |According to Albert, the IDA iwould face grave difficulties inrecruiting were the universitiesthat presently constitute it towithdraw. Albert stressed, how¬ever, that he felt it his patri¬otic duty to work for the de¬fense of the United States. Hesaid he has, over the past manyyears, worked for both the IDAand its predecessor.Albert also emphasied that ieven if the University were to (withdraw from IDA, he andother professors would continueworking for them, as other pro¬fessors work on private con-1tracts.He further stated that whileno one can “stop a man from;thinking,” which is the pri¬mary activity of the men work-Turn to Page 2 A. Adrian Albertrowcnemic.rtL co.(M0/VOAYjvlAPflU^i~ £> <pBoPLB ^mAAT7"o AE>°ur^BETTING FR1MYl±:iS pn 'kjos&tiuraid 2L,Anti-Dow Poster Protesf Is PlannedFor Dow MondayBy JOHN SIEFERTSlaff WriterThe conflict permeating the cam- jpuses of the University of Wiscon¬sin and Brooklyn College maycome to Chicago with the visit ofDow Chemical Company recruitersto the Graduate School of Business! on Monday.Dow, a multi-million dollar cor¬poration with diversified interests,supplies most of the napalm usedby American forces in Vietnam.A visit by Dow recruiters here, on October 20 went almost un¬noticed. “We flubbed it,” admitted| Jeff Blum, president of StudentGovernment.tBut Student Government and Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society donot intend to repeat their firstoversight. A meeting will be heldat 4:15 p.m. today in Rosenwald 2to determine what students will doagainst Dow.The November visit by Dow waslisted in the Placement Office Bul-i letin of the Graduate School ofI Business. This bulletin was distri¬buted to all second-year business| students early in October.Censoring Is ChargedHowever, Jerry Lipsch, vice-president of Student Government,charged that Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell is censoring in¬terview notices to exclude listingswhich might provoke demonstra¬tions or violence.“I think it’s dishonest of him,”Lipsch said. “He is trying to pre¬vent peaceful picketing, let alonea disruptive demonstration.”O’Connell replied that the char¬ges were false. “I have not cen¬sored the Calendar for RecruitingVisits, nor do I see that Calendaruntil it is released publicly.”| O’Connell pointed out that theCalendar for Recruiting Visits hasnever carried information aboutJ visits to the Graduate School of See related stories on Page 6and an editorial on Page 8.Business. These are listed separ¬ately in the Graduate School’sPlacement Office Bulletin.Dozen InterviewsA dozen students have signed upto be interviewed by Dow. Dean ofthe College Wayne Booth admittedthat students have every right todemonstrate and protest Dow Che¬mical coming to campus.“But in my view,” Booth said,“one group of students has no rightto prevent those interviews fromtaking place. Such a group has noright to violate the rights of otherstudents.”Preventing the interviews fromtaking place, Booth said, would bean example of students taking awaytheir own rights. It would, headded, set a bad precedent.Booth promised to do everythingin his power to avoid having policeon the scene of the demonstration,but his authority in this area islimited. “I hope,” Booth added,“that people on both sides are de¬termined to have no violence.”Liberal Arts PlansNow Under WayThe third annual Liberal ArtsConference LAC will be held thisyear during the second week of thespring quarter. Two proposedtopics for the conference are:“College, Myth and Reality;” and“The Place of the University inSociety.”LAC is primarily a student en¬terprise. The two previous confer¬ences have featured several keyspeakers and small discussiongroups which focus on specifictopics. The main topic of the firstLAC was: “What Kind Of Know¬ledge Is Most Worth Having?”Robert M. Hutchins HutchinsRobert Maynard Hutchins, presi¬dent of the Center for the Studyof Democratic Institutions andchairman of the Board of Editorsof Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.,will speak at Chicago this Tuesday.Hutchins’ talk, entitled “TheTruth about the Center,” will bepresented at 8:15 p.m. in the LawAuditorium.Hutchins is the former presidentand chancellor of the Universityof Chicago. He received an A.B.degree (1921) and an LL.B. degree(1925) from Yale, joined the lawfaculty there in 1925, and two years To Speaklater was appointed a full profes¬sor and acting dean. The follow¬ing year he became dean of theYale Law School. He was namedpresident of Chicago in 1929.Chicago’s Boy WonderHutchins, who was 29 when hetook over the presidency, has oftenbeen referred to as Chicago’s “boywonder.” His reorganization of theCollege and pioneering of generaleducation here have contributed toan aura of godliness attributed tohim by much of Chicago’s under¬graduate body.His center for the Study of De- j Here onmocratic Institutions, perennialtarget of ultra-right criticism, wasthe object of charges this summerby Sen. Everett Dirksen (R-Ill.)that the Center, at a meeting withStokeley Carmichael and otherblack power figures, had played arole in Negro revolts in the cities.The charges were denied.Britannica SeriesThe lecture is the fifth in aseries of six scheduled for thisautumn under the auspices of theBritannica Lecture Series, whichis presented each year at the Uni¬versity under a grant from the Tuesday“Encyclopaedia Britannica.” Thegeneral topic of the 1967 series,offered in connection with the 200thanniversary of the “EncyclopaediaBritannica,” is “The IntellectualLife — Outside the University.”Hutchins is the author of num¬erous writings, among which are“The Higher Learning in Ameri¬ca,” “Education for Freedom,”“The Democratic Dilemma,” and“Some Observations on AmericanEducation.”The lecture is free and open tothe public.I, , if 1 I• ■ I I I I I * • III* • IA History of ID As Association with the UniversityBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorIn Institute for Defense Analy¬sis (IDA) was founded in 1956with a $500,000 grant from theFord Foundation for the specificpurpose of aiding the Departmentof Defense. The Department hadbeen having trouble getting sci¬entists to work at Civil Servicewages, and the answer was toform a “captive corporation”which could match the goingrates in academia.Originally the Defense Depart¬ment went to MIT and asked jthem to run the program of sci¬entific research for the military,but after a short time MIT de¬cided that it was not a properrole fcr a university, and re¬quested that the IDA be formedinstead. Joining with MIT werethe California Institute of Tech¬nology, the Case Institute of Tech-1nology, Stanford, and Tulane.Since then Princeton, Columbia,Chicago, Penn State, and thestate universities of Illinois, Mich¬igan, and California have joined.Chicago joined in 1960.Trustees are SentEach of the schools involvedsends one trustee to the IDA.These trustees are the legates oftheir schools, and are in nominalcommand of the operations of theinstitute.A. Adrian Albert, dean of thePhysical Sciences Division hereand Chicago’s trustee at IDA, ex¬plained its function in economicterms. IDA has to put out whatthe customer wants. When thecustomer is satisfied, very well,but when not a project has to bedropped or redone. In the case ofthe IDA, Albert pointed out, thecustomer is the Department ofDefense. j are presently twelve universityI trustees on the board at IDA.j They in turn elect between sevenand ten public trustees, as wellas the president and executivevice-president of the organization.Academic AtmosphereAccording to Albert, the mainduties of the trustees are to seethat IDA runs with an “academ¬ic atmosphere.” He stressed thatthe environment at IDA is almostentirely academic, with mainlypure research being carried out.He contrasted the IDA with theRAND corporation, another gov¬ernment-sponsored ‘ ‘ think-tank, ’ ’where workers have to check ineach morning and out in the eve¬ning, and where no one really careshow much work is done at home,at night, or in other ways.The trustees receive reports onprogress being made by the IDAon its various projects, but Al¬bert implied that, except forthose projects especially favoredby some trustee, little is doneabout the reports.Prestige Is LentAlbert stressed that the trusteesact as representatives of their re¬spective universities, and that thiswas one of their more importantfunctions. A university in IDA lendsthe organization great prestige, hesaid, and helps maintain the aca¬demic purpose of the organiza¬tion.The prestige that the universi¬ties lend to IDA is a major factorin recruiting, he stressed, but uni¬versity “loans” to IDA are alsohelpful. In the loan, professorstake up to a year, or even two,on leave from their university towork for IDA, and then return totheir campuses.Sometimes, said Albert, the pro¬fessors are so attracted to theWith the increase in the num¬ber of sponsoring schools, there ! work at IDA that they stay thereFaculty CommitteeTo Consider IDA Tie permanently. The major attrac-!tion he cited was the absence ofclasses, and the ability to do re¬search full time.Security ClassificationOther factors that lead to pro¬fessors staying at IDA includethe great attention that theirwork commands and the easewith which they obtain informa¬tion. Professors working for theinstitute are accorded the highest“need-to-know” security classifica¬tion, and when they need informa¬tion, it is forthcoming.Factors such as these, plus pa¬triotism, have enabled the insti¬tute to gather a core staff ofabout 150, according to the mostrecent figures available. In addi¬tion there are many academicinswho do consultant work for theIDA on a part-time basis. Otherswork during the summer, so asnot to interfere with the academ¬ic careers.Not all the work done by theprofessors is directed towards theDepartment of Defense, but byfar the greatest part is.Funds AUoted! According to Steve Kindred, thej professors are allowed to spendup to five percent of their allotedj funds for work that will make |them more competent in theirI own fields, even though it is dis-1connected with any specific de-1fense department request. Kin¬dred, a leader of the Chicago Stu¬dents for A Democratic Society! (SDS), has done extensive re-! search on the IDA and claims toknow most of what is available tothe public about the workings ofthe IDA.Kindred said the IDA is “a top-level, flexible, relatively quick re¬sponse think-tank for the govern¬ment. It is tied to the civilianpart of the Pentagon.”Kindred went on to describe thework done by IDA. It does pre-i liminary weapons system re-j search, computer theory, andstate of the art surveys, he said,j Among the recent achievements; of the IDA have been solid-fueli missile systems, such as Polarisand Minuteman, and more sophis¬ticated devices, such as infra-redpersonnel detectors.Making It PossibleContinued from Page 1ing for the IDA, no classifiedwork is done on campus forthem. This is due to the lackof security here and to theUniversity’s policy of not accept¬ing classified government con¬tracts.Distinction is MadeKindred and other SDS lead¬ers agreed. They said that, fora variety of reasons, they werenot attacking the right of Chi¬cago professors to work for IDA,but simply the University’s mem¬bership in it.They agreed that the majorresult of University member¬ship in IDA was an increase inIDA’s prestige, and the resultantease in recruiting. They dis¬agreed strongly, however, with Albert’s statement that this was ja personal duty.“The University should with¬draw from IDA, said Kindred.“It has no right to act as alegitimizing agency for the mostblatant attempt of the military!to impose on academia. It is an Iaid to American politico-militaryhegemnoy over the world, whichwe oppose.”Other SDS people agreed.“There is a central anti-Vietnamwar thrust to the proposal,”said Ernie Dornfeld.At present SDS is keeping itsactions within channels of pro¬test. Next weekend, Novembei7-10, it will sponsor a conferencehere on “The University and theMilitary” with the avowed aim Iof education and channeling |protest. Kindred stated that IDA recent¬ly issued a report to the DefenseDepartment attacking the pro¬posed anti-ballistic missile systemas non-cost-effective, i.e., too ex¬pensive compared to its likelyusefulness. At the same time,Kindred stated, it was the IDAwhich had made the ABM possi¬ble in the first place.Much of the work of the IDAhas been concerned with weaponsj research, but a good deal is not.The Communications ResearchCenter at Princeton, N.J. is con¬cerned primarily with cryptogra¬phy and similar work for the Na¬tional Security Agency, as wellas research on different types ofradios for use under different con¬ditions.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone; 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas wtiat you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionot the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYJESSELSOrSS8RVIN4 HYM PARK POR OVBR >0 VRAMWITH THC VIRY RUT AMD PRBHfSTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190. DO S-9186 1140 K. flrd Among the projects for whichIDA has received credit was thedevelopment of a radio that couldwork in the Vietnamese jungle, re¬placing those previously in oper¬ation, which were cut off by thickundergrowth. Similarly, work hasbeen done on development of aradio that permits the user towhisper, yet broadcasts voicesover a 150-mile radius.Arts SurveysThe state-of-the-arts surveysconducted by IDA report on pres¬ent technological progress invarious fields, such as laser de¬velopment. The reports detailwhat is presently possible, andwhat might be possible in the for-seeable future.Presently there seems to be ashift in emphasis at the IDA. Inthe past it was almost entirelyconcerned with weapons researchand other obviously military pro¬grams. According to Albert, how¬ever, the trustees recently votedto increase the amount of “socialsciences” work in the institute.Such projects include counter-in¬surgency projects, improvementin prisoner interrogation techni¬ques, and specific contingencyplans for dealing with variouspossible insurrections in African,Asian, and Latin American na¬tions.The increase in emphasis on thebehavioral sciences met withsome opposition among the trus¬tees, because some of the men atthe institute felt that other pro¬ jects were more important, Al¬bert said.Other Work, TooNot all the work done now is forthe Pentagon, either. Accordingto Kindred, IDA has just finishedstudies of the supersonic transportplanes, for the Federal AviationAgency, of crime for the Presi¬dent’s Commission on Crime, andon urban counter-insurgency,again for the Pentagon.Not everything written for IDAis classified, but again the vastmajority is. Sometimes, explainedDean Albert, an incidental by-prod¬uct of classified research wouldbe well worth publishing and yetof no military value. Such a casewould be computer theory work,of which a great deal is done byIDA in the course of developingprojects for the defense depart¬ment. Also, in his spare time aprofessor may do research thatdoesn’t need security classifica¬tion. In such a case it would bepublished with the name of theauthor, and his association withthe Institute. Other classifiedworks bear no author’s name, butsimply the IDA signature.An article in Missiles and Rock¬ets, March 23, 1963, summed upthe role of the institute indefense. “Clearly, the professionalforce of the Institute is made upof people of many backgroundand disciplines. Their work, re¬ferred to by the highest echelonsin the Department of Defense, istherefore an unpublicized buthighly important factor in defensedecision-making.”ml slo&es-Jeivelry- Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 321-7266I’unvenieiil hours: Noon to S p.m. dailyASA MATTER OP... tun Life Insurance It a sure wafto financial Independence for youaad your family.Aa a local Sue Life representative, mflfI tall upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CIUOn* North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRenklin 2-2390 - 79S-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.•UN UFI ASSURANCE COMPANY OP CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY2 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 3, 1967ILiterature Is Dead According To Cl ifton Fadiman |The world or literature, if not theworld itself, was laid to rest Wed¬nesday night, and the funeral ora¬tion was delivered by Clifton Fa¬diman, noted author, critic, editorand journalist.Fadiman’s lecture, on the sub¬ject of “Literature in the Ice Age,” !began at 8:30 p.m. in the Wey-mouth Kirkland Courtroom of theLaw School, as part of Encyclo¬paedia Britannica series. Althoughhe freely acknowledged that he wasusing “extravagant language moreapproriate to satire than to seri¬ous discourse,” Fadiman cited ninemajor trends which have beenwidely remarked upon as to thefuture course of society, and re¬lated these to the future of liter¬ature.The result was a uniformly dis¬mal picture. Fadiman’s nine trendswere • The accelerated growth oftechnology, • The population re¬volution and the megalopolis, • Amarked decline in privacy, • Thesecularization of culture, • Thespread of permissive attitudes to¬ward sex, • The attitude of “past-lessness,” • A growing acceptanceof violence, • The devaluation of the individual, • And finally, therebellion of some elements of so¬ciety against the other eight trends.Danger of ExtinctionThese trends, according to Fadi¬man, will combine to place litera¬ture as an art form in great dangerof extinction or limitation to avery small dissatisfied culturalelite.“Technological achievement,” hesaid, “seems to thwart literaryimagination,” and he characterizedthe written reactions to spaceachievements with the phrase“shattering vacuity.”Turning to his second theme ofpopulation growth and the mega¬lopolis, he humorously, describedthe predictions for such huge con¬urbations as “Boswash,” “Chi-pitts” and “Sansan,” and conclud¬ed that these massive areas of urbanity might produce the ulti¬mate conclusion that “nature is outof date.”‘Blank Pages’At several points in the lecture,Fadiman attacked these trends. Onthe subject of the decline in priv¬acy, he said, “We are all alonebecause we are all together.” Hequipped, “The lives of the majo¬rity are not only an open book,but an open book full of blankpages.”Often alluding to Marshall Mc-Luhan’s ideas that “the mediumis the message,” Fadiman observ¬ed, “On all sides we are told thatthe reign of Gutenberg is over.”He described the future societywhich these trends indicated as a“McLunatic paradise.”“The writer of the next 33 yearsmay have to prepare himself to live obscurely,” Fadiman re¬marked. “He has already begunto write that way.”Obsolescence of LoveTouching upon other trends, Fa¬diman, a member of the board ofeditors of Encylopedia Britannica,indicated that the liberalization ofsex standards would cause the ob¬solescence of romantic love in liter¬ature, because the obstacle wouldno longer provide a major literarytheme.Turning to the subject of viol¬ence, he said it had been notedthat, between the ages of five and14, the average American childwitnesses some 13,000 simulateddeaths on television. He concludedthat, though past literature hadused violence extensively, its gen¬eral acceptance would remove allpossible literary meaning frompain and death. The MaroonClifton FadimanPolls Open TodayFor SG ElectionsDorm residents have the oppor¬tunity today to vote for candidatesfor Student Government (SG). Thepolls will be open from 11:30 a.m.to 7 p.m. in Pierce Tower. Wood¬ward Court, and Burton-Judson JCourts.Residents in these areas andfreshmen who eat in one or ano¬ther of them are eligible to vote.The candidates in all but Burton-Judson are divided into StudentsFor Action (SFA) or unaffiliatedcandidacies. SFA has politicalideals close to the campus left-wing party, Students Political Ac¬tion Committee (SPAC), and ap¬pears to be a SPAC front. SPACofficials have asserted that theyare not publicly supporting anycandidates.Running for the five at-large (freshmen seats are five SFA cand¬idates: Louise Brotsky, Daniel Co¬hen, Dawn Esser, Judith Hartman,and Leonard Zax, and four unaffi¬liated candidates: Marcia Edison,Joan Filter, Niel Stephen, and Mar¬garet Wochele.Candidates for the two NewDorms seats are Laura Finkler,Chelsea Bayer, John Siefert, andNancy Wieckowiz, with Finklerthe only SFA candidate.Up for the two Pierce seats aretwo SFA people, Robert Lindbergand Timothy McAfee, and sevenunaffiliated people: Robert Fin-berg, Dave Gray, Thomas Harris,Michael Harris, Sheldon Sacks,Daniel Soyer, and Cheak Yee.The candidates for B-J’s loneseat are Irl Extein and Jerald Kes¬sler, both unaffiliated.Several of the students runningfor upper class vacancies arefreshmen. Si nondum viginti duos annos habes, haec chartaparva efficiet, ut propemodum, quocumque “Eastern’1vo I at, dimidio preti soliti voles.Unum hoc incommodum est: circumstare debesexpectans sedem tibi paratam. Ceterum charta ''YOUTHfare I. D. CARD" per paucos dies non valebit: diebus festisGratiarum Actionis et Nativitatis Christi. Quibus excep-tis, quando et quocumque volare desiderabis dimidiopretio volare tibi licebit.Quid cunctaris? Obtine chartam! Right. Took the words right out of my mouth.I'm under 22 and want to apply for anEastern Youth ID card. It will let me fly any¬where within the continental United Statesthat Eastern flies, on a stand-by basis, forhalf-fare. Enclosed you'll find either a $3check or money order, payable to EasternAirlines, and a photocopy of my birth cer¬tificate or driver's license. I'm sending themto: Eastern Airlines, Dept. 350, 10 Rocke¬feller Plaza, New York, N. Y. 10020. i'PIZZA jPLATTER 1Pizza, Fried Chicken.Italian FoodsCompare the Price!I 1460 E. 53rd Street$ Ml 3-2800w NameAddress.CityWe want everyone to fly State Zip Code J(What's the ablative absolute of Eastern?) !L iNovember 3, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3I FESTIVAL ' 1967 VANCOUVER Flt_/V\''A wasterpiEce-the Finest experi-^EMTAt £ 2W0 6e*JERAV/0NS' *—-BOSTOM AVATARrtC ‘ *' Th£ Quintessence°f vlR°Xi^?A1- ——TTOROAJTY5 6U58F* MAILA VERY PowERFuc SEMSATion I "— ARTS CANADA*rr:s as 'f Rimbaud and MarshallM‘LuhAN hap coulABoRAtep TO ntoDUc©A coMTFMpoMRY ’5FASoA IAJ HEL-L' F/ic£PWITH TERRORS AND BeXuflES THAT AREindescribable ! "—~~lcwom fleff rtessTOONTURCS Up A UAIQ u£r SEI^WL-dEVERlE. ALL GRATIFICATIONS Opvision hfaria>6, taste, touch And^cf-L eXEMPClFiEp IN TH|5Twin - scrTEe^ cataract op sicatsAnp s&jvps. xt haV/vts themind con6 aft£r the screen haspar.re'ned** irwoA/ro veiz&la/m r_/*r HAS FLOWER-Power |N fVCWisis s^i/eNfLs©/L,. DirIctoA of ohWAtGRAtEccoNS, Los AN^Gt-ES FtfBPRE.S.S-A TRIUMPH of sexual ART. *——-1/ANCOUUEX SUN°ONE OF THE AtoST 5Xre.fi,-ORPINAFW AND MPVi/VC- F/lmsthatX'UE SEEN /Ai P LONG T/AIE. ADECADENT Film //u THE SFnSC thatBunuel's vm chiev an&alou andL'A&ej'DR are OecADENT AvpWHOSE CATHARSL5 ROMS TTfRoUfcK-por FROM First Frame td last."-—-Peter 4a?R.RtSiC: orator,Canadian film Afcttiv-es’♦EXCGPr/ONALLY Exc 1 riAI& - ASA CHRONICLER, of THE FEELINGSOF Hts 6EHERAT1 ON N(5T OVLV IN$£fjSiM6 social moops Bor iw>i-VIPUAL. FFELIN6S, HOFSE5S EXCELS.v-—take oa%.v . CANADIAN Filmrr » ^aga2>we* _ _Y A 5ENSUAL HoneycombPROPPING with Rich CclcKHOF5GS5 USES F/LM AS ANArtist Awp HI5 FALEttf is aGESJETRPUSL^ Rich one. "HAMILTON SPECTATORI^ILMED IN SOMETHING ELSE COLOR. BYR?N /JAMElk at Poor RIOKARI* IN CHICAGO(^OMMENTAW W STUDS TERVCEL.STUDENTS * 1.00 ReGULaR ADMISSION * I 7S5H®=oa m.X0RK CINEMATHEQUEIG>08 N- WELLS, IN PIPERS ALLEY^ PHONE 337-4*54*••*»# ••••*!♦MAROON INTERVIEWO'Connell Declares For House Rule, Against PotThe following interview withDean of Students Charles D.O'Connell was conducted ear¬lier this quarter in O’Connell'soffice by Maroon ExecutiveEditor Michael Seidman. Rela¬tively unscarred from chargesof political bias leveled againsthim by the Left last year,O'Connell today reaches themidpoint of his first full quart¬er as dean of students.MAROON: Mr. O’Connell, how doyou like your new job?O’CONNELL: Well, I think thatI’m still a little bit dazed by thenewness of it all. The other day Ihad a long distance telephone callfrom a person who was askingme a question about admission.And I had a kind of glow of satis¬faction spread over me becauseI thought it was the first questionthat I had been asked for overthree months on which I had adefinite answer. But I’m learning,and I’m finding that it is satisfy¬ing, and even reasonably exciting.MAROON: There has been a gooddeal of discussion in liberal jour¬nals about the emergence of theNew Left as a political force, par¬ticularly the reawakening of thecampuses after what was sup¬posed to have been a particularlyapolitical, dull period in the fif¬ties which is usually associatedwith McCarthyism. As an admin¬istrator who generally ends upbeing attacked by these groups,do you join in with the rejoicingor are you mourning it instead?O’CONNELL: Well, I’m certainlynot mourning it. I do find it diffi¬cult for you to associate dullnesswith the McCarthy period. How¬ever, it was anything but dull forthose of us who remembered it.There was a period during thefifties when at least the popularpress would have it that the stu¬dents were being exceptionallyquiet; that they were so preoccu¬pied with getting their degreesand getting their work done thatreal apathy on political and socialquestions set in on the campuses.I don’t think that the Universityof Chicago has ever been apa¬thetic, if this is true at all na¬tionally. I don’t recall a day heresince the fall of 1946 when Ifirst arrived on campus whenyou could have called this cam¬pus an apathetic or dull one.I think that students have beentraditionally involved — andrightly so — on the issues of theday, both political and social. Ithink that there has been a rea-mergence of what is now knownas the “New Left”. And I find adifficulty in distinguishing attimes between their views on na¬tional political issues and theirviews on, let us say, the structureof higher education in America.I am not at all clear as to whatthey actually want in terms of thefuture of higher education. Itseems to me that frequently theytend to draw analogies far tooeasily between education and thestructure of the organization ofhigher education and the politicalunits of the society. I am quitesure that the very nature of high¬er education makes it basicallydifferent from a political unit insociety. I am not quite sure thatsome ground rules should applyin the government of an institu¬tion of higher education as applyto the government of a politicalunit of society.MAROON: What about the ques¬ tion of drugs, particularly the useof marijuana on campus? Do youthink that marijuana is danger¬ous? If so, in what way? If not,what is the University’s rationaleof the policy of its use oncampus?O’CONNELL: The policy, as youknow, has been put rather start-ingly in the Student Handbookand Mr. Wick and I are even nowpreparing a longer statement tobe released to the students and tothe University community givingthe context in which that policywas arrived at. In answer to yourfirst question, I think that the evi¬dence about marijuana is so con¬fusing and sometimes misleadingand sometimes outrageously ex¬aggerated that it is difficult to de¬rive a simple conclusion. We knowfor sure, I think, that marijuanais not physically harmful, that itis not physically addictive, andthat most of us feel that the pres¬ent laws concerning its use or itsdistribution are probably in caba¬listic proportion to the possibleharm that the drug might cause.I think, however, that for the Uni¬versity to base its policy on thesimple illegality of the drug wouldbe a mistake. I think the problemof marijuana on the campus hasto be viewed primarily in the con¬text of the University communityof the appropriateness of the useof drugs like marijuana in a col¬lege or university whose mainpurposes are educational—whoseexplicit purposes are educational.There are certain considerationsthat a university must give informulating a policy on mari¬juana that concerns a student’srelationship to the larger society;to the laws of the larger society;to the police; to the dangers thatillegal practices on campus willbring not only to that student butalso to his colleagues, to his class¬mates, and to the university as awhole. I think that widespreaduse of marijuana on campus islikely under the present legal situ¬ation to bring unwanted police in¬trusion into the University com¬munity and this would be as dis¬turbing to students as it would bedisturbing to faculty and admin¬istration. I think that there issome danger in widespread useof marijuana brought into a cam¬pus community, with the presentstate of legislation against mari¬juana, of undesirable non-studentsand possibly fringe charactersfrom the underworld. I realizethat this is not necessarily truebut this is a concern that is cer¬tainly a justifiable one. But Idon’t think that a universityshould formulate its disciplinaryprocedures primarily to enforcethe laws of the larger society. Ido think that they have to beformulated primarily to reenforcethe kind of values that an educa¬tional community must have if itis going to be a successful one.And I think the use of marijuanaand the other hallucenogenicdrugs, although the evidence iscomplex and to some degree con¬fusing, does bring about in theuser of these drugs a kind ofstance that is almost antithicalto the scholarly stance that wewould expect in a university. Tobe more explicit, I am not quitesure what is meant by “turningon” and “dropping out.” But Iwould gather from what I readand from the conversations thatI have had with both medicalpeople and drug users, that there is a tremendous tendency on thepart of drug users to turn in uponthemselves to become basicallyuncommunicated and this seemsto me almost by its very defini¬tion difficult to make compatiblewith the needs for communica¬tion that is basic to a universitywith the self-discipline which isnecessary to a scholarly life. Itis a very complex question.MAROON: What about the broadquestion of premarital sex? Yourstatement put the University posi¬tion on that matter in somewhatstarker and less nebulous termsthan it has been put before. Doesthe University consider this notconducive to academic work or isit considered dangerous to thehealth of the students? What isthe rationale behind this?O’CONNELL: First of all, I wouldlike to make clear that, to myknowledge, I was not making newUniversity policy when I madethe statement concerned. It wasa very small part of a longermessage to the house presidentsand Inter-House Council that theprivileges of inter-visitation hoursdid not mean that the universitywas condoning or permitting theiruse for sexual intercourse in thedormitory. I was perhaps makingclear a policy that had existedbefore but never had been pre¬cisely formulated in public. Now,clarity may be an overrated vir¬tue but I do think that it is im¬portant for students to be clearon what a university policy is. Isaid earlier that I don’t think auniversity disciplinary procedureshould be instituted primarily toenforce the laws or the mores ofthe larger society of which theuniversity is a part and I empha¬size the word “primarily.” Ireally think that once you havestated a policy on this subjectwhich is clear, to footnote it, toannotate, to comment on it undulyis in this particular context toleave yourself open almost inevit¬ably to parody, but I do want tomake clear that the long-standingpolicy that I have apparentlyclarified is primarily derivedfrom a concern about what is ap¬propriate in a residence hall inwhich many students live and where one student’s right to besocial must be balanced againstanother student’s right to be aso¬cial. Certain things that are quitelegal and even quite appropriateunder one set of circumstancesare not appropriate under anotherset of circumstances and I thinkthat a dormitory in which thereare fifty or seventy or more stu¬dents living must by necessityadopt certain types of restraintson its individual occupants thatmight not necessarily be appro¬priate or necessary outside a situ¬ation involving what a friend ofmine has called “community liv¬ing” so to clarify the policy whichyou refer to, I really don’t wantto defend it on the basis ofwhether pre-marital or sexual in¬tercourse is legal, illegal, appro¬priate, healthful, or unhealthful.I do want to say that in a univer¬sity dormitory, it is neither ap¬propriate nor permitted.MAROON: You said before thatyou think that regulations andnorms governing a political com¬munity don’t necessarily apply toan academic community whichhas different aims. Do you haveany difficulties rationalizing regu¬lations such as these which areimposed from the outside whenmatters that are being regulatedare not academic in characterbut, rather, really concern mostpersonal and private aspects ofan individual’s behavior such aswho he sleeps with and what hedoes in his own room with thedoor closed?O’CONNELL: I don’t think of itas a process of rationalizationalthough it may be just that inthe pure sense of that term. Ithink that the University would bewise—and if not wise, prudent—to regulate as little as possible theprivate life of the student. On theother hand, I think that there arecertain minimal controls necessa¬ry in a communal living situationthat necessarily intrude on thetotal privacy of a man’s life or awoman’s life. And I would hopethat these controls would be keptminimal. But I think that sayingthat there should be no controlswhatsoever is quite another mat¬ter. And I am quite prepared to plead that there are other areasof life where this is appropriate.I don’t think that a college or uni¬versity setting is one of them. Ithink that it is true that whenstudents come to a university ora college, they take on certainprivileges and certain rights ina way that is probably not theirs,at least the privileges, in thelarger society that they have lefttemporarily, and they enjoy thesefreedoms and they enjoy theseprivileges and they should. At thesame time, when students cometo a college or a university, theyprobably take on certain respons¬ibilities and certain needs to self-control that are not necessarywhen they live individually in thelarger society. And I would hopethat the combination of greaterresponsibilities and greater free¬dom would be a balance that wecould maintain in this Universitywithout going to one extreme orthe other, of having total anarchywith no restraints whatsoever on jan individual’s behavior which I jthink that all of us would conceive !of as a madhouse, and total re- jstraints totally abhorent not wilyto the students but to the othermembers of the community; andit is this very delicate balancewith privileges and freedoms onthe one hand and restraints onthe other which makes it possiblefor us to enjoy the very specialstatus that we enjoy in a univer¬sity community. Now the re¬straints are best if they are self-imposed. I think that our experi¬ence of human nature is that self-control is helped considerably,particularly among the young, ifsome guidelines of an external na¬ture are provided.MAROON: There has been a lotof noise over the past couple ofyears about house autonomy. Doyou still think that a useful way 1of describing what University pol-licy is and wonder if you would,just one more time, because thereis so much confusion over this is¬sue, give us a brief definition ofexactly what the Universitymeans by the term.O’CONNELL: Let me speak for jmyself first as the dean of stu- idents. I have read over with ad- jmiration what Mr. Wick had tosay on the subject of house auto¬nomy last year and his very care¬ful distinction between what hecalled positive autonomy and neg¬ative autonomy. And it was theformer that he felt quite rightlyshould remain in house rule. Ifwe keep our distinction constantlyand refer to positive autonomy Idon’t think that there is going tobe much disagreement between jthe students and the dean of stu¬dents. My letter to the house pres¬idents and to the inter-house coun¬cil certainly was not intended todiminish in any way the concept !of house autonomy that was con¬notated last year. I do think thatwith the freedom to initiate andcontrol their lives in the housescomes, as I’ve said before, withequal force and with equal neces¬sity, the obligation to exercise re¬sponsible restraints on that free¬dom and autonomy. To be spe¬cific, I am less concerned aboutthe exact hours that students de¬cide to have their house open forinter-visitation than I am thatsome reasonable and simplemethod be instituted in the housesby the students themselves, sothat the students themselves cansee that those rules or those hoursare observed.5November 3. 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONAnti-Recruiter Demonstrations Are WidespreadWASHINTON (CPS) - Stu¬dents on seven campuses made ita rough time for recruiters fromthe armed services and fromother organizations connected withthe military.Their sit-ins and other protestsare almost all over now but thepromise of disciplinary actionagainst protesters on most of thecampuses may provide the nextsource of controversy.Dow Chemical Co. recruiters,catalysts for the massive protestat the University of Wisconsinrecently, figured in three of lastweek’s sit-ins: that at Harvardand those at the Universities ofIllinois and Minnesota.Other targets for demonstrationswere the Navy recruiter at Ober-lin College Ohio; the CIA recruit¬er at the University of Colorado; a center for classified researchat Princeton University; and aconference of defense contractorsin Detroit, Mich.Students for a Democratic So¬ciety (SDS) members figured tosome extent in all the protests,but not all were organized bySDS.Authorities Are CalledOn three campuses — Prince¬ton, Oberlin and Wayne State inDetroit—police were brought infrom outside to deal with the stu¬dents. Although it was the ap¬pearance of city police on the Un¬iversity of Wisconsin campus thatbrought thousands of otherwiseuncommitted students into theprotest there, the police did nothave the same effect last week.On one campus—Illinois—theprotestors achieved their immed¬ iate goal. After 200 of them sat-inin the doorway and corridor out¬side the office where Dow wasrecruiting, the administration can¬celed the company’s recruitingprogram there. According to aUniversity spokesman, the actionwas taken “to avoid possibly bod-j ily injury and destruction ofproperty.”In the Detroit protest there wasj a brief outbreak of violence on| Wednesday. The students, return¬ing for a second day to protestthe fourth annual Defense andGovernment Procurement Confer¬ence (in which businessmen heardAir Force and Army officers tellthem “how to keep your share ofdefense business”), tried to enterthe building where the conferencewas being held from the rear.They scuffled with police thereDISCIPLINE AND A POLLAftermath of ProtestsWhile demonstrations againston-campus recruiting by the DowChemical Company were continu¬ing to pop up at various institu¬tions, students who at some of theschools which have already hadsuch demonstration are being dis¬ciplined for their sit-ins.Nine undergraduates and fourgraduate students who took partin an October 25 demonstrationagainst Dow at the University ofIllinois at Champaign werecharged with offenses rangingfrom “use of forceful imprison¬ment” to littering.The charges state that theypicketed inside a classroom build¬ing, interfering with the doorways,disturbing classes, and litteringthe premises in the process.They “did invade and convertto their own use certain universitypremises and facilities, to with thesecond floor of the East Chemis¬try building,” the charge states.Those charged will have theircases heard next Tuesday andThursday.Cliffies Singled OutMeanwhile, some of the Harvardand Radcliffe students who staged a sit-in on the Cambridge campus,holding a Dow recruiter virtualprisoner for seven hours, havebeen selected for discipline.Shortly after the sit-in at Mal-linckrodt Hall October 25, 400 stu¬dents voluntarily turned in theirbursar’s, or identification, cardsin support of the demonstrators.The day after the demonstra¬tion, the Harvard AdministrativeBoard decided to separate demon¬strators into three categories:•Those who were observed inthe building hallway; there wereabout 25 Harvard men in thisgroup, seven Radcliffe women.They have been notified they facepunishment, possibly expulsion.•Those observed in the area ofthe demonstration.•Those who sent in their bur¬sar’s cards.About 800 students voted in ameeting Monday to demand equaltreatment for all involved, includ¬ing those who only turned in their cards. About 900 students signedanother statement asking for len¬iency.Final decision by the RadcliffeJudicial Board was scheduled fortoday.Columbia ReferendumAlthough Columbia University:has already had an anti-Dow dem-!onstration, a poll of men studentsthere showed two-thirds had no,objection to recruitment on cam- Jpus by any empolyer, governmen- jtal or private.Over two thousand students in jthe College and School of Engi¬neering responded in a referen¬dum held by the officers of thesophomore, junior, and seniorclasses.About 390 voters preferred an al¬ternative asking them to namespecific organizations they wantedto see barred from on-campus re¬cruiting; 312 students opposed on-campus recruiting by any non-academic organization. and with some of the business¬men attending the conference.One demonstrator was arrested,bringing the total number of ar¬rests for the two days to 14.Disruption At OberlinCertainly the best organizedprotest was the one at Oberlin,where students knew well before¬hand what day the Navy recruiterwas to arrive. Some of themdrove out to the edge of townThursday to meet him and escorthim to the campus. There weremore than 100 students who sur¬rounded his car and kept himtrapped inside for about fourhours.When the recruiter finally triedto drive his way out of the pre¬dicament he succeeded only inramming a newsman’s car be¬hind his. He finally was freedwhen local police and firemendrove the demonstrators awaywith tear gas and water sprayedfrom fire hoses.Harvard Sit-inAt Harvard about 300 Harvardand Radcliffe students sat in thechemistry building outside theDow recruiters’ office. Accordingto one observer the recruiter“was effectively imprisonedthere”The protest was organized bySDS, and it had originally beenplanned as a picketing demonstra¬tion outside the building. Whendemonstrators arrived Wednesdaymorning, however, the protest be¬came a sit-in. About 450 students, including theheads of the two major undergrad¬uate political bodies, have turnedin their bursars cards to expresscomplicity with the protest. Ameeting of all members of the fa¬culty has been tenatively sched¬uled for Tuesday, to decide on dis¬ciplinary action for the protestors.At the University of Minnesotaabout 40 students jammed intothe entrance of the placement of¬fice to protest the presence of aDow recruiter there Tuesday.No disciplinary a c t i isplanned against the protestors.Students NeededFor Drug ParleyStudents are needed to help theNational Student Association’s drugconference to be held here overthe weekend of November 24-26,announced NSA coordinator CarolChave yesterday.Two delegates to the conference,five group discussion leaders, andfour students to help with logistics,are needed.All of the students who work forthe conference will be admitted tothe plenary sessions and to theworkshops. Admission for otherChicago students will be limited tothe plenaries and those workshopsin which there is room.Students who are interestedshould call John Moscow at Ext.3260.CotMBEAUTY SALONy ExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY - 3-8302 REYNOLDS CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY. EXT. 3573M-F‘S a m.-5 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-12 p.m. TEXASINSTRUMENTSINTERVIEWINGON CAMPUSNOV. 6Knight 60 watt solidstate amplifier $55.00Bell 238 stereo tape-deck $60.00521-0460 and 256-4785Ml 3-31133424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforatgn cor hospital South Side's Newest Dealership!NEW CARS FINE USED CARSComplete Line of ’68 Mercurys Leasing and Rental ServiceCougars Da'ly’ Weekly* MonthlyThe New Montego AI1 Makes and ModelsLincoln ContinentalHours9-9 Daily9-6 Saturday and Sunday8640 South Chicago Avo. IS 5-9800GADFLYA Case for the Banning of Dow from ChicagoBy JEFF BLUMAnd BERNIE ARONSONThe primary argument thatis advanced for Dows’ being al¬lowed to recruit on campus isthat Dow is exercising a rightof free speech and that to denythat right would be to violatethe principle of academic free¬dom. But Dow is not coming oncampus to speak about the vir¬tues of napalm as an instrumentof foreign policy, or about thesuperiority of domestic productsfor war, or about the advantagesof the free enterprise system, orabout new ways to create intenseheat.Rather, it seems likely fromexperience at other campusesthat the Dow representatives willattempt to avoid any discussionof napalm and their role in thewar. In short, Dow representa¬tives are not interested in takingpart in the free public discussionthat is the essence of the univer¬sity, but rather their sole inter¬est in the university is to use itsfacilities to sell their companyto prospective employees. Ittakes a great stretch of the im¬agination to conceive a hiringcampaign as falling under therubric of “free speech.”DOW S INDIFFERENCE not¬withstanding, it is not irrelevantto the possible presence of Dowon campus that it is the princi¬ple manufacturer and supplierof napalm to the military. Na¬palm is a weapon whose effectscannot be understood in the rel¬ative security of the university.It is an anti-personnel bomb thatadheres to the flesh of whom¬ever it touches and that burns atover 1000 degree Fahrenheit. Thenapalm jelly cannot be removed;and if the victim tries to easehis suffering with water, his painincreases. The only immediaterelief from the burning napalmis to remove it from oxygen,EVE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StraatHYde Park 3-8372tludtnl and Faculty Dittounfexcellent foodat reasonable ,>ru esThe Alps Restaurant201? F . 7! ;t ST.r \CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award WinnerCannes Grand Prize WinnerSTUDENT RATE$1.50 with I D. CardGood every day but Saturday10th MONTHAnouk Aimee-American“For Anyone Who Has everbeen in love”Sun-Times Four StarsIn Color"A MAN & A WOMAN”Mon. to Fri. starts 6:30 pm.Sat. & Sun starts 2 pm. which in peasant communitiesis most easily done by buryingoneself in the mud — often re¬sulting in serious infections inthe wounds.Even people who seem to ap¬preciate the horrors of napalmfear that to bar Dow is to sacri¬fice the University’s necessaryinstitutional neutrality. Yet byhelping Dow to recruit employ¬ees, the University commits anact of complicity with Dow andhence with those policies it helpsto carry out. Whether we do ordo not permit them on campus,we are taking a positive action,one that is not neutral. If theyare allowed to make use of theUniversity, we tacitly supporttheir activities. If they are notallowed on campus we opposetheir policies. To say that wemust preserve our neutrality byallowing anyone who wishes torecruit to do so merely becausewe allow some to, is to bind our¬selves to that involvement andit is to abdicate our right tojudge what is and what is notdetrimental to the purposes ofthe University.IT IS IRONIC that in wishingto preserve a neutral status theUniversity actually helps pro¬duce the opposite effect. Thepowerful military and industrialelites that formulate public pol¬icy do not require that insti¬tutional assent be given to theirpositions. Indeed, they are quiteconfortable with the doctrine ofinstitutional neutrality; for it al¬lows them, with their great eco¬ nomic and political incentives, tocommand use of those resourcesand facilities necessary to carryout their goals without the neces¬sity to defend them.By granting access to thesefacilities in advance the Univer¬sity and other institutions in theprivate “sector” effectively neg¬ate the possibility of opposing fu¬ture policies no matter whattheir content.It is the height of folly to believethat the University can isolate it¬self from the effects of its re¬search for the military or thepolicies of those corporate andmilitary institutions which useits facilities for their recruit¬ment. The war is changing thenation for the worse, and theUniversity as an integral partof society supers too. Dow is apart of the war, but Dow doesnot have to be a part of the Uni¬versity.RATHER in attempting toavoid taking a position, the Uni¬versity violates its own commit¬ment to its stated purpose by al¬lowing itself to be used by a non-academic special interest. If aca¬demic freedom means to be“value-free,” to abdicate judg¬ment, to always be on the sideof the most powerful people, thenthe University should consideranother principle on which to op¬erate. It should particularly con¬sider whether that kind of “aca¬demic freedom” is not self-de¬structive, when those committedto values which deny free speechand academic freedom and a*,■'Extraordinary!"-London TimesJAMES JOYCE'S masterpiece(FinnegansWakeProduced and Directed byMARY ELLEN BUTEAn Evergreen Film Releosed byGROVE PRESS, INC. (Film Division)"Brings out the meaning and thebeauty and the comedy with claritysurpassed only by Joyce himself."-DWIGHT MACDONALD, EsquireFeature at 1:00, 2:50, 4:40, 5:30,8:20, 10:10.Irish coffee served at Special Midnight Showing Saturday Only/Wfflnenoczvous^juTHQ Sir VSmSS *** «# ISnGSnStHYDE PARK T.V.HYDE PARK T.V.HYDE PARK T.V.T.V. RENTS television for$6.50 a week FMradio lor $5.00 amonth.T.V. SERVICES television, hi firadios, tape re¬corders, etc.T.V. SELLS ZenithMotorolaGrundigT.V. OFFERS a 10% discountto students ii yonmention this ad.td Street PL 2-2700 VO DOW, THE CIA, and the mili¬tary are in fact opponents of thatacademic freedom in whosename they are defended. Thatin itself would not justify pre¬venting them from coming tocampus if their purposes wereto discuss their positions; in afree society and in a free uni¬versity all information and viewsmust obviously be given a fo¬rum. What is not protected apriori is the recruitment of em¬ployees on campus which is ir¬relevant to free discussion andfree decision-making. That ir¬relevance, too, would not suffi¬ciently justify preventing theirrecruiting.When, however, Dow’s funda¬mental irrelevance to the pur¬poses of the University is com¬pounded by its part in the warand the resulting suppression offreedom at home, then weshould oppose their presence oncampus. We are not weakerwithout them; we are strongerif we can in any way contributeto ending the war by resisting itsencroachment on the University.(Editor’s note: Jeff Blum, a jlurth-year student in the Col->ge, is president of Student \overnment. Bernie Aronson isfourth-year student in theollege.) .ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELANNUAL UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL SERVICESunday, November 5, 1967, II a.m.The Reverend E. Spencer Parsons"OFMEMORY AND HOPE”Service of remembrance for members of the Universitycommunity who died during the past year.We’vebeen at it120 years—But it still takesover four monthsto brew Carlsberg—the mellow,flavorSul beerof Copenhagen.Drink Carlsberg—the mellow, flavorful beer of Copenhagen.free university are in such pow¬erful positions in society today.Finally, it is argued that pre¬venting Dow from coming wouldbe a tyranny of the majority; yetit is more likely that followingDow to come is a tyranny ofthe minority. A very small num¬ber of students stand to gain byhaving Dow here, and their gainwill be only one of personal con¬venience, not one of academicimportance. Why is the adminis¬tration of the Business Schoolpermitted to speak for the com¬bined students and faculty of theUniversity, when Dow’s presenceon campus implicity involves allmembers of the community?Students should not be expectedto passively accept their Univer¬sity’s support and involvementwith Dow and the military when,as in so many other cases, thisdecision was made without theirknowledge, involvement, or con¬sent. It seems that whenever stu¬dents are denied a role in deci¬sions vital to their interests ascitizens as well as students, theirparticipation is deemed a “vio¬lation of the sanctity of academ¬ic freedom”: now we are beingasked, in the name of this prin¬ciple, to tacitly support napalmso that a few students may beable to get a job more easily.EiMl The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1*92Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiejJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger Black i Photographic Editor.. Marc PoKempnerExecutive Editors Michael Seidman Associate Editors — David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergJohn Welch Joan PhillipsNews Editor John Moscow Literary Editor David L. AikenCulture Editor Edward Chikofsky ! Editor Emeritus David A. Satter -$9I iDow and IDATuesday’s editorial discussed two alternatives Chi¬cago might ideally take with regard to unpopular recrui¬ters on campus, concluding that neither of them was en¬tirely heartening: by doing nothing to prevent such com¬panies as Dow Chemical from flourishing, the Universityin effect politically devotes itself to the maintenance ofan undesirable status quo; while by opting to limit thelending of facilities to “acceptable” companies, the Uni¬versity by violating a general principle of freedom ofindividual choice invites what could become an equallyundesirable tyranny of the majority.In view of the return of Dow to Chicago this Mondayand the Left’s consideration of various plans of action,we are compelled to take a firmer position on the issue.This position can be only that freedom of choice mustbe maintained. 'Let's play again. First I punch youin the arm, then you hit me in the head, OK?'Last year we advocated that Chicago withdraw itsfunds from Continental Illinois Bank because of thatbank’s membership in a consortium that makes loans tothe racist Union of South Africa. Here too the University—whether it liked it or not—was faced with a moral deci¬sion; the difference is that by its nature the decision hadi to be made collectively and did not jeapordize individualliberties. Chicago’s endorsement of civilian control of nu¬clear energy is an example of a political decision actuallymade; the abolition of class ranking is another issue that: can be decided only collectively.The University’s membership in the Institute for De-! fense Analyses is a further example. By retaining its af-j filiation with the IDA, Chicago is giving tacit approvalto the Vietnam war. A referendum among all membersof the University community would undoubtedly indicatewidespread disapproval of this affiliation, and on thisground we urge the Committee of the Council of the Uni¬versity Senate to terminate Chicago’s membership whenit discusses the matter on Tuesday.In the Dow situation we reiterate that students, be¬ing the parties concerned, ought initially to decide wheth¬er all, none, or a selected few off-campus organizationsare to be lent University facilities for recruitment pur¬poses; and like any set of ground rules, the decision oncemade would have to be adhered to until changed. Butwe would hope the majority of those voting on the mat¬ter would recognize the dangers and difficulties involvedin embracing the last option.The limiting of University facilities for political rea¬sons in this case has frightening ramifications concern-: ing free speech and academic freedom. If Dow and otherrecruiters are to be resisted—no matter how obviouslythey should be—it must be accomplished on individualbases. To make a collective decision where one is notnecessary is to accept the principles of totalitarian rule.We wholly endorse a non-disruptive demonstrationagainst Dow on Monday, but cannot lend our support toactivities infringing upon the rights of students to be re¬cruited—blocking access to the representative, for in¬stance. For a disruptive demonstration against Dow, incontrast to civil disobedience over the Vietnam war in theform of draft resistance and related activities, would con¬sist only of unjustified militancy on the part of those forwhose employment Dow couldn’t care less. JEFFREY KUTADow and the New Left:Majorities and MinoritiesWhy the writer of today’s firstletter to the editors asked thather name be witheld is beyondme, for what she wrote crystal¬lized in a beautiful way the cur¬rent dilemma concerning thepresence of unpopular recruitersat Chicago and other universities— except for a few hidden as¬sumptions.First, not everyone recognizesDow Chemical as morally repre¬hensible for its role in the manu¬facture of napalm, a substancetoo well known by the Viet¬namese for its quality of stickingto human skin as it burns. ForDow continues to make its visitsin spite of the trail of conflictand — what’s more important toDow — the unfavorable publi¬city they leave; evidently, somepeople actually are being re¬cruited.ALSO, not everyone recognizesthe natural right of students tomake rules for themselves inmatters that concern them —who their University may lendits facilities to for recruitmentpurposes, for instance. This isclear in the power structures ofeducational institutions, whichhave a small and unrepresenta¬tive clique of administrators, orfaculty and administrators, mak¬ing decisions that affect the en¬tire academic community.After these two assump¬tions are granted (as they shouldbe), a third one presents itself,one that is impossible to accept.This is that people, like worms,cannot be made to realize theconsequences of their actions be¬fore they make them. A humanbeing venturing blindly out ontoan avenue in front of heavy traf¬fic doesn’t have to be forcedagainst his will to wait for thegreen; he can easily enough be warned to "look out.”The application of this in theDow situation is the following:Even though such companiesshould be opposed, and eventhough students should legallyhave the power to decide wheth¬er or not the University is tolend its facilities to such recruit¬ers, the individual’s freedom ofchoice should be spared on theassumption that he can be edu¬cated — if he isn’t already — tothe moral implications of work¬ing for an outfit like Dow. A gen¬eralization of this conclusion car¬ries with it a suggestion for arechanneling of New Left ener¬gies.TO USE THE racial crisis asan example: Civil rights hascome a long way in the past fewyears (and has a long way togo). It has come this far becausethe majority of the people andtheir elected representativeshave been educated to the truththat racial discrimination is onprinciple morally wrong. Thetrouble now is, given the sameopportunities open to whites,blacks still would hold a second-scale position in American so¬ciety because centuries of vic¬timization have left them ill-equipped to compete with whites.Drastic measures to correct thisdisparity must be undertaken.But as hard as it is tomake a lower-middle-class whitesee the merits of job trainingprograms and negative incometaxation over the strengtheningof the National Guard, convinc¬ing them or their representativesof the truth is the only road tolasting social change. Open hous¬ing and open recruiting are bothexamples of protection of thefew from tyranny of the many,and paradoxically both policies must be decided on by a vote ofthe majority just the way theU S. Constitution was made thelaw of the land.IT BOILS DOWN to this: thosewho would ban Dow and othersfrom Chicago — even if they constituted a majority of students —while right in declaring themoral reprehensibility of thatcompany, haven’t the "right” tosay that they are right and theminority wrong. Legally, Dowpancy. But ethically speaking thisis tyranny and in practice not avery good idea since some daythe tables could be turned.The Left too often forgets thatyou can’t produce social changeby hitting people over the headwith the truth, and the Dow issueis just one case in point. As Lin¬da Murray points out, the Uni¬versity is a racist institution inits housing policy — but this isa de facto rather than a con¬scious policy and she didn’tmake the distinction clear. Thiskind of sloppy argument is astypical of the Left as neglect ofthe principle involved in the Dowcase.In-group rhetoric against themajority and power playsagainst the minority are not theways to effect change.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.November 3, 1967 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwoAs any reader of McLuhanknows, mass media consists ofmuch more than publications.Broadcasting can reach any¬one with a radio, be he illiter¬ate, tired, blind, or preoccupied.It can talk to him, instead ofjust offering itself for his per-usual; and it exists in time in¬stead of space. Early radio menwere not broadcasters at all —they concentrated on point-to-point communicatons. Only after World War I was the idea oltransmitting programs to every¬one who might wish to tune input into practice.The chaos thereby resultingfrom a multiplicity of stationscaused the Federal Governmentto assign channels. Some stationswere operated by private corpor¬ations which profited by sellingair time. Many others, operatedby corporations, universities, andother bodies were run as publicnidiGOESFMservices, earning no revenue. Acommercial station was a val¬uable property, a non-commer¬cial one an expensive operation,and so radio stations came to beoperated only by those wealthyenough to afford them. Continual WUCBrearrangements of frequencies bythe Federal Government, and theneed for litigation to preventcommercial stations from talkingover non-commercials’ channels,made one educational institutionafter another abandon its broad¬ casting operation rather thancontinue to assume even highercosts to fight legal battles inhopes of retaining even less de¬sirable frequencies. Only a fewof those early educational sta¬tions survived. Essentially whatwas broadcast was determinedby who had money.INTO THIS SCENE of en¬trenched conservatism, project agroup of enthusiastic Universityof Chicago undergraduates. Acampus-limited station requiresno license, and can be constructedcheaply. Presto—“Underground'’radio station. This was WUCB.which began broadcasting in thebasement of Burton-Judson Courtson December 3, 1945. Mr. andMrs. Eugne Chimene, parentsof a founder of the station, don¬ated funds for equipment. OnlyB-J residents heard WUCB until1952, when an undergroundcable to the old C-Group dor¬mitories was leased. By 1959.other dormitories were receiv¬ing the station, and WUCBmoved from the basement of BJto its present studios in MitchellTower.Programming included alltypes of music, local and na¬tional news discussions, drama,and rebroadcasts of commercialFM stations. An application wasmade for FM broadcasting, andconstruction permit granted bythe Federal CommunicationsCommission in 1960. But, “Thepeople running the station areamateurs. . .” said Dean of Stu¬dents, John P. Netherton, and hetherefore refused to allow theFM plans to go through. Thisbrought on a decline in the sta¬tion, lasting until about 1963.AT THIS POINT, a renewedinterest developed, when aContinued on Page TwoWHPKContinued from Page Onegroup of students led by Char¬les Packer, adopting the name“Radio Midway,” who began torebuild the station. The worn-out equipment was repairedand where possible, replaced.The station’s image, too, waspatched up as the quality of thesignal and of programming im¬proved to former levels. Re¬broadcasts of WFMT were in¬stituted for listeners without FMradios. By 1965, plans were onceagain afoot for FM. In fiveyears, the situation had changedconsiderably.A new Dean of Students,Warner Wick, was sympatheticto the idea of a student-operatedcommunity station. A high per¬centage of undergraduates livedin small dorms and apartmentsand could not be efficientlyserved by closed circuit trans¬mission. And several area highschools had begun radio stations,indicating that perhaps collegestudents were indeed capable ofsuch an operation.ONCE AGAIN, money rearedits curly green head. It washoped that the station could beprovided with high-quality equip¬ment, which would be cheaperin the long run. By May, thisgoal had been abandoned, andthe hope was that merely de¬cent equipment could be bought.Even this could not be affored,however, until the Owl and Ser¬ pent Society decided that WUCBshould be its project for theyear. C&S has a tradition ofhelping campus organizationsand services to get started or toimprove, and aid was forthcom¬ing from many generous alum¬ni, members of O&S. By lastmonth, enough had been raisedto permit purchase of a goodused transmitter.O&S funds also will be usedto pay for the antenna and forconstruction work which hasbeen done in preparation for theinstallation of the transmitter.As of today, construction of thestation is not yet complete.When finished, it must be in¬spected by the FCC, tests mustbe made, and then a licenseshould routinely be issued with¬in a week. Broadcasting canthen begin.The variety of good program¬ming broadcast in Chicago ap¬pears to be shrinking. All-jazzWAAF has become just anotherrock station. WFMT, long con¬sidered among the nation’s bestfine-arts stations, is being boughtout. Still, there are many dif¬ ferent types of programs avail¬able to the Chicagoan. One canlisten to country & westernmusic, classical music, religiousincantations or rhythm andblues at almost any time, onsome station in the area. Turnon the radio, set the dial, andknow exactly what to expect—the same familiar music, talkcommercials, or whatever. AsLinus needs a blanket, so Chica¬go needs this sort of program¬ming.IN ADDITION, the peculiardemands and needs of the areaserved must be taken into ac¬count. The call letters WHPK-FM were chosen to indicate thestation’s desire to be a partici-pent in the life of Woodlawn,Hyde Park, Kenwood, and sur¬rounding areas, rather than onlya University medium. HydePark is a special sort of com¬munity, which could benefitfrom having a radio station inaddition to its weekly newspaperto serve its needs.WOODLAWN IS less unique,but perhaps more important.Woodlawn and the University are in constant conflict, eachside using the weapons it handlesbest. Communication betweenthem is difficult. If Woodlawncould be convinced to listen to aradio station run by Universitystudents, if Woodlawn’s tasteswere catered to at any time bythe station, then perhaps a med¬iating agency of sorts will havebeen established. It is a possi¬bility which will be explored.With goals as broad as these,rigid policies must be few. Thebasic guidelines for determin¬ing the programming of WHPK-FM will be the interests ex¬pressed by the station membersand the unserved demands inthe station’s listening area.WITH SUCH flexibility of pro¬gramming, it is impossible atthis time to say what the pro¬gram schedule will call forwhen the station first signs onthat it will be different fromanything else in Chicago—andthat the schedule will change as soon as the need for change ap¬pears. Sundays will include rockand rhythm and blues at timeswhen other stations abandon thisprogramming. The rest of theweek. . . Folk Music, Jazz, Clas¬sical music presented in a topi¬cal manner, including obsecureworks.WUCB WILL continue to oper¬ate as a closed-circuit station,broadcasting its own programsin the afternoon, relayingWHPK-FM to AM listeners atnight. Beginning staff memberswill participate in only WUCBuntil, with guidance from themore experienced, they aregood enough for WHPK-FM.Eventually, it is hoped that thetwo stations will be able tooperate completely separately,sharing only staff, each servingits own audience full-time. Likemany projects, this must waituntil adequate funds and spaceare avilable for spearate studiosand control rooms.THE NEW LEFT'S ANSWER TO LIFELINEThe Citizen's Forum will begin broadcasting five minute pro¬grams against the war in Vietnam on WTAQ (1300 on the AMdial), from 12:30 - 12:35 P.M. Monday Nov. 6th. Broadcastswill be aired every Monday and Thursday thereafter at the sametime.A mass meeting on Tues. Nov. 7th at 7.30 p.m. at Ida Noyeswill be held to discuss future programming. Social action, fellowship, intellectual explorationthe Sunday platform of theCHICAGO ETHICAL SOCIETYNov. 5: Charles V. Hamilton, co-author with StokclyCarmichael, “BLACK POWER: The Politics ofLiberation”-A dialogue with Mr. Hamilton.Nov. 12 “BE HAPPY BUT NOT TOO HAPPY -The Worldof Carl Sandburg” Leader, Walter Lawton Poemsand music410 S. Michigan Ave. — II a.m. — Students WelcomeL P’s 2 1 m Of A PP ANY CURRENT ALBUM *19/0 ■ ■ ONE WEEK DELIVERYC0MNALLY 643-3987THE BALANCE OF POWERIS CHANGING . . .THE SHIBBOLETHS OF THE COLDWAR ARE OUTDATED . . .THE EURAMERICAN ALLIANCEIS UNDER FIRE . . .Hima multi-national magazine ofEuropean/American affairs chartsthe dynamic movement of the newtechnological societies. Though writtenentirely (and entertainingly) in English,INTERPLAY draws upon the thinkingand experience ot seers and punditsfrom both shores of the Atlantic—university dons and deans,international affairs experts,industrialists, government officials,journalists, philosophers, not onlyfrom English-speaking countries butfrom all the countries of the Continent.If you are concerned about thefuture that is going to be theinheritance of those coming after, youwill welcome the intelligent andsprightly thrust into the EurAmericanfuture that INTERPLAY will presentten times a year.To take advantage of the Chartersubscription rate of $6.00(regularly $7.00), please fill outthe attached coupon.INTERPLAY200 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y 10019Please enroll me as a Charter subscriberto INTERPLAY at the special rate ot:§1 year (10 issues) t 6.002 years (20 issues) $11.003 years (30 issues) $15.00□ Payment enclosed □ Please bill meName .AddressCttv- «um» -Zip. DANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICALIKETHE BYRDSPAUL BUTTERFIELDNEIL DIAMONDCRYAN’ SHAMESBABY HUEYTHE BUCKINGHAMSTICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at L0 1 -8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 2000WIDE OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 8 P.M. HYDE PARK THEATERLAKE PARK AT 53rd STREETTelephone: NO 7-9071STARTS FRIDAY NOV. 3rdFIRST CHICAGO SHOWING“INGMAR BERGMAN has followedthe Swedish freedom into theexploration Of Sex.” -New York Post“INGMAR BERGMAN proves that afully clothed woman telling of asexual experience can make allthe nudities and perversions thathave been splattering the screenlately, seem like nursery schoolsensualities.” -World Journal Tribune&BIBI ANDERSSON / LIV ULLMANNADDED ATTRACTIONW.C. "A FATALFIELDS GLASS OF BEER"Frederico Fellini's LASTRADAGiulietta (JULIET OF THE SPIRITS) Massina and Anthony Quinn hit the road together. In Soc. Sci. 122 tonight at 6, 8. and 10. $1.00 Doc FilmsCulture VultureTwo events happened in Chi-in the past two weeks thatchanged Chicago cultural lifeabout as much as any two eventsin any two weeks possibly could.They were of course the openingof the Museum of ContemporaryArt and the reopening of the Aud¬itorium Theater.There are articles about both inthis WEEKEND and there is noreason for the Vulture to go intothem at length. We, along withmany other fine birds, were atthe Auditorium the big night andare ecstatic. And while our reac¬tion to the Contemporary Museummay be slightly less emotional,we are very happy to see a gapin the Chicago scene finally atleast partially filled.Incidentally an inside friend ofours at the Auditorium says thatyou might be able to get ticketsfor N. Y. Ballet peformancesthere tonight, Saturday, and Sun¬day, due to cancellations and no-shows. Call the box office first,922-2110.On CampusMeanwhile the regular culturallife at the campus goes on. AliAkbar Khan, who is usually heardaccompanying Ravi Shankhar’ssitar with his sarode, will play ina crammed Mandel Hall tonightat 8:30. The tickets have beensold out since the concert wasfirst announced (there are ru¬mors that they were seized bysome hippie-faculty-Indian consor¬tium.)There is, however, a fine al¬ternative: The Fifth Annual In¬ternational Folk Festival, whichTHETRULY EVILRICH ANDFAMOUSLIBERATIONFRONTBLUESBANDFRI.NITE 8:30-10:30 will be at International House to¬night at 8. This festival will begiven over entirely to folk danc¬ing with folkdances of Yugoslav¬ia, Russia, India, Armenia, Indo¬nesia, Scotland, Norway, Sweden,Ukrania, Poland, Lithuania, Is¬rael, West Africa, and Japan,among others. (There is an arti¬cle about it elsewhere in WEEK¬END.) The two-and-one-half-hourfestival costs only a dollar forstudents ($2 for everyone else.)Afterward there will be open folk¬dancing to live music. Also to¬night Doc Films is showing Fel¬lini’s masterwork La Strada at 6,8, and 10 in Soc Sci 122 (ad¬mission $1.) This should not bemissed (but neither should AliAkbar Khan or the Folk Fes¬tival.)More FilmsIngmar Bergman’s most re¬cent, most beautiful film, Per¬sona, starts Friday at the HydePark theater. It is a hauntingstory of two women—an actresswho cannot or will not speak andher nurse—whose personalitiesbegin to merge. Bergman’s useof black and white photography ismagnificent, and his use of thefilm as film is unparalled. Per¬sona is perhaps the best film ofthe year.Saturday night Doc Films is having a comedy triple-featurewith the Marx Brothers’ Night atthe Opera, Mae West’s I’m NoAngel, and W. C. Fields’ TheBank Dick, all for a dollar. Tues¬day they are showing OrsonWelles’ Macbeth (Soc. Sci. 122, 75cents, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.) AndWednesday in their Westernseries will be Virginia City, di¬rected by Michael Curtiz (Soc.Sci. 122, 75 cents, 7:15 and 9:30.)Bergman’s Sawdust and Tinselis being shown Sunday night at7:30 p.m. in Ida Noyes by theGraduate Germanics Club as parto f their German and SwedishFilm Festival.At Hillel House on Sunday willbe the Chicago film Goldstein,produced by two University grad¬uates, and based on the legend ofthe prophet Elijah. Hillel Houseis 5715 Woodlawn. The film is at8:30 p.m.ArtThere are two art shows oncampus which will close in aweek, and which ought to be seenbefore they do. “Flying,” a three-student show reviewed two weeksago in WEEKEND has graphicsby Cheryl Adams, paintings byRob Allen, and sculpture by Ktri-cy Schulson at the gallery in Lex¬ington from 9 to 5 until November10.A show of recent photographsHULL HOUSE AT PARKWAY500 E. 67th ST.Preteats•THE LAUNDROMAT"ROGER CO.INISHThrough Nov. 11 Friday and Saturday 8:30—$3.00Sunday 7:30— $2.50Student Discount, $1 00 off Phone Reservations 324-3800 by John Demou are on show atMidway Studies (6016 Ingleside)through November 11. They areopen weekdays from 9 to 5 andweekends from 12 to 5.The Modern Makonde Sculptureexhibit in Goodspeed will con¬tinue through November 19. (It isopen weekdays 10 to 5, and Satur¬days 1 to 5.) David Katsive willreview it next week in WEEK¬END.On Monday at Hillel House anexhibit called The Tragedy of So¬viet Jewry opens and will bethere through November 18. Pan¬els depict the recent history andculture, the oppression and deter¬ioration of Jewish life in SovietRussia, in photographs, charts,and statistical data.Next week the Vulture will takea look at some of the downtowncultural happenings, principally theater. Eventually we hope toget settled down to giving you arunning account of what is goingon, culture-wise, around Chicago.(By the way, if any of you cul¬ture-makers are reading, pleasekeep us in touch with what youare doing. You can write: TheMaroon, Ida Noyes Hall, 121 E.59th, Chicago 60637—to the Vul¬ture’s attention.)Norman Mailer"The Deer Park”HARPER THEATREBU8-1717STUDENTSHALF-PRICETuesday, Wednesday,Thursday 8:30Sunday 7:30THE MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium 8PMNovember 6ALVIN W. GOULDNERThe Romantic Movement &: Social SciencesOther lectures in the series will include:Nov. 13 Leonard KriegerCulture, Cataclysm, and ContingencyNov. 20 Gerald HoltonOn the Irrelevance of Crucial Ex¬perimentsSERIES ADMISSION $10.00 (no single lecture ticketsavailable). U. of C. students, faculty and staff mayrequest complimentary tickets by calling 3137 or fromthe Information Desk, Administration Bldg.W.C.Fields in THEBANKDICKAlso, Marx Brothers in NIGHT AT THE OPERA at 6:30, Mae West in I’M NO ANGEL at 8:00 and THE BANK DICK at 9:30. MandelHall. $1.00. Doc Films. Saturday Nov. 4.A Scholarship Fund BENEFITU. of C. Laboratory SchoolsAdventures in the ArtsMANDEL HALL THEATER57th Street- at University Ave.Fri. Nov. 10th -8:30 P.M.Sal. Nov. 11th - 1:30 P.M. & 8=30 P.M.TICKETS: ’2.50, ’2.00 and ’i.50 BOOK SALEOver 2000 Vo Is.Sale Tables Re-Stocked DailyLibrary Duplicates and Discardsto be sold byThe University of ChicagoBookstoreat University of Chicago Bookstoreand Mrs. RobinPHONE: ES 5-5898 or writeADVENTURES IN THE ARTS5747 S. KIMBARK AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60637all seats reserved Six Days Only Oct. 30 - Nov. 3, 1967 8 A.M. - 5 P.M.Books Twenty Five Cents and UpGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.November 3, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3Wm Qnfoersitg of ChicagoROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELFIFTY-NINTH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE1967-ORATORIO FESTIVAL • 1968RICHARD VIKSTROMDirector of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND MEMBERS OFTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRANOVEMBER 12 • CURLEW RIVER (Chicago Premiere) Benjamin Britten8:00 P.M. THOMAS SCHERMAN, Musical Director; members of the Little Orchestra Societyand Concert Opera Association of New York.DECEMBER 10FEBRUARY 4MARCH 10APRIL 7MAY 5 • MESSIAH George Frederick Handel• A GERMAN REQUIEM AND NANIE Johnnes Brahms• MASS Igor StravinskyAPPAREBIT REPENTINA DIES Paul HindemithTHE PEACEABLE KINGDOM Randall Thompson• THE PASSION ACCORDING TO ST. MATTHEW . Johann Sebastian Bach• TEDEUM Zoltan KodalyMASS IN F MINOR Anton BrucknerALL PERFORMANCES ARE AT 3:30 P.M. UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATEDPrograms and dates subject to change in the event of unforeseen circumstancesMonday evening at 8:00DECEMBER 11 • MESSIAH G. F. HandelAdmission by single ticket only; not included in Season Ticket price.SEASON TICKETS (6 CONCERTS)Reserved ....... . $18.00 CURLEW RIVER (Single Admission Prices)Reserved ....... . $5.00General Admission ..... . 15.00 General Admission . • • • • 4.00UC Faculty/Staff ..... . 12.00 UC Faculty/Staff • • • • 3.50Student ....... 9.00 Student • • • • 3.00DECEMBER 11 MESSIAH (Single AdmissionReserved ....... Prices). $4.50 UC Faculty/Staff • • • • 3.00General Admission ..... 3.50 Student • • • • 2.50TICKETS ON SALE AT: Ticket Central, 212 N. Michigan AvenueUniversity of Chicago Bookstore, 5802 S. Ellis AvenueKendall College, 2408 Orrington Avenue, EvanstonWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th StreetCooley's Candles, 5211 S. Harper AvenueMail Orders: ORATORIO FESTIVAL * 5810 S. WOODLAWN AVENUE • CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60637Please make checks payable to the University of Chicago and enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope.For further information call: Midway 3-0800, Extension 3387, 33884 WEEKEND MAGAZINE November 3, 1967Beneath the Bombs:AVisit to North VietnamRennie Davis’s first-hand report from North Vietnam‘ M.■ y eager ac¬ceptance of an invitation beneaththe bombs of my own govern¬ment, might not have been theusual response of the detachedjournalist seeking “a story.” Iwas not a “neutral” observer, tobe frank. I wanted informationthat would be useful to Amer¬icans trying to end the war-information on the mysterious“fragmentation” bombs that killpeople without damaging build¬ings, on the U.S. targets that arenot military, and the facelessVietnamese on whom this countryhas released its advanced weap¬ons of destruction.I went to Vietnam with pre¬ gets defined and attacked byAmerican airpower. We saw theremains of these targets: vil¬lages in rubble, crumblingpagodas, blasted schools, broken,empty hospitals. We met the vic¬tims of pellet bombs and na¬palm. In the most populated sec¬tions of Hanoi, we saw the bombdamage the U.S. government re¬peatedly denies: a half block ofHue Street; three houses on MaiHac De Street’ a hospital inThanh Tri District — all locatedin areas of high population in thecenter of Hanoi and attackedwithin the past two months.B'ut we alsoexperienced the unexpected —another Vietnam, one that seemsincomprehensible against the of the Vietnamese people in themilitary strategy of their coun¬try.Such indications turned to con¬clusions as we learned that onthose highways, busy with trafficevery night, the eyes and earsof thousands of peasants warnthe vehicles of approachingenemy aircraft. Traveling byjeep at night, with lights dimmedand shielded from U.S. planes, Iwondered what could protectmilitary convoys from night at¬tacks. The roar of motors, theconstant attention on the newlyrepaired road, gave no opportu¬nity for watching the sky. Sud¬denly, a peasant woman wavedus off the road. Lights were cut.We waited as a plane circled butfound nothing.“What we saw was a streetcalled Hang Van Thu wherethere were a thousand familieswho had lost their homes, alarge church that looked likeGod sat on it, bombed dikes,and streets that were dark anddeserted A,conceived opinions about thewar: that our objective to “repelagression” from the North wascontradicted by a Southern liber¬ation army that was resisting theU.S. successfully; that the offi¬cial aim to “preserve freedom”was blackened by local dictator¬ships and concentration camps;that our cry against Chinese “ex¬pansion” ignored the fact thatChina has no troops in SoutheastAsis whereas U.S. bases are inKorea, Japan, the Phillipines,Formosa, Okinawa, Thailand,Laos and Vietnam.I went to Vietnam not to gath¬er information “on the enemy,”but to understand, if I could,why the most powerful nation inhistory, with 60 percent of theworld’s wealth, using the mostadvanced weapons, was beingdefeated by an army of “peas¬ants”. I traveled with six otherAmericans, including journalists,a film maker, community organ¬izers and a minister. The triphad grown out of a conference inBratislava, Czechoslovakiawhere 41 Americans and 31 Viet¬namese had exchanged opinionsand information in a six-day dis¬cussion. Seven of us had been in¬vited to Vietnam to see firsthand what we had heard in Bra¬tislava.We saw, of course, what wasexpected: the wreckage, the suf¬fering, the terrible loss. We trav¬eled at dawn, at dusk andthroughout the night to the tar¬ American picture of a stubbornpeasant country being blastedback into the Stone Age.Out of Hanoi, south on High¬way 1, we traveled on a road theU.S. air force claims to have de¬molished. Trucks, jeeps and evenbuses passed us by the hun¬dreds. I saw rocket and anti-air¬craft defenses everywhere, andon the move. Every night, motorvehicles along with thousands ofbicycles appeared to move anentire defense system into a new • bout 30 milessouth of Hanoi, we visited thecity of Nam Dinh, defined by theU.S. air force as a “military tar¬get” because of its small textilefactory and railroad line.What we saw was a streetcalled Hang Van Thu where athousand families had lost theirhomes, a large church that lookedlike God sat on it, bombed dikes,and streets that were dark andvirtually deserted.Two years ago this city beganto disperse to the countryside,along with every population cen¬ter in North Vietnam. We visitedexamples of this dispersal. Onethat I shall never forget was an“evacuated” hospital.The hospital was in a residen¬tial village. The houses wereconstructed of bamboo, pastedwith mud and bamboo strips —several dozen in all, with ricefields as their front yard. One ofthese bamboo houses, however,was distinct: it didn’t have kidsrunning in and out of the door¬way. And this was the hospital.We saw patients, all victims ofbombing raids. Under each bedwas a large cement undergroundshelter. We saw a surgery table,in a large pit well below groundlevel with an overhead light con-“A woman, perhaps in her60’s, presented us with a pieceof the bomb dropped that day,with the only words: ‘Pleasetake this back to America,where it belongs 9 99pattern, making useless, accord¬ing to the Vietnamese, the hun¬dreds of photographs taken byU.S. reconnaissance planes only12 hours earlier.This total reshuffling of a de¬fense by night was my first indi¬cation of the mass involvement nected to a small generator thatwas turned by a bicycle pedal,Tran Thac Nghien, the hospital’sdirector, explained to us that theprinciples of the hospital re¬quired that they be “neat, light,and mobile.” He said that manysections of the original Nam Dinh hospital existed in villageslike this one and that they allmoved regularly.The incredible camouflage andthe close relationship between avillage and the “programs” itsupported made “dispersal” the ject to pellets that cut deep intothe body, tearing and ripping ina zigzag pattern, causing longsplits in bones and digging deeptrenches in internal orans.We saw the markings of CBU’s— walls marred from tiny, scat-“I went to Vietnam, not togather information ‘on theenemy,’ but to understand, if /could, why the most powerfulnation in history, with 60percent of the world’s wealth,using the most advancedweapons, was being defeatedby an army of ‘peasants. 9 99most exciting operation I wit¬nessed in Vietnam. We saw mod¬ern machinery, turning out gearsand axles, hidden in peasant vil¬lages. We met children of Hanoistudying in evacuated schools,under straw roofs 15 miles fromthe city. The dispersal we sawwas more than a defense inNorth Vietnam. It was a way ofbuilding a society at the grassroots, underneath U.S. bombing.I• n Nam Dinh,we had our first introduction to“fragmentation” bombs. We hadheard an explosion a mile and ahalf away in the morning, split¬ting the air with a terrifyingroar. By evening, on the way toa small women’s militia school,we crossed the spot that had re¬ceived what we heard. It ap¬peared to be the one area ofNam Dinh that still had largenumbers of people. A woman,perhaps in her 60’s, presented uswith a piece of the bombdropped that day, with the onlywords: “please take this back toAmerica, where it belongs.”During our visit, I talked atlength with a French military ex¬pert, Jean Paul Viegier, whoclaimed that one out of everytwo bombs dropped in NorthVietnam is a fragmentationbomb, a “Cluster Bomb Unit”,or “CBU.” According to Vigier,who was a former World WarII general in the French resis¬tance, the CBU is an “ingen¬ious” American weapon, neverbefore used in warfare, that killspeople without destroying proper¬ty or material. One CBU sprays640 small “bomblets” into theair, each of which contains 300steel pellets, slightly larger thana beebee. Some 202,000 steel pel¬lets create an area of death over1000 yards long and 250 yardswide. Every living thing is sub-tered chips — all over North Vietnam including populated sec¬tions of Hanoi.-®- wo distinct re¬alities exist side by side in Viet¬nam today. One is measured byhuman suffering and the emptyshells of former hospitals, fac¬tories, schools and churches. Theother, which is not so familiar tous, is found in the countrysidewhich is undertaking a remark¬able social experiment.Vietnamese women, who twoyears ago, could not read orwrite, attend medical school toprepare for service in the villagehospital teams that dot the coun¬tryside. Peasants, after carryingwater across a dike for 10 hours,crowd into a night class on mod¬ern agricultural techniques.These things make up anotherside of Vietnam. Throughout thecountry, the war has sharpenedthe vital instruments of the fu¬ture: health, education, agricul¬ture, industry — instrumentsthat are not concentrated in thecities but are highly decentral¬ized.There is a confidence that per¬meates Vietnam that has beenbuilt at great human cost. Ev¬eryone suffers the loss of some¬one close. No way has yet beenfound to move the villages them¬selves and everyday bombs ripthrough villages picking theirrandom victims. Yet„ every¬where I traveled, I heard andsaw it affirmed that the UnitedStates cannot smash this society.One gets the distinct impressionthat the United States has onlysucceeded in forcing Vietnam todemonstrate to itself that thereis no limit to what a united peo¬ple’s will can accomplish.Mr. Davis returned to Chi¬cago from North Vietnam lastweek. He works here with JOINCommunity Union in Uptown.November 3, 1967*'* tt i', % \ l' it \ /i't'rct / • iVi?rr- \ WEEKEND MAGAZINE 5You get one with everybottle of Lensine, aremovable contact lenscarrying case. Lensine,by Murine is the new,all-purpose solutionfor completecontact lens care.It ends the needfor separatesolutions forwetting, soakingand cleaning yourlenses. It’s theone solution forall your contactlens problems.WEEKEND MAGAZINEr«Friday & Saturday EveningsTheBigChicagoBandAmerica's greatest new bigband sound Sixteen menplaying smashing modernarrangements of originaltunes for today s listenersTwo blocks west ofMcCormick Place311 East 23rd StreetFor Reservations call225-6171 J WW1For 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 LEARN FOUR RELATEDLANGUAGES SIMULTANEOUSLYEnroll in TEUTONIC GROUP Iand use and compareDanish-God dag min herreGerman-Wie geht es IhnenSwedish-Mycket bra,tack,Och Ni ?Dutch-lk ook.dank U.Totziens.Enroll in ROMANIC GROUP Iand use and compareFrench- Bonjour monsieurSpanish -Como esta usted?Portugese-Muito bem.obrigado.E o Sr.?Ital ian-Anch’io grazie.Arrivederci.• small classes, two-hour sessions; 13 sessions; once ortwice a week.• new comparative method.Slovonic |-(Russian.Polish,Czech,Serho-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 grammatncal aids,special texts.SPECIAL STUDENT RATES: $2.50 an hour for classes offive or more.GROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE - 288-0675Mae West in I’M NO ANGELSandwiched between Marx Brothers NIGHT AT THE OPERA at 6:30 and W. C. Fields THE BANK DICK at 9:30, don’t miss Maeat 8:00 in Mandel. $1.00 for all three. Tomorrow night. Doc Films.If Matthew Thornton had signed his namewith the Scripto Reading Pen, he’d be remembered today.Scripto’s new Reading Pen makes what you write eas- new kind of pen with a durable Fiber-Tip. Get the re- j* New fiber tipier to read. That’s why Scripto calls it the Reading Pen. tillable Reading Pen for $1. Refills come in 12 colors. IromIt’s a new Fiber-Tip pen that writes clear and bold. Available in a non-refillablc model for 39t. Write with ^Not a fountain pen, not a ball-point, this is an entirely Scripto’s new Reading Pen. You’ll be remembered. LRDJNovember 3, 1967over¬nightcaseThe Auditorium Upturns:A Tumintf Point in the Second City?Chicago Historical SocietyThe Grand Opening, 1889Chicago Daily NewsThe Grand Re-opening, 1967EJ-Jyeryone wasthere. The dowagers, coveredwith jewells and furs. The gen-glemen, grumbling in their tux¬edos (“The only reason I madeyou wear this, George, was tosee what you looked like inone.”) The ushers in white ties,directing people to their seats,hardly knowing themselveswhere the seats were becausethis was the first time the thea¬ter had been used in 26 years.Marshall Field, IV. Mrs. Ferdi¬nand W. Peck, Jr. Richard J.Daley, Mayor.Before they were all settleddown in their seats (the sameseats that were there when thethe theater was built in 1889,the lights dimmed, a spotlightcame on and Norman Rosswalked to a podium on the stageand said “Good evening, ladiesand gentlemen.”And despite all the rustling andtalking and lack of attention, de¬spite the prosaic quality of thesefirst words spoke in the Audito¬rium Theater since 1946, despitethe fact that Ross spoke thewords and did not shout them,everyone heard.The first grand opening ofLouis Sullivan’s and DankmarAdler’s Auditorium Theater wasNovember 9, 1889. Italian operastar Adelina Patti sang twoverses of the new hit song,“Home Sweet Home” (for $2,-000 a verse). President Benja¬min Harrison was there, alongwith the governors of severalstates. The second grand open¬ing of the Auditorium was lastTuesday night. Mayor Daley wasthere, and President Johnsonsent a telegram. The New YorkCity Balet performed A Midsum¬mer Night’s Dream. (IronicallyChicago had to go out of townfor the star attractions of bothopenings.) While the opening was magni¬ficent and important for Chicago,the reopening, if not as magnifi¬cent (one gets the feeling that in1889 the cream of society knewbetter how to act and dress likethe cream of society) was per¬haps more important.For Chicago is pretty good atbuilding great buildings, probab¬ly better than any other majorAmerican city. But it is alsopretty good at tearing themdown. Only five years ago Sul¬livan’s Garrick Theater, whichwas in about the same state ofdisrepair as the Auditorium wasfive years ago, was torn down.So perhaps this is a turning pointfor Chicago. Perhaps the citymay begin to pull itself out ofthe Second City Syndrome — asyndrome it confirms with ev¬ery Garrick Theater it demol¬ishes and every McCormickPlace built.In any case it was a turningpoint for the Auditorium Thea¬ter. The resotration is not fin¬ished — back stage needs a lotof work, and the gilt stencilingthat will finally decorate everyinch of the theater, not cov¬ered with Sullivan’s plastic orna¬mentation, has yet to be done (itwill cost nearly 10,000 just top upup the scaffolding to put on thestencils.Though it is not complete, therestoration is far enough alongto give you an excellent idea ofwhat the place will be like whenfinally completed. The effect islike being inside a great goldenring. The turn-of-the-centuryelectric lights, the gilded plaster,the gold and ivory seats, thegreat width of the theater, theperfect sightlines, the acoustics,the four big gold arches, the gold¬framed stage, the side murals,the proscenium frieze, all add upto make the place warm, person¬al, and beautiful. It is without adoubt the best, most magnificent theater we have ever been in,and we have been in most ofthose that are considered tobe the best in America.You will quickly gather that weare just about ecstatic about theAuditorium Theater. We wereless ecstatic about the New YorkCity Ballet’s Midsummer Night’sDream. The program matchedthe evening’s romantic splendor,but it lacked both the substanceand technical balletic challengethat the occasion deserved.Edward Villella portrayed hisrole as Oberon with a regalgrace and dramatic excellencethat characterized most of theNew York City Ballet’s perform¬ance.Suzanne Farrell’s delicate Ti-tania was supported by a finecorps de ballet in the first act,featuring the really delightfuluse of a young children’s groupin the forest scenes. Here Bal¬anchine achieved an interpreta¬tion of Shakespeare’s play thatwas both technically imaginativeand dramatically effective.The fanciful, comic flavor ofA Midsummer Night’s Dreamwas perhaps most vividly dancedby Arthur Mitchell as Puck. Ashe wove magic love spells andengaged in forest chases andduels, Mitchell performed witha vibrant technical skill and anexcitement in his role thatbrought the ballet to life. Hemade the audience laugh and re¬lax, a happy relief from the pom¬posity into which such an open¬ing can lapse. Equally charmingwas the fresh portrayal of thetwo crossed couples by MimiPaul, Patricia McBride, KentStowell, and Marnee Morris.The second act’s wedding cele¬brations could have been elimina¬ted altogether as unnecessary tothe plot. To compound this, Bal¬anchine’s choreography for thecorps de ballet here was unin¬spired, and its execution was im¬ precise in timing. Balanchinefailed to spark the sequence be¬yond a ballet of stilted classicgesture and pose, not even re¬deeming the dramatic superfluitywith exciting dance. MelissaHayden and Conrad Ludlow, fill¬ing in for Jacques d’Amboise,executed the Act II Divertisse¬ment rather tediously completingthe second act which was, at anyrate, happily brief.Scenery and lighting by DavidHays were especially lovelywithout being opulent. Mme Kar-inska’s elegant costuming wasnotably light for such a ballet.Still, the opening was a mag¬ nificent, enchanted evening. Itmay be possible to get tickets, totonight’s performance, and Sat¬urday’s and Sunday’s, if somepeople cancel. So call the Audi¬torium box office on the chancethat they have. In any case go tothe Auditorium (hopefully to givethe Theater Council whateverpennies and nickels you canscrape together) and ask to beallowed to see it. No show isbooked to immediately follow theballet. But when the word getsaround that the Auditorium isback, it will be booked solid.ROGER BLACKDEBORAH CANTORA New Museum for Chientfo.Aiter nearlyfifteen years of dreaming, threeyears of ambitious searching, sixmonths of frantic planning, andfour days of elaborate festivities,Chicago’s Museum of Contempo¬rary Art opened to the public onOctober 26th.The opening ceremonies, whichincluded a press luncheon, ablack-tie cocktail preview anddinner at the Ambassador, twodays of champagne previews, anevening of discotheque at theCheetah, and a happening at Sec¬ond City, gave some idea of theenergy, ambition, and directionof this new institution. It seemsto have been dropped, fullygrown, into the midst of Chica¬go’s Art Gallery district on E.Ontario St.The museum has no immediateplans to house a permanent col¬lection. Instead, exhibitions willbe shifted at four to five week intervals in1 the upper arid lowergalleries. Since it is not really amuseum, and since many of theworks to be shown do not fitwithin the conventional usage ofthe word “Art”, a more descrip¬tive title for the museum wouldbe “The Gallery for Contempo¬rary Ideas (Presented in VisualForm).”There is unanimous agreementamong those concerned with thestate of Art in Chicago that thenew museum is exactly what thecity needs to keep the public in¬formed and sympathetically in¬terested in the most current art.Furthermore, a measurableamount of pressure has beenlifted from the local galleriessince they are no longer bur¬dened with this educational task.Jan van der Marck, the formerchief curator at the Walker ArtCenter in Minneapolis and the di¬rector of the Contemporary Mu¬seum, has set up a program of ex¬hibitions which is highly divers- fied and adventurous. The showswill try to be an international artinformation service. In someinstances the works may even betwo or three jumps ahead of theartist which, of course, meansthat they will be even furtheraway from the grasp of the gen¬eral public. To combat this, themuseum is planning an extensiveeducational program of tours,lectures, concerts, films, andevents to help justify or clarifythe works being shown.The museum’s first exhibition,“Pictures to be Read — Poetryto be Seen” is not as avant-gardelooking as all of the above mightseem to imply. Each piece onexhibit represents a form of in¬termedia — art which reliesheavily on words, text, or picto-graphic images to carry itsmeaning. Most of the works de¬mand a close scrutiny, a literalreading, and an ability to makeassociations on your own withthe material presented. Many appear to be puzzles, posingquestions with no answer offered.The burden is placed upon theobserver to interpret or philoso¬phize. Strangely enough, thepieces that are easiest to under¬stand are the two that are theleast conventional — Allan Kap-row’s “Words” and Alison Know¬les’ “The Big Book”.“Words” is an environment oftwo rooms, one bright, noisy, fullof crudely lettered signs whichthe visitor is invited to supple¬ment, followed by a smaller,subdued room, supplied with fatsticks of chalk to be used on theinterior walls. It is all rathervivid, playful, and suggestive ofurban clamor and graffiti. “TheBig Book” also is an environ¬ment, an eight-foot-tall carouselof pages through which the spec¬tator can walk, crawl or scram¬ble. The book is incomplete untila person walks through it. Then,the main character is that veryperson and the story is about how the person reacts and asso¬ciates with what confronts himduring his “life” inside thebook. This situation amusinglyconfounds the usual art-life anal¬ogies.The lower gallery sports agraphic exhibition entitled:“Claes Oldenburg: Projects forMonuments” among which areincluded his proposals for amammoth windshield wiper forBuckingham Fountain in Chica¬go, a colossal banana (halfpeeled) for Times Square in NewYork, and a soft vinyl drainpipemonument, T-shaped, for To¬ronto.The material is very wry andwitty. In many instances, thedrawing is strikingly adept andfluid. It is an easier show to ab¬sorb than the intense restless oneupstairs.The museum is going to be anexciting and vital activity to fol¬low.DAVID KATSIVENovember 3, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINEt t « i v ? v * '' W V r .Folkdancing:Center Stage at the Fifth Folk FestivalFolk dancing at Chicago, to most merely a line inthe weekly calendar, has in fact a large, enthus¬iastic following on campus, and it takes ce\terstage tonight at the Fifth Annual Chicago FolkFestival at 8 p.m. at International House.Balkan Igre, an avid study group of Yugoslavianfolklore and dance on campus, will headline theprogram with performances of dances of Montene¬gro, Serbia, and Macedonia.Montenegro is a rough land of rocky mountainsand deep gorges; while other parts of Yugoslaviaare fast becoming modernized and westernized,little of this has come to Montenegro. Men stillgather on market days to show off in proud, stren¬uous dances to the music of their own voices andthe rhythmic sounds of their tapping feet. Mendance wildly, identifying themselves with the eagleof the mountains; women join the dance and enticethe men with shimmying hip movements.The Israeli Dancers, also a University group, willentertain with dances from this young, vigorousnation. The new state of Israel has managed in afew short years to create its own folklore by mixingthe various backgrounds of its people. Israeli dancescontain elements brought by Jews from every land,and include European styles, Yemenite rhythms,and the twisting desert steps of the Arabs. Menand women often dance the same steps, combiningmany backgrounds in coy and flirtatious courtingdances.The Popovich Brothers Tamburitza Orchestra willalso perform and will provide music for open folkdancing after the show.Tickets for the evening are $2.00 for the generalpublic and $1.00 for students and children.Photographs by Robert Rice WEEKENDOf Culture, Dissent, and SatireThe Chicago Maroon MagazineEditor Ed ChikofskyManaging Editor Roger BlackContributing Editors T. C. FoxDavid KatsiveStaff Photographers Marc PoKempnerRobert RiceIN THE AVANT-GARDE WE TRUST...On Oct. 29th, Aardvard Cinematheque presented a sneak preview of THE PALA CE OF PLEASURE, a dual-projection color film byCanadian film-maker John Hofsess. Based on 108 Evaluation Sheets returned after the showing, this is how the audience responded:Rating ExcellentScale (9) (8) Good(7) (6) Average(5) (4) Fair(3) (2) Poor(ifNumberof Sheets 39 23 21 5 6 4 5 0 2Comments ranged from “a very beautiful film” “a first class work of art” “excellent light and color composition as well as synchroniza-tion of screens,” “intriguing treatment of the contrast between the horrors of our world and the beauty,” “very provocative” “rivals inimagery the finest films I have seen” “startlingly beautiful, profoundly poetic,” “what a beautiful, sensitive film.’” to “too much tosee at once” “there is no future for dual-projection films” and “the only person who would take offence to this movie might be L. B. J.”We invite you to come to THE PALACE OF PLEASURE, November 5 to 12th, 7-9-11 p.m.You'll probably enjoy it too.AARDVARK CINEMATHEQUE1608 NORTH WELLS (in Piper *s Alley)The Home of New Cinema in Chicago.8 WEEKEND MAGA7ANE November 3, 1967Letters to the Editors of The MaroonFree ChoiceAs I passed Oriental Institutethis morning, I paused to watcha very long worm elongatingaway from the cool moist grass,precisely bisecting the 90-degreeangle formed by the pavement atthe junction of 58th and Univer¬sity. In his wake was a faintlyglistening trail. He moved withsurprising speed toward the busystreet. Out there lay countlessmachinery for his division andsubdivision, compression and ob¬literation. I paused a momentand considered: should I returnhim to the grass, and his normalmetier? I walked on and theworm continued to define his linetoward the hypotenuse.The moral question continuedto bother me. Had I abdicatedmy responsibility? Had I chosento remain uninvolved in this ex¬istential drama? Or had my in¬action confirmed his right to afree choice?NAME WITHHELDBY REQUESTOn McNeillIn his recent comments in TheMaroon Mr. McNeill continues tohold himself aloof from seriousdebate; he conceals himself be¬hind an alleged need for secretdecision-making and does noteven try to confront the evidenceof tremendous confusion in theHistory Department concerningthe connections—or lack of con¬nections— amorg scholarship, con¬victions and appointments. In ad¬dition, he makes certain errors offact.To review some of the evidence—and to add some more:On September l(i, 1966 Profes¬sor Richard Storr, a senior Amer¬ican historian, and thus one ofthe men who was about to makethe decision concerning my re¬newal, said to me, “Of course,your renewal will be a controver¬sial affair in light of your parti¬cipation in the sit-in.’’ No end ofassertions by Mr. McNeill thatmy politics were not discussed“during the deliberations of thetenure group” will explain thisaway.IN NOVEMBER THE Pro¬vost returned my case to theHistory Department. I have nevercontended that Levi, in McNeill’swords, “rejected (the depart¬ment’s recommendation) or sent(it) back for reconsideration.” Ihave no such vision of the Pro¬vost as a benevolent tyrant,struggling alone to preserve aca¬demic freedom. What I said isthat Levi “remarked that thecase against m e was not suf¬ficient justification for droppingme” and that the History Depart¬ment “did better the secondtime.” Last spring Mr. McNeillmade it crystal clear that hewould never admit that it hap¬pened that way, even if it had:“Even if it (my case) had been(reconsidered on the suggestionof “higher officials,”) he toldThe Maroon, “I wouldn’t tellyou.” Although this would seemto render useless any furthertestimony from Mr. McNeill onthis matter, he has since relentedslightly. His first response to mycontention this fall was whatseemed at least a partial acknow¬ledgment: “not exactly true.”Then he clammed up, speaking of the need for secrecy. More re¬cently he has felt the need toamplify his earlier remarks andhas opened a pandora’s box bydoing so: now he acknowledgesthat Levi participated in a discus¬sion of my case in a meeting ofthe department’s full professors.McNeill’s various statementsshould be read in the light ofanother one, made last April 18:then he argued that neither stu¬dents nor administrators arequalified to participate in suchdecisions, but the latter, nonethe¬less, have a “necessary voice. . .oecause they are the custodiansof money. . .”ALTHOUGH WE are not per¬mitted to know what members ofthe tenure group said in the de¬partment meetings concerningme, we do have indications ofwhat some of them think aboutconvictions and scholarship. InNovember of last year an articleby Preston and Sterling MortonProfessor of History Daniel Boor-stin entitled “Good-By, M r.Chips: The Dissenting Profes¬sors” appeared in The ChicagoSun-Times (November 7, 1966)and in more than one hundredother newspapers across thecountry. This murky piece (whichdraws conclusions about the aca¬demic advancement of dissentingprofessors on the basis of the ex¬perience of Lawrence Kimpton,Nicholas Katzenback, Dean Rusk,Eugene Rostow and Daniel P.Mognihan) explains professorialdissent in this way: “publicitybuilds academic careers and in-stiuttions compete for news¬worthy professors.” Thus, farfrom being a sign of possible“vigor or independence of mind/’dissent is “simply another publicrelations gimmick. . .” (All ofthis seems to make some sensewhen applied to Moynihan et. al.;when applied to dissenting pro¬fessors, such as Eugene Geno¬vese (of Sir George WilliamsUniversity, Montreal), NormanPollack (Wayne State Universi¬ty), and Staughton Lund (Chica¬go State College) it is ludicrous).CLAIMING TO FAVOR truedissent, Boorstir worries aboutthe bad effects of what he imag¬ines to be the dissenters’ “aca¬demic immunity.” “Reputableinstitutions,” he tells us, havebeen overtolerant of dissenters:“doubly cautious lest they under¬estimate the professional compe¬tence of dissenters, not infre¬quently they lean over backwardto avoid the shadow of intoler¬ance.” Even if the dissentingprofessor should be dismissed,that is no cause for concern: “heis almost certain to becomesomebody’s hero.” (Here Boor-stin shows as much sensitivityto the professor’s academic free¬dom as he does in his scholarlywritings to the religious freedomof such groups as the Quakers.Indeed, the dissenting professorseems to be a modern-dress ver¬sion of the Quakers who appearin “The Americans: The Coloni¬al Experience”: seeking freedomto practice their religion in Mass¬achusetts, the Quakers are bru¬tally treated by the Puritans,whose intolerance Boorstin ap¬plauds as “a source of strength”.The Quakers struggle nonviolent-ly for their principles and someare hanged. Boorstin sees this asthe fulfillment of their “quest formartyrdom” and ridicules them:“Never was a reward soughtmore eagerly than the Quakers sought out their crown ofthorns.”)LATER ON last year, Profes¬sor Richard Wade paid his re¬spects to the principle of separa¬tion of convictions and scholar¬ship when “Faculty for Daley”released a campaign leafletwhich included a photographwhich could only be interpretedas depicting Mr. Wade and stu¬dents in a University of Chicagoclass. What outcries about con¬victions and scholarship wouldwe hear were I to decorate a“Withdraw from Vietnam” leaf¬let with a photograph of myselfteaching University of Chicagostudents! Certainly, I believe,that outcry would be justified.To return to Mr. McNeill’s as¬sertions: I first learned that mycontract was not to be renewedin a brief letter which arrived atmy home on the afternoon of De¬cember 14, 1966. Thus Mr. Mc¬Neill is precisely correct whenhe says that I was “informed ofthe decision shortly before thestatutory time at which such in¬formation was due.” The dead¬line is December 15. If a briefletter the day before the dead¬line is, as Mr. McNeill insists,normal procedure, it hardlyseems to be anything to boastabout.AT LUNCH in the QuadrangleClub on December 16 Mr. Mc¬Neill told me that I had not beenobjective enough and that “yourconvictions interfered with yourscholarship.” Mr. McNeill’s as¬sertion that the tenure groupmade no mention of my politicsin its deliberations will not makethis statement go away. Wheredid Mr. McNeill learn of my con¬victions? What evidence led himto the conclusion that my convic¬tions interfered with my scholar¬ship? I asked these questionslast year and have yet to receivea response.Five days after my lunch withMr. McNeill I wrote formally toask for an additional year; I hadmade such a request orally onthe 16th. (Inexplicably, Mr.McNeill now describes this re¬quest as having been made“after some weeks’ delay.” Sucha distortion, petty though it maybe, is especially unseemly inlight of the University’s own rec¬ord in regard to promptness).IN MY LETTER of December21 I noted that my wife had anexcellent position and ample re¬search facilities at Loyola andthat, in addition, she had recent¬ly received a grant for her workthere. (I might add that my wifehas found at Loyola an honestand humane environment inwhich to teach and do her re¬search; this is in marked con¬trast to her experience at theUniversity of Chicago, whereDonald Levine — with the Uni¬versity’s customary promptness— managed to discover a “nepo¬tism” rule two weeks before shewas scheduled to begin teachingin the fall of 1965. Equal Oppor¬tunity Employer indeed!)Mr. McNeill calls my requestfor an additional year “excep¬tional.” It might also be con¬sidered exceptional to be thrownout after only one term at aplace which has announced toyou as its policy that “we waita little longer than some placesbefore awarding tenure ... be¬cause we strive to give tenureonly to men of demonstrated scholarly ability and achieve¬ment — and it usually takes alittle time for a man to prove notonly his capacity but his achieve¬ment.” Those were Mr. McNeill’swords when he originally invitedme to come to Chicago. (It mustbe recalled that the decisionmade concerning me last yearwas not on tenure, but simply onwhether I was to be given a sec¬ond appointment as assistantprofessor).MANY PLACES dismiss facul¬ty with eighteen months notice,which more nearly meets the jobrealities than the six and onehalf months originally providedme by this University. Otherplaces — including institutionseven more prestigious than theUniversity of Chicago — custom¬arily make one-year terminal ap¬pointments upon request and donot consider such extensions asall unusual. If following this cus¬tomary procedure is, as Mr. Mc¬Neill says, “unusual or excep¬tional” at the University of Chi¬cago (or, as Donald Levine hascalled it, a “special benefit”),that is only further evidence ofjust how backward this place is.Last spring Mr. McNeill told astudent meeting that it would be“improper” for him even to“paraphrase” the Department’sreasons for getting rid of me;neither students nor I myself hadany right to such information. Tospeak in even the most generalterms of what went on in thesecret meetings of the tenuregroup would limit their ability to“speak freely” among them¬selves. Those of us who werethus excluded would, Mr. Mc¬Neill asserted, “simply have to. . . believe in my good faith andin the good faith of my col¬leagues.”THERE ARE several reasonsfor our not deferring to thosewho demand that we do so. Tobegin with, even those with thebest of intentions do make mis¬takes — and Mr. McNeill makesthem in abundance. Some ofthese mistakes would be easilycorrected if the person being dis¬cussed were present during thediscussion. It seems to me thatthe principle holds whetherteachers are trying to decide howwell they have prepared studentsfor an examination, or the tenuremembers of the History Depart¬ment are trying to evaluate mywork: the people being discussedjust might happen to have somerelevant information.Another reason for not defer¬ring to the good faith of groupswhich make a fetish of secrecyis that they may not deserve it:indeed, common sense and his¬tory indicate that such a fetishis prima facie grounds for sus¬picion, whether it is found in theSocial Science building or in thePentagon. Secret criticism is thevery antithesis of scholarship;standards of criticism are de¬graded when scholars feel thatthey can “speak freely” aboutscholarship only in private.I myself once attended a meet¬ing of a faculty group which in¬sisted upon secrecy as the con¬dition of my remaining. Reluc¬tantly, I acquiesced. Afterwardsa tenure member of the group— a man who is in many waysan admirable person — saw noth¬ing reprehensible in breaking thesecrecy by making a publicstatement which announced notsimply the outcome of the meet¬ ing (which would have been per¬missible under the secrecyagreement) but which also gavean utterly false and misleadinginterpretation of how the meet¬ing had come to that conclusion.Here is a case in which thosewho were excluded from themeeting were duped if they be¬lieved in the faculty’s good faith.FINALLY WE SHOULD nothave to rely upon the good faithof members of secret groups be¬cause this is, after all, the twen¬tieth century, and because thereis — or should be — somethingcalled due process (especially inan arm of the government whichcalls itself a “private” institu¬tion). The people with powermay be uninformed, or they maybe prejudiced. That is why wehave consitutions and contracts,and that is why we have dueprocess.Thus, even a high school teach¬er about to be fired for smokingmarijuana has the right to faceher accusers and defend herself.And on the assembly line at De¬troit management long ago con¬ceded the same right to labor.But what is seen by both sidesas established right in the highschools and the factories is seenas tremendous impudence whenstudents and junior faculty seekit here. At the University of Chi¬cago the contention that the pow¬erless members of the “commun¬ity” have the right to due pro¬cess in decisions which directlyconcern them produces in re¬sponse only arrogance and jeal¬ous guarding of perogatives. Theright to due process, much lessthe fact of due process, is stillan alien concept at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.JESSE LEMISCHAssistant Professorof HistorySuspicionsI have long suspected the mo¬tives of such organizations asSWAP and STEP whose tutoringprojects in Woodlawn have beenslowly and quietly growing sinceI came to this campus threeyears ago; but I have never beenable to express those suspicionsas clearly as Linda Murray atthe Black Liberation/White Re¬sponse panel.I am grateful that The Maroonhas printed Miss Murray’s clearinsights into the insidious mo¬tives of this University’s white-liberal conscience organizations.Attempts by such student serv¬ice organizations to cloud theclass consciousness of black chil¬dren with such middle-class val¬ues as education and industry,and to cultivate interest in thenatural sciences and non-radicalliterature, clearly divert the at¬tention of these children from theproblems of the ghetto, and frus¬trate radical leaders’ attemptsto organize the ghetto politically.The encouragement of intellec¬tual progress among black chil¬dren must stop if there is to beany radical political progressmade south of the Midway.LOUIS MESTICHELLILetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean-in. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.November 3, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9i'4MAROON SPORTSThompson North, Psi Upsilon Win MeetBy JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterThompson House North scored atight victory over Thompson Southin the house competition of theintramural swim meet on Octo¬ber 30. Psi Upsilon easily over¬whelmed all opposition in the fra¬ternity division.Thompson North took threefirsts and five seconds to nipSouth, which scored four firsts.Taking top spots for the winnerwere Craig McPherson, first inthe 40-yard freestyle and secondin the 100-yard event; Jon Belcher,who won the 40-yard breaststrokeand also took third and fourthplace finishes; and Mike Reid,who won the diving competition.> Mike Rabinoff led the Southsquad by taking the 40-yard back-stroke and also pacing both relayteams to victory. Karl Schafferperformed the same feat, winningthe 40-yard butterfly and alsoswimming in the relays. Glusteinand Clark also swam in both win¬ning South relays.Brodie, of fifth-place ChamberlinHouse, broke the Thompson streakby winning the 100-yard freestyle;Frank Seifert of third-place Salis¬bury took two seconds.Psi U DominatesPsi Upsilon finished first in fiveout of eight events to score an easyvictory over runnerup frat PhiGamma. Porter Sexton topped the entry with firsts in the 40-yardbreaststroke and butterfly compe¬titions and a tie for the top in thebackstroke. Hans Jergenson tiedwith Sexton in this event and wasalso a member of the victorioussweat shirt relay and freestyle re¬lay teams.Andy Weary from fifth-place PhiDelta took first place in both the40-yard freestyle and the divingcompetition. Phi Gamma’s DennisSprinkle scored the final place vic¬tory in the 100-yard Freestyle.Bruce Taylor and Ted Petersonalso took firsts with membershipon both winning Psi Upsilon relayteams. Steve Goldberg finished outthe Freestyle relay team, whileEdwards completed the prize-win¬ning sweat shirt relay.Cross CountryThe frosh-soph members of thevarsity cross-country squad won twin victories over Wilson andWright Junior Colleges on Monday.The young Maroons defeated Wil¬son 23-34 and Wright 22-33.Jeff Melby paced the harriers tovictory over Wilson with a 16:24first place time. Pat Murray tooksecond, and was followed by JoeFrank in fifth, Mike Rauworth inseventh, and Mike Klein in eighth.Melby finished a scant secondbehind the top Wright runner andwas forced to settle for secondhere. The rest, however, easilyoutran their opponents and broughtthe victory home. Murray wasthird, but Frank finished fourthand Rauworth fifth. With Klein re¬peating in the eighth spot, ChicagoI clinched the double triumph.This meet was another step inthe building up of great Universitycross-country team. The squad’simprovement is illustrated by thefact that the time of the frosh-sophrunners in this meet would have defeated the entire Chicago team’stime against Valparaiso two weeksago 24-31. The full squad will facethe University of Illinois Chicago! Circle at home on Wednesday.IM FootballIntramural touch football is en¬tering the final days of regular! competition and will begin play-j offs next week.In the College House Green di¬vision, Tufts South and ShoreyNorth share the lead; the Red di¬vision is dominated by Dodd, whilethe Blue division is controlled bySalisbury.Topping the fraternity division isPsi Upsilon, the winner of theswim tournament. The “B”league’s Blue division is headedby Phi Gamma, and the Red sec¬tion by Henderson South.Leading the pack in the division¬al league’s Red section is the I Saints, while a fierce three-waytie exists between the Boilmakers.the Lipscombs, and the Eagles inthe Green league. The Offenderslead the Blue league, and the| Orange league lead is held jointlyi by the Disciples and Physics.Turkevich Will SpeakAnthony Turkevich, JamesFrank professor in the Departmentof Chemistry, will keynote the 13thannual Science Open House at theUniversity tomorrow.The gathering is intended to stim¬ulate intellectual curiosity amongsuperior Chicago-area high schoolscience students.Turkevich, who directed the de¬velopment of the instrument thatrecently gathered data to analyzethe chemical composition of themoon’s surface, will discuss “WhatIs the Moon Made Of?”ROUGE REFLEX|Copper-alloy, gold plated. Lastslife time. Has elegant shape,and is well done. Diamondcut design. Fits anylipstick case. Near¬ly one and half in¬ches long. Three-quarters inches wideMirrors full mouth.Now no frantic huntTor a mirror to see"lip make-up. Lovelyfeminine touch ob¬tained by market analysis and artistic in¬spiration. Attractivelygift packed. Thinkingof Christmas? ThinkRouge Reflex. Price $2.88PPD. Order fromQUALITY GIFT SHOPPEBox 2973 Grand Central StationNew York 17, New YorkCHICAGO PREMIERE“TRUDY and the MINSTREL”Rollicking New Mwsicol for ChildrenNOW ON STAG6JWeekends-VertarmanCf5 aMTltecTlO130 a m. 2:30 p.m. Sad. 2 30 p.m.GOODMAN CHILDREN'S THEATRE200 S. Columbus Drive • CE 4-2337CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL212 N. MICHIGAN AVE.See OurEverything to MakeYour Child’s Partya SuccessMEXICAN PINATAS1.000 PARTY | ACFAVORS ONLY | (JWE HAVE ALL MATTEL'STALKING TOYS, DOLLS.BOOKS, GAMES, RECORDS,BALLET SHOES. LEOTARDS.SCHOOL SUPPLIES.EDUCATIONAL GOODSWE ACCEPT ALL MIDWESTCHARGE CARDScoeeTeys. Hobbies1701-1710 \ Bast 79th St.M 4-4510 ES 5-04*4Tree Perking Neat Doer 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 Service It Hull10 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 3, 1967ISC Commission Denies CIA CooperationWASHINGTON — A commissionset up by the International Stu¬dent Conference says the ISC didnot work with the Central Intel¬ligence Agency, though it receivedCIA funds.The ISC, however, has notdropped any funds received fromfoundations alleged to be CIA con¬duits.And the International Union ofStudents (IUS) has blasted the re¬port as a “whitewash.” IUS iscomposed mostly of national stu¬dent unions of countries with Com¬munist governments.The ISC, formed 17 years agoas a “free world” alternative tothe IUS, was accused of usingCIA funds and working with theCIA by officers of the U.S. Na¬ tional Student Association afterNSA’s own CIA ties were revealedin February.The ISC subsequently suspendedNSA’s membership and denied thatit had co-operated with the CIAor received any CIA funds.Later, however, after numerousdemands, the ISC set up a seven-man commission to investigate anyties with the CIA.The commission’s report, whichhas just been released, says thatthe ISC has “at all times func¬tioned as a legitimate organiza¬tion, although we are unable, ob¬viously, to say the same for allindividuals in it.”It is clear that the ISC has beenreceiving CIA funds. The commis¬sion report says that 70-90 percentA JAB AT HUTCHINS of the ISC budget comes fromfoundations, mostly in the U.S. Atleast three of these have beennamed as CIA conduits—the Foun¬dation for Youth and Student Af¬fairs, the San Jacinto Fund, andthe Asia Foundation.But the report alleges that theISC was not aware that funds werecoming from the CIA, did not co¬operate with the CIA, and thatthe foundations alleged to be CIAconduits did not pressure the ISC.The report includes statements tothis effect from several former ISCofficers, all of whom say they didnot know that funds were comingfrom the CIA.The commission says it believestheir statements. Yet one of theformer secretaries general, Ed¬ ward Garvey, is also a former NSApresident. When the NSA scandalbroke in February he signed astatement saying he knew of theNSA-CIA ties but that they haddone the organization no harm.Since he knew of NSA’s CIA con¬nections, he must have known aboutthe Foundation for Youth and Stu¬dent Affairs (FYSA), named byNSA officials as their major sourceof CIA funds and also a majorsource of ISC funds.While it let the ISC off scotfree, the commission attackedNSA, particularly on the groundsthat NSA officers only announcedtheir intentions to sever the tiesafter Ramparts magazine revealedthe relationship.NSA President Ed Schwartz saidhe had not seen the report, but said that NSA did not reveal itsCIA ties sooner because it wastrying “to protect innocent people,including some of those in theISC.”, s m ''UNIVERSITYSYMPHONYm|| The University of Chicago ||Symphony Orchestra will Ifhold its 1967-68 Concerto |i Contest on Friday, Decem-i ber 1, in Lexington Hall.Those interested in per¬forming a concerto with the1 Orchestra in the winter1 quarter's concert shouldcontact John Solie, Ext.| 2615, or 667-2414.Booth Defends Required Courses BOOK SALEDean of the College Wayne C.Booth defended the philosophythat an education in which mostof the courses are required canbe a “liberating” one.In an informal lecture in theHenderson house lounge, Wednes¬day evening, Booth said that theultimate purpose of any liberaleducation was to aid the studentin coming to an assessment of hisidentity accurate enough to en¬able him make meaningfulchoices between alternatives ofwhich his courses have made himaware.Required courses are the meansby which the faculty, a groupmore fully liberated because oftheir higher degree of education,forces the student to make him¬self able to choose how he willspend his time, Booth declared.Booth characterized the Hutch¬ins’ college, with its 14 requiredcourses, producing an unparalleddogmatism in some of its stu¬dents. He admitted that the presentsystem at Chicago is the result ofmany compromises, not all basedon academic considerations, be¬tween those who would requirethe student to prepare himself ex¬ tensively before attempting tomake any important decisions re¬garding his education and thosewho would give him practicewhile still in the process of ma¬turing.Student-Faculty Dinners Begin Tues.Next to the Chicago weather,the second must bemoaned topicon campus, it seems, is the isola¬tion of students from each otherand from the faculty. The formermay remain a lost cause, but agroup of students have organizedin the hope of doing somethingabout the latter.Starting this Tuesday at 5:30p.m., there will be a weeklymeeting of students and facultyfor dinner and discussion in thePrivate Room of HutchinsonCommons. Dinner may be pur- jchased in the regular servingline of the C-Shop.Although similar dinners are being held in the dorms as partof the freshman orientation pro¬gram, these dinners are intendedto give students living off-cam¬pus an opportunity to meet andtalk with faculty members.Some of the faculty who willbe there this quarter are WayneBooth, Charles O’Connell, JamesRedfield, Virgil Burnett, JamesO’Reilly, Jerome McGann andJohn Cawelti.All students are invited to at¬tend and partake in the discus¬sions. The Maroon and the week¬ly calendar will give further in¬formation. Students and facultyinterested in helping should con¬tact Susan Grosser at 752-2134. LIBRARY DUPLICATESAND DISCARDS10< 10< 10* 10< 10< 10< 10*Monday thru SaturdaySTMSiMTC@—©|?Reynolds Club BasementTOAD HALL SellsNew as Well as Used Equipment«/>oD0>a</>"Da>«/>D Fisher 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 "Oco Q)Q>CDk.DDo£TOAD 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. If we don't have what you desire,place a Special Order and have the merchandise in about a week.144 E. 57th Street BU 8-4500 kTHE CHICAGO MAROONi- * * \\ 11November 3, 1967tSjOt v f-v-W^VV^V V'.»■*»•**#»*• mm■' ; mCalendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toThe Maroon two days before the day beforepublication.Friday, November 3LECTURE: (Biochemistry Grad. TrainingProgram), H. W. Siegelman, BrookhavenNational Laboratory, “Function, Structure,and Properties of Some Tetrapyrrole Pig¬ments in Plants," Abbott Hall 101, 12:30p.m.SEMINAR: (Chemistry), Joseph R. Kates,"Messenger RNA Synthesis by Pox VirusParticles," Research Institutes 480, 4 p.m.INFORMAL TALK: (Center for Middle East¬ern Studies), Professor Alessandro Bausaniof Rome and Naples Universities, FosterLounge, 4:15 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of Germanic Lan¬guages and Literatures), Bertil Molde,University of Stockholm, "Anglo-AmericanInfluence on Swedish," Wieboldt CommonsRoom, 4:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: "La Strada," by Federico Fel¬lini, Soc Sci 122. Admission SI. 6, 8, and10 p.m.FOLK DANCERS: Fifth Annual Universityof Chicago. International Folk Festival8 p.m. at International House. General ad¬mission $2, students and children $1.TRAVELOGUE: Brazil and Argentina, In¬ternational House Home Room, 8:15 p.m.Students 50c, others $1.00.CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: Ali Akbar Kahnand Company playing Indian ragas andtalas. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m. AdmissionS3.LECTURE: Professor Stanley Gevirtz, "OfMyth and Man: Reflections on the Gardenof Eden," Hillel House, 8:30 p.mDEBATE: Cuban Ferez vs. Socialist Terry,"Can the U.S. Keep Castro's Commies fromTaking over Latin America?" College ofComplexes, 105 W. Grand Ave., 9 p.m.Admission SI.ART EXHIBITS: "Flying," at LexingtonGallery, open weekdays 9 a m. to 5 p.m.thru November 10; "John Demou: RecentPhotographs," at Midway Studios, openweekdays 9 a m. to 5 p.m., weekends 12noon to 5 p.m. thru November 11; "ModernMakonde Sculpture," at Goodspeed Hall,open weekdays 10 a m. to 5 p.m., SaturdaysI to 5 p.m. thru November 19.Saturady, November 4FOOTBALL: Lake Forest at the North Field,10 a.m.TELEVISION SERIES: Charlando, a Spanish-language program on WGN-TV, Channel 9,10:30 a.m.CROSS-COUNTRY: University of IllinoisChicago Circle at Washington Park, 11 a.m.DOC FILMS: Three comedies: "A Night atthe Opera" by Sam Wood at 6:30 p.m.,"I'm No Angel" by Wesley Ruggles at8 p.m., and "The Bank Dick" by EddieCline at 9:30 p.m., Mandel Hall, SI.LECTURE: "Crooked Judges in America,"College of Complexes, 105 W. Grand Ave ,9 p.m., SI.Sunday, November 5RADIO SERIES: From the Midway. WFMF(7 a.m.), WAIT (10 a.m.), and WNIBII a.m. Saturday); former Sen. PaulDouglas, "Tax Loopholes, or My EighteenYears in a Quandry and How It Grew."ANNUAL UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL SERV¬ICE: Rev. Parsons, "Of Memory andHope." Rockefeller Chapel, 11 a.m. SOCCER: Northwestern University at North-field 1 p.m.J OPEN HOUSE: Hyde Park Community Horse-| back Riding School at the Hinsdale Stables,7500 Joliet Rd., from 2 to 4 p.m.CHESS CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, Cloister Club,SUNDAY EVENING AT CHAPEL HOUSE:Supper (75c) at 5:30 p.m. Lecture by Dr.Richard Moy at 6:30 p.m.FILM: "Goldstein," produced by two Chicagograduates. Hillel House at 7:30 and 9:30p.m. Students SI, others S2.FILM: (The German and Swedish FilmFestival), Ingmar Bergman's "Sawdustand Tinsel," Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 p.m.Adm. $1.FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub 7:30-11:00 p.m.Monday, November 6ART EXHIBIT: "The Tragedy of SovietJewry," Hillel House, thorugh Nevomber18. Ford Grants $100,000 to CampaignS.D.S. CHAPTERHall, 7:30 p.m. MEETING: Ida NoyesRecruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200. Forappointments call Ext. 3282.GovernmentNov. 6 — U.S. Dept, of Housing and UrbanDevelopment, Chicago, Fort Worth, SanFrancisco, Washington, Philadelphia, NewYork, Atlanta. Graduates in Law, Eco¬nomics, Social Sciences.Nov. 6 & 7 — VISTA.Graduate SchoolsNov. 3 — Duke law school. Chicago yesterday received fromthe Ford Motor Company Fund agrant of $100,000 for building im¬provements and expans on of theGraduate School of Bus ness.Announcement of the g 'ant to theUniversity’s $160,000,000 Campaignfor Chicago was made by Presi¬dent Beadle.Chicago was notified of the grantby Benson Ford, president of theFund, who said:“The University of Chicago has continually demonstrated its lead¬ership in education methods andbusiness research. Ability to trainyoung minds and govern the inno¬vative talent of future leaders isa bulwark of today’s business com¬munity.“The - Ford Fund is pleased to*contribute to the campaign, andwe are confident that the Uni¬versity will maintain its reputa¬tion by expanding with the needsof our country.”The University of ChicagoRockefeller Memorial Chapel59th Street and Woodlawn Ave.November 12Sunday Evening at 8:00BENJAMIN BRITTEN’SCURLEW RIVERA Parable for Church Perfor¬mance (Chicago Premiere)“A smooth melding into whatis a new, wholly engagingmusical form.’’Time Magazine“Blends Miracles of Old, New’’Thomas Willis, Chicago TribuneThomas Scherman, MusicalDirector, with members of theLittle Orchestra Society ofNew York and the ConcertOpera Association.JOHN WEST as The AbbotWILLIAM METCALF as TheE errymanKENNETH RIF.GEL as TheMadwomanJOHN ROBERE DUNLAP asThe TravellerReserv ed $5.00 Students $3.00(General Admission $-1.00UC Fac/Staff $3.50TICKETS ON SALE AT:University ofChicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.Woodworth’s Bookstore,1311 F.. 57th StreetCoolev’s Candles,5211 S. Harper Court DR. AARON ZIMBLER. Optometristin meNEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55tf» St.DO 3-7644 DO 34866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES Tha U. of C. RENAISSANCE PLAYERSonnouncts aCAST MEETINGPositions open for actors, directors and in ali aspectsof production.Tues. November 7, 8:30 p.m.Ida Noyes Library - RefreshmentsSPLIT OUT.Well go 50/50 with you on the USA,TWA 50/50 Club: your half-price ticket to all the action, from coast tocoast. Most any time,jJHPfPp for just half our regular■■IIM j Coach fare. And you’rein for the foil treatment. At^ food. On many long hauls,make time fly. On cross-country non-stops,new movies, too. There’s more: you’ll getreduced rates at all Hilton andSheraton hotels in the country.Plus a club Newsletter to fill youin on other discounts—hereand abroad. The whole dealwill set you back a grand totalof $3 for your 50/50Club card.If you’re under 22, move fast. Stop into yournearest TWA office and get your card, today.P.S. Attention College Bands, Combos, Vocal Groups. Don'tforget the National Championships at the 1968 IntercollegiateJazz Festival sponsored by TWA. For Information write:IJF, Box 246, Miami Beach, Florida 33139♦Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.Movies presented by Inflight Motion Pictures, Inc. Welcome [TWAto the world ofTrans World Airlines...the all-jet airline12 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 3, 1967, ‘‘V « . » « . < • • •' * ) I if V* X iV» }'■■■ ( <■ j < 5 * «' :• * - < - ! * fv 4 ,5 .* /' ,*.* ‘ »MT> * ' *■' ■ “ 4 ■IS THE U of C WORTH A WEEK?Is the college just an arm of a ma¬jor research center? Or does it havean identity of its own? If so, what wasit, what is it, and what is it becoming?What sort of education are we get¬ting? How relevent is it to our future?What forces are affecting that edu¬cation?These are questions which must beraised, discussed, and acted upon. Inplanning this year's liberal arts con¬ference we have been thinking aboutthese problems and have formulatedtwo possible conference topics.Topic I College: Myth and RealityWhat is the meaning of a liberal educationtoday?Do we need a new myth-or are we satis¬fied with the remnants of the Hutchins era?What will the Levi college be?The conference would considera) the nature of the mythb) its transmissionc) how the reality compares with themythd) how the reality might be altered toconform more with the ideal, andconversely, how the ideal might bealteredand e) the realities: drugs, grades, sex,drop-outs, administration, food,pressures, discrimination.Our basic question would be: what kindof community is this community of scholars?Name: Address: Phone:Deposit in Faculty Exchange mail boxes; College Suggestion Box (G-B 132); box in Woodward Court, Pierce, or Burton-Judson; or box in Mandel corridor.Topic II The University in SocietyHave recent developments in Americansociety changed the role of the University?The conference would consider the impli¬cations of such problems as:1. the University and the political estab¬lishment2. the University as a center for politicaland social action3. pressures against freedom of expres¬sion from within and without4. the public's view of the University5. the role of the arts in the UniversityIs the University, in the words of MayorRichard Daley, "another improvement for Chi¬cago?"-Student Liberal Arts ConferenceCommitteeSovember 3. 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 13Maroon Classified Advertisements Oratorio FestivalrOpens Nov. 12RATES: 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. 4-door. A.T. Rad., Exc. cond.Best offer. Ml 3-6000, Room 634.3 whl H-D Police Bike 750 cc, eng. reblt.10-66. New batt, elec, sys., carb. $165/offr.Greenbaum 285-6529 or 726-9306 ext. 9.IMMEDIATE POSSESSION: Six room resi¬dence, vie. 81st & Blackstone—3 large bed¬rooms; plenty closet space; carpet, drapes,blinds, natrl. fire place, sprinkling system,fish pond, 2- car brick garage, bath & Vi.must be seen to be appreciated, by appoint¬ment, phone SO 8-3111 or RE 4-3790.RECORD CHANGER in good condition.$29.56 or best* offer. Call Ml 3-1535.1 green velvet couch $20. Will throw infree chair. Call 268-1851 (eve.)'59 CHEVY, 2 door, R & H auto trans..New battery, call 493-9142 after 6 P.M.'62 CORVAIR, A.T., Rad./heat, REASON¬ABLE CONDITION, Best Offer. 288-4910.1965 CORVAIR-Monza-pretty baby-ownerleaving country in a hurry, Call 493-6901.ROOMMATE WANTEDTwo Graduate men wish to share ampleapartment with third. 667-7086.Young Woman Grad Student wishes to sharemodern furnished HPK. APT. with same.Call 667-0543 after 10 P.M.APARTMENTS FOR RENTSTUDIO APARTMENT IN Sherry Apartmentsnow available. Call 288-5211.NEARBY ECONOMICAL QUIET 2 & 3 roomAPTS. $77.50 8. UP. Free Utilities, Call Wil¬liams at 6043 Woodlawn, MU 4-2300.WORKActors—models, ma'e and female for maiorunderground film durinq Mov. Princioa'soaid $30.00 per dav. Preference given tothose who have read Norman O. Brown'sLIFE AGAINST DEATH. Photo heloful. Pic¬tures will be returned, and scripts issuedto all those who are suitable. Write toPROJECT ONE, AARDVARK CINEMA¬THEQUE, 1608 N. Wells, Chicago 60614.Learn to fly FREE! Introduce the idea offlying to your eamnus. Chicago-MidwtayTravel Inc. 582-9400, ask for Jay.Coordinated Estate Plan bv University Sealhas a campus clerk position open. Earnover twentv dollars nor dav while on cam¬pus. No selling. Position ooen to Junior orSenior men and women aae twentv one andover. Call KE 9-4858 (day) or HO 5-5230(evenings) or write Norman B. Brown, 3530W. Peterson, Chicago, III.FOR SUBLEASEHuge carpeted studio apt. 3 blocks fromcenter campus, 2 blocks from 1C. In livingroom, lovelv wall of casement windows ooen-inq on Dorchester; enormous walk-in closet,verv larqe kitchen, charming bath. $120/mo.2-year lease, DO NOT CALL if could nottake lease for full period. 643-6824.PERSONALSDOW Chemical is Coming ! ! ! ! ! They'recominq next Monday to Business East torecruit us for their comoanv which makesthat indiscriminate, unconscionable weaponof murder, NAPALM, which US. Forcesuse to BURN VIETNAMESE PEOPLE.WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUTDOW? Meetinq to discuss this question—today at 4:15 in Rosenwald 2.FOR RENT—TOWNHOUSE: South Shore, 2Bedrooms, Basement, 1 Vi baths, $155 permonth. Call 731-5740.JERRY A. LEVY—the sixth week of thequarter approaches ...P.J.—Actually I was having a brief but ex¬citing six-hour affair with a marine fromthe Bahamas. The drawbridge dropped with a surly clang.AND through the dark arch a chargersprang.CALIFORNIA BEWARE—the iceman cometh!Chicago's turned-on group, "The ReasonsWhy," plus "The Chicago Fire," the Mid¬west laughter machine. For a complete nightof great entertainment, call 966-5836.ALPHA (Psyche) DELT (Ic) SPLASH"It'll tickle yore innards!"Saturday, November 4 at 8:305747 University Men 50cThank you Linn County!GOLDSTEIN, a film made by two U.C.graduates, filmed in Chicago and based onthe Hebrew legend of the prophet Elijah,will be shown at Hillel on Sunday, Novem¬ber 5th. 7:30 & 9:30 P.M. Students $1.00:others $2.00.SFA COURT OPENINGS: Two-year and one-year terms. Submit self-nomination in writ¬ing to SG, IDA NOYES, 1212 E. 59th, byWed., November 8, 12 noon. For FurtherInfo.: Read Court Section of SG Constitutionor call SG, ext. 3274.See Elijah at the sausage factory.Hook. Hook. Hook. Hook. MSL. Hook.Thank you AARDVARK, for your fine ad.POLITICS FOR PEACE:Canvassing at 12:45,Sunday, IDA NOYES.DOW Chemical is Coming ! ! ! ! ! They'recoming next Monday to Business East torecruit us for their company which makesthat indiscriminate, unconscionable weaponof murder, NAPALM, which U.S. Forcesuse to BURN VIETNAMESE PEOPLE.WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUTDOW? Meeting today to discuss this ques¬tion—at 4:15 P.M. in Rosenwald 2.Pull out of IDA!a conditioned bumBefore he struck 21Ideals ambitions made him a paragon onceLater reduced him to lowest termsVictim or Student call it if you cana young manA bumBefore 21Complain he will notfor this is his slicea young man a paragon Not 21Ah! this is niceWhat does it mean to be a conditioned bumMaybe not to wear the bestand to eat the lessnot to aspire in this corruptiblefirenot to converse and think your owntil an ingredient of agreementw-i—11 hear you faira bum by principle is beautiful and faira bum by principle and condition isgenteel and realHarassed and ridiculed by the small (mindedand heart)Yet accepted by the small children andmatured adultHe represents a group that has been formedof not his ownIf this a condition bum I will very defi¬nitely accept one will youBE READ BY MILLIONS—PUBLISH IN THEMAROON—50c a line—you are your owncensor.POST PUMPKIN POWER PARTY. B.Y.ONov. 3 at 8:30, 1215 E. Hyde Park. Apt. 303.The FRUMIOUS PRESS is now consideringoriginal prose, poetry, and other creativewriting for illustration and publication thisyear. Our format is varied and our plansare very flexible at this point. If interested,please call Bob Griess, 752-5383 or MarionSirefman, 288-2832.PATRONIZEOURADVERTISERSTAKE A TRIP WITH MARCO POLO.288-5944.The New Quest for AMERICAN RADICAL¬ISM.On November 3, 7:30 P.M.:"THE "RELIGIOUS' VISION OF THE NEWRADICALISM" by STAUGHTON LYND.On November 4, 10 A.M.:"A THEOLOGICAL CRITIQUE OF AMERI¬CAN RADICALISM" by GEORGE PICKER¬ING.On November 4, 2 P.M.:"INSTITUTIONS TO DEVELOP RADICALACTION" — CARL SIEGENTHALER, UR¬BAN TRAINING CENTER. JAMESBUNDY, DIVINITY SCHOOL. PHILIPDRIPPS, METHODIST CHAPLAIN.SPONSORED BY METHODIST THEOLOGI¬CAL FELLOWSHIP. All Sessions atMe Giffert House,5751 S. Woodlawn Avenue.Drop by the SDS Coffee Hours next Tues¬day, Nov. 7, anytime 11:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. inReynolds Club South Lounge. At 3:30-anSDS discussion meeting on IDA, etc.Man's |oy or sorrow depends as much uponhis disposition as upon his fate.LOVE!If Chicago don't come around Chicago shouldbe gnawed down — P.N.B. SFA COURT OPENINGS: Two-year and one-year terms. Submit self-nomination in writ¬ing to SG IDA NOYES, 1212 E. 59th St.,by Wed., November 8 before 12 noon. For jFurther Info.: Read Court Section of SG ;Constitution or Call SG, Ext. 3274.Maybe the AM works. Let's be frivolous.BARK POWER — SQUIRREL MAN.ALPHA DELT SPLASH PARTYTomorrow November 4 at 8:305747 University Men 50cDOW Chemical is Coming Mil! They'recoming next Monday to Business East to ]recruit us for their company which makes ;that indiscriminate, unconscionable weapon jof murder, NAPALM, which U.S. Forcesuse to BURN VIETNAMESE PEOPLE.WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO ABOUT |DOW? Meeting to discuss this question-today at 4:15 in Rosenwald 2.GOLDSTEIN GOLDSTEIN GOLDSTEINMost chaste women a like hidden treasures: jsafe, because no one is searching for them. |SCIENTIFIC IWONDER, XRAY GLASSESIT CANTIE TIUE.BUT LOOKFOB YOU*.SCLF.illusion of ths cuuturyl Apnniuully son boons thru shta. snsthru clothns. sic. Guts will assn, trust you with ths so. butlor thnw laoh lor thsnsslms an, sfooionrly son Isas riahtthru yarn pants. Amors and embarrass svsryonal Rrruls,Sira flasoss with buib-in optical darks.Ho. 1762. Pair, Postpaid Qpty 9S|See Elijah come out of the lake. Be atHillel, Sunday, November 5th.Clumsy people have gentle hearts.Be Safe-buy insurance (in French or Eng¬lish) from Ralph J. Wood.SDS Regular meeting changed to Tuesday,Next Week Only.| J.A.L. is an instant party.| DAVE G. BELL—PLEASE WRITE—LOVE M.LARNER R. TEAK—what is your mailing address—MAROON BUSINESS OFFICE, EXT. 3266.■ Senor, get off your hacienda and come to ■! the Bandersnatch."I "Oh, Cisco."j F.U.C.K. sucks.| Get a head in the world,Check out HEADLAND,1205 N. Wells Street.Elijah comes to Chicago.What's this, the Second Coming at last?HELP SDS celebrate the 50TH ANNIVER¬SARY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION.Tuesday, November. All the booze you candrink. For tickets, call 667-7009.Having trouble with German?I Expert tutoring, very reasonable rate, Callj 721-1138.I:!LLEL needs a reliable person to distribute.■esters on campus. $1.50/hour. Call PL 2-1127. IA is a procurer for the Pentagon.| : ITERESTED IN AFRICA?U.C. African Studies Association is orga¬nizing discussions, lectures, etc. If inter¬red, leave name in African Studies Office j:S117 or call 643-8474.T /PING—Reasonable rates—call before 10P.M. 731-5980.Immortal mortals, mortal immortals, livingtheir death and dying their life.The lord whose oracle is in Delphi neitherspeaks out nor conceals, but gives a sign.LAWYER, 25, working on advanced degreein criminal law would like to meet attrac¬tive, hip soc or psych grad, student or sen¬ior. Call Richard 337-0659.LECTURE: OF MYTH AND MAN: REFLEC¬TIONS ON THE GARDEN OF EDEN, Prof.Stanley Gevirtz, Dept, of Oriental Languagesand Civilization. Friday, November 3, 8:30p.m. at Hillel House. 5715 Woodlawn.WHAT's to It, Paul?Want to learn to fly?(SAY WHAT?)Call Jerry Levy, Campus Rep.at Ml 3-0800, ext. 3266 days.Is this one of those fly by night things?ART EXHIBIT: THE TRAGEDY OF SOVIETJEWRY. November 6-18. Fourteen panelsdepicting the recent history and culture,the oppression and deterioration of Jewishlife in Soviet Russia, in photographs, charts,and statistical data. HILLEL HOUSE, 5715j Woodlawn.I WRITERS WORKSHOP. PL 2-8377. NAPALMNAPALM is a jelly-like adhesivesnti-personnel chemical thfttburns human flesh at over 1000degrees and clings to the skin, !Applying water makes it burnworse. The average victim inVietnam can find relief fromNapalm burns only in the mud,which complicates the infection.THIS IS WHAT DOW CHEMICALIS SUPPLYING TO THE JOHNSONGOVERNMENT FOR USE ON THEPEOPLE OF VIETNAM BECAUSETHEY DON'T SUPPORT THE SAI¬GON REGIME.DOW CHEMICAL KNOWS WHATNAPALM DOES.IT HAS TO KNOW . . .IT HAS TO "PERFECT" IT.WE CANNOT STOP ALL COM¬PANIES WHICH AID THE WAR,BUT WHERE WILL WE BEGIN???MEETING—TODAY—FRIDAY, AT 4:15 P.M.ROSENWALD 2.HYDE PARK PARTIESPOST PUMPKIN POWER PARTY. B.Y.O.L.November 3 at 8:30. 1215 E. Hyde Park.Apartment 303. The 10th Rockefeller Chapel Or¬atorio Festival Series at Chicagowill open its 1967-68 season on Sun¬day, November 12.A total of six programs will bepresented during the season, all inRockefeller Memorial Chapel.Benjamin Britten’s “Curlew Riv¬er” will be performed for the firsttime in Chicago at 8 p.m. Sunday,November 12. The musical parablewill be conducted by ThomasScherman and performed by themembers of the Concert Opera As¬sociation and the first-chair play¬ers of the Little Orchestra Society.The Rockefeller Chapel Choir andmembers of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, conducted by RichardVikstrom, director of Chapel Mu¬sic, will present George FrederickHandel’s “Messiah” on Sunday,I December 10.The group will perform “A Ger¬man Requiem and “Nanie” by Jo¬hannes Brahms on Sunday, Feb¬ruary 4.WANTEDGRAD STUDENTS fo substitute in math-matics at University High School. $5.00/hour.Call Mr. Cobb mornings at Ext. 2514.1 or 2 room APT. WANTED IN HYDEPARK AREA, AROUND $80. Call 324-5751.Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins again inunending war againstball-point skip, clog andsmear. Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic still writesfirst time, every time.And no wonder, bic’s“Dyamite” Ball is thehardest metal made,encased in a solid brassnose cone. Will not skip,clog or smear no matterwhat devilish abuse isdevised for them bysadistic students. Getthe dynamic bic Duo atyour campus store now.%(M9WATERMAN-IIC PEN CMP.MILF0A0, CONN.BiC Medim Paint 111 On Sunday, March 10, the groupwill present “Mass” by Igor Stra¬vinsky, “Apparebit RepentinaDies” by Paul Hindemith, and“The Peaceable Kingdom” by Ran¬dall Thompson.The group will perform “The Pas¬sion According to Saint Matthew”by Johann Sebastian Bach on Sun¬day, April 7.The series will close Sunday,May 5, when the Choir and the in¬strumentalists perform “Te Deum”by Zoltan Kodaly, and “Mass in FMinor” by Anton Bruckner.The last five concerts will be¬gin at 3:30 p.m. Tickets for theseries will be $18 for reservedseats, $15 for general admission,and $9 for students from all col¬leges.Tickets for individual concertswill be $4.50 for reserved seats,$3.50 for general admission, and$2.50 for students. Individual tick¬ets for “Curlew River” will be$5, $4, and $3.Tickets may be purchased at theUniversity Bookstore, Cooley’s Can¬dles, Woodworth’s Bookstore, andthe Downtown Graduate BusinessSchool, at 190 E. Delaware PI.mmmLAC MEETINGThere will be a meeting ofihe Liberal Arts ConferenceCommittee Tuesday, No¬vember 7, at 7 p.m. inSocial Science 106 —not inCobb 112 as previouslyjnnounced.TAhSAM-YMfCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1311 EAST *3rd ST. MU 4-10A214 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 3, 1967 BiC Fins Point 2M; 4 » 4 *.**<$< 4 »«*;><* t * « 4 >*«<*««+ 4 <**<*<**><**<«' *Anti-Involvement Sit-In at MichiganMore than 300 University ofMichigan students and 20 facultymembers staged a sit-in at theMichigan administration buildingWednesday to protest universityinvolvement in classified war re¬search.The seven hour sit-in followed anoon rally where student leadersdemanded the formation of a stu¬dent-faculty committee to reviewthe university’s policies on war re¬search. Student leaders also calledfor more student participation inpolicy-making decisions.Committee HereLoses to SACBThe Chicago Committee to de¬fend the Bill of Rights failed inits attempt to end the life of theSubversive Activities ControlBoard (SACB).The Committee’s primary aimwas to persuade Senator CharlesPercy to vote against passage. In¬stead, he voted for the bill, spon¬sored by Senator Everett Dirksen.Passed by the Senate on October23, the bill was designed to cir¬cumvent the Supreme Court deci¬sion earlier this year to void the(McCarran) Subversive ActivitiesControl Act of 1950.Contained in the bill is a “com¬promise” amendment prolongingthe effectiveness of the SACB un¬til June 30, 1969. It will cease toexist if no proceedings are broughtbefore it by the Attorney Generalup to that time.The committee plans to act fur¬ther if any cases are presented tothe SACB within the specified per¬iod.Chairman of the committee isEmeritus Professor of EducationRobert J. Havighurst. A. Geoffrey Norman, the univer¬sity’s vice president of research;Richard L. Culter, vice presidentof students affairs; and Allen F.Smith, vice president of academicaffairs, debated with demonstra¬tors.Norman, defending the univer¬sity’s role, claimed the universityis free to accept any researchgrants. He further said the deci¬sion to take on research grants“properly rests with the faculty,”not the students.The Michigan Daily has exposeda four-year $1 million Defense De¬partment contract with the univer¬ sity involving the detection of in¬surgency activities by infra-redaerial photography for the RoyalThai Army. The university’s Wil¬low Run Laboratory also has 64additional contracts with the De¬fense Department totaling over$11.8 million.According to Joseph Morgan, aphysicist involved in research inThailand, the goal of the Thai pro¬ject is to “prevent another iVet-nam.”On Monday the Senate AdvisoryCommittee on University Affairs,the highest executive body of the Michigan faculty, issued a state¬ment calling for no immediate ac¬tion concerning the Thai project.The committee set up a two-mansubcommittee to investigate theDefense Department contracts.Student leaders are organizingin a vigorous campaign of petition¬ing and leafleting to increase stu¬dent dissent on the Thai project.The administration has not com¬mented on the demonstrations.It has admitted involvementwith the Defense Department inwar research, but refuses to makeany further statements. SFA COURT| Nominations are open tofill four seats in the student-1 faculty administration court.| Two two-year and two one-| year terms are open. If youwish to serve submit aH statement in writing to Stu¬dent Government, 1212 E.| 59th St. Attention: Electionand Rules Committee. Forfurther information consultthe SG constitution in theHandbook or call Ext. 3274,SG. Deadline is Wednesday,November 8, 12 Noon.The Marx Brothers in ANIGHTATTHEOPERAStarting Saturday Nov. 4 at 6:30 in Mandel. Then stay for Mae West in I’M NO ANGEL at 8:00 and W. C. Fields THE BANK DICKat 9:30. $1.00 Doc Films.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER. MALE OR FEMALEHAVE 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 schoolChicago's most complete record store—Every label in our huge inventory always at adiscount—Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed—Large selection of importand hard to get records.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS, INC.GOOD FOR 38% OFFLIST NOW3.592.97All labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONVERVEFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP. etc. 201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)LIST5.794.79ON ANY ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYClassical * Jazz • Folk Music * Spoken * Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDREDELLillllllllllilllilllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllillllillllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllilllilJi THIS COUPON GOOD FOR i38°/< OFF LIST PRICE* ON IAny One Time RecordPurchase At 1discount records, inc. || 201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake) |CE 6-2187 1Good until Nov. 30, 1967 =nillllllllllllllllllllllllllilllillllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllTTmilllllllllllTmHUiUirMONO OR STEREO All labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.JUST BRING THIS COUPON!!Browse our budget binsDiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX • RIVERSIDE •. PRESTIGE • SCALAETERNA • MGM CLASSICS • VERVE • URANIAEVEREST • CONCERT DISC • PRESTIGE FOLK MUSICMONITOR • VERVE FOLKWAYS • COUNTERPOINT*Sorry, due to manufacturer's price policy imported LP's cannot be allowed in this offer. 1. How do you knowArnold is serious?He gave me hisstuffed wombat 2. Think you’ll like lifewith a naturalist?Arnold says a pup tenthas everything you couldwant in a house.3. What’ll you do for fun?Go on overnightcricket hunts. 4. Oh boy!For food, it’ll befigs, cords and whey.5. Yummy.Arnold says we’ll findnew meaning in thevigor of outdoor life. 6. Gee, Malcolm is just theopposite. He likes hiscomforts. Before wegot engaged, he linedup a good job; then hegot plenty of LivingInsurance from Equitableto provide solid protec¬tion for a wife and familyand build a retirementfund at the same time.How do you return awombat without hurtingsomeone’s feelings?For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: James L. Morice, Manager, College Employment.The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F © Equitable 1967November 3, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 15/ CBOUR NEWPRESIDENTYou might think Norm Simon was an Horatio Alger hero come to life... Except he didn’tget where he is by saving someone's daughter from a runaway horse. He did it withplenty of determination and hard work.When Norm came to Chicago 27 years ago he did it by riding a freight car. He didn'thave enough money to pay the train fare from his native Louisiana. But he was boundand determined to get here because he felt Chicago offered great opportunitiesto a poor but willing boy.He found lodgings with some relatives on the city’s west side, took a part time job, andthen went to school to “learn something about business." School was about five milesfrom where Norm lived, but he walked back and forth. His meager income didn’t evenpermit the luxury of riding the CTA.That early desire to “learn something about business” led our new president to obtaina B.S. degree in commerce with a finance major at Roosevelt University and then on tothe University of Wisconsin’s Graduate School of Banking.In addition to his academic and professional schooling, he served ten years as assistant tothe president and an officer of a major Loop bank... and in March of this yearbecame the first negro president of an all-white-owned bank. His excellent record in thislast post convinced the Board of University National that he had all the qualificationsto be president of our bank.And Norm hasn’t forgotten the community that gave him his opportunity. He’s a member ofthe Illinois Commission on Low Income Housing, a board member and secretary-treasurerof the Cook County Office of Economic Opportunity, and a board member and chairman ofthe budget committee of Senior Centers of Metropolitan Chicago. He’s also an activemember of a dozen other civic and charitable organizations.All in all he’s a high grade citizen and a more than competent banker. Why don’t you stopin and say “hello.” We know you’ll like him as much as we do.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and service03 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association / Federal Reserve System16 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 3, 1967