VOL. 76. NO. 16 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1967-lK'i ^ / •Napalm Issue Burns 8 12 PAGES, 1 SECTION500 Quietly Picket Dow TalksCAUGHT UP IN THE CONTROVERSY: George P. Schultz (left), Deanof the Graduate Business School, who allowed the demonstrators toset up a table inside Haskell and Hans J. Morgenthau, Professor ofPolitical Science, a faculty supporter.Douldner Talks onRomantic Sociology“Romanticism is not only an es¬thetic doctrine but a many facetedand enduring social movement,”said Professor Alvin W. Douldnerof Washington University in a lec¬ture last night at the Law SchoolAuditorium.Douldner spoke on “The Roman¬tic Movement in Social Science,”as part of the Monday lecture ser¬ies.“German romanticism should beunderstood not only as an avoid¬ance of the French Revolution butas an effort to confront an abidingGerman problem,” Douldner said.He defined this problem as findingan alternative to the unsatisfactoryorder of feudal Germany while re¬jecting the French solution.“Unable to revolutionize society,the Germans thought instead torevolutionize culture,” he con¬tinued. Because they had found apolitical solution impossible, theGermans turned to the sphereof culture.Rejecting the French future andthe German present, the romanticsemphasized the past, DouldnerMAROONDue to a pressing matterat his desk, Chicago Sun-Times City Editor Ken Tow- iers was unable to appear iat The Maroon Office lastweek. His visit has been |frescheduled for Wednesdayat 8 p.m. Staff members andI tryers-out are invited to at- I| tend. The Maroon's news- Iwriting workship will also if1 meet next at this time. I said. That they were not tradition¬alist he added when describing theromantic movement as “a revoltof intellectual and artistic eliteagainst their own cultural estab¬lishment.”Douldner then described variousromantic qualities. “The modernmanifest itself in a view of man notonly as one who can know, but asone who can create new meaningsand values,” he summarized.“Comte and Sam Simeon con¬ceived of positivism as a fusion ofromanticism and science,” Dould¬ner said in relating the romanticview to Social Science. French pos¬itivists and German romanticsagree on the importance of senti¬ment he feels.“Max Weber created the roman¬tic image of the social scientist asa dedicated scholar who must relyon his own inner and very person¬al resources,” Douldner continued.For Weber an orderly social realmis the creation of the sociologistego.Extending his point to contempo¬rary Social Science, Douldner de¬scribe anthropology as a more ro¬mantic discipline than sociology.“While the sociologist seeks to ex¬tricate his person from his re¬search, anthropology requires dif¬fuse involvement in field work,” amore personal emphasis and vividand colorful writing.Douldner qualified the basic dif¬ferentiation by noting that thereare exceptions to the rule, he de¬scribe the University of Chicago’sschool of sociology as having amore romantic quality than most.“Chicago prefers the standpoint ofBohemians rather than Philis¬tines.” By JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterAbout 500 people, some carryingpicket signs, marched to protestthe presense of three Dow Chem¬ical Company recruiters here Mon¬day.More than 40 faculty members Iwere present at the demonstra¬tion. Professors Flacks, Levine,and Skolnick carried picket signs.Dean of the College Wayne Boothwas said to have contributed per¬sonally towards the cost of thedemonstration.Hans Morgenthau, a leading crit¬ic of President Johnson’s warpolicy, addressed the rally at Has¬kell Quadangle. Morgenthau calledthe demonstration a useful tool.A dispute over whether or notstudents had the right to maintainan anti-Dow table was resolvedwhen demonstrators voted over¬whelmingly to ask permission toset up the table rather than cir¬cumvent regular channels.This happened at the conclusionof the rally, when the demonstra¬tors began picketing. The protest¬ors’ Steering Committee carriedout its plan to place a table insideHaskell to test their own rights offree speech.Tense MomentsHarold Metcalf, dean of studentsin the Graduate Business School,told the students to remove thetable. He added, however, that assoon as the table was removedthey could make a formal requestto set it up and such a requestwould almost certainly be granted.As soon as news of this orderwas announced outside, themarchers gathered at the door ofHaskell. Morgenthau entered thebuilding to be a witness. CharlesIsaac, one of the students main¬taining the table, came outsideand said he would go back insidewith or without permission.A quick vote was taken of thedemonstrators whether or not toremove the table. About 40 peo¬ple voted to leave it in withoutpermission, while over 300 peoplevoted to go through regular chan¬nels. The table was removed.Bob Ross, chairman of the Steer¬ing Committee, then asked theDean of the Graduate BusinessSchool George Schultz for permis¬sion to set up a table. It was im¬mediately granted.Picketing ResumesThe marchers then resumedtheir picketing and continued un¬til 2:30 p.m. though their numberswere sharply reduced by the de¬lay.Seventy-five picket signs carriedstatements ranging from “DowShalt Not Kill” to “Caution, Na¬palm is Hazardous to your Health.”One sign near the back of the rally,said simply “Fuck Dow.”There was a flurry of activity while some newsmen from ABCinterviewed students, but it dis¬persed when the men werethrough.“Such demonstrations,” Morgen¬thau told the rally earlier, “espe¬cially large ones, have made animpression on the government.Members of the administrationwho were afraid to speak out evenin private are encouraged to statetheir opposition to the war.”Morgenthau said that he waspresent not because he was inter¬ested in Dow, which he pointed outwas merely one of many corpora¬tions involved in the war effort,but because he wanted to expresshis political and moral oppositionto the war.“This war is morally repug¬nant,” Morgenthau said. “We killfor the sake of killing. It is a warof extermination.”LATE EDITIONThe Maroon apologizes to f§1readers and advertisers for §fthe delay in delivery of its IfFriday editions due to the ||current transition in print- Iers, the third this year. Reg- |ular Friday delivery will re- |sume as The Maroon print¬ing operation stabilizes. Skolnick congratulated the activ¬ist students for what he said wasgood moral and political sense intheir recognizing the right of Bus¬iness Students to invite Dow re¬cruiters to campus.However, Carl Davidson, a na¬tional officer of SDS, said thatDow itself admits its recruitingefforts do not involve the questionof free speech. He pointed out thatthe Dow recruiters refuse to talkabout their company’s role in thewar.“With Dow, the CIA, and the Ar¬my,” Davidson said, “we mustresist their crimes by any meansnecessary.”Bob Ross, chairman of the Steer¬ing Committee, questioned wheth¬er war criminals have the rightto commit war crimes. Ross saidit was ridiculous to call themarchers a threat to Dow’s free¬dom.Violence Is RejectedThree days before yesterday’sdemonstration a meeting had beencaled in Rosenwald 2 to discuss“what students could do againstDow.” Ross Dow DemonstrationPlanning Committee, presentedstudents with two alternatives.One: they could shut down the in¬terviews, or two: they couldpeacefully protest the presence ofDow on campus.Turn to Page 5CORSO Gives $4370To SG: Maroon WaitsThe Committee on RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO)met Sunday, but while the StudentGovernment appropriations weremade, no final decision was madeconcerning The Maroon.Student Government won all ofits request for $4370 despite theinitial feelings of some of the COR¬SO members that its full-time sec¬retary was unnecessary and whohad reservations about the presentfinancial status of SG.It was pointed out that SG hasso far spent $1299, with only $500appropriated. It was furtherpointed out that in the proposedbudget SG would spend $260 fortelephones, whereas it has alreadyspent $743. Some $20 of this wasdue to a rise in rates.The Maroon has so far provedto be the toughest problem facingCORSO as accurate figures regard¬ing its financial position are diffi¬cult to obtain.Mark Joseph, a graduate studentin education and chairman ofCORSO, distributed a sheet onwhich he claimed to have the fig¬ures for the maximum and mini¬mum Maroon deficits for last year. One of the problems is the ques¬tion of how many of last year’sdebts can be collected.Even with the figures that Jo¬seph ran, however, he admitted toThe Maroon Business Office yes¬terday that he “could not find”$2600.Minimum Is GivenAt the meeting, however, CORSOvoted that it would fund The Ma¬roon with at least $1,137, the min¬imum amount of the deficit forlast year as Joseph figured it. Sev¬eral members of CORSO havegone on record recently as oppos¬ing The Maroon subsidy in its en¬tirety.In other CORSO action the Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society re¬quested the funds for a newsletter,the first issue of which appearedyesterday. Their request was de¬nied because of a CORSO by-lawwhich forbids funding of politicalgroups.Also, the Renaissance Playerswere given $320 on condition thatthey return whatever money theydon’t use. They are planning twoshows this year, with a projected$160 deficit per show.Letter GradingThe college faculty at Yale votedlast week to inaugurate a non-numerical grading system for its 1undergraduates.Under this system, which willbegin in January and last exper¬imentally for five years, the 4000undergraduate students will begraded on an “honors,” “highpass,” “pass,” and “fail” system.A motion for guidelines for thesefour categories was voted down by the faculty members. The gradu¬ate students were not affected bythis decision.With no meaningful grade aver¬age or numerical class standing,graduate schools will have to eval¬uate student abilities and achieve¬ments by other means, such asletters of recommendation fromprofessors.With the emphasis on the draftchanging from the undergraduate to the graduate level and with thedraft deferment test for academicborderline cases, the non-numer-ical grading system will have nodirect effect on the draft status ofthe undergraduates at Yale.There has been a trend awayfrom letter grades and numericalrating among many colleges in theUnited States which one educatorhas called “the excessive preoccu¬pation with number or letter grades,” but few of them go as faras the charge at Yale.Chicago To ConsiderSome colleges, under a grantfrom the Ford Foundation, haveoperated without the use of anystandard designations of grades. !At Columbia, students were al- jlowed this year to select onecourse each semester in which hisgrade will be only “pass” or; “fail.” If he passes it. the course result is not computed in his gradeaverage. ,A plan similar to this was pre¬sented by the Fact-Finding Com¬mittee on Grades in its secondreport last April to the CollegeCouncil at Chicago.The report, which suggested aprocedure similar to that at Col¬umbia, was tentatively revised bythe College Council.MAROON SPORTSChicago 2-0 Soccer Upset Over Wildcats a FirstBy JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterChicago’s record-setting soccerteam scored another first Sundayby upsetting the Northwestern soc¬cer club for the first time in Chi¬cago history, 2-0.The Maroons have now tied theUniversity record for soccer vic¬tories and, with three games leftto play, stand an excellent chanceof smashing the two decade-oldmark.Scoring ace Mark Manewitzscored the first and winning goallate in the second period andthereby tied the all-time Chicagoindividual scoring record of tengoals. Tad Malloy picked up thefinal tally in the closing minutesof the game on a nearly uniqueplay, dribbling the ball 70 yards upfield himself and scoring past 1the goalie.Coach Bill Vendl considered Ma- jroon goalie Dave Gadian to be the'outstanding player of the game; |Gadian made two very spectacular,saves on normally certain goals |and totalled 26 vital saves. “Ourconditioning and determinationwere just too much for the North¬western team,” the coach said.“Northwestern was much olderand more experienced than Chi¬cago, but we outplayed them inevery department.” Northwesternhas an official soccer club, ratherthan team, and was thus able touse six graduate students againstthe Maroons.Chicago has only three gamesleft, but, as Coach Vendl com¬mented, “Each one of them is go¬ing to be a tough game and an important one, since we’re trying)to set a record for the future.”The team faces Roosevelt at GrantPark Wednesday at 2:45 p.m.The annual Intramural WrestlingTournament will be held tonightbeginning at 6:45 at Bartlett gym.Athletes from the various campusresidences and organizations will compete in a total of eight indi¬vidual weight classes.The cross-country meet sched¬uled for Saturday has been post¬poned and will be run tomorrowat 4 p.m. at Washington Park. TheMaroon harriers will face the Uni¬versity of Illinois at Chicago squadin this competition. The revision states that if apass-fail grading system is adop¬ted by the college for 25 percentof undergraduate courses, thepassing grade will not counttoward the grade-point average,but a failing grade will.A definitive decision on whetherthis system will be adopted or notwill be made in the Council meet¬ing at the end of this month.HUTCHINSUNA to Hear Profs SaturdayMaroon Takes 3 Debates, butMichigan Wins Debate Tourney Two University of Chicago pro¬fessors will address a meeting ofthe Chicago branch of the UnitedNations Association here Saturday.Speaking are Phillip Hauser, pro¬fessor of sociology and director ofthe Population Research Center,and Richard Me Keon, professor ofphilosophy and classical languagesand literature, who will chair themeeting.The meeting, dealing withUNESCO and Human Rights, issponsored by the United NationsAssociation and the University’sCommittee on Ideas and Methods. Following Hauser’s speech, on“Human Rights and the PopulationProblem,” the meeting will breakup into discussion groups under theleaderships of graduate students. Robert Maynard Hutchins,former chancellor andpresident of the Universityand now president of theCenter for the Study ofDemocratic Institutions, willspeak at 8:15 tonight in theLaw School Auditorium on“The Truth about the Cen¬ter."The sixth annual University ofChicago National Debate Tourna¬ment was held in Ida Noyes hallover the weekend.Michigan won top honors amongthe 25 participating schools by de¬feating Oberlin in the finals. Alsorepresented were Northwestern,Cornell, and Columbia.The Chicago team won two outof four negative debates, defeatingDePauw and Northern Michigan,and losing to Wisconsin and WayneState, and one out of four affirma¬tive debates, defeating BowlingGreen, and losing to Cornell, theIllinois Circle campus, and Iowa.The topic for the year is “Re¬solved: That the Federal Govern¬ment should guarantee a minimumannual cash income to all citi¬ zens.Debater Steve Seitz, ’69, pointedout that Chicago often has diffi¬culty with affirmative debates be¬cause it tends to take “a rationalrather than a traditional ap-!proach.” A judge expressed thepoint somewhat differently, say¬ing, “No socialist in the countrywould propose so leftist a plan.”Debaters from Chicago, besidesSeitz, included Dick Neumeier, ’68;Neil Malmsten, ’69; and MaryTurck, ’71. ANDERSON'S BULKOSERVICE STATIONH.qhesf Quality Gasolineat Lowest PricesFeaturing theBULKO PANTRYA Complete Grocery StoreOpen 24 Hours57th & Cottage Grove The United Nations Association isan independent publicity agency forthe UN. It promotes speakers’ pro¬grams, films, and other media topromote the UN in the Unit¬ed States. All of its meetings oncampus are open to the public.Theses, term papers. .Typed, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. SKIChristmas in Aspen$169I.cave Chi Dec 16th 4:30pmarrive hack in Chi Dec 24thIncludes all train, bus,lodging in Aspen, tow tickets,all meals on trains, breakfastdaily, pool, taxes.Northwestern IJ. Ski Groupcall Dick 764 6264 262 3765DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 00 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIUED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESMorgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rr* St.CORNELL ELECTRONICSERVICEFAST andDEPENDABLESERVICETV • RADIO • TAPE RECORDERPHONOGRAPH • ANY BRANDFOREIGN AND DOMESTICTRANSISTOR OR TUBECOMPONENT STEREO - HI FIPL 2-77301635 E 55th StYou won t have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 We’ve Moved!um Larger Locationnm Wicker FurnitureHim. e uropean Kitchen CentreNEW! Pipes & SmokingAccessoriesand much, much mote!4 COOLEY’S4*» candlesplus. . . .5211 S. Harper, 363 -4477/ X ' - ’ \ • -THE CHICAGO MAROON ;-v5- -I »*>-November 7. 1967> Enrollment at Chicago Rises by 202 to 8561According to figures announcedby Dean of Students Charles O’¬Connell, student enrollment at Chi¬cago’s Hyde Park campus hasrisen by 202 students, to a total of8561.This figure includes the College,the graduate divisions (biologicalscience humanities, physical sci¬ence, social sciences), and the sixgraduate schools (business, divini¬ty, education, law, library, and theSocial Service Administration).The College in 1966 had an enroll¬ment of 2,542 students; the 1967figure is 2657, a rise of 0.58percent.“The increase”, O’Connell said,“is entirely a result of a larger re¬turning group rather than an in¬crease in the number of enteringfreshmen.” There are now 3722 registeredstudents in the four graduate divi¬sions; this is an increase offive students over the 1966 fig¬ure of 3717.The total for the six graduateschools is now 2182 as opposed to2100 in 1966. There are variationsaf from one to about 50 stu¬dents within each school, but thetotal number shows no significantchange.“There is not much room to ex¬pand at the graduate level,” saidO’Connell. “In some areas therewere more acceptances and rejec¬tions than we had expected.”This accounts for the overallslight variation within the schools,he said.Commenting on the reason forthe slight increase in total student enrollment, O’Connell said, “Wecan’t house or teach a larger num¬ber of students. We’ll always be amoderately small university.”Even given the funds and the fa¬cilities, the University would notexpand greatly, he said.“What really determines the sizeof the student body,” O’Connelladded, “is the size of the facultyand the nature of the instructionthat we want to offer. Right now,we are in no position to expand.”O’Connell concluded, “The en¬rollment figures for this year giveno indication whatsoever that weare becoming a multiversity.” EnrollmentCOLLEGEBiological DivisionHumanitiesPhysical ScienceSocial ScienceTotal Undergraduate DivisionsGRADUATE SCHOOLSBusiness SchoolDivinity SchoolEducation Graduate SchoolLaw SchoolLibrary Graduate SchoolSocial Serv. Administration SchoolTotal Graduate enrollmentTOTAL STUDENTS ON QUADRANGLES190 MBA/ProfessionalExecutive ProfessionalExtensionTOTAL ENROLLMENT IN UNIVERSITY 1967265760390967215383722571452177461108413218259048561107615273810,527 1966254258994263715493717580405202468933522100581783591067147925Lynd Urges Lifetime New Left ActionStaughton Lynd, newly-appointed Christmas,” he said, “than I did in the movement, he asserted,i assistant professor at Chicago j about the reprisals the U. S. gov- thr0„gh ActionI State College, urged radicals to eminent would take as a conse-1 str*sed thal thc new rad., take up the “New Left philosophy” quence of my trip. I icalism is new because of its meth-With $56 Million Yet to Collect Lynd asserted that as a result of od of dialogue through action. TheFund Raising Officials OptimisticBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorAs the second year of the Uni-v’s three-year drive to raiselion draws to an end, fundraisinb oiticials are maintaining afacade of careful optimism.“I’m a cautiously optimisticperson,” said Charles U. Daly, vice-president for development, in atelephone interview “and I guessI still feel that way.”Daly bases his optimism on thefact that the University has col¬lected $104 million in gifts andpledges by October 31. Thisleaves $56 million, or just over onethird of the total, to be raised inthe final fourteen months of thecampaign.Daly was particularly hopefulabout the prospects of earning all. .of the Ford Foundation $25 million jln the fund s first year-three-for-one matching grant whichforms the core of the campaign.Funds for the Ford grant are. jsj ,earned on the basis of actual gifts ! dn , ■ * . . c ,. eceived, and will be granted8 in ^ “S f “erfai'S 10 ra‘SeI Stanford fund drive which set the! previous record for money raisedsucseeded in raising equal a—mounts in ea" i of the three years. The conference, open to the en¬tire university community, was on‘The New Quest for American Rad¬icalism.”To illustrate his point Lynd citedhis own anxieties on the wayto Hanoi in 1965. “I worried moreabout how I could get back to myclasses at Yale on time afterto the fall conference of the Meth-Daley pointed out, however, that I odist Theological Fellowship Fri-the drive must go well beyond da^earning the Ford Grant to be suc¬cessful. He also conceded that thedrive still had a long way to go.“If you are asking if the last yearwill be the toughest I would saythat it will be,” he said.The Big GiftsDaley indicated that the chiefproblem will be continuing to at¬tract the large foundation or in¬dividual grants that have kept thedrive out of serious trouble so far.“In a drive like this, if you don’tget the big gifts, you don’t makeit,” he stated.The University recently receiveda $1 million grant from the SmartFamily Foundation for construc¬tion of an Art Center, but largefoundation grants have generallybeen lagging behind the pace set tion.The recent tendency of othermembers of the new resistance tovisualize radicalism as “the workof a lifetime rather than a two-year or three-year ‘experience’ ”has freed professionals, marriedpersons and students to participateIndependents Take 5G SeatsSix unaffiliated students have between Woehrle and Cohen to bebeen elected to Student Govern- resolved in the SG assmbly.ment (SG). | The results in the two WoodwardAccording to results released by i Court seats are Chelsea Baylor,SG yesterday, no Students For Ac- 191; Nancy Wieckowicz, 161; LauraIt is not, however, unusual fora fund drive to be successful aftertwo-thirds of theU. of C. OffersMuseum TourThe University is sponsoring aguided tour of the Museum ofContemporary Art on Friday,November 10, at 3:30 p.m. Allwho are interested should sim¬ply be at the museum at thattime. The museum, at 237 E. On-tarios St., closed Mondays; isopen Tuesday, Wednesday andThursday from 10 to 10; Fridayand Saturday from 10 to 5; andSunday from 12 to 5. Admissionis 50 cents; students 25 cents;student membership, $5.00. Daly was emphatic in assertingthat a failure to meet the $160million goal would be “disasterous”for the University. “You’re in aperiod when support for our aca—demic progress is absolutely es—sential if the University is tomaintain its position,” he stated.MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOB8Y STORE OtTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925>.Student Discounts tion (SFA) candidates were elec¬ted, there were two ties, andtwo Pierce Tower seats are indispute with the results beingwithheld pending the Election andRules (E & R) Committee meet¬ing last night.SFA resembles Student’s Politi¬cal Action Committee, the left-wing majority party in SG.The results in the five first yearseats are Neil Caiman, 221; JoanFilter, 186; Marcia Edison, 181:Sheldon Sacks, 158; MargaretWoehrle, 146; Daniel Cohen, 146;Louise Brotsky, 142; Leonard Zax,140; Dawn Esser, 138; and JudithHartman, 115.Caiman, Filter, Edison, andSacks were elected, with the tie his Hanoi trip he decided to make whole New Left comes out of thehis “whole life available to the sol- i experience of the old Lelt, he said—ution of our problems” and is now j “people who theorized but didn’tmuch more relaxed about his voca- act.”He argued that the individual“must not merely talk about butalso act on his deepest ethical be¬liefs” and that this challenges the“dichotomy between thought andaction enshrined in the FirstAmendment.” This amendment, hesaid, considered “free speech in¬alienable only insofar as it did notlead to action which disturbed thepublic peace.”Religious opinion. Lynd said, wasfelt to be harmless “because itwas only opinion.” Noting that it ishypocrisy to allow a man his be¬liefs but to prevent him from put¬ting them into practice, Lynd statedthat the New Left wants to extend“unarmed action,” a convictionwhich already has legal sanctionin the Courts’ consideration ofpicketing, sitting-in internationaltravel and draft card burning asforms of speech.STAMP 171f 'V 0 -v IT'S THF FAG*M lS - model_ ANY 3?5 LINS TEXT71.* Iln"* l»"'rcTriir,TlPIE METALPOrFFT RUBBEP STAMP. ■ 2 ".r ... Si *•?• Ttii.ri-v . r.u-r.hiiii.llmtr i-!iars< Ari<!Pif n.pt xhtrm*n» e»*;.*»rtlnnGu«finte*<jTHE MOPP CO.P. O. Box 18623 L*nox Square StationATLANTA, GA . 30326 Finkler, 95; and John Siefert,62. Miss Baylor and Miss Weicko-wicz were elected.The results in the one Burton-Judson seat was a tie between IrlExtein and Jerrold Kessler, whoboth received at 36 votes. The tiewill be resolved in the SG assem¬bly.No official comments were ob¬tained regarding the status of thePierce elections, but action inpromised after the E & R meeting.Franklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd Street UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor•V ^5^ =<■ - .-mPEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ON NEW BOOKS IT CAMPUS AUTHORSsemmwm The Arts and The PublicEdited by James E. Miller, Jr. $6.50miwiiiCUSTOM QUALITY The Interior LandscapeTranslated by A. K. Ramanujan $5.75CLEANING1363 E. 53rd St. General Book Department752-6933 The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.10% Student Discount HYDE PARK T.V. bsntsHYDE PARK T.V. SERVICESHYDE PARK T.V. SELISHYDE PARK T.V. OFFERS television f orS6.50 a week FMradio for S5.06 *month.television, hi 1 iradios, tape re¬covers. etc.ZenithMotorolaGrundiga 10°o discountto students if yonmention this ad. ;!|1463 East 53rd Street PL 2-2700 *HiNovember 7, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3GADFLY *Student Representation? Not Unless...By JERRY LIPSCHI’d like to take this space tocomment on last Friday’s Ma¬roon editorial, “Representation”which discussed the Student Gov¬ernment’s being unrepresenta¬tive.On some factual points the edi¬torial was correct: It is true thatthe Student Government has, asever, a high drop-out rate andthat attendance at meetings islow. What was primarily wrongwith the editorial on SG was thatit reflected not the slightestawareness of the political real¬ities of which the chronic prob¬lems of SG are a mere symp¬tom.Before discussing what I con¬sider this main problem, I wantto cite some of the factual errorsand distortions in the editorialitself.FIRST, the SG Assembly is not malapportioned. “Apartmentdwellers” are not “over-repre¬sented.” All electoral units areapportioned a number of seatsappropriate to their percentageof the student population. Thereis no “dorm dwellers” or “apart¬ment dwellers” - electoral unit.There is a single “College unitfrom which separate units aredistinguished for dormitory com¬plexes of 100 residents or more.Second, while your concern forthe drop-out rate may be com¬mendable, your solution is not.You would eliminate the suspen¬sion procedure and make a quor¬um always half the absolutenumber of seats in the Assem¬bly. Since you realize that withlow attendance this would para¬lyze the institution, you proposea “cure:” namely, to exclude all“uninterested” constituen¬cies from having seats at allFaculty Asks End to Viet War“Mr. President, we dissentingDemocrats want a cessation ofbombing and an end to escalation.We want an immediate beginningof meaningful negotiations with allforces involved in this conflict.We want out of the war in Viet¬nam.”This plea, signed by several Uni¬versity of Chicago staff members,will appear beneath a letter toPresident Johnson in a full pageadvertisement in The Chicago Dai¬ly News November 11.Milton J. Rosenberg, a spokes¬man for the University committeeseeking signatures, announcedthat the ad, which will appear in25 newspapers throughout the na¬tion, is designed to advise thePresident that the dissentinggroup’s “campaign funds, their en¬ ergies and votes will go to thosej and only those political figures whowork for an end to the war inj Vietnam.”Another member of the Chicagocommittee, Marvin Zonis, reportedthat information had been sent toevery faculty member and invitedany interested person who will be21 years of age by the November1969 election and who usuallyvotes Democratic to contactJames D. McCawley, Robert C.Coburn, Marlene D. Dixon, AlanGewirth, Rosenberg or himself.Sign-up sheets will be posted atvarious places on the campus, headded. Five dollars from a facul¬ty member and $2 from a studentwill reserve a spot for his namein the ad. (e.g., most graduate divisions).This might impress us if youcould come up with democraticcriteria by which to define a con¬stituency “uninterested” beforean election, and thereby denythem representation altogether.FINALLY in the “facts” de¬partment: you make allusions inthe editorial to SG failure to pro¬vide services and a speakers’program. The fact is that all theservices we offered last year aresimply in the hands of other or¬ganizations which expressed spe¬cific interest in running them:We have no speakers’ programsimply because this ever-so-intel-lectual University isn’t interestedin underwriting one with thatnecessary thing called “capital.”We would love to have a speak¬ers program — find us money.But all this concern about ap¬portionment, quorums, IHC peti¬tions for “house based” SG, andso on, is both boring and irrele-! vant. All this concern for consti¬tutional change masks the mainproblem, and urges people intoa pseudo-dramatic struggle forstructural revision in the attrac¬tive (but poorly understood)name of “representativeness.”TAKE THE IHC plan, for ex¬ample. It’s supposed purpose isto make SG more representative.Besides many specific problemswith the plan, the main thing isthat it assumes that by electingpeople in the dorms from eachhouse, suddenly a new enthusias-asm and relevance will fill thelungs of what has always beena sickly institution. I appreciatesome house chauvanism: I recog-; nize the Geist of Henderson and| the Geist of Shorey. But I fearI that even the radient and effer-i vescent spirit which makes the IHC so relevant, its meetings sointeresting, its issues so real,and — above all — what makesit so popular and important toits constituency — I’m afraidwhat has made the IHC what itis will never make SG what Icall “representative” or “mean¬ingful” or “significant.” Thanksto IHC for their magnificent ex¬ample of representativity — but“no thanks.”But The Maroon doesn’t get offthe hook so fast. While I don’tagree with Burstein’s solution,I’ll defend the IHC as a potenti¬ally relevant body, in the sameway SG could be: either by hav¬ing power or working to get it.That is the only solution to rep¬resentation problems.WHAT HAS having power gotto do with being representative?It’s really quite simple. Whyshould people pay attention tobodies that have no significanceto their interests? SG has nosignificance to students interestsso long as it has no power. It’ssimply inherent in the notion ofan organization’s being repre¬sentative, of people’s directingtheir votes, opinions, actionstoward the structure — it’sinherent in this that the struc¬tures have to be “where it’s at.”What’s it? Power — decision¬making. That’s the essential.Without it people have no reasonto pay attention to the institution.Until we get power there will beone string of reforms after an¬other and none of them will in¬volve most people in anythingand only a few for a short time.Only if IHC, SG, or any other body becomes a real governmentfor students, a means of studentself-government — only then canit be representative.OKAY. So IHC and SG aren’trepresentative now because stu¬dents are powerless. These bod¬ies are irrelevant because stu¬dents are irrelevant — they’vebeen defined irrelevant to the de¬cision-making process. Words,kind intentions, “civilized discourse — these can’t change stu¬dents’ irrelevance. Only actioncan. Action by students to winpower. Action by authorities toshare power. Without power weare irrelevant.But need SG and IHC be ir¬relevant until students get offtheir butts and try to get somepower? No. IHC and SG havegot to make that revolution,make that social change that willmake students relevant to theirown lives.(Editor’s note: Jerry Lipsch,a fourth-year student in theCollege, is vice-president ofStudent Government.)Ml 3-3113*5424 S. Kimbarkwe sell ’he best,and fix the restAmericans by the thousandsupon thousands have beenreading and thinking aboutSENATORFULBRIGHT’Spowerful appeal for theUnited States to come to itssenses before it is too late.THE ARROGANCEOF POWER"Avery specific protest against the war in Vietnam, and a plea thatwe get out, even if it hurts. It is an angry cry against all war. It isan articulate statement of the duty to dissent... an invaluable anti¬dote to the official rhetoric of government."—max frankel, N.Y. Times Book Review “Ah, to be young again!To fly Ozark at Vi off!”Fly Ozark Youth Fare and save 33V3% ... with confirmedreservations. If you’re under 22, write or call Ozarkfor a $10 Youth I.D. Card application.(Travel under plan not applicable during major holiday periods)call- go-getters go726-4680 OZARKih Over 150,000 copies in printCloth $4.95; Vintage Book p«. lerback $1.95Now at your bookstore. RANDOM HOUSETHE CHICAGO MAROON4 November 7, 1967No Link in Washington March, Recent ProtestsWASHINGTON (CPS) - On theface of it the wave of protestsagainst recruiters and militaryprojects that has swept collegecampuses in the past two weekswould appear to be a direct out¬growth of the October 21 mobiliza¬tion. In fact, however the twoare connected only in the sensethat both are working against U.S.military undertakings.The timing of the protests islargely a result of the fact thatDow Chemical and armed forcesrecruiters have been on the cam¬ puses where the protests have oc¬curred.As to the reason for the protests,if there is any one event that maybe singled out as their cause it isnot the mobilization but the Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS) national convention lastJuly.At that convention the delegatesdecided to direct their efforts thisyear toward reducing military in¬volvement on university campuses.As Mike Spiegel, national secretaryof the organization, admits, “We really decided after the fact. Therewas a lot of this kind of activitygoing on last year on various cam¬puses.”Militant ActionIt also is true that SDS has notbeen the sole impetus behind eachof the campus protests of the pasttwo weeks. On the other hand, SDSmembers have been involved tosome extent in all of them andhave organized some of them.At the convention the policiesvoted on did not include tacticalquestions. According to Spiegel,Profs Condemn Disruptive ProtestsWASHINGTON (CPS) — The or to prevent speakers invited to all for dissent. But we thinkAmerican Association of Universi- campus from speaking. all persons, regardless of their be-ty Professors has condemned re- jcent student demonstrations de-'signed to stop campus interviewsDow RecruitersMeet ProtestContinued From Page 1By a margin of almost 10 to 1,t h e more than 100 studentspresent rejected the use of vio¬lence and affirmed the right ofbusiness students to invite andspeak freely with whomever theychose.Shortly after, Professors Levine,Skolnick, Fred Eggan, and Mor-genthau issued a statement call¬ing on their faculty colleagues tojoin the students in the demonstra¬tion.A previous visit by Dow on Octo¬ber 20 to interview Ph. D. candi¬dates in Chemistry had gone al- imost unnoticed.SDS Watched CalendarStudents for a Democratic Socie- jty had members watching the Cal¬endar for Recruiting Visits issuedby Career Counseling and Place- jment. But in the words of AnitaSandke, director of placement,“We have not handled a visit byDow recruiters through this officefor as long as I can remember.”The appointment for Monday’svisit presumably was made with !Business School officials last jspring.PIZZAPLATTERPizza Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!tHO E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 The AAUP, which has long beenone of the most liberal organiza¬tions in the academic community,warned that recent protests at sev¬eral campuses across the nationare destructive to the principles ofacademic freedom.The AAUP position was issued inthe form of a resolution adopted bythe AAUP Council, the organiza¬tion’s policy-making board, whichconsists of 30 elected representa¬tives. National Student AssociationPresident Edward Schwartz en¬dorsed the resolution, when he wasasked for comment.Against DisruptionThe resolution says “action byindividuals or groups to preventspeakers invited to the campusfrom speaking, to disrupt theoperations of the institutions in thecourse of demonstrators, or to ob¬struct and restrain other membersof the academic community andcampus visitors by physical forceis destructive of the pursuit oflearning and of a free society. Allcomponents of the academic com¬munity are under a strong obliga¬tion to protect its processes fromthese tactics.” ! liefs, should have the same free¬doms. Our concern is that thelarger freedom (freedom ofspeech) not be eroded away byparticular forms of protest whichwe think may be a challenge tothat larger freedom.”Student Role EndorsedVan Waes emphasized that justrecently became the AAUP hasbeen promoting greater academicfreedom for students. The organ¬ization one of five behind a jointstatement on the rights and free¬doms of students. This statementendorses such rights as a studentrole in policy-making and due pro¬cess for students in disciplinarycases.DISCOUNTART MATERIALS• PICTURE FRAMING• OFFICE & SCHOOL SUPPLIES• FILING CABINETS & ETC.DUNCAN’SRobert Van Waes, associate sec¬retary of the AAUP, said, “We’re 1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111BOOK SALELIBRARY DUPLICATESAND DISCARDS10$10$10$10$10$ 10$ 10$Fresh Stock DailyMonday thru SaturdaySTODdOTC®—©IPReynolds Club Basemento questions of strategy and tacticsare left up to individual SDS chap¬ters. It probably was inevitablethat the tactics would be in the di¬rection of sit-ins, however, becauseSDS has stressed the need for mili¬tant action against military involve¬ment on campuses.Police IntroducedSpiegel said militant action hasbeen emphasized because past pro¬tests have shown it to be the mostsuccessful method of raising theissues that SDS wants to raisej among university people at large.“When students are willing totake militant action,” Spiegel said, i“other people on campus see thatthis group takes its goals very se¬riously and then they start to thinkabout the problems involved.”Militant ActionAnother result of militant actionhas been the increased use of out¬side police, as in the protests atthe University of Wisconsin andat Brooklyn College. For SDS theintroduction of the police can be Iadvantageous but it is not always 1i an unmixed blessing. According to Spiegel it can turn the controversyaway from the question of militaryinvolvment on campuses to that ofpolice brutality. “We think the is¬sue of civil liberties tends to ob¬fuscate the real issues,” Spiegelsaid.Not the IssueAs for the questions of the re¬cruiters’ freedom of speech, SDSsaid the freedom is not at issue,the issue being rather whether uni¬versities and their students shouldcontribute to the country’s mili¬tary efforts. It is the freedom ofspeech issue, however, that is thesticking point for the National Stu¬dent Association (NSA). Al Mi¬lano, an NSA national staff mem¬ber, said the organization supportsfreedom of speech on campus forrecruiters as for anyone else.“We understand the frustrationsthat lead students to these kindsof protests,” Milano said, “but wehave to be consistent about freespeech. What we are urging is thatstudents be given a voice in thingslike who recruits on campus.”“SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT"LAYAWAYFORJUNENOW!!ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS"67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: Jerry A. Levy-Ext. 3265 or 324-5751LAYAWAYFORJUNENOW!!PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMOND( \NavalResearchLaboratoryWASHINGTON, D.C.An Equal Opportunity EmployerThe Navy’s Corporate Laboratory-NRL isengaged in research embracing practicallyall branches of physical and engineering sci¬ence and covering the entire range frombasic investigation of fundamental problemsto applied and developmental research.The Laboratory has a continuing need forphysicists, chemists, metallurgists, mathe¬maticians, oceanographers, and engineers(electronic, electrical, mechanical, chemi¬cal and civil). Appointees, who must beU.S. citizens, receive the full benefits ofthe career Civil Service.Candidates for bachelor’s, master’s and doc¬tor’s degrees in any of the above fields areinvited to schedule interviews with the NRLrepresentative who will be in theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOplacement office onNOVEMBER 20,1007Those who for any reason are unable toschedule interviews may write to The Direc¬tor (Code 1818), Naval Research Labora¬tory, Washington, D. C. 20390.V - JNovember 7, 1967* r i THE CHICAGO MAROON 5The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1891Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerP Managing Editor Roger Black§§ Executive Editors Michael SeidmanJohn WelchNews Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward Chikofskymmmm IAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel Hertzberg ||Joan PhillipsSiLiterary Editor David L. Aiken SiEditor Emeritus David A. Satter% mmPeaceTo almost everyone’s surprise, the protest againstthe Dow Chemical Company, the major manufacturer ofnapalm, passed yesterday without incident.There was a great deal of confusion when The Ma¬roon came out on Friday over what the demonstratorswere going to do. Perhaps they did not know what theywere going to do themselves.Dow has left behind it an ugly wake of violencewhen they tried to hold interviews on other campuses(e.g. Harvard, Brooklyn, Oberlin, Reed, Illinois, Wiscon¬sin, and Princeton).Because of these precedents, because of the recentmemory of violence at Washington, because the fact thatthe Dow visit would seem to be an obvious place to applythe new rationale about violence formulated in Washing¬ton, many people believed there would be violence here.But there wasn’t. The demonstrators voted twice onhow they should handle the demonstration, and eachtime violence was voted down. Hopefully they voted inthe realization that the introduction of violence into thepeace movement has split it wide open and has alienatedalmost everyone else. (The “moderate” faculty memberswho joined the protest, said they would not join it ifthere were to be violence.)Hopefully the demonstrators voted in the realizationthat Dow and LBJ are more likely to listen to peoplewho are talking than people who are shouting and throw¬ing rocks.If peaceful protests are ignored, then an alternativeshould be sought. But persistent, frequent, peaceful pro¬tests are the movement’s best chance, and they shouldbe tried first.Mr. O'Connell“. . . With the freedom to initiate and control theirlives in the houses comes ... the obligation to exerciseresponsible restraints on that freedom and autonomy.”This is how Dean of Students Charles O’Connell summedup Chicago’s position on social rules in a Maroon inter¬view Friday.We heartily agree with the end but strongly dis¬agree on the means. To us, the term “house antonomy”when applied to a procedure whereby the Dean of Stu¬dents may reject students’ rules he considers “unac¬ceptable” is a sham. If students of one of the Collegehouses are unanimously in favor of open intervisitationhours and the invitation to sexual intercourse which thisimplies, Mr. O’Connell should not have the power tooverrule them.Clearly the “minimal controls necessary in a com¬munal living situation that necessarily intrude on thetotal privacy of a man’s life or a woman’s life” must,if the phrase “house autonomy” is to have any meaning,come from the dorm residents themselves; and if theydecide that restriction of hours is unnecessary in theirsituation, who is Mr. O’Connell to say otherwise? JOHN MOSCOWNo Democratic Beliefs:The New Left and SDSMost of the people intimatelyconcerned with the New Left, es¬pecially the misnamed Studentsfor a Democratic Society (SDS)are not believers in democracy.They dc not understand how itworks; they dislike the democra¬tic processes; and rather thanevery compromise their own half-baked notions of what this societyshould be, they subvert and des¬troy everything that it stands for.Democracy, as I understand theterm, means rule by the peopleor by a majority thereof. This ruleby majority is limited only bysocietal covenants, in our case theConstitution. There are some ar¬eas which are forbidden to ma¬jority rule, such as equality ofrights for all men, and the rightnot to have to testify against one¬self. Otherwise the majority ofthe country is free to determineits own policy.There are two ways in whichdemocracy can be subverted.Either a majority may decidethat, despite the Constitution, itwill refuse to grant equality toall men; or the majority maylose the power to make its owndecisions. Both threaten in thiscountry.IN THE RACIAL crisis inAmerica today, a clear majorityof the white population does notwant the Negroes to have whatshould be theirs by law: equality.They must be persuaded that itis in their interests to grant Ne¬gro equality — not from somelofty motive such as justice, butbecause our form of governmentwill not stand the strain of con¬sistent violation of the Constitu¬tion. With time and continued pres¬sure that problem should be set¬tled but others will remain.There will still be the anti-demo¬cratic forces of totalitarianism,such as SDS, which will bothseek to make policy while a mi¬nority of the country, and claimthat they, being “right,” have thetied, but still be the anti-demo-In this, they act in a way remi¬niscent of the Roundheads, theInquisition, and the Americangovernment around 1920. Due tothe rectitude of the cause, all ex¬cesses are to be permitted, eventhough the cause itself be de¬stroyed.PRESENTLY the New Leftmakes no claim to represent amajority of the country, yet itinsists on national adoption ofits platform. Failing that, it usesforce, such as staging sit-ins, onthe theory that no large numberof people can be jailed at once.They should be proved wrong.No democratic society can en¬dure with impunity the active re-sistence by the minority to thedecisions of the majority. Whatthe SDS fails to realize is thatit favors a revolution opposed tothe wishes of a majority of thiscountry. Such opposition, whileadmittedly making electoralprocesses less promising, for itis hardly a mandate for physicalopposition. The political weaponsin a democracy are persuasionand compromise, not the black¬mailing demonstrations and po¬litical assassinations favored bythe paranoids of the Left (andRight). THE CLAIM is for a more“democratic” society, which willguarantee that all men areequal, which present Americansociety does not do. Since notall men are equal, there is noreason why it should. Whatshould be guaranteed are equal¬ity before the law and equalityof opportunity. One of these ispresently written into our stat¬utes, and the other will be soon,by the liberals who favor demo¬cratic means of accomplishingsocial revolution.Unfortunately, the New Leftfails to make any promises aboutindividual freedom in its millen-ial society. We won’t have toworry about government action,but Judge Lynch will keep theminority in line. If anyone wantsto do something unpopular in theNew Left state, such as eatinghis eggs from the big end ratherthan the small, he won’t be al¬lowed to do. He won’t be per¬suaded that he is wrong. He willbe forbidden to do it, by majori¬ty vote of the New Left, enforcedby “non-obstructive civil disobed¬ience,” if the majority gets outof line. It is not an attractiveutopia that we are shown.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand Intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 7, 1967Letters to the Editors of The MaroonSigns and SGThe abundance of signsthroughout the campus advertis¬ing the Dow demonstration haveall claimed Student Governmentsponsorship of both the demon¬stration and the planning meet¬ings. As a member of the SGassembly, I would like to pointout that the Assembly was nevergiven the opportunity to considerwhether to take a position on thedemonstration, even though theSG Constitution gives it solepower to determine SG policy. Inspite of this, the officers of SGpermitted the organizers of thedemonstration to use the SGoffice in preparing and printingthe publicity, and let them useSG’s name on that publicity.We see here another blatantdisregard for the principles ofhonest and legal politics on thepart of the officers of SG. Intheir zeal to use SG for their ownpurposes, while purporting to bea government representative ofstudent opinion, they have by¬passed the constitutional organfor determining that opinion.BILL PHILLIPS, 70 A RoseIn the classified ads of TheMaroon (October 31, 1967), thereappeared an ad for a male work¬er to teach Negro boys. Theword Negro was spelled with asmall “n”. This was an insult tothose students both black andwhite who feel that proper cour¬tesy and respect require the cap¬italization of the word Negro. Wefought for this for a long time inmy home town and it’s disgust¬ing to see the same kind of thinghere in the University paper.Jesse H. TurnerThe Business Office replies:A rose by any other name is stilla rose.Visions of TruthUpon his return from MountSinai, Jeff Blum discovered hispeople in the act of worshipinga wicked idol named Dow Chem¬ical Co. Evidently, some did notagree with the True Moralitywhich had been revealed to him a sort time previously. Virtuous¬ly taking a stand against deca¬dent libertarianism and freedomof choice, he now proposes thatthe Childern of Guevara shouldsee to it that sinners will be pre¬vented from making up their ownminds about the evils of napalm.A genuine pacifist might picketthe Dow recruiters. Different al¬together is the True Believer whowants to prohibit them fromcoming to campus.In my mind, the major causeof the brutal mass death of thiscentury has been, not DowChemical, but fanatics with vi¬sions of the Truth that supersedethe rights of other men to thinkdifferently .The isms are variedand confused, but the kill-the-beast mentality is constant.Mr. Blum is not very extremecompared to Hitler or Mao (orperhaps just not as powerful);but he has some of the same en¬thusiasm for limiting dissent.Why reason with your oppo¬nents? If you can’t prove yourcase, force them to be good. Na¬ palm is merely a by-product ofthe 20th century ; it is the Blumsthat sign the contracts.Anthony A. West, ’68Study PlaceI am a Chicago school teacherand a part-time student in math¬ematics at Loyola University. Ihave often had the fortune of us¬ing the reading rooms on the thirdfloor of the Harper Library sinceI moved to Hyde Park a year ago.On Sunday evening, October 29,1967, in search of a quiet placeto study, I entered the library,but was stopped by a guard whoinformed me that no person fromoutside the university communitywas allowed to use this facility.A young lady, working behind alibrary counter, affirmed whathe said.I asked if this was a result ofthe recent arsons on campus andwas told that it wasn’t. “Sir, thishas been long standing policy,”said the young lady firmly, yetpolitely. The question immediate¬ ly came into my mind of why Ihad been allowed to pass into thelibrary without question on pre¬vious weekends.To console my mixed feeling ofdisappointment and anger, she toldme that this policy was only in ef¬fect during the weekends and thatI would be able to study in the li¬brary during any weekday evening.This statement certainly called foran explanation, which she was un¬able to supply.I request that the restriction tostudents like myself to study inHarper Library be lifted. A studentI.D. should be all that is requiredin order to use what I believe is oneof the few places in Hyde Park ex¬ceptionally conducive to studyingduring weekends.ALLEN E. POLLACKLetters 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.ANOTHER GADFLYPulling Out Worse than the War?By ROBERT PORTUSLast year I was a student ofthe University of Chicago. Thisyear I am working as an econo¬mist for a firm whose name isof no interest to you — in fact,I would not be writing this atall, except for one peculiarity ofthis firm: it has a long-term con¬tract with the U. S. governmentto do economic research in Viet¬nam, and I happen to be workingfor this firm in Saigon. (Theopinions herein expressed aresolely my own, and are not in¬tended to reflect or indicate po¬sitions of the U. S. governmentor of my firm.)I despise war, and despise theweaknesses in man’s naturewhich lead him occasionally touse force. I have often, in a phil¬osophical mood, asked myself,what can be worse than war?For war is the legitimization ofmurder, and can there be any¬thing worse than granting socialapproval to the destruction ofanother man’s life? Does it notcorrode the very fabric of a so¬ciety to approve as an act of pol¬icy the same action which wecondemn as the most heinous ofcrimes when it is the action ofone individual against another?The answer to these questionsis, alas, not quite as simple asit might seem at first glance.For if we neglect the actual na¬ture of man, but rather conceive)f him as a virtuous being cor-'upted only by his social engage¬ments, then we may easily andcorrectly claim that man should;ry to effect his disengagementfrom society, and not participatein any form of killing, even if itis sanctioned by that society aswarfare. The history of the vari¬eties of Communism as dynamicforces in the world is marked bya refusal to accept this line ofreasoning. The response of ourown society is marked by a sim¬ilar refusal. If the actual natureof man coincided with this naivebelief, then we would find a suc¬ cessful society which has met thechallenge of those now existentby responding with adherence tonon-violence. The lack of emer¬gence of such a society I take asample demonstration of the factthat such a view of man’s ratureis in fact erroneous.So I maintain that these aredifficult questions, not immedi¬ately susceptible to analysis. Letus turn from them for a moment,and consider a practical matter:our country is currently at war;assuming for the moment thatthere are times at which a coun¬try must respond militarily, howshould we as individuals informourselves as to the nature andthe possible justification (or lackof justification) of this display offorce? In my own case, I feltthat this was an issue of moraland political significance too im¬portant to be evaluated from sec¬ondary sources; that is one rea¬son why I am writing this in Sai¬gon, rather than in a comfortableapartment in Chicago. But I amnot asking you to travel 9000miles so that you may betterjudge for yourselves. Nor wouldI demand that you rush out inorder to talk to any Vietnamesewho happen to be in your neigh¬borhood, although I would thinkthat anyone of normal intellec¬tual curiosity might want to talkto Vietnamese before formingopinions about the situation here.I would rather beg you to ad¬here to standards of intellectualhonesty in forming your opinions.I find it dismaying that a promi¬nent linguist, an obviously bril¬liant and sincere person, shouldprefer to base his argumentsagainst this war on a spuriousphilosophy rather than on actualinformation. I am disgusted bythe spectacle of literally thou¬sands of academicians, whowould not think of conductingscientific research based on per¬sonal preconceptions, coming toconclusions on the basis of per¬ sonal attitudes and preferenceswhich are in turn based on whatthese persons would like men tobe, rather than on what menactually are. It is my requestthat you gather your informationfrom people who have been here,rather than from people whoknow little of the situation here,and who base all their argumentson an attitude, which while com¬mendable in itself, has little todo with the workings of the realworld; namely, an extreme dis¬taste for war.Now I am not asking, norwould I presume to ask, that youreject the arguments of thosepeople who have been here andhave found our conduct of thiswar unjustifiable. Nor would Icondone the inefficiency or cor¬ruption of the government ofSouth Vietnam, where suchexists, or the occasional failureof this government to be suffi¬ciently aggressive in pursuingpolicies beneficial to its citizens.(Because of this statement, Imust remain anonymous for aslong as I am a guest of this gov¬ernment.) I would only ask thatyou weigh my remarks againstthe other informed opinions towhich you have access.When you consider the idea ofAmerican withdrawal from thiswar, I simply ask that you con¬sider the following: firstly,please give some thought to theone million North Vietnamesewho left the north in 1954-56.These people clearly preferredthe then far more corrupt South¬ern government to the oppres¬sive regime of Ho Chi Minh,whom some of you now hail asa leader of revolutionary free¬dom. Consider those thousands ofsoldiers who fought valiantlywith Ho when the fight wasagainst French colonialism, butwho have laid down their arms,rather than fight for the imple¬mentation of Communism. Con¬sider, please, the northerners who still stream into the South inthousands, preferring refugee life(with an allowance of ten pias¬ters a day) to decent subsistencein the North. Consider, then,those capable Vietnamese (manyof them refugees from the North)who are earnestly striving for analternative to Communism. Fi¬nally, consider over two millionSaigonese, the vast majority ofwhom are friendly to Americans,and who look to us to providedefense while they work outsome sort of alternative to a dy¬namic Communist movement.Are you ready to abandon thesepeople, or have you even givenany thought to them?Then consider the challenge toour society of another societywhich has armed itself with adynamic philosophy of politicalbehavior — one which I person¬ally find distasteful, one which Iam sure many of you would dis¬like intensely were you subjectedto it. Is our response to be “Wegive up!”? Please thumbthrough those volumes of Toyn¬bee which have been decoratingyour bookshelves. You will findreference to a few societieswhich have given up; these arenow extinct. You will find somethat have responded unsuccess¬fully to challenges: they too areextinct, though in waging thefight, they have sometimes modi¬fied their challengers. And youwill find some which have re¬sponded successfully, and haveconsequently improved them¬selves in a quest for survival.So let us return to our originalquestion: is there anything worsethan war? I say emphaticallyyes: one may be the inhumaneabandonment of people who havecome to depend upon our mili¬tary might; but there are otheractions far more reprehensiblethan this. As a society, we canrefuse to respond to the chal¬lenge of other societies: we will then fail to contribute anythingto the betterment either of ourown society or of others. InAmerica, we have the opportuni¬ty to contribute to our progressby a successful response to ou:domestic problems; in Vietnam,the same opportunity is ours itwe will but seize upon it. Let usrespond successfully in both, forin doing so, we will advance allsocieties; or let us at least at¬tempt both, for the attempt willbe of benefit to others. Killingis evil, but the abrogation of therole of our society in the historyof civilization would be a lastingcrime against all men, and hencefar worse.But perhaps I am being overlydramatic; the French were de¬feated here, and yet our WesternSociety did not fall to pieces.(Although it seems to me thatthe French defeat was the defeatof colonialism; we are, albeit in¬advertently, fighting for higherstakes.) This, however, I ac¬knowledge as a valid objection tomy preceding argument. But myobjective in writing this piecewas not to present to you irre¬futable arguments, but rather toenable you to consider the unfor¬tunately seldom-mentioned as¬pects of this conflict.I welcome your opinions andcomments, but let us omit themisleading slogans which inthemselves are but poor repre¬sentations of inapplicable precon¬ceptions and spurious philoso¬phies. And let us base our argu¬ments on real information ratherthan on random impressionsfrom biased sources. Now: letthe debate proceed, and let itproceed rationally, with a clearview of all that is at stake inthe outcome.(Editor’s note: The pseudo¬nym Robert Portus was used inorder to protect the author,who is an employee of the U.S.government in Saigon.)November 7, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONSAMUEL A. BEU"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE l»UPICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lak« Park493-5200See the restthenbuy the bestOlyrnpia TypewriterTypewriter DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.carry fresh breath in your pocketWHISPERnew aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Am„ New York. N.V. 10017Tne 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 TheFerrymanKENNETH RIEGEL as TheMadwomanJOHN ROBERT DUNLAP asThe TravellerReserved $5.00 Students $3.00General Admission $4.00UC Fac/Staff $3.50TICKETS ON SALE AT:University ofChicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.Woodworth’s Bookstore,1311 F.. 57th StreetCooley’s Candles,5211 S. Harper Court GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersMichael Curtiz’ VIRGINIA CITY LINCOLNMERCURYSouth Side’s Newest Dealership!NEW CARS FINE USED CARSComplete Line of *6P Mercurys Leasing and Rental ServiceCougars Daily, Weekly, MonthlyThe New Montego AI1 Makes and ModelsLincoln Continentalflours 9-9 rsaily9-6 Saturday and Sunday8640 South Chicago Ave. ES 5-9800By the director of CASABLANCA. With Humphrey Bogart. Errol Flynn. Randclf Scott. Wednesday. 7: I 5 and 9:15 in Soc.Sci. I 22. 75C,Doc FilmsSPECIALREAL DRAUGHT(ALL BEER)NO FOAMaod Coai/imyHEADQUARTERS FOR CUT RATE LIQUORS1238 EAST 47TH ST. KE 6-6500We Deliver * 2 Drive In WindowsVi Block West of Q»l»r DriveCan The Waldorf-Astoria, a solidlyentrenched memberof 'the establishment9initiate a meaningfuldialogue with theyouth of America?We can try. A FULL GALLON OF COLDDRAUGHT BEER$1 39PER GAL69<t per Half Cal.By telling H to you like it is: if you want to enjoy Thanksgiving inNew York City, first check out The Waldorf's —MINI-RATE SCHEDULE FOR STUDENTS$ 9.00 per person, 2 in a room$12.00 per person, 1 in a room$23.00 for 3 persons in a roomAt The Waldorf, you’ll be right around the corner from the swingingEast Side scene of "nowness." Maxwell's Plum, Friday's, Mr. Laffs,and all those other friendly spots between 48th and 65th Streets arejust a short walk from our location on Park Avenue between 49thand 50th. That means you can stay at New York's finest hotel at bar¬gain rates and save a bundle on taxi fare. When it comes to eating,well, The Waldorf's famed Oscar is a bargain, too. And wouldn'tyou just know...it's a Hilton. How's that for a college try?Just call or write301 Pork Av.nu., N.wYork, N.Y. 10022 T.I.I212) 355-3000. • The New Morality is an attempt by serious thinkersto find more livable, more human standards of rightand wrong than the old, inflexible “Thou Shalt Nots.”Joseph Fletcher, of the Episcopal Theological School,believes that lying, pre-marital sex, abortion, adultery—and even murder—could be right, under certaincircumstances. Our only guiding principle, he insists,should be love—a love that most of us know little about.He presents his case in his controversial bestsellerSITUATION ETHICS: The New Morality—whichTime Magazine has called “a lively, readable defenseand definition of this way to moral decision.” Cloth$3.95; paper $1.95.In a sequel called MORAL RESPONSIBILITY: Situa¬tion Ethics at Work, Professor Fletcher develops hisideas further. This book, like the earlier one, is filledwith situations sure to test your conscience—no matterhow moral, or immoral, you think you are. Cloth $3.95;paper $1.95.THE OPEN END OF CHRISTIAN MORALS byWesley C. Baker brings clerical insights into perspective—and shows, again with provocative examples, howthe principles of situation ethics can be applied in dailylife. Paperbound, $2.25.If you have been bothered by a moral problem, thesebooks—now at your bookstore—will help you think itout. They are published by the same team that ex¬ploded the Bishop of Woolwich’s theological bombshell,'Honest to God.THE WESTMINSTER PRESS*Witherspoon Building Philadelphia, Pa. 19107What’s this“New Morality”all about?3 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 7, 1967MUSIC REVIEWA Master of Music, A Teacher of SilenceBy TODD CAPPAli Akbar Khan is a wise man,a teacher. You could see it lastFriday night at Mandel Hall inthe way he would play a phraseon sarod, then wait patiently lorhis son, Ashish Khan, also play¬ing sarod, and Pandit Mahapur-ush Misra, on tabla, to repeat it.Once, when they didn’t get itquite right, he made them playthe phrase again until they did.All evening while he playedmusic he was teaching: teachingmusic, teaching about love,heartbreak, success, anguish,perseverance, and despair. Thegreatest lesson he taught was notreally a part of the music heplayed. It was embodied in asingle moment, that moment justafter the end of his last piece,when there was no more music.I’ll try to explain: There arealways vibrations. Any orderingof these vibrations into a pat-University TheaterThe University Theatre underthe direction of Mr. James O’Rei-ly will present a production ofLuigi Pirandello’s “Each in HisOwn Way” on November 17, 18,and 19 at Mandel Hall.The cast now includes the fol¬lowing actors: Lanny Unruh, JoanCagen, Jerry Wasserman, WilliamSmith, John Mattingly, CarolineHeck, Ed Letch, Richard Printz,Jerry Lapidus, Larry Stout, AmyCederbaum, Nancy Silverman,Robert Rainey.“Each in His Own Way” is oneof a trilogy by Pirandello involv¬ing plays within plays. The othertwo plays in this group are thewell-known “Six Characters inSearch of an Author” and “To¬night We Improvise.”THE BALANCE OF POWERIS CHANGING . . .THE SHIBBOLETHS OF THE COLDWAR ARE OUTDATED . . .THE EURAMERICAN ALLIANCEIS UNDER FIRE . . .a 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 of seers and punditsfrom both shores of the Atlantic—university dons and deans,international affairs experts,industrialists, government officials,journalists, philosophers, not onlyfrom English-speaking countries 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 of:81 year (10 issues) t 6.002 years (20 issues) $11.003 years (30 issues) $15.00□ Payment enclosed O Please bill meName -Address , ... -_Cltv State 7ioCM1 terned sequence we call rhythm.And there is an omega pointtoward which all rhythms are di¬rected, the consummation of allrhythm. That point is pure si¬lence. The point just before thatis the most complex rhythm youcould imagine.This same principle holds true,of course, for harmony, melody,and any other ordering of vibra¬tions, including the vibrations ofthe life process itself. Just aslife, starting always from thevoid, should be lived to the fullestbefore one is ready to return tothe void in death, so must music,if it is to be complete, aspire tothe highest complexity beforeceasing. No music can fully attainthis, any more than a life can besaid to have fully explored all itspossibilities. But it can comeclose. And the music played byAli Akbar Khan and associatesFriday night came closer thananything I’d ever heard. (Signi¬ficantly, the piece I’ve been re¬ferring to, the evening’s final work, was a Ragmala, “a garlandof ragas, embodying all themoods.”)There were many things tothink of and marvel at through¬out the concert. I noticed, forexample, that Pandit Misra’stabla playing is markedly differ¬ent from that of Alla Rakha,Ravi Shankar’s accompanistwhile Alla Rakha emphasizes allthe beats fairly evenly to bringout the rhythmic structure, Misraplays more lyrically, with certainbeat? serving to carry a melody,others functioning as grace notes.I could also hear the consum¬mate authority in Ali AkbarKhan’s playing, emphasized incontrast to that of his son, whosephrases run together a little,whose pauses don’t quite carrythe same air of finality. (Who isnot a teacher yet, but an excel¬lent student.)But mostly, I thought about thatfinal silence. And marvelled atthe best music I’d ever heard. Ali Akbar Khan, .Whatthe interviewerswon’t tell youaboutGeneral Electric.They won’t tell you about all the job opportunitieswe have for college graduates —engineers, science,business and liberal arts majors. Not that theywouldn’t like to. It’s just that there are too manyjobs and too little time. In a half-hour interviewour man would barely have time to outline thescope and diversity of the opportunities we offer.That’s why we published a brochure called “Start¬ing Points at General Electric.” In plain language it will tell you exactly how and where a person withyour qualifications can start a career with GeneralElectric. Pick up a copy at your Placement Office.Then arrange for a productive session with ourinterviewer. He’ll be on your campus soon.GENERAL ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employerNovember 7, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9Mmmmmmmml v': , §8« g M MS IMMMMSSS M8BM8 MM MM MMMMMMMMMMMaroon Classified AdvertisementsFASCISMFIGHT FASCISM! See the real story ofthe Nazi defeat in North Africa, "DesertVictory." B-J Cinema, judson dining room,11/9, 8:30, FREE ADMISSION!WORKACTOR-MODELS—Male & Female—for majorunderground film during November. We re¬quire people with a talent to enhance thelives of others, and who convey this withexuberance and sincerity, rather than stud¬ied, stagey mannerisms and technique.Amateurs preferred, especially those whohave read Norman 0. Brown's LIFEAGAINST DEATH and have heard Mahler'sRESURRECTION Symphony at least once.Principals paid $30.00 per day. Send aresume if you like, send an essay if you'vegot a beautiful mind, or send a photo thatspeaks for itself. Write to PROJECT ONE,Aardvark Cinematheque, 1608 North Wells,Chicago, Illinois 60614.MALES, 18-35, wanted to serve as subjectsin Sleep Lab experiments. Those subjectswho have trouble falling asleep and stayingasleep are particularly needed. Subjectsselected will be well paid. Call Ml 3-0800,Ext. 2341 (or 2353), 9 AM TO 5 PM, Mon-day-Friday.SIXTEEN FULL OR PART-TIME TEMPOR¬ARY HELP—this week and next. Come toRoom 309, Young Building, 5555 S. Ellis from j8:30 to 12:00 A.M.WAITER OR WAITRESS—three evenings a iweek from 5 PM to 9:15 PM, Exp. Pref.,contact Gordon's Restaurant, 1321 E. 57th IStreet, PL 2-9251. MmPlato: Grand-feathers saysto get thosebooks out ofhis house. Sam and Kirk Me Ghee resurrect countrymusic on the U.C. Campus Friday, Nov. 17—Cloister Club.SFA COURT OPENINGS: Two-year and one-year terms. Submit self-nomination in writ¬ing to SG, IDA NOYES, 1212 E. 59th Streetby Wed., Nov. 8, 12 Noon. Further Info:read COURT SECTION OF SG CONSTITU¬TION OR CALL SG, ext. 3274.Thank you Wes and Knights. Mike.LEARN TO FLY—First Lesson Free—JimLeyden 493-0166—Campus Rep. Cessna Air¬craft, Student Pkg. Plans, Financing, WOW.WOW?BOW WOW?"ISLAMIC PHILOSOPHY IN CONTEMPOR¬ARY ISLAMIC THOUGHT." PROF. MuhsinMahdi. Friday, Nov. 10, International House,8:00 p.m. Sponsored by the Muslim StudentsAssociation.Emily Post declares gloves and hats areoptional at a Pumphandle. Tonight, 9 to 11.Cure vestal virginity now, Peter.FAR-OUT YET LITERATE ACID-HEADNEEDED to review Sunday Donovan Concertfor Maroon. Free Ticket. Call Todd Capp,324-4592. Pursued by Gothic shades I travel west Insearch of the fallen night.Kr.LOSTReward offered for return of gold charmbracelet. R. Osnato, BU 8-1100, Ext. 1003.PARTIESThe College Histry Group is holding a"beer and pretzel" party in honor of theWarwick exchange students at the SocialScience Commons Room, 8 PM on Thursday,Nov. 9. All undergrad history concentratorsand faculty are invited to attend.WANTEDHILLEL urgently needs someone to dis¬tribute posters on campus. $1.50 per hour.Call PL 2-1127 if you are interested.RIDERS WANTED TO NEW YORK. CALLHELEN OR VIVIAN NO 7-3531. 213 FREE! PEARL NECKLACELOVELY GRADUATED PEARLSWITH CLASP OVER 100 PEARLSYELLOWS HERE S A SWELL GIFTFOR YOUR GIRL SEN0 100 BAZOOM COMICS OR 70c ( SCOMICS TO BAZOOKA BOX 9200ST PAUL MINN SSmINCLUDE YOUR ZIP CODECifflics Ml trjniltrxblt Valid tnly »h.r» i«,»tmAkV£*Tl2.t^5Part-time secretary for Charter Flight Pro¬gram. Work 12-4 PM daily. $2.00/hours.Student wife pref., call ext. 3272.FOR SALE3 whl H-D POLICE BIKE, 750 CC, eng.rebuilt 10/66. New batt., elec, sys., carb.$165/Offer. Call Greenbaum at 285-6529 or726-9306, Ext. 9.One GREEN VELVET COUCH—$20.00. Willthrow in FREE CHAIR. Call 268-1851, eve¬nings. Nice-looking boy auditing Hum. 106. Youremind me of someone I love.lonely New Yorker TAKE A TRIP WITH MARCO POLO. 288-5944.Martini and Mellicks mix marvelously.Having trouble with German? Expert tutor¬ing, very reasonable rate, call 721-1138. What New Morality?TYPING—reasonable rates—call before 10PM. 731-5980.1957 MERCEDES-BENZ. 300-D Limousine. , . . ..$1595.00, (11200 So. Halsted), call WA 8-5100, ™E BfST.p£°PLE Wl11 ,be. a* toC.PU^P‘weekdays from 9-5. HANDLE. Snell Lounge, tonight, 9 to 11.1965 CORVAIR MONZA—pretty baby, ownerleaving country in a hurry. Call 493-6801.Note: last week phone No. on this ad wasprinted wrong.APARTMENTSFOR SUBLEASE on December 1-Huge car¬peted studio apt. 3 blocks from center ofcampus, 2 blocks from 1C. In living room,lovely wall of casement windows openingon Dorchester; enormous walk-in closet, verylarge kitchen, charming bath. $120/month,2 year lease, DO NOT CALL if could nottake lease for full period. 643-6824.TO SHARE—Young woman Grad studentwishes to share modern turn. hpk. Apt. withsame. Call 667-0543 after 10 P.M.FOR RENT—Nearby economical, quiet 2 &3 rooms. $77.50 8. up. Free utils. CallWilliams, 6043 Woodlawn, MU 4-2300.GRAFFITTITHINK BLACK PEOPLEPEOPLE THINK BLACKBLACK PEOPLE THINKREVOLUTIONPERSONALSDENVER DAVE—Don't lose faith being aWife and Mother.Tomorrow is another day.TANK.Don't miss the LINN COUNTY at MotherBlues.Dear Trustees—Please send money—A GreatUniversity without a Great Newspaper is nogreat university at all. Love, Maroon.Female Vocalist interested in singing withJazz or Blues Grou|3—for professional oramateur work. Contact Dori at 324-2667.Everyone loves a good, old-fashioned Pump-handle, and Snell is having one.Children Alone?Children, infants, and babesThis is hard times bad timesWorse than all timesFather is gone Mother disappearsAll out to get the moneyThat will make it all fitIt is a shame—such laborSo confining all done in vainBecause when all the fundsThat are desired are eventually obtainedThey will find that this one of theirsHas long passed pubertyAnd there went the anticipated gainChildren, Children, This is insaneYour parents—maybe they want—their own personal gainAt your expenseI knowBut it can never work out to be rightYou are all alone. HOOK. HOOK. HI. M.L. HOOK. MSL. HOOK. I Dylan JeanA'L!iCGodard s MASCULINE-FEMININE. Andy jWarhol's I, A MAN. FINNEGANS WAKE, !TITICUT FOLLIES, WARRENDALE EX¬TERMINATING ANGEL, the return ofCHAFED ELBOWS, For One Dollar we willsend you a ticket good for one admission atany time (regular price $1.75) and a monthly |bulletin for a year listing AARDVARK'sfeatures and underground programs. YOUONLY LIVE ONCE. DO IT NOW. AARD¬VARK CINEMATHEQUE. 1608 North Wells,Chicago 60614.Hutchins Lives!Lawyer, 25, working on advanced degree inCriminal law would still like to meet at¬tractive, hip soc. or psych, grad, student orsenior. Call Richard 337-0659.UP, UP AND AWAY—in an airplane flownby you—call JERRY LEVY, Campus Rep—Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3266.help yourselfP.J.M. wanna hear RMH tonight? Havetickets . . . 3 . . . you can bring afriend. MSL. Dear Cindy—will write longer letter verysoon—think of names for kittens—hope youcan use stamps and will send us somedrawings—the house will probably never bepainted or cleaned so come whenever youcan. Love, m.l.COMING TO CHICAGO!Grand Old Opry Stars: Sam and Kirk Mc¬Ghee. November 17, Cloister Club.a housea housea housea housea housea mousea housea house is not a homeis not a homeis not a homeis not a homeis not a homeis not a houseis not a homeis not a homeEat your bagles at the Bander.Prof. Herman Finer, Prof. Emeritus of U.of Chicago speaks on "The Future of Israel"on November 14 at 8:00 P.M. East Lounge,2nd Floor, Ida Noyes, sponsored by theStudent Zionist Organization.MOM—come see the MESSIAH—Mar.Writers' Workshop. PL 2-8377.The old college has been replaced, RMH,by the new funky college.Nymphomania reigns in 1207 Wallace.and everywhere.INTERESTED IN AFRICA? UC AfricanStudies Association is organizing discussions,lectures, etc. If interested, leave name inAfrican Studies Office SSI 17 or call 643-8474.SNOWFLAKE that fluttered prettily past56th 8. University last Sat. afternoon pleasecall the Weatherman. 324-0127.Actors, directors, producers, designers, thea-tricians! Don't forget Renaissance Playerscasting meeting. Tonight 8:30 in Ida NoyesLibrary.PLATO—Grandfeathers says to get all thosebooks out of the house!Urgently desired: student to write book and/or lyrics for musical of Kafka story. CallBarry 684-7787.Mary—that's alot to pay for a purse.Sunny snowy Sundays begin at 7:30.Fly to New York for Thanksgiving. Still$80.00. A few seats left on the group flight.Tickets available at Charter Flight Desk,2nd Floor, Ida Noyes, or call ext. 3272 be¬tween 12 8. 3:30. Leaves Wed. night., returnSaturday night.LOUIE—WELCOME BACKI!UNIVERSITY CHAMBIRORCHESTRAJohn Solio, ConductorCONCERTSUNDAY, NOV. 12, 3:00 P.M.LKXINGTON HALLADMISSION FREE 1 WHAT IS ITS SIGNIFICANCE?Beverly Basick,Dept, of AnthropologyArchetypical.The ritual of the Midnight Pudding Snack iswell established in primitive societies. SinceShake-A Pudd’n does not require refrigeration,it lends itself to use in dormitories (surely oneof the most primitive societies), therebyfulfilling this basic, instinctual human driveat the precise moment it arises.Harry Holesome,Dept, of Health EducationThe American Dream come true.Shake-A Pudd’n combines healthful nutrition,bracing exercise and, above all, Good Clean Fun.An essential part of the Physical Fitness Program.Sylvia Cimbill,Dept, of PsychologyTruly Freudian.Powder and water are mixed in a cup, anobviously mammalian formation, seen on adeeper level as Mother. One shakes the cup, in adesperate but futile attempt to shake off theinhibiting Superego and free the primitive Id.Michael Media,Dept, of SociologyA true product of the Electric Age.Shake-A Pudd’n has transformed a fragmented,time-consuming, mechanical task intoan almost instantaneous, totally involvingexperience. Definitely "cool.” Althoughequally good at room temperature. Francine Factor,Dept, of HistoryOf tremendous historical significance.Had Shake-A Pudd’n been discovered in the18th Century, the French Revolution wouldprobably never have taken place when it did.Marie Antoinette’s famous remark, “Let ’em eatcake,” would no doubt have been transformedto "Let ’em eat pudd’n,” thereby appeasingthe masses for at least another century.Shake-A Pudd’rrthe new instantdessert mix from Royal.Just put water and powder in »he cup, snapthe lid, shake for 30 seconds and let it set.In Chocolate, Vanilla, Butterscotch or Banana.Each package complete with four puddings,spoons, lids, and throwaway shakers.10 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 7 1967Calendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at The MaroonOffice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then besent or brought to the office at least twodays before the date of publication.Tuesday, November 7COFFEE HOUR: (SDS), Discussion on IDA,Reynolds, Club, 11:30-3:30 p.m.IDA: (SDS), Reynolds Club, 3:30-5 p.m.UNIVERSITY BOARD MEETING: (Univers¬ity Senate), Mandel Hall, 4 p.m.POETRY READING: (Hillel Foundation),Modern Hebrew Poetry: A Bilinqual An¬thology, Mrs. Ruth Finer, editor andtranslator, Foster Lounge, 4:30 p.m.SEMINAR: (Ecumenical Christian Council),"The Dynamics of Hope," Chapel House,4:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Senior Math Club), "OnWhitehead Products on Spheres," LeifKristensen, Arhus Universitet. Eckhart206, 4:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Adlai E. Stevenson Institute),"Health in a Changing Environment,"Dr. Joseph Handler, director of PublicInformation, W.H.O. Robie House, 5 p.m.DINNER AND DISCUSSION: Wayne C.Booth and Charles D. O'Connell. Hutchin¬son Commons Private Room, 5:30 p.m.CHAPTER MEETING: (S.D.S.), Ida NoyesHall, 7:30 p.m. BEER AND PRETZEL PARTY: (CollegeHistory Group), In honor of Warwickexchange students, Social Science Com¬mons 8, 8 p.m.MEETING: (Independent SG Representa¬tives), Meeting of all Independent SGrepresentatives interested in formulatingplans for reinstating SG student services.Woodward Commons, 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, November 8LECTURE: (Business School), "From In¬dustrial to Consumer Markets: SomeProblems in Managing Change," ThomasHancock, president, Trane Company.Business East 103, 1 p.m.SOCCER: Roosevelt University, Grant Park,2:45 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of History), "TheProblem of Ottoman Rejuvenation," AllanCunningham, Department of History,Simon Fraser University. Soc. Sci 122,4 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "The RibosomeCycle in Protein Synthesis in EscherichiaColi," David Aperion, Washington Uni¬versity Medical School. Abbott 101, 4 p.m.DISCUSSION: (Adlai E. Stevenson Institute),"Two Facets of Health Progress: Edu¬cation and Research," Dr. Joseph Hand¬ler, Director of Public Information,W.H.O. Robie House, 5 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub, 7-10:30 p.m. p:HCOUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room, 8-10 p.m.LECTURE: (Oriental Institute), "A Historyof Metallography," Cyril S. Smith, Pro¬fessor, M.l.T. Breasted Hall, 8:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: "Virginia City," Michael Cur¬tis, Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m.Admission 75c.Thursday, November 9FORUM: (Student Health Organization),Medicine in a Negro Ghetto, Jim Mc¬Gowan, K.O.C.O. Billings P-117, 4:30 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: (Hillel House),Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn, 8 p.m.FILM: (Burton-Judson Films), "Desert Vic¬tory"—defeat of Nazis in North Africa,Judson Dining Room, Admission: free,8:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Social Science), "A Historian'sView of the Origins of the City-State,"Robert Adams, Professor, Departmentof Anthropology. Kent 103, 1:30 p.m.SEMINAR: (Ecumenical Christian Council),"The Just War: A Re-Examination,"Calvert House, 4:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), "Self-InducedTransparency by Pulsed Coherent Light,"Erwin L. Hahn, University of California,Berkeley. Eckhart 33, 4:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: (University Concert Band),Laboratory Schol, Belfield 244, 5 p.m. Gondoliers'Adventures in the Arts, and Gil¬bert & Sullivan Co., Inc.t havecome back to where they started.It was 1960 when a group ofneighborhood thespians, destinedto form the nucleus of the presentGilbert & Sullivan Opera Co.,Inc., met to begin rehearsals for aproduction of “The Gondoliers.”At the time, there was no firmexpectation that the Gilbert andSullivan production would be anannual event, but it has. The au¬dience has grown each year, andproductions have grown moresparkling.November 10 and 11, Fridayand Saturday, at 8:30 p.m., andSaturday, November 11 at 1:30p.m., “The Gondoliers” will be atMandel Hall, 57th Street and Uni¬versity Avenue. All seats are re¬served. Tickets are available Are ComingTwo in 'The Gondoliers'from Adventures in the Arts, 5747South Kimbark Avenue, Chicago60637; Phone: ES 5-5698; and U.of C. Bookstore. Prices are $2.50,$2.00, and $1.50.DOC FILMS: "Macbeth," Orson Welles, SocSci 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Admission75c.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING:Assembly Hall, International House, 8p.m.LECTURE: (Encylcopaedia Britannica), "TheTruth about the Center," Robert MaynardHutchins, Center for the Study of Demo¬cratic Institutions. Law School Auditor¬ium, 8:15 p.m. Orson Welles' MACBETHTonight and tonight and tonight, Soc. Sci. 122. 7:15 and 9:15. 75$, Doc FilmsWhy carry around a wholechemistry set full of potionsfor wetting, cleaning andsoaking contact lenses?Lensine is here! It's an all¬purpose solution for completelens care, made by theMurine Company.So what else is new?Well, the removablelens carrying caseon the bottom ofevery bottle, that'snew, too. And it’sexclusive withLensine, thesolution forall your contactlens problems • j!for contacts 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 ServiceNovember 7. 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11Style Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount LEARN FOUR RELATEDLANGUAGES SIMULTANEOUSLYEnroll in ROMANIC GROUP I Enroll in TEUTONIC GROUP Iand use and compare and use and compareFrench- Bonjour monsieur Danish-God dag min herreSpanish -Como esta usted? German-Wie geht es IhnenPortugese-Muito bem.obrigado.E o Sr.? Swedish-Mycket bra,tack,Och Ni ?Italian-Anch'io grazie. Dutch-lk ook.dank U.Totziens.Arri vederci.• small classes, two-hour sessions; 13 sessions; once ortwice a week.• new comparative method.Slovonic |-(Russian,Polish,Czech,Serbo-Croat)may be given next yearCourses specialize in: correct pronunciation, new internationalphonemic alphabet, basic vocabulariesof 800-1000 wordsWritten material furnished to students: comparative vocabulary,basic grammatncal aids,special texts.5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 SPECIAL STUDENT RATES: $2.50 an hour for classes offive or more.GROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE — 288-0675 For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASHMl 3-17151330 E. 53rd ST.OPEN HOUSEANDPRIVATE SHOWINGOFPLUS FASHIONSSUNDAY. NOVEMBER 121 TO 6 P.M. We are pleased to announceTHE GRAND OPENINGofINCIN HARPER COURTFeaturing Latest Fashions For Young Modernsat5225 South Harper AvenueChicago, Illinoison Thursday, Friday, SaturdayNovember 9, 10, IIBetween the hours of 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. June S. BlumEleanor PoseyNorris BlakemoreIN THE AVANT-GARDE WE TRUST...On Oct. 29th, Aardvark 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) Pjror(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 i>,P« s AiieyiThe Home ol New Cinema in Chit ago.12 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 7, 1967