aarr'Vj\t 6 ? i br ary! I V 8 i'M r 53 ?-;niV.60637 ago Maroon FoundedIn 1892VOL. 76, NO. 19 CHICAUu, )IS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1967 20 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSVincent Hours RulesBacked by the IHCThe MaroonDESCRIBING THE NOISES: Sir William Haley, editor-in-chief of theEncyclopaedia Brittanica, before a Breasted Hall audience.Sir William SpeaksOn British Media“The Isle is indeed full ofnoises,” said Sir William Haley,referring to England, in a talkWednesday night in Breasted Hall.Sir William, editor-in-chief of theEncyclopedia Brittanica, spoke onlife in England as part of the Brit¬tanica Lecture Series.To explain his topic, Sir Williamquoted British constitutionalist SirIvor Jennings: “The ultimate pow¬er in Britain is public opinion.”Every issue, he said, ends up asa “dogfight in Commons,” and thenext day, “every pub and club inthe country” knows the merits ofthe argument and who got the bestof whom.Class ConditionedThese opinions and popular cul¬ture are in part conditioned byclass structure, the division ofwhich Sir William said “finds ex¬pression in the way men and wo¬men speak — their accents.”Although young people, he con¬tinued, come to universities andspeak in the same accents as dothe other undergraduates, whenthey return home they reassumetheir old accents so as not to be¬come “socially isolated.”Another influence is the vastlyincreased spending power among youth, he said. He dismissed theeffects of formal education and theChurch as unimportant.The press, however, since it isnow “less dominated by egoman¬iacs,,” has more influence. Al¬though public insistence on theright to know isn’t as strong as itis in America, he added, there is ahatred of censorship of any kind.‘A Healthy Suspicion’Even during the war, newspapereditors could and did disregard thepublic censors with impunity. |Quoting a member of the House, iSir William said, “ 'Every editorshould have a healthy suspicionof government.’ ”Radio is also a shaper of culture,he continued, citing an examplefrom his experience as former di¬rector of the British BroadcastingCorporation (BBC). Each week theBBC broadcasted a play, progress¬ing from popular “middlebrow”plays to the “greatest, most austereplays “of the international reper¬tory.Even though the public has now“succumbed to the inanities oftelevision,” Sir William pointedout, plays still have a large follow¬ing in England. By JOHN RECHTStaff WriterThe Inter-House Council (IHC)Tuesday passed a proposal submit¬ted by Vincent House asking for acomplete withdrawal of restrictionson social houurs.The vote was nine to three, with14 members present out of 26.Vincent House President StevenCope, ’70, has since requested thatthe proposal be withheld from for¬mal presentation to Dean of Stu¬dents Charles O’Connell until theNovember 27 IHC meeting. At thattime the IHC hopes to take anothervote on the proposal with moremembers present in order to showa clear majority decision.Dean O’Connell has said it wouldbe “unfair and foolish” for him tosay that he favors Vincent’s pro¬posal.Three Votes TakenExplaining Vincent House’s posi¬tion on the proposal before the IHC,Cope said three votes were takenin the house by secret ballot. Thefinal and most complete resultswere 40 to ten in favor of unre¬stricted visitation hours with twonot voting.The students who opposed themeasure said they didn’t want thenew rules for themselves or thehouse, but they didn’t think theirrights would be infringed upon, hesaid.The members of Vincent careful¬ly considered whether the lack ofsocial hours would hurt the aca¬demic environment, and the deci¬sion was that women did not makethe environment unfavorable, butthat noise was responsible for this,Cope said. “The strongest rules inVincent are against disturbingother members.” House membersbelieve that noise is not increasedproportionately to social hours, headded.Concerning the effects of the pro¬posal on studies, the opinion of See Editorial on Page 6the residents is that the hours noware such that a person could “over¬participate,” and a change of hourswon’t alter this, Cope said.Apartment ShortageCope declared that many of thestudents would like to be in apart¬ments, but can’t be because of thelimited number of apartmentsavailable. These students should notbe deprived of their freedom todetermine their social life, he said.IHC members questioned whetherthe social habits of some studentswould interfere with those of others.Cope answered that in Vincent thisis no problem, since the rooms arealmost all singles, the walls arevery thick, and there are rules pro¬hibiting excessive noise.The enforcement of the anti-noiseordinances is carried out by hav¬ing the house council recommenddisciplinary actions to the residenthead. With continued violations, theStudent Housing Department couldtake action, Cope said. Persons ac¬cused can present their own de¬fense in such cases.B-J’s ConcernSome IHC members also ques¬tioned whether the granting of re¬quests in B-J would create a situ¬ation where one dorm would be pre¬ferred over another, since with thegreat number of doubles in otherdorms students might be inconve¬nienced with open hours. OtherIHC members replied that peoplein other dorms shouldn’t care whatB-J is doing, and that the issueshould be considered for otherdorms only when they present itto the IHC.In other action the IHC passeda proposal formulated jointly bythe Executive Committee and Stu¬dent Housing Director EdwardTurkington to allow the Pierce cafe¬ teria to remain open all night togive students a place for study.The measure is being sent to thePierce house council for approval.A motion was sent to IHC’s Ori¬entation Committee urging it toplan an advisory service for stu¬dents in the dorms. The IHC mem¬bers argued that providing thisservice for all houses would makeit unnecessary for individual housesto effect similar plans.Demonstration Held Against Army Recruiters HereAbout 130 people filled the Rey¬nolds Club Wednesday afternoonin a demonstration against recruit¬ing on campus by representativesfrom the Chief of Staff of the Ar¬my’s civilian personnel office.The interviews were being heldin the counseling offices on thesecond floor, and the demonstra-THANKSGIVING |The Maroon will not pub- f|lish next Friday due to Ifthe Thanksgiving holidays.Tuesday's edition will in- 1elude Weekend magazineand a special supplementon drugs. Normal advertis¬ing deadlines apply. tors sat quietly on the stairwell andin the first floor desk area for anhour until one of the two recruit¬ers agreed to come down and ad¬dress the group in the lounge.The speaker, Andrew A. Masiel-lo, addressed the group and an¬swered questions for about a halfhour and then returned to the sec¬ond floor office to resume inter¬viewing. The crowd dispersed atthis time.The total number of appoint¬ments made for interviews wasroughly ten, but only three wereserious: two undergraduate mathmajors and a grad student in phil¬osophy. The rest of the half-hourinterview periods were filled bystudent demonstrators.CADRE TableThe demonstration was not spon¬ sored by any groups, but CADRE | scriptions are similar to positionsliterature was available at a table in civil career services, he de-I dared.set up in a corridor. CADRE (Chi¬cago Area Draft Resisters), a radi¬cal organization, was not leadingthe demonstration, however, andno one made any serious attemptto lead the crowd in any actions.In his speech before the demon¬strators, Masiello outlined the workof his office. With 10,000 careercivilian positions serviced, andone-half of these technical or pro¬fessional, recruiting is necessary,especially on the college level, hesaid.The Army seeks data-processtrainees and mathematicians forjobs staffed jointly by civilian andmilitary personnel. The job de- ‘No Viet Tie’Masielle stated that the purposeof their being here doesn’t have adirect tie-in with the Vietnam in¬volvement, and that he is not in aposition to make policy statementsfor the Department of the Army.In response to questions fromthe crowd, Masielle said all thepositions to be filled are in themetropolitan Washington, D. C.area.He said that he does not knowthe ultimate use of informationprocessed by his department, butthat it is used by the Army on aworld-wide basis. Pot ConferenceWill Be HereNext WeekendThe first large-scale intercolle¬giate drug conference will be heldthe weekend of November 24-26 inj Ida Noyes Hall.Present at this conference willbe a panel of distinguished ex-! perts, representing a cross-section; of views on drug use, and 150 stu¬dent and faculty delegates fromj 35 schools in the Midwest.The conference, run by the Na¬tional Student Association (NSA)under a grant from the NationalInstitute of Mental Health, is thefirst to bring students, faculty, andi experts together to probe and dis-i cuss student drug involvement inthe Midwest. The conference isconcerned with two primary is-i sues: To give the best possible fac¬tual information to the studentsi concerning drugs and their use and: to help schools establish a rationalj standard concerning them.Dr. Daniel X. Freedman, profes-| sor and chairman of the Depart¬ment of Psychiatry, and Dr. Jer-; ome Jaffe, pharmacologist at the! Medical School, will address the| conference. Other well-known ex¬perts to be present at the confer-; ence are Joseph Oteri, a Bostonlawyer involved in narcotics cases;Michigan State Sen. Roger E.Craig; and Dr. Ralph Metzner, edi¬tor of Psychedelic Review.Warning Is GivenFearing that the campus will beinfiltrated with law enforcementofficials NSA has instructed thedelegates to leave their drugs athome and to watch what they say.The panel discussions will be openI to the public. The smaller 10 mem¬ber discussion groups, which willconsist of 10-15 students and facul¬ty, will be closed to the public inorder to screen the law officials.The open meetings will be onNovember 24, from 1:30 to 4:30p.m., medical aspects; November25, from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon, his¬torical, legal, and sociological as¬pects, and from 7 to 10 p.m.,general aspects; November 26from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon, aspectsof campus drug use.CIA Cuts Back on Its Recruiting VisitsWASHINGTON (CPS) - In theinterest of “maintaining a peace¬ful academic atmosphere, “theCentral Intelligence Agency hasdecided not to recruit on campus¬es that lie near one of theagency’s regional recruiting of¬fices.A CIA spokesman has confirmedthat college and university place¬ment bureaus affected are beingnotified of the decision, but didnot say where the agency’s re¬cruiting offices are located. Heestimated that there are “10 to 12” of them, however, presumably inthe major cities.The spokesman also noted thatin some cases interviews wouldbe conducted in a downtown areaof cities that do not have CIA of¬fices.The CIA has met with protests,some of them obstructive ands others not, on several campusesI this fall. Among them are the Uni-| versities of Colorado, Maryland,Iowa, and the University of Cali¬fornia at Berkeley.According to the CIA spokes¬ man, the agency normally recruits i pressure from students who haveat 100 campuses around the coun- protested CIA recruiting. “We don’ttry. He added that at many of J vjew ^ jn light,” he said. Headded that “one of the young menthem we’ve had no trouble.’Middle West CalmHe indicated that the disruptionof CIA recruiting has been con¬centrated in certain areas of thecountry, mainly the East and Westcoasts. He said the agency has hadalmost no trouble on campuses inthe Middle West and the South.The CIA spokesman denied thatthe agency was succumbing toGADFLY (referring to a student reporter)who called here said SDS was call¬ing it a victory,” but denied thatthe change was likely to affect theagency’s recruitment efforts.Chicago in DoubtHere at Chicago, it is an openquestion whether or not the CIAwill be coming to town. According to a CIA spokesman, the agencyis not planning to recruit here be¬cause it had received a letter fromthe University indicating a visitwould not be possible.But according to Assistant Deanof Students Anita Sandke, thisletter was sent early in the yearwhen no recruiters were being ac¬commodated and did not rule outthe possibility of future visits.Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell said he did not know whetherthe CIA would visit Chicago or not.New McCarthyism Threatens From The LeftBy JONATHAN STILLWhen I first came to the Uni¬versity of Chicago, I neverthought that I would find it nec¬essary to speak out in the de¬fense of freedom — especiallythe freedom of speech. Yet thatis exactly what I now find itnecessary to do.After hearing about the waythe University stood up in de¬fense of the freedom of speechduring the McCarthy era, andthe fact that the University haddeclared against any speaker banlong before other universities, Ithought that freedom of speechwas generally accepted by allgroups in the University com¬munity and that it thereforedidn’t need to be defended here.It turns out that I was wrong.FOR THE New Left movementhas spawned another “New”movement — one that I can onlycall the “New McCarthyism.”The New McCarthyites and theold McCarthyites take the samebasic position; only the peopleagainst whom they act haschanged. That position is thatthere should be freedom ofspeech, but not for people whoare “morally reprehensible” (de¬fined in practice as those withwhom they disagree). For theold McCarthyites, the “morallyreprehensible” people, were Com¬munists and left-wingers in gen¬eral — who they deemed to beassociated with secret police andSiberian slave labor camps .Forthe New McCarthyites, the “mor¬ally reprehensible” people are al¬most all people not in SDS — whoare deemed somehow to be ad¬vocates of burning babies at 1000degrees Fahrenheit.The most blatant evidence thatthe New McCarthyism has ar¬rived at the University of Chica¬go is the Gadfly written by JeffBlum and Bernie Aronson advo¬cating the banning of Dow Chem¬ical Company recruiters fromcampus. Their reasoning is analmost perfect example of NewMcCarthyist reasoning (and, withjust a few name changes, of oldMcCarthyist reasoning as well.THE NEW McCarthyites pointout that Dow makes napalmwhich is used in Vietnam. This,they say, makes Dow immoral,and therefore they should bebanned from campus. But not allpeople agree that Dow is immor¬LANGUAGE TUTORINGGROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE288-0675 al. Obviously, the Dow peopledon’t think that it is an immoralcompany, because if they didthey wouldn’t be working for it;nor do the students who want tosee the Dow recruiters — or atleast they are reserving a deci¬sion until after they talk to Dow.It seems to me that these peoplehave a right to their views justas much as the New Left has aright to the view of Dow as im¬moral. But this doesn’t seem tobother the New McCarthyites.Such people are “wrong” andwrong people don’t have a rightto their views. If such peoplecan’t be persuaded that Dow isimmoral and therefore oneshouldn’t work for them, we rightpeople, the New McCarthyitesthink, must force these people toaccept our views.THAT brings me to the nextpoint. No one is stopping the New'McCarthyites from trying to per¬suade other students not to workfor Dow. This method would beperfectly in accord with freedomof speech and, if the argumentsare good ones, could be just aseffective as banning Dow fromcampus. But persuasion takes alittle more thinking and effortthan simply banning Dow. Appar¬ently, the New McCarthyites aretoo lazy to go to this effort.The New McCarthyites use theargument that we must denyfreedom in order to preservefreedom. Blum and Aronson say,“It (the University) should par¬ticularly consider whether thatkind of ‘academic freedom’ is notself-destructive, when those com¬mitted to values which deny freespeech and academic freedomand a free university are in suchpowerful positions in society to¬day.” This, to me, soundsstrangely reminiscent of the oldMcCarthyite argument that al¬lowing freedom of speech toCommunists is self-destructive ina world in which those (Commu¬nists) who deny freedom ofspeech to others have so muchpower and are actively workingto impose their system on theUnited States. I find this argu¬ment equally distasteful in bothcases. If one group thinks that another group wants to denyfreedom of speech to them, thenthey should fight the othergroup’s efforts, but they shouldnot in the process deny that othergroup the very freedom theyclaim for themselves.I WOULD add one purely prac¬tical note. That is that if theNew McCarthyites don’t watchout, the old McCarthyites mayturn the tables on them. If theNew McCarthyites convince peo¬ple that organizations considered“immoral” should be bannedfrom campus, that argument justmight be used to ban the organ¬izations the New McCarthyitessupport most. After all, Illinoisnow has the Clabaugh Act, whichbans “subversive” (i.e., left-wing) speakers from the Univer¬sity of Illinois campus, but itdoes not yet have a law banningDow recruiters from appearingat the University of Illinois. Ifdistinctions are going to be madebetween “moral” and “immoral”organizations, there are an aw¬ful lot of universities where suchdistinctions are going to be madein exactly the opposite directionto that in which the New Mc¬Carthyites want them to bemade.Fortunately, the New McCar¬thyites are not totally oblivious tothe fact that their position in¬volves denying freedom to Dowand students who want to see theDow recruiters. At least they dosee the need for rationalizingtheir position. The vehicle bywhich they do this is the Doctrineof Complicity.THE DOCTRINE of Complicitysays that the University cannotbe neutral in allowing others touse campus facilities to presenttheir cases to students. The Uni¬versity, just by allowing Dow tocome, “commits an act of com¬plicity with Dow,” to quote Blumand Aronson. A few applicationsof the Doctrine of Complicity willshow how ridiculous it is.Since 1961, the University hasallowed George Lincoln Rockwell,Senator Everett Dirksen, SenatorWayne Morse, and Stokely Car¬michael to use University facil-AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH --NEW & USED-THE CHICAGO MAROON Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedlos and Cartridges -r Tubes - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsNovember 17, 1967 ities to address students. Accord- freedoms accorded SDS shoulding to the Doctrine of Complicity, also be accorded to Dow.that means that in less than six BLUM and Aronson claim at an¬years the University has com¬mitted acts of complicity withthe American Nazi Party, theRepublican Party, the Demo¬cratic Party, and the StudentNon-Violent Co-ordinating Com¬mittee. Lest it be protested thatthese were speakers and not re¬cruiters, I would point out thatwhen I first came to the Univer¬sity, in the fall of 1964, I wasgreeted on Activities Night in IdaNoyes Hall by tables manned bypeople recruiting me to work forthe election as President of Bar¬ry Goldwater, Lyndon Johnson,and Clifton DeBerry (candidateof the Socialist Workers Party).Using the Doctrine of Complicity,that means that the Universitywas, simultaneously no less, com¬mitting acts of complicity withthe Repbulican Party, the Demo¬cratic Party, and the SocialistWorkers Party. To say the least,that makes the University arather schizophrenic place, ye?that is just what the Doctrine ofComplicity would have us con¬clude.As to the distinction that Blumand Aronson try to make at onepoint between speakers and re¬cruiters, it seems to be a ratherartificial one. What is involvedin either case is a presentationmade to students in an attemptto persuade those students to actin a certain manner. Whethersuch a presentation takes theform of a mass presentation inMandel Hall or individual pre¬sentations in a room in BusinessEast, the same principles of free¬dom to make the presentationand freedom of students to hearit apply. To take the case of anorganization other than Dow,should the University allowspeeches by SDS leaders but notallow SDS recruiting tables? Idon’t think so; and I think that other point that Dow’s visit is notof “academic importance”Frankly, I don’t think that Ever¬ett Dirksen, Stokely Carmichael,and Cassius Clay are very “aca¬demic” people but I think thatthey should have the freedom toappear on campus just as I thinkthat Dow should have the samefreedom.I am not yet as worried aboutthe threat to freedom that is pre¬sented by the New McCarthyismas I would have been in the earlyfifties by the old McCarthyism.This is simply because the NewMcCarthyism does not yet enjoythe same amount of popular sup¬port that the old version did, oreven that the remnants of the oldversion still enjoy today. Afterall, Joseph McCarthy was ableto get himself elected to theUnited States Senate; I don’tthink that a New McCarthyitecould get elected yet in any ofthe fifty states. But consideringthe doctrine itself, apart from theamount of support it has, theNew McCarthyism may be justas invidious, pernicious and dan¬gerous to freedom as the old.(Editor’s note: Mr. Still is afourth-year student in the Col¬lege majoring in politicalscience.)PIZZAPLATTERPizza. Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!I tSO E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800SLOW YOUR MIND BUT NOT YOUR BUTTONSISuch contemporary sentiments as:“Mary Poppins is a junkie."“How would you I ike a professor I iving next door to you?"are just two of the five “mind expanding" buttons that will zonkyour friends and teachers one way or the other.Please send $1.00 in cash, check or money order, for each setof five (5) buttons.HAPPENING ENTERPRISESP.O. Box 9093Chicago, Illinois 60690Name (Print clearly)AddressCity State Zip CodePlease send me sets(s) of 5 buttons. Rush handling at noadditional charge.Finer Describes Problems of IsraelThe MaroonHerman Finer “Never has Israel needed mon-$ey and men as it does now,” ac-j cording to Herman Finer, profes-k sor emeritus of political science, here. “That is, after a victory . ..• but victories are only temporary.”Finer began his lecture on “TheFuture of Israel” Tuesday nightby declaring himself “full, heartand soul in accord with Zionism”He went on to describe the prob¬lems and promise of Israel. Hespoke of the sense of responsibili¬ty Americans — particularly Jews— should feel towards Israel.According to Finer, Israel hastwo main problems: economic and,more important, political.The economic needs of Israelhave increased since the JuneWar, he said. A greater proportionof the people must be mobilized fordefense, and “people have to betaken out of the factories.” At thesame time, the Israelis must raisemoney to buy arms, if possible, ormanufacture them themselves. Finer added that, even beforeJune, one third of the Israeli bud¬get went for defense. The prcentof their Gross National Product de¬voted to National defense was thegreatest in the world, with the ex¬ception of South Vietnam.The Israelis must also care fortheir one million Arab refugees.I “Israel must pay for teachers andj textbooks for the Arabs,” statedI Finer. “They will not toleratecruelty toward the Arab refu¬gees.”Finer estimated the annual“gift” needed by Israel at some¬where between three and four hun¬dred million dollars.“Jewish people have to pay twotaxes,” he said. Those of them whoare concerned about Israel’s sur¬vival, and do not just “eat hamsandwiches on Jewish rye” shouldall give money to Israel.The political problems Israelfaces are even more pressing ac¬cording to Finer. Israel lacks the recognition and, more important,the support of other nations. Finerfeels that it cannot rely on the Uni¬ted Nations, which is hampered by“the wicked egoisms” of delegatesand member nations.The Russians, Finer claimed,have vetoed every UN proposal fa¬ voring Israel since 1954.Finer conceded smilingly that“the Jews are not everybody.”Still, he said, “I can’t forget thatthey have given the world so manythings. This is nothing to bechauvinistic about — but it’s noth¬ing to get killed for.”Pierce Vote TodayDespite Court OrderStudent Government (SG) lastnight announced that it would ig¬nore an injunction on it issued bythe Student-Faculty-AdministrationCourt (SFA) barring today’s sched¬uled election in Pierce Tower.Jeffrey Blum, president of SG,said that since two of the threepeople who signed injunction areno longer justices, he felt that SGDow Spokesman Interviewed on Campus ReceptionsBy JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterA spokesman for Dow ChemicalCo. has revealed that members ofthe Uriversity of Chicago admin¬istration were in contact with Dowbefore and during the anti-wardemonstration here November 6.The spokesman also revealedthat the interviewers sent by Dowwere instructed not to debate withstudents on the question of na- Business on February 12, 1968. Ac¬cording to the Dow spokesman, theUniversity was “very co-opera¬tive” both during the demonstra¬tion and in scheduling another in¬terview date.Hurting the ImageDow admits that the demonstra¬tions are hurting its image. Otheranti Dow tactics, such as organizedboycotts of Dow products and thesale of Dow stock, has the potentialto hurt Dow even more, the corn- materials they need,” the state¬ment said, “including napalm.”It concluded with a plea for Ameri¬cans to support Dow despite effortsto “intimidate” it. its production of napalm as a wayto arouse anti-war emotions.Dow was the target of 55 demon¬strations last year. So far thisyear, students have protestedDow’s position is that leftists Dow’s production of napalm at 25around the nation have picked on j different college campuses.palm. They were given a basic policy statement to hand out. Any pany spokesman admitted,additional questions, either from j Although some membersstudents or the press, were re¬ferred back to Dow’s News Infor¬mation Service.If in their interviews ousinessstudents asked about napalm, theinterviewers were permitted totalk about it. The spokesman indi¬cated, however, that napalm does ofDow’s Board of Directors favorending that company’s productionof napalm, the top management isunanimous in its desire to con-tirue interviewing on college cam¬puses despite harassment.In a policy statement, Dow saidthat current demonstrations willnot come up in many interviews not deter the company from, “sup-with busiress students. porting our young men in Viet-Dow will again conduct inter- j nam.”views at the Graduate School of “We will continue to supply the Jury Convicts Dr. AbramsOn Liquor Law ViolationDr. Arnold Abrams, a De Paul j someeone had orought up to her. AUniversity associate professor of | kid was sitting next to her, andpsychology arrested during a fund ! they (the police) said it was his.raising party for the Spring Mo- j When she tried to take back herbilization at his Hyde Park resi- * drink, it spilled,” Abrams charged,dence April 8, was convicted Wed-1 On the basis of the incident, henesday by a Circuit Court jury of j said, two policemen testified thatviolating a Chicago liquor ordi-' she slapped them,.Housing Teach-In Is Set for TomorrowA “teach-in” entitled “The Uni¬versity Role in Hyde Park Hous¬ing” will take place on Saturdayat 1 p.m. at the Hyde Park UnionChurch, 5600 S. Woodlawn Ave.Speakers on the program willdiscuss their expectations for de-elopments in Hyde Park and ranee forbidding sale without alicense. He was acquitted on fiveother charges.The trial arose from the ar¬rest of 19 out of 150 people at Dr.Abrams’ house when an anti-warfund raising party was raided byUniversity Realty, to discuss Uni- j a score of policemen. Of those ar-versity Housing policy. Nobody j rested, eight were convicted of thepresently connected with the Uni- misdemeanors of interfering withversity would agree to participate, a police officer and disorderly con-The program will also includeJune Dolnick, an authority on ten- Mrs. Florence Levinson, a Uni-ants’ options when facing evictionfor urban renewal, and on urbanmember of the Hyde Park Plan¬ning Committee: Herman Jenkins,of the East Garfield Park Unionto End Slums, on organizing tenantunions.neighboring areas and their exper- j renewal plans; Bob Gordon, aience with approaches to the hous¬ing situation.The teach-in is sponsored by theHyde Park Area Tenants ActionCommittee, whose announced pur¬pose is to help “tenants band to¬gether for mutual aid and mutualaction,” and to ensure that the ar¬ea will be “varied by income aswell as by race.”Included on the program will beWinston Kennedy, formerly with “The whole situation,” assertedattorney Charles Bellows, “wasprovoked by two stupid policemenwho called out the entire SouthSide police force to look for a littleboy who had a drink of liquor. Andit wasn’t true.”Bellows said he would appeal Dr.Abrams’ conviction.According to Abrams, “I thinkfor the first time a group of peo¬ple stood up to (the police). In thiscountry we take for granted theBill of Rights and all the niceversity of Chicago writer and re¬searcher, was found guilty on twocharges of battery, two of ag-1 wor(^s we have on paper. In anygravated assault, disorderly con-:era every generation must fight was not bound by the injunction.Danny Boggs, third-year lawstudent and former member of SG,felt differently. Boggs, who is act¬ing for two second-year students inthe suit, said, “It ill behooves theStudent Government, which hasconsistently failed to elect newjustices, to defy the mandate ofthe court simply because some ofthe justices of that court shouldhave been replaced by this date.”The SG constitution states thatjustices shall serve from November1 to October 31. This year, how¬ever, SG has not acted on electingnew judges.Injunction ServedThe injunction in the Pierce elec¬tion case was served following anelection in which both first- andsecond-year students ran for va¬cancies created by students leav¬ing the dorm. The Election andRules (E&R) Committee of SGruled after the first election —which was disqualified due to im¬proper rulings by the ballot-boxwatchers — that any student, re¬gardless of residency and gradepoint requirements, was eligablefor election.The plaintiffs, Michael Marshalland Cheak Yee, argue that both aone-quarter residency requirementand a 2.0 grade point average arerequired, thus making freshmenineligible to run.Due to SG’s refusal to acceptthe injunction served by the Court,the elections will be held todoy.duct, and interfering with a po¬liceman.When the police entered, Mrs.Levinson “had a glass with a drink to reestablish these rights.’ WASH PROMStudents interested inmaintaining the annualWashington Promenade ina more relevant formshould attend the promcommittee meeting to beheld in Ida Noyes Hall.Tuesday, Nov. 21, at 7:30p.m. Ken Levin, prom com¬mittee chairman, will beavailable for questions andsuggestions.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933I0% Student Discount THE MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium 8 PMNovember 20GERALD HOLTONProfessor of Physics, Harvard UniversityOn the Irrelevanceof Crucial ExperimentsUniversity of Chicago faculty, students, andstaff may obtain complimentary tickets at theCentral Information Desk, Adm. Bldg. the roa6 goes evep ona song cycle * music By6onaK) swann - poemsby j. r. r. tolkienNow the songs of Frodo, Bilbo, Sam Treebeard andTom Bombadil can be sung or played by alt. DonaldSwann, of Flanders and Swann, has, with the assist¬ance and encouragement of Professor Tolkien, setseven songs from The Lord of The Rings to music.Each song may be sung individually or taken togetheras a group to form a song cycle. The arrangementsare for piano or voice and guitar symbols are given.$3.99poems anO sonqs of miOOie eapthREAD BY J.R.R. TOLKIENFor his first venture into the recording world ProfessorTolkien has chosen to read from the delightful poemsof Tom Bombadil. On the reverse side William Elvinsings the songs from The Road Goes Ever On withDonald Swann at the piano. This record is a must.Caedmon Record »TC 1231 $5.99Available at y®vr collet* bookstoreHOUOHTON MIFFLIN COMP ANTNovember 17, 1967 THE CHfdAGV kAHdON»«»»*, S*l **.#** i * #Available Government Fellowships Are Listed(Editor's note: Following is alist of government fellowshipscurrently available to graduatestudents, provided for publica¬tion by the Fellowship Office onthe second floor of the Adminis¬tration Building, Ext. 3416. In¬quire there for further informa¬tion.)National Science FoundationThe National Science Foundation(NSF) offers fellowships to stu¬dents who are working on a grad¬uate degree in the mathematical,physical, medical, biological, engi¬neering and social sciences and inthe history and philosophy of sci¬ence. Awards will not be made inclinical, education or businessfields, nor in social work, diplo¬macy, history or law.The basic twelve month stipendis $2400 in the first year of grad¬uate study, $2600 in an interme¬diate year, or $2800 in the final yearof study. In addition, a $500 allow¬ance is provided for each depen¬ dent, and tuition and fees are cov¬ered.Office Cards for making prelim¬inary application are available inthe Fellowship Office, Ext. 3416.The closing date for filing applica¬tions is December 8,1967.Health InstitutesThe National Institutes of Health(NIH) offer fellowships in health-oriented fields. Stipends and bene¬fits are the same as for NSF.There are three applicationdeadlines during the year: Janu¬ary 2 for notification in June, April1 for notification in September,and October 1 for notification inFebruary.Application packets will beavailable in the Fellowship Officelater in the Autumn Quarter. Inthe meantime, applicants shouldwrite directly to NIH and may ob¬tain the address from the Fellow¬ship Office.NDEA IVNational Defense Education Act Title IV fellowships (NDEA IV)will be awarded throughout theDivisions and professional schoolsin Ph.D. programs approved an¬nually by the U. S. Office of Edu¬cation. Nearly all programsavailable at Chicago have been ap¬proved.The applicant should write“NDEA Title IV” at the top of theapplication. Students must certifythat they are interested in collegeteaching.Normally the period of award isthree years. Stipends are $2000 inthe first year of tenure, $2200 inthe second year, and $2400 in thethird year for a nine month aca¬demic year. Full tuition is pro¬vided and dependency allowancesand supplemental summer studygrants are also available.NDEA VINational Defense Education ActTitle VI (NDEA VI or NDFL)awards are given for study inmodern non-Western languages.The basic stipend is $2250 for aMAROON SPORTS6-5-7 Season for the BootersBy JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterThe University soccer squad fin¬ished one of its best seasons in re¬cent years on a rather disappoint¬ing note with a 5-0 loss to GeorgeWilliams College on Wednesday.Contrary to the evidence in thescore, the visitors did not by anymeans dominate the game; in fact,Chicago controlled the ball throughmore than half of the contest andactually played a superior game.Outplaying all, however, wasGeorge Williams center forwardNick Ghawi, whom Chicago CoachVendl called “the best playerwe’ve seen all year.” He scoredfour of the five Williams goals ononly six shots. He was just toomuch for the usually tough Ma¬roon defense.Coach Vendl gave much creditto his defense. “We outplayed themin every way,” he said, “butcouldn’t quite reach the goal.” He added that Ghawi was really theironly important man.Winning RecordWith this contest the Maroonscompleted their 1967 season with asix-win, five-loss, one-tie record,one of the best the booters havehad in many years.Not only did the squad break the1956 record of five total victories,but this year’s team set a markfor most goals scored, 25, and tiedlong standing records for mostshutouts, three, and most consecu¬tive shutouts, two.Center forward Mark Manewitztied the all-time individual scor¬ing record with ten goals. Vendl is, of course, quite satis¬fied wiith the team’s performance,“In 21 years,” he said, “we’ve hadonly three winning seasons andyou naturally feel good when youget one.”He looks upon this year as thepossible beginning of real soccerpower at Chicago, considering theperformance of this squad is anindication of things to come.IntramuralsThe All-University IntramuralFootball Championship will be de¬cided today at 3:45 p.m. at Mid¬way Field seven. The game waspostponed from Wednesday. nine-month academic year in addi¬tion to full tuition. Allowances fordependents and travel are alsoavailable, and twelve-month ap¬pointments may be available.A supplemental application,which must be filled out in addi¬tion to the regular Universityform, may be obtained in DeanNorthcott’s office, Administration204.Urban DevelopmentThe Department of Housing andUrban Development may offer fel¬lowships in city planning and ur¬ban development through the Cen¬ter for Urban Studies. The fellow¬ships provide full tuition and sti¬pends of $3000 for nine months ofstudy; a dependency allowance of$500 is available for each of up totwo dependents.Students interested in applyingfor this or other fellowship supportin the Center for Urban Studiesshould write “Urban Studies Fel¬lowship” at the top of the applica¬tion which they submit to theirdepartments.The departments recommendcandidates for fellowship aid to theCenter for Urban Studies.NASAThe National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) pro¬vides three-year grants to the Uni¬versity to train outstanding stu¬dents in space-oriented areas.These are mainly in the mathema¬tical, physical and biological sci¬ences, but awards have been madefor degree research in space-ori¬ented problems in law and politicalscience.The selection of students forthese traineeships is made locallyby a University Committee. Spe¬cial interest in space problemsshould be noted at the top of theapplication.Full tuition and a stipend of $2400is provided for twelve months. Anadditional allowance of up to $1000may be awarded at the discretionof the department for dependentsor for merit.Public HealthTraineeships in the NIH andNSF areas are available in depart¬ments that have obtained USPHS(United States Public Health Serv¬ice) or NSF research or traineegrants. Selection of trainees ismade by the Departments. Stipendamounts for USPHS trainees aredetermined individually by the De¬partments. Stipends and allow¬ances for NSF trainees are thesame as for NSF Graduate fellows.TAl-SAM-Y&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062 Furnish your home at theCatholic Salvage Bureautruckloads arriving daily3514 So. Michigan 10 E. 41st Street For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityREMT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY —- MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per DayI INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715excellent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant2012 E. 71st ST.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used SXllRug. To a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants 6 Mill Returns at fractie.iot the Original tost.Decorative Colon and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY HYDE PARK THEATERLAKE PARK AT 53rd STREETTelephone: NO 7-9071ONE WEEK ONLYLIMITED ENGAGEMENTW. C. FIELDS FESTIVALW. C. FIELDS in "The Bank Dick”alsoW. C. FIELDS with MAE WESTin"My Little Chickadee” DANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICARip out this ad now and bring it toCheetah this weekend for aSPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGOSTUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00!■■■■■■■ ■■■■_»■■■■ I ■ I ITICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANOCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 2000WIDS OPIN PftIDAY, SATURDAY. SUNDAY AT • f».M.THE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 1967 o v.PARALLELS NOTEDBlack Nationalism Not Really So NewThe MaroonGilbert Osofsky University of Illinois AssociateProfessor of History Gilbert Osof¬sky told a group of University ofChicago students Wednesday nightthat “The anti-slavery period inthe 1840’s and 1850’s runs verymuch parallel to the presenttime.”Osofsky spoke before the firstmeeting of the History Club on thetopic “Black Nationalism in theNineteenth Century.” “Two characteristics of this pe¬riod,” he argued, “were theerosion of faith in the democraticsystem among Negroes and a vo¬calized militant nationalistic move¬ment.”Osofsky went on to mentionsome of the factors involved in theformation of these characteristics.“First of all,” he said, “there wasa widespread fear of mass oppres¬sion. Government actions such as lhe Fugitive Slave Act and theDi ed Scott Decision could only addto Negroes’ disillusionment of the‘democratic system.’The Chief Losers“Finally,” he noted, “during thesecession winter (the winter di¬rectly preceding the Civil War)feelings ran very high since it wasfelt that if the North and Southreconciled, then the blacks wouldbe the chief losers.”Defense Dept. Is Declassifying Some Research Projects According to Osofsky, there werevarious black nationalist groups atthis time. Among them were theGarrisonians, a militant group,with an accent on reform andmoral persuasion. Their scope,however, was international. Thepolitical abolitionists tried to usepolitics as a wedge. They wereeven more militant than the Gar¬risonians; they felt the Garrison¬ians were too universal. In addi¬tion, there were groups who dis¬cussed emigration to Africa or theWest Indies, but this group wasnever too prominent.WASHINGTON (CPS) - Theopposition to secret research onuniversity campuses is at leastpartly responsible for a recent De¬fense Department move toward“declassifying” some projects nowunderway at universities.A Pentagon spokesman said the“hue and cry” raised by some stu¬dents and faculty membersError on HobsonThe Maroon regrets misrep¬resenting Christopher Hobson’sposition on civil liberties in Tues¬day’s Maroon. Hobson’s state¬ments “we recognize civil liber¬ties as a counter-argument thatwe have to deal with” and “wemust make clear that the civil lib¬erties question is bullshit” duringa conference on the university andthe military were taken out of con¬text, and actually are contrary tohis position. Hobson gave them asexamples of widespread but wrongattitudes within the movement. against classified research is oneof the reasons that the move isunderway.Relatively few projects are like¬ly to be declassified, since the sur¬vey to determine what projectscan be given a non-secret statusis aimed only at classified proj¬ects in the area of basic research.Of the more than 4,000 projectsthat fall under the heading ofbasic, as opposed to applied, re¬search, only 138 are presentlyclassified. A far greater percent¬age of the applied research proj¬ects are secret.The first suggestion that the De¬fense Department was trying to cut down the number of classifiedresearch projects came from Dr.John Foster, Director of DefenseResearch and Engineering, Foster’soffice exercises broad control overthe Department’s entire $7.2 billionresearch and engineering program.The amount of this total spenton university projects is relativelysmall — somewhere between $400and $600 million. Of this amount,some $140 million goes into basicresearch projects.One Pentagon source suggestedthat it would be difficult to pindown exactly how much moneygoes to universities as such, be-| cause of the difficulty of definingwhat constitutes a university.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the resl. foreign car hospitalWho killed Kennedyis revealed in a small 32 page brownpaper booklet, which has been suppressedand subverted by the CIA. A booklet thatforced the CBS Whitewash of The WarrenReport. A secret contained in this fairy¬tale is yours to ponder in silent certainty.Send $t. to Box 64, Glenville. Conn. 06830. NEWMOODSConte select from ournew collection of moodsetting incense andincense burners. Manyexciting fragrances.Aromatic, long-lastingand effluvient.Imported from Africa,Mexico and India.Incense from.99Burners from$2.49Be Practical!Buy Utility ClothesComplete selection of boots,overshoes, insulated ski wear,Noded coats, long underwear,corduroys, “Levis”, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00 Slicfe slavesA new international arts and crafts centerJEWELRY • HANDICRAFTS • SCULPTUREHurper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7266Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. daily; Noon to 5 p.m. SundayUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair GiftingendTintingme l jm k mr >4ni 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 school The Defense Department’s ap¬parent goal in regard to basic re¬search is to declassify all projectsthat fall under that heading. Anyproject that cannot be declassifiedwill probably be removed from thecategory of basic research.Some of the projects that noware classified do not actually in¬volve work that must be kept se¬cret. They are classified becauseone or more of the researchers in¬volved have access to materialsthat Defense wants kept seret.These projects will probably bedeclassified. PHOTOGRAPHYCLUBThe Photo Club will meetnext Monday, November20, at 7:30 p.m. in theWoodlawn Residence, 5544S. Woodlawn (Phone num¬ber: 667-3435). The topicfor the meeting will be“Highlights Vs. Shadow."Membership in the group isopen to men, faculty, andstudents at the University.LINCOLNMERCURYSouth Side's Newest Dealership!NEW CARS FINE USED CARSComplete Line of ’6* Mercurys LEASING AND RENTALComets SERVICECougarsThe New Montego Dai|y> Weekl* Month,yLincoln Continental All Makes and ModelsHOURS: 9-9 Caily9-6 Saturday and Sunday8640 South Chicago Ave. ES 5-9800MMr^oJS- fe<ber#|S?Nowyber, i&Mmm THE-micxab TbAMofr ’TThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editors Michael SeidmanJohn WelchIt News Editor...|| Culture Editor.*■ John Moscow.... Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor Roberto ArrozLiterary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertEdward W. HearneDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus David A. SatterOpen HoursA problem has arisen in the structure of “house auto¬nomy” as set up last year. Vincent House, in Burton-Judson Courts, has asked for open hours and has won thebacking of the Inter-House Council.The problem is that while a strong case can be madefor open hours in B-J, no such case can be made for mostof the other dormitory units on campus. It is being arguedthat hours should not be different in the different dormi¬tories.When the residents of Coulter House, also in B-J,presented their request for open hours to then Dean ofStudents Warner Wick last winter, with the approval ofthe IHC, their request was rejected. The Vincent requestshould be accepted.Last year, when the idea of house autonomy was firstbroached, one of the major arguments in its favor wasthat each house was constructed differently and was com¬posed of different types of students. This argument is asvalid today as it was last year.Vincent House, as are the other houses in B-J, iscomposed mainly of single rooms, where the idiosyncraciesof the occupants of a room disturb no one else. The roomsare fairly well sound-proof and community action has longbeen accepted as the proper way of keeping noise down.The request for open hours is not necessarily a re¬quest for permission to install women in the dorm at alltimes. Due to the widely disparate schedules of Chicagostudents, it should rather be viewed as a request to havevisitors at any time, rather than all the time.Obviously the situation is different in Pierce Tower.There a majority of the rooms are doubles, so that thereis a serious potential problem of one roommate incon¬veniencing another with late-night visitors. The same pos¬sibility is strong at Hitchcock, and New Dorms. Whereroommates are involved, the greatest care has to be takenso that they are not imposed upon. When roommates arenot involved, as with Vincent, there should be no suchcareful scrutiny.To anyone who has followed the course of the stu¬dent fight for freer hours here, it should be obvious thatthe pressure has always come from dormitories wherehours restrictions make no sense. The men at Pierce havenot instituted a radical hours proposal in several years,while the men at Flint House have never even taken ad¬vantage of the hours presently open to them.This would seem to dispose of the argument thatopening one house complex but not others would depletethe other dorms of their upperclassmen. It hasn’t hap-pended yet, and there is no reason to fear it in the future.This leaves the decision up to Charles O’Connell asdean of students. We hope that he will accept the reason¬ing of two successive Inter-House Councils and overturnthe unfortunate precedent set last year.Not to do this would be to invite widespread abuseof whatever hours rules turn out to be “acceptable” andto acknowledge the meaninglessness of the phrase “houseautonomy.” If houses were really autonomous, no admin¬istrator would have anything to say about students’ socialrules. At this point, we hope for his own sake that Mr.O’Connell does not tamper with Vincent’s. Rounding Up the ResistersMICHAEL SEIDMANNorman Thomas at 83:A Life Lived in Vain?Last weekend, Norman Thom¬as came to the University of Chi¬cago campus to protest againstthe war in Vietnam. Today, afew days before his 83rd birth¬day, he lies gravely ill ir. a hos¬pital bed.Left-wing conventional wisdomprobably gives Thomas morecredit than he merits for chang¬ing American society. Most his¬torians now agree that it was po¬litical pressure applied by Cough¬lin, Long, and Townsend ratherthan the socialists that forcedRoosevelt to embark on the sec¬ond, and more important, NewDeal.BUT IF Thomas never repre¬sented a serious threat on elec¬tion day, his impact on theAmerican consciousness remainsincalculable. His tall, Lincoln-esque frame, his famous highforehead, his calm, hoarse voicebecame a permanent part of thepolitical landscape in the 30’s,and his patient insistance on talk¬ing compassionate good sensewhen large segments of the Leftwere talking violent revolutionplayed a substantial role in find¬ing political solutions to the na¬tional crisis.Like so many men who outlivetheir time, Thomas’s positionseems strangely out of place inthe context of black power andthe continuing slaughter in Viet¬nam. His recent attack on hip¬pies and his poignant but some¬how embarrassing plea for pro¬testers to wash the flag insteadof burning it seem strikingly an¬ achronistic today.Flag washing has simply goneout of style, and, indeed, one ofthe significant differences be¬tween the crisis of today and thecrisis of thirty years ago is thatno Norman Thomas is aroundnow — persistently running shoe¬string campaigns for Presidentand by sheer stubborness andmoral presence forcing theAmerican people to adopt hisviews.The closest modern counterpartto the Thomas of the ’30’s isprobably Martin Luther King.But whereas events had a habitof proving Thomas right, theyseem to be constantly provingKing wrong. The hard facts oflife are that non-violence has notbrought equality to the AmericanNegro, and there seems to belittle evidence to support the con¬tention that it will bring an endto the war in Vietnam.THOMAS, of course, was not in¬fallible. His brief fling with theAmerica Firsters in the years be¬fore World War II is still asource of embarassment to hisfollowers. But Thomas did havethe distinction of being right farmore often than his contempo¬raries, and the enactment ofmuch of the legislation he hadbeen advocating for years estab¬lished him as something of anAmerican social prophet — atitle to which King has yet tolay claim.It is unfair, of course, to blameKing for not being NormanThomas. They are different men living in different times, facingdifferent problems. Indeed, itmay well be the case that eventshave simply made the Thomasapproach to American problemsirrelevant. The flag’s beenthrough the wash mary times be¬fore, but there is just the chancethat this time it really won’tcome clean. Thomas could pro¬pose solutions to the problem ofhungry Americans and stillmaintain a stance of unabashedpatriotism. But when the prob¬lem becomes a hungry world —a world for which Americanshave publicly rejected moral re¬sponsibility, burning of flags andretreat from politics into therealm of self may well constitute(he only moral response.If this is so, then maybe it isjust as well that Thomas lies inhis hospital bed today. Blind,aged, and weary from the effectsof six hopeless presidential cam¬paigns, it will be better for himnot to be around if it turns outthat the politics he devoted hislife to did not hold the answersafter all.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 17, 1967November 17, 1967 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwoWHAT AILS AMERICA? This isthe title of an article by Profes¬sor Morgenthau that appears inthe New Republic for October 28,1967. It is very lengthy and deep¬ly lugubrious. But the tears arenot lachrymae christae. His wineis sour, having been too long ex¬posed.Of course, everything, accord¬ing to Morgenthau, ails America.In this article, he has repeatedall those wrong-headed pronunci-amentos of the last few years,gathered together all the willfulmisconceptions of American andworld history and contemporaryevents, and has interlarded themwith the usual irrelevant name-dropping and tricks of rhetoric.At the invitation of the editor ofThe Maroon, I comment on thisportmanteau of poverty-strickenpropositions. Since, however,space is limited, I am bound toconfine my attention to the mostglaring errors, the characteristicones, as an index to the want ofreason and fact that is evident inthe whole piece. Any responsefrom the other side, will be, Ithink, the usual: evasion or per¬sonal abuse.The motif of these lachrymoselucubrations is this:The disarray of foreign anddomestic policies, the vio¬lence from above and below,the decline of the public in¬stitutions, the disengagementof the citizens from the pur¬poses of the government, thedecomposition of those ties oftrust and loyalty which linkcitizen to citizen and the citi¬zens to the government—...It reminds him, he says, “of theother two great crises which simi¬larly put into question the veryidentity of America.”The student is invited to con¬template the words “similarly and“identity.” What on earth can theymean? The two great crises arethe 1860’s and the 1930’s. He goeson to say, “a comparison amongthese three crises puts the peculi-ir gravity of the present into starkrelief.” The crisis of the 1860’swas, of course, that of the CivilWar and of emanicipation. I pre¬sume “stark relief” and “peculiargravity” mean more serious, clos¬er to disaster, to anarchy, to dis¬grace? The rhetoric is windy andmeaningless. He may mean some¬thing by his words; they reveal nosizeable meaning. The 1930’s were WhatAilsby Herman Finer ^mainly involved in the building ofovercoming the Depression, and inendowing labor with the rights dueto it. He does not make this cleareither, but uses the term New De¬al in a vague way.Now, the moaning that is em¬bodied in the bill of complaintshas a notable quality: the termsare not expressed with a sense ofproportion. All societies, like allindividuals are never withouttroubles or malaise, which varywith time and place. When statedin Professor Morgenthau’s rhet¬oric, this sense of proportion, themore or the less, the permanentor the fleeting, the curable or theindurated, the way is open forevery kind of fallacious argu¬ment. Such unproportioned state¬ments are most effective withclergymen and adolescents: theformer because they usuallyhave not been schooled in thesocial sciences in a thoroughlydisciplined way, and are alwayson the alert for gloomy, sweep¬ing themes for sermons to ad¬monish their congregations fornot being saints and not attend¬ing church, and the latter, theadolescents, because they haveas yet neither judgment, exper¬ience, nor knowledge, and are,naturally, in generational conflictwith the powers that be. Forvague statements of this kindone can obtain claques readywith applause all over the nation,and they will even pay to be en¬tertained with thoughts thatmake them feel very superiorintellectually and emotionally tothe lesser breeds without the law.Unusual for him, ProfessorMorgenthau ends with a confes¬sion of inability to make a con¬structive proposal! “While Iknow that this is what we need,”he says, “I have no idea how tobring it about.” To bring aboutwl»t? He informs us: “We needa supreme effort at radical re¬form creating unity and stabilityout of that dissension and unrestwhich are inseparable from radi¬cal reform.” He has been at itfor over 40 years.Could it be that his now de¬clared impotence is due to (a) anoverstatement of the ills of oursociety, due to his inability tocomprehend them with a senseof proportion and (b) a dogmaticand subjective temper, or even(c) mere denunciation for thesake of effect? By extreme sub¬ jectivism he has argued himselfinto a complete retreat fromcommon sense, that is, of askingtoo much altogether from humannature, that human nature shouldbe much more like Morgenthau,instead of being itself.From the farrago he choosesthree issues for special lamenta¬tion: Vietnam, the Presidencyand Race.My space today allows meonly to traverse two of these,Vietnam and the Presidency.On Vietnam, of course he re¬peats for the umpteenth time hisboast that he has given warningsabout Vietnam for six years.Sure. But he never stops to re¬flect that he has been wrong forsix years. Repetition, as wefound with Hegel’s dialectic, isnot a complete guarantee of rec¬titude of judgment. It could bepersistence in error through will¬fulness and egotism. What he re¬peats is: “Political aimlessness,military uselessness and risks,and moral liabilities.” But theVietnam war has political aims:to stop nationalistic agressionagainst the nationalism of an¬other people. It is militarily use¬ful, for in time, if persisted in,it will bring home to aggressors,nationalistic in preachment, butCommunist in policy and worldstrategy, that they cannot over¬turn other people’s rights withimpunity. To this view severalAsian nations not only assent, butthey pray that the U.S. militaryeffort shall continue to success.They have said so, and they livein the area of danger, and willbe all their lives in it. It is moredangerous to live in the Philip¬pines and in Burma than on thecampus of the University of Chi¬cago, if the persistence of Chinaand North Vietnam and of SovietRussia to fight “just wars” is re¬flected on.As for “moral liabilities,”there are some, mainly con¬cerned with the kind of war cas¬ualties on every side of the con¬flict. But if Mr. Morgenthau isreferring to the idea that war isnot moral, or that moral consid¬erations should not urge a nationto go to war, he long ago puthimself out of court on this ac¬count. A substantial part of hisDefense of the National Interestis to warn U.S. political leadersnot to take moral considerationsinto account, but to make war 29c*sa§aaV)©■sQfQ©aa-aatoa**C\a-ato5aV* Fineror pursue peace in the “nationalinterest” or not. Here, of course,we are a little blinded by his in¬ability to persuade those whohave looked into his divinations,to make sure what he meansspecifically by the “national in¬terest.” It is hardly in the na¬tional interest, I think, to act likea skunk, whether for the moraleof the population or for thehealth and honor and even cred¬ibility of democracy. I notice thathe never condemns the deliber¬ate cruelty of the Vietcong toVietnamese men, women andchildren.His positive objection to thewar in Vietnam is that the war“violates the very principles up¬on which this nation was foundedand for which it has stood bothin the eyes of its own citizensand of the world. It is an anti¬revolutionary war fought by a re¬volutionary nation.” That is afruity mouthful. Let us look intoits rhetoric.“It is an anti-revolutionarywar.” Is he referring to the so-called “civil war” within SouthVietnam? If so, then the answeris that not all civil wars (evenif this were the cause of the Viet¬nam troubles) are sanctified. Thecivil war started by Hitler in1923, and then with crushingbrutality from 1933 onward, wasnot sacrosanct. For me, the onlycivil war that is justified is onefor both national freedom andfor individual freedom (withinthe rights and obligations or Eng¬lishmen etc., etc., as BlackstoneTurn to Page 7CULTURE VULTURECHICAGO MAY NOT be the cul¬ture capital of the world but thisweek-end there are some excitingevents:TheaterHere on campus this weekend,University Theatre presents itsfirst production of the season —Luigi Pirandello’s Each in HisOwn Way. Pirandello is one ofthose playwrights who can serveas discussional material for ayear. The performances will betonight, Saturday, and Sunday at8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall. Ticketsare $1.50, $2.00, and $1.25 respec¬tively for University of Chicagostudents and faculty.Each in His Own Way is partof Pirandello’s famous trilogyof “theater within the theater.”Coupled with the well-known SixCharacters in Search of an Au¬thor, and with Tonight We Im¬provise, this piece attacks theproblem of the stage illusion con¬trasted with illusion in life andstage truth verses truth in life.Pirandello breaks down the bar¬riers between the stage and theaudience and questions the reali¬ty of both; “Each in His OwnWay” is not merely a play alonebut is a play about a play.Obviously, the task of bringingthe author’s unique ideas to lifeis difficult indeed, so difficultthat many other theater groupsfrom attempting Each in HisOwn Way and other Pirandellodramas. In selecting this play,the first large-scale experimentaldrama ever attempted by Uni¬versity Theater, Director JamesO’Reilly had several motives. Inthe first place, 1967 marks theCHICAGOBLUES3 Bands A WeekOpen 7 NightsTill 4a.m.MOTHER BLUES1305 N. WELLSwho killedKennedyA secret is told in silence and certainty in astrangely suppressed 25 page fairytale. $1.t0 Bo* 64, Glenville, Connecticut 06830See OurEverything to MokeYour Child's Fortya Success10’MEXICAN PINATAS1,000 PARTYFAVORS ONLYWE HAVE ALL MATTEL'STALKING TOYS, DOLLS.BOOKS. GAMES, RECORDS.BALLET SHOES. LEOTARDS.SCHOOL SUPPLIES.EDUCATIONAL GOODSWC ACCEPT ALL MIDWESTCHARGE CARDSurn,T*ys, M»bfciei A Jnv*nll« Furniture1708-1710 \ Eatt 79th St.RE 4-451R ES 5-9464Free Parking Not Door centenary of Pirandello’s birth,and through this production theChicago community will be re¬minded of the accomplishmentsof this foremost of dramatists.Joan Cagen as Delia MoreliaEach in His Own Way waschosen over the other two playsin the trilogy for two major rea¬sons. In the first place, O’Reillysays it is probably the most ex¬perimental of the three. Further¬more, O’Reilly thinks that theUniversity Theater has an “ob¬ligation to its audience to presentworks the people would not nor¬mally have an opportunity tosee.”Tonight and Saturday nightHarper Theater presents MartinYarbrough, folk singer and gui¬tarist plus the newly formedNew-Old-Fashioned BaroqueCompass Players. The Players, arejuvination of the old CompassPlayers (who turned into SecondCity), unlike many of the so-called improvisational groupsreally improvise and do not rely on prepared material. Theirshow is called “What to do incase of Peace”. They will con¬tinue playing through and alongwith the run of The Cherry Or¬chard, directed by Paul Sillswhich starts previews on Tues¬day. Tickets for The Cherry Or¬chard are $3.00 weekdays and$3.90 on week-ends, half price forstudents.FilmsTonight at 7:00 and 9:30, DocFilms will present Birth of a Na¬tion, D.W. Griffith’s classic de¬fense of the Ku Klux Klan. Bringyour own sheet, but do not missit.Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Risingplus Chafed Elbos will be shown.night somewhere in Hyde Parkby Second City with the help ofthe Porter Foundation. To findthe owners made a long time ago.The films were shoved out offrom the Hyde Park Theater(something about an agreementday in a special Thanksgiving is-The film of Strindburg’s MissJulia will be shown in Ida NoyesSunday at 7:30. It is the last ofthe Graduate Germanic’s Club’sseries of German and Swedishfilms. $1. Students, 75 cents.ExhibitsTomorrow is the last day tosee the exhibit of a collection of14 panels entitled The Tragedyof Soviet Jewry” at Hillel House.It covers all the aspect of Jewsin the U.S.S.R.MusicSam and Kirk McGee, stars ofthe Grand Ole Opry, will be pre¬sented in concert by the Univer¬sity of Chicago Folklore SocietyASA MATTER OP... tun Ufa fnnurance ?• a sure wajto financial Independence for yo«aad your family.At a local Sea Ufa representative, RMfI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRenklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hour* 9 to 5 Monday*,others by appt.•UN UFI ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYHYDE PARK T.V. RENTS television forS6.50 a week FMradio for $5.00 amonth.HYDE PARK T.V. SERV,CES(orders, etc.Zenith If'HYDE PARK T.V. EEEEEGrundigHYDE PARK T.V. OFFERS a 10% discountto students if yonmention this ad.1463 East 53rd Street PL 2-2700 jfWEEKEND MAGAZINEr.Svi rAZINE November 17, 1967\\* *. v \ '4‘Itt.v.v . V-i nA % tonight. The concert will be inIda Noyes Hall at 8:15 p.m. Tick¬ets for the concert cost $1.75, and$1.50 for university students,bought at the Mandel Hall boxoffice, or at the door.Sam and Kirk McGee beganperforming on the “Opry” in thetwenties, as soloists and with thelegendary Uncle Dave Maconand his Fruit Jar Drinkers. Theirmusic is lively, exciting, andhumerous. It comes from ruralsouthern dance music, old bal¬lads, nonsense songs, sacredsongs, from the minstrel, vaude¬ville, and music hall repertoireof the early twentieth century.Both Sam and Kirk are versatileinstrumentalists — on banjo, gui¬tar, and fiddle.Pete Seeger comes to town to¬night and tomorrow night to per¬form at Orchestra Hall at 8:30p.m. Tickets range from $3.50- 6.50. No doubt he will be bring¬ing both his guitar and hisbarbed comments on the presentpolitical scene.On Sunday, Ellen Karnofsky,cello, and Bill Hayaski, pianoand harpsichord, will present aconcert in Ida Noyes Library. Ifyou are a Bach, Mozart, Schu¬bert or Shostakovitch fan, do notmiss it.Barbara Cook, the Toni-win¬ning singer-actress will make themidway look a little bit likeBroadway when she sings in theLaw School Auditorium on Sun¬day at 8:00 p.m.PBLIf you missed PBL last week¬end on television (that dirtyword), tune it in this Sundaynight on Channel 11. Though itmay not be the Thucydides of themedium, it is like a leaky faucetin the vast wasteland.Yosne Romanee1962 YintaqeBurgundy.SPECIAL *4 A FULL GALLON OF COLDDRAUGHT BEER$1 39PER GAL69 per Half 6*1.ghi HEADQUARTERS FOR CUT RATE LIQUORS1238 EAST 47TH ST. KE 6-6500W« Deliver • j 2 Drive In Window*Vi Block West of Oef«r DriveCohn & Stern(Haunt Sc (HaitiansShop4 season all weather coatThis London Fog all weather coat stays trim, crisp8c handsome no matter what. Washable, water re¬sistant Dacron cotton with a zip-in Orion liner tokeep you toasty on the coldest days. Black, navy,natural or olive in regular, short and long sizes. $45Others from $37.50 to $60Hyde Park Shopping Center Open Daily til 655th & Lake Park Thursday & Friday til 9f ► t r < • « • i » • i * i t y yt t ( i * «,,«?♦> i :(;•*<«« iif i « 11 < v/A'r: ..vmwmwmm t >What Henru Moore's Statue 'Nuclear Energy' Is All AboutWilliam H. McNeillALMOST a quarter of a centuryago a group of physicists work¬ing on our campus under EnricoFermi’s direction contrived thefirst controlled release of atomicenergy. They were aware at thetime of the potential importanceof what they had done. Withinless than three years, the firstfruits of their work, the A-bomb,announced itself to all the world.Other uses of nuclear energycame more slowly. In particular,the generation of electricity isonly now, after twenty fiveyears, becoming cheaper in mostcircumstances and locations thanalternative forms of fuel for pow¬er plants. But within anothergeneration, if present technicaltrends continue, most of thewould’s electricity will derivefrom atomic reactors.Humanity’s perils and oppor¬tunities have thus enormously in¬creased as a result of the con¬trolled release of atomic energy.No one can doubt that the futureof all mankind depends upon theuses to which the new technicalpossibilities are put. An awesomerisk and a no less awesomepromise inheres in human pos¬session of cheap and all but il¬limitable energy.The faculty committee respon¬sible for planning the forthcom¬ing celebration of the 25th anni¬versary of Fermi’s experimentwanted to express that awe. Ittherefore turned to sculpture asthe traditional vehicle throughwhich men of our civilized tra¬dition have always, ever sincethe days of the ancient Greeks,tried to express and symbolizegreat public events.Our theme called for a greatsculptor left to his own devices.Henry Moore, one of the mostfamous sculptors of our time, un¬dertook the task, and his twelvefoot bronze “Nuclear Energy”will be unveiled on December 2,1967, at 3:36 p.m., the exact an¬niversary moment of the timewhen the first atomic pile wentcritical. The statue will standon the spot where the pile oncestood, near Ellis avenue, between56th and 57th Streets.Universities and research insti-carry fresh breath in your pocketWHISPER"new aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION000 Second Ave.. New York. N.V. 100X7 tutes of every kind are foundedon the faith that the destructionthey bring to old practices, ideasand values will in the long run bemore than made up for by thegrowth of new, more powerfuland perhaps also more precari¬ous orderings of human activity.Moore’s ‘Nuclear Energy’Often the contructive, slowerand longer range improvementsin man’s ability to cope with theworld which a free exercise ofreason permits are less obviopsthan the short range destructionthis same free exercise of reasoncauses.It so happens that the historyof man’s discovery and use ofatomic energy illustrates this re¬lationship with unusual clarityand with a supreme force. For just as the A—bomb and its stillmore destructive progeny threat¬en total eradication of humanlife, so also the enlarged energysupply atomic reactors create liftthe ceilings upon what is techno¬logically possible beyond thewildest dreams of former ages.Thanks to atomic energy, the endof poverty no less than the endof humanity now seem real pos¬sibilities, within a time spanmeasurable by only a few humangenerations.Fermi’s famous experimenttherefore aptly symbolizes theambiguity that informs intellectu¬al life in general and the corpor¬ate life of our university and ofother universities in particular.For insofar as the University istruly dedicated to the life of themind, it is dedicated to callinginto question the way things are.By so doing, professors and stu¬dents threaten ordinary, unthink¬ing human behavior, just asatomic destruction threatens usall. But just as atomic power hasbegun to come into its own, sonew truths eventually generatefresh pieties and rules of con¬duct that will be better in somemeaningful sense of the termthan behavior based upon the ex¬ploded myths and erroneousjudgements of the past. Or somen of intellect must believe, un¬less they are ready to admit thattheir professional activity is anti¬social.It was an accident that broughtREYNOLDS CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY. EXT. 3573M-F' 8 o.m.-5 p.m., Sol. 8 a m.-12 p.m. Fermi’s breakthrough experi¬ment to our campus. The menwho made it possible were scat¬tered all over western Europe,and the particular team of sci¬entists who carried the experi¬ment through had been assem-led under war time secrecyfrom all over the United States.But it is the sort of accident ofwhich thinking men should beproud, and celebrate with fullawareness of the* ambiguities itso poignantly bodied forth, in1942 no less than in 1967, andthrough unnumbered years yet tocome. For as thinking men, wetoo are destroyers and creators,whatever our specialty or par¬ticular line of inquiry may be.This is what Henry Moore’sstatue and the ceremony of its unveiling is really all about,other things into the statue andinto the event it commemorates.But here and now, the statueand the ceremony of unveilingare the very best we of this Uni¬versity can achieve by way ofserious and honest statement ofwhat we know and believe —with the perspective of a quarterof a century — about the tre¬mendous and ambiguous triumphof man’s intellect and skill thattook place at Stagg Field on De¬cember 2, 1942.Professor McNeill, formerchairman of the department ofhistory and author of The Riseof the West among other books,is on the faculty committeewhich made the negotiationsfor the Moore statue.1. What are youdoing, Al?Lesson 1 in“Tiptoeing YourWay To The Top.” 2. What’s thisall about?Preparing for thestart of mybusiness career.3. Really?I’ve learned an awfullot from “SidesteppingMiddle Management andOther Fancy Footwork.” You should read“Fun Things To DoWith Your FirstMillion.”5. If you don’t mind my saying so,I think you’ll save time andeffort by looking into the terrificopportunities at Equitable.The work is challenging, the paygood, and there are plenty ofchances to move up fast.What’ll I do with “How To PlayLosing Golf With Your Boss?”For details about careers 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. 10019. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F ©Equitable 1967November 17, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3THEATERMine TiisKftiMl’sromcs (d'liica^oMust we endure Sham Shaw Iwould hope that the answerwould be a thunderous NO: TheReal Shaw was quite enough,thank you. Yet on Monday nightI suffered through precisely that:a waxwork Shaw, complete withshaky-quaky voice, directed fromMadame Tussaud’s. The GoodmanTheatre, however, wiser than itsLondon home office, charged awhopping 25 shillings per rump.That this event occurred but asingle night suggests that eitherthe Chicago Police or a few fossilfriends of mine would soon haverun it out of town as a lewd spec¬tacle.Why, why, why? If Mr Bram-well Fletcher, the perpetrator ofthis vicious business, had said,as his program notes would sug¬gest, that it was because of hisundying gratitude for what I hadtaught him. or if he had said,with a bulge in his cheek (and owhat a cheek!) that he wantedto share the Old Boy with hisAmerican friends and that thiswas the only way he knew how,then I just might have comedown Jove-like and struck himdown deaf, dumb, and dead.If he had said it was merelyfor the money to be made in aone-man, one-lobe show, then Imight have forgiven him. Theonly other person who wouldhave to be paid would be the onewho scissored and pasted up thisbeginningless, middleless, andendless mess Mr BramwellFletcher almost had committedto memory. Ye gods: this mighthave been Mr. Bramwell Fletch¬er himself.Mr. Bramwell Fletcher’s waxenShaw was satisfying enough visu¬ally. The figure onstage wore mytweed cap, coat, and knickers,arid gestured hands-on-hips orthrew himself into a convincinglyugly Victorian chair oftenenough. And that, like tapdanc¬ing or faithful reproductions ofLandseer lapdogs, is of somevalue. But need I say that I didexactly the same thing in 1903when I put myself onstage asthe hero of my first metabiologi-cal play Man and Superman? And need I say I did it better?But the evening was not entire¬ly wasted. I found out, for onething, that people not only willpay to see live celebrities insteadof dramas, but also will pay tosee dead celebrities. Here isthe classic opposition: Russiansget to see Lenin’s corpse fornothing; Americans get to seeShaw’s corpse for 25 shillings.But the corpse, promises to thecontrary, seldom came to life.Too much non-Shaw string be¬tween my baroque pearls. Toolittle attention to seeing whereto go next. Too many trips to theprompters. Toe much of my in¬decent asides and too little ofmy holy writ. I still curse my¬self for not writing up such aShaw on Shaw evening’s enter¬tainment myself and wedging itinto my last will and testament.The only excuse I can make isthat I thought my plays, books,and reviews would have done thejob I have just seen the fruits ofmy folly.The Shaw on Shaw I wouldhave created would have beendivided into five parts, each partat least an hour’s length. TheFirst would have shown me justarrived in London with my weak,naked chin wishing it had someway to hide itself. The Secondwould show my red beard, myall-wool Jaeger suit, my thinlydisguised novel heroes, my stintas the music critic extraordinaryCorno di Bassetto, and my cart-and-trumpet antics as a laughingsocialist. The third would showthe next persona called G B S inall his wrath as drama criticheaping coals of fire upon thepomaded heads of London actor-managers for net (among otherthings) producing my plays.Then in Part Four the rich andsought-after Bernard Shaw turn¬ing from Jekyll to Hyde as theGreat War’s treasonous Cassan¬dra. Then finally the cranky oldsainte has been besainted by thepassage of time or sense and be¬sotted by too many years of adul¬ation by unclever people whocould always be found to pushme ahead like a wheelchair out of control — and then the dis¬gusting child who shriveled upbut refused to die. That would betheh Real G B S.But what did the audiencesee? Exactly what Bernardola-try demands: a spicy old Grand¬father Everyman who tells funnystories about himself and is quiteharmless; he may have blas¬phemed and blustered, but he letus in on the secret of his twin¬kling eye, his crypto-sexuality,and why we should cherish hisholy memory because of hope¬lessly dated statements that drawtheir charm from being totallyinapplicable to present-day life.Why in the name of Clio didn'tMr. Bramwell Fletcher or hispastepot hirelings update someof my What I Really Said Aboutthe War? Or Fabianism and theEmpire? Or even HeartbreakHouse? All they would have hadto do was to change the namesof the combatants and the eve¬ning would have had some pur¬pose.Two last matters and I’mthrough with this show of spleen.The first concerns the title, TheBernard Shaw Story. Its mostdamning indictment is merely torepeat it. The second concernsthe opening two minutes of PartTwo, when about one-third of theaudience were caught out oftheir seats and Shaw-Tussaudhad already made his entrance.Now I ask you: what would areal Bernard Shaw have done?Certainly not what was done.The Sham Shaw started, stopped,and shouted his lines (like Noahtrying to talk to his wife over thedin of the gangplank), and be¬gan the same lines over again!The real Bernard Shaw, ofcourse, would have walked offthe stage, or begun chatting withthe front row, or would haveseized upon the jawbone of anass and have begun fellingeveryone he saw standing. Butnothing so imaginative or true-to-life happened. That is why Ihave always had so little use foractors.G B SThe Chicago Symphony String Quartetevening ofString Quartet No. 1Quartet No. 3Quartet in e minorMonday, November 208:OOPMThe First Unitarian Church57th Street at Woodlawn*3<0 0 s,udenu$ t.SO(Tickets ct the door)A Benefit Concert to Support the Humane Activitiesof the Unitarian Universalist Service Committeepresents anSchubertVon DohnanyiSmetana # On Campus withMaxShuIman(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,11Dobie GiUis,” etc.)FOOTBALL FOR SHUT-INSAt next Saturday’s football game while you are sittingin your choice student’s seat behind the end zone, won’tyou pause and give a thought to football’s greatest and,alas, most neglected name? I refer, of course, to ChampertSigafoos.Champert Sigafoos (1714-1928) started life humbly ona farm near Thud, Kansas. His mother and father, bothnamed Walter, were bean-gleaners, and Champert becamea bean-gleaner too. But he tired of the work and went toMontana where he got a job with a logging firm. Here theerstwhile bean-gleaner worked as a stump-thumper. Aftera month he went to North Dakota where he tended thefurnace in a granary (wheat-heater). Then he drifted toTexas where he tidied up oil fields (pipe-wiper). Then toArizona where he strung dried fruit (fig-rigger). Thento Kentucky where he fed horses at a breeding farm (oat-toter). Then to Long Island where he dressed poultry(duck-plucker). Then to Alaska where he drove a deliveryvan for a bakery (bread-sledder). Then to Minnesotawhere he cut up frozen lakes (ice-slicer). Then to Nevadawhere he determined the odds in a gambling house (dice-pricer). Then to Milwaukee where he pasted cameralenses together (Zeiss-splicer).Finally he went to Omaha where he got a job in a tan¬nery, beating pig hides until they were soft and supple(hog-fiogger). Here occurred the event that changed notonly Champert’s life, but all of ours.Next door to Champert’s hog-floggery was a mooringmast for dirigibles. In flew a dirigible one day, piloted bya girl named Graffa von Zeppelin. Champert watchedGraffa descend from the dirigible, and his heart turnedover, and he knew love. Though GrafTa’s beauty was notquite perfect—one of her legs was shorter than the other(blimp-gimper)— she was nonetheless ravishing, whatwith her tawny hair and her eyes of Lake Louise blue andher marvelously articulated haunches. Champert, smitten,ran quickly back to the hog-floggery to plan the wooing.To begin with, naturally, he would give Graffa a pres¬ent. This presented problems, for hog-flogging, as we allknow, is a signally underpaid profession. Still, thoughtChampert, if he had no money, there were two things hedid have: ingenuity and pigskin.So he selected several high grade pelts and stitchedthem together and blew air into them and made for Graffaa perfectly darling little replica of a dirigible. "She willlove this,” said he confidently to himself and proceeded tomake ready to call on Graffa.First, of course, he shaved with Personna Super Stain¬less Steel Blades. And wouldn’t you? If you were lookingto impress a girl, if you wanted jowls as smooth as ivory,dewlaps like damask, a chin strokable, cheeks fondlesome,upper lip kissable, would you not use the blade thatwhisks away whiskers quickly and slickly, tuglessly andnicklessly, scratchlessly and matchlessly? Would you not,in short, choose Personna, available both in Injector styleand double-edge style? Of course you would.So Champert, his face a study in epidermal elegance,rushed next door with his little pigskin dirigible. ButGraffa, alas, had run off, alas, with a bush pilot who spe¬cialized in dropping limes to scurvy-ridden Eskimo vil¬lages (fruit-chuter).Champert, enraged, started kicking his little pigskinblimp all over the place. And who should walk by justthen but Jim Thorpe, Knute Rockne, Walter Camp, andPete Rozelle!They walked silently, heads down, four discouragedmen. For weeks they had been trying to invent football,but they couldn’t seem to find the right kind of ball. Theytried everything-hockey pucks, badminton birds, bowlingballs, quoits—but nothing worked. Now seeing Champertkicking his pigskin spheroid, their faces lit up and as oneman they hollered “Eureka!” The rest is history.* * * ©1967, Max ShulmanSpeaking of kicks, if you've got any about your pres¬ent shave cream, try Burma-Shavey regular or menthol.\'i «y» .< v4 WEEKEND MAGAZINE November 17, 1967 i* • * '■FILMS'68 Camaro:Accelerates smoother, hugs the roadrides quieter than ever before. Camaro SS CoupeA quiet car speaks for itself.That's why Chevrolet wentall out to make the '68Camaro smoother, steadierand more silent than ever.Camaro’s famous road-hugging performance hasbeen improved with a refinedsuspension system.Camaro’s big-car ride hasbeen improved, too. Softrubber cushions snuff out road noise and vibrations.Even Camaro’s new AstroVentilation works for yourpeace and quiet. Adjustablevent-ports built in theinstrument panel let outsideair circulate without wind ornoise. You don't even haveto open a window! It all addsup to the silent ride of quality.See for yourself. Put a hushed’68 Camaro through its pacesat your Chevrolet dealer's. All these Chevroletquality features, too:• Unitized all-weldedBody by Fisher.t Power team choices upto a 396-cubic-inch V8.• Self-adjusting Safety-Master brakes withdual cylinders. tighter,An automatic buzzerthat reminds you totake your keys withyou.Proved safety featureslike the GM-developedenergy-absorbingsteering column andmany new ones thatinclude armrest-shielded door handles.Be smart! Be sure! Buy now at your Chevrolet dealer’s.All Chevrolets are priced for greater value! The lowest priced 1968 Chevrolets are (models not shown): Corvair 500 Sport Coupe$2,220.00; Chevy II Nova Coupe $2,199.00; Camaro Sport Coupe $2,565.00; Chevelle 300 Coupe $2,318.00; ChevroletBiscayne 2-Door Sedan $2,558.00; Corvette Convertible $4,320.00. Manufacturer's suggested retail prices including Federal Excise Tax,suggested dealer delivery and handling charges. Transportation charges, accessories, optional equipment, state and local taxes additional.November 17, 1967M\ U ^ ‘ o/ WEEKEND MAGAZINE{/A\ .2P U U''A&yi'i *Terry Turner [above] of San Jose,Calif., working in a castleJobs in EuropeLuxembourg—American Student In¬formation Service is celebrating its10th year of successful operationplacing students in jobs and arrang¬ing tours. Any student may nowchoose from thousands of jobs suchas resort, office, sales, factory, hos¬pital, etc. in 15 countries with wagesup to $400 a month. ASIS maintainsplacement offices throughout Europeinsuring you of on the spot help atall times. For a booklet listing alljobs with application forms and dis¬count tours send $2 (job application,overseas handling & air mail reply) to:Dept. O, American Student Informa¬tion Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy ofLuxembourg.Godard at Aardrark: Beyond AlphariUeWHILE THE film festival here istrying to discover “unknowns”and playing with gimmicks (areview of which will appear inthese columns in two weeks), theAardvark is doing an incrediblejob getting some of the most im¬portant cinema to Chicagoanswho don’t usually patronize DocFilms. Currently they are givingthe commercial Chicago premiereof Jean-Luc Godard’s eleventhfilm Masculine-Feminine.A complete review is impossi¬ble. So a few comments precededby a few facts:The strange numbers that popup at irregular intervals through¬out the film are references to thefilm’s subtitle “fifteen precise ac¬tions.”Godard considers himselfcloser to sociologists than to po¬ets. He is showing not explaining.Highly involved with the Frenchcinema verite school he decidedthat Masculine-Feminine was tobe in line with Chronique d’unEte (Paris in summer by Rouchand Morin) and Le Joli Mai(Paris in May by Chris Marker).Masculine-Feminine is Paris inDecember, the peculiar Decem¬ber of 1965 when Mitterand andde Gaulle prepared for the run¬off election.Chantal Goya (Madeline) is avery popular French rock singer.Jean-Pierre Leaud (Paul), be¬sides being the young boy of TheFour Hundred Blows, was God¬ard’s assistant director on anumber of films. Along with theother principals of this film,these are the people Godardspent the summer preceding M-Fwith. Needless to say, he was theonly one not under thirty. Alsoneedless to say, he is very muchaware of American slogans.What fascinated him was his ac¬ceptance by these equally awareyouths under thirty. He wastrusted.These facts go a long way toexplain how the film appears.The lack of surface emotion inan extremely emotional film. Thepreoccupation with politics. Theobviously improvisational nature of the film. (All of Godard’sfilms are improvised. The differ¬ence here is that the improvisa¬tion is obvious.)What they do not explain is theparing nature of the film. Godardwho purports to be simply show¬ing, who refuses to make a state¬ment (who in his next projectwill claim it is impossible tomake any statement), this sameGodard makes a film called Mas¬culine-Feminine which refuses tostay on the surface, which keepstaking layer after layer off andwhich miraculously remainsdeeper than your last thought.Seventh time round the film re¬mains as compelling, relevent,and profound as the first.Visually the film tends towardssimplicity. Simplicity of cameraset-ups, simplicity of camera mo¬tion, simplicity of cutting. Thereare a minimal number of takes.The camera finds a place to stayand stays there. This is the cine¬ma of essentials. The only prob¬lem is that essentials are notsimple. Those characters andplaces the camera finally findsrefuse to be as simple as thecamera would like. They feel toostrongly the instrusion of theworld.The world keeps intruding intoM-F. It intrudes on the sound¬track, one of the most brilliantand complex tracks on film. This complex sound is in such directcontrast to the visual that it be-. comes in itself an intrusion.The world intrudes in the formof the single inserted shots thatkeep the film from maintainingan absolute visual simplicity.The world intrudes most oftenin the form of random violence.Two Negroes quote from Dutch¬man then turn the play on endand kill the white girl. A manthreatens Paul with a knife thenkills himself. A man asks Paulfor a match, grabs a box, thensets himself on fire leaving themessage “paix au Vietnam.” Thewar itself intrudes everywhere.This violent world is not ration¬al. In the laundry Paul tells Rob¬ert of being followed by threedifferent men. The object of thiscomplex plot is to make Paul be¬lieve he is being followed.In Alphaville Godard createda world where love did not ex¬ist and where computers reigned.Yet the intrusion of time andlove into this world broughtabout its self-destruction.In Masculine-Feminine thecharacters try desperately tocreate a viable world for them¬selves. Paul and Madeline trylove. Paul and Robert try poli¬tics. Madeline, Elisabeth, andCatherine try friendship. Made¬line tries art.All of them fail. Paul is capable of only playingat politics. The only time we seeMadeline singing is at an unsuc¬cessful recording session. (Sig¬nificantly, Paul intrudes.) Thefriendship deteriorates: Cather¬ine wants Paul, Elisabeth wantsMadeline. For the first time inGodard, love fails. It may neverhave existed. It may have sim¬ ply been a game, the kind Paulplays with politics: the founda¬tion may be real but the struc¬ture itself is false. Finally Paulfalls (jumps? is pushed?) offan unfinished apartment housewhile Madeline finds herselfpregnant. What will you do? thepolice investigator asks her. Shedoes not know what she will do.Announcing3 new ways to shorten yourLong Distance phone bill!The One-DollarWeekend SpecialThe low Sunday Long Distancerates for calls to other states havebeen extended to include Saturday.Now, all day Saturday and allday Sunday, you can make athree-minute station call anywherein the country except Alaska andHawaii and never pay morethan $1.00 plus tax! Monday-thru-FridayEvening SpecialsThe low $ 1 weekend rate alsoapplies on weekday eveningsbeginning at 7 PM — an hourearlier than before.From 5 PM to 7 PM these samecalls never cost more than $ 1.25plus tax. Why not top off yourdinner with a cup of coffee and aLong Distance call? The Midnight-to-MorningSeventy-Five-Cent SpecialGreat news for Night People! Nowon any night between midnightand 7 AM, if you dial direct*you can call other Night Peopleanywhere in the country (exceptAlaska and Hawaii)—three-minutes, station-to-station—and never pay more than 75 $plus tax!* After-Midnight rates give you reductionsonly on interstate calls over 354 miles.They apply to calls dialed direct and callswhere Direct Dialing Service is notavailable, or a physical handicapprevents dialing.There are more Long Distance bargains thatyou should know about such as the reduced daytimeand early evening rates and specialperson-to-person bargain calling times.For a handy wallet size rate chart,write P.0. Box 4740, Chicago, Illinois 60680.Illinois Bell TelephonePart of the Nationwide Bell System6 WEEKEND MAGAZINE November 17, 1967FinerContinued from Page Oneand Edward Coke and the resthad taught their descendants whohad peopled America.) I do notconsider a civil war that intendsopenly or covertly to suppressfreedom as deserving moral con¬donation or physical support, asbeing holy.If it is argued that Hanoi isconducting a mere war of nation¬alism, and that the war of Northand South in Vietnam is the civilwar referred to, then by the man¬ner in which that country evolvedover the centuries and the cir¬cumstances of the division be¬tween the two Vietnams, SouthVietnam is as much a nation asthe North and has as much rightto seek to establish a sovereignstate as Hanoi.As I am interested in the pro¬gress of morality in internationalaffairs, I have to add that I con¬sider South Vietnam more en¬titled to do so, and to be re¬garded as the truly “revolution¬ary” party, in that it still haswide freedoms (amounting al¬most to anarchy) while in Ho ChiMinh’s paradise, every oppositionhas long since been buried andevery possiblity of dissent getsshort shrift. Students are invitedto read the best authority onNorth Vietnam's brutal regime,the works of Professor P. J. Hon¬ey of the University of London.He knows North Vietnam: Pro¬fessor Morgenthau does not, anddoes not seem to care.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.UNIVERSITYTHEATREannouncesthe third in a series of% %%plays and poems byRobert FrostSUNDAY 19 3;30 PMCloister ClubIda Noyesaudience andactors invited Now the United States is a “re¬volutionary nation” in twosenses, which Professor Morgen¬thau misunderstands. It is revo¬lutionary in that the colonies (notthe “nation”) fought against theMotherland almost exclusivelyfor the transfer of sovereigntyfrom London to the independentAmerican state capitals. Theydid not fight for a religious, poli¬tical, or economic or socialchange within their societies, orin America as a whole. This ob¬servation disposes of the utterlyfallacious use Professor Morgen¬thau makes of the parrot-crymuch in evidence in church cir¬cles (I have heard them recitethis to me), “the emphasis ofthe Declaration of Independenceupon the right to revolution asa universal principle.” There isno phrase in the Declaration thatdirectly includes the word “re¬volution.”The Declaration says: “Butwhen a long train of abuses andusurpations, pursuing invariablythe same Object evinces a de¬ sign to reduce them under abso¬lute Despotism, it is their right,it is their duty to throw off sucha government, and to providenew Guards for their secur¬ity. . .” Before that the Declara¬tion declares that “governmentsderive their just powers from theconsent of the governed.” Andalongside this, it declares thatprudence would dictate thatlong established governmentsshould not be changed “for lightand transient causes.”If the Declaration is applied tothe relationship between Northand South Vietnam, then it is theNorth that seeks to reduce theSouth “under absolute Despo¬tism.” Anyone who can get outof Soviet Russia, East Germany,Czechoslovak^ Poland and Hun¬gary will do it, even highly priv¬ileged people. The same is true inNorth Vietnam, if they were freeto do so.The Declaration, the readerwill see, favors freedom of theindividual, to pursue happinessfreely. In every use of the De¬claration, the moral advantage is with the South Vietnamese cause,and with the U.S.A. which is re¬sisting, as in 1776, the attempt toimpose an alien despotism on it.This is not all. The Declarationwas not a problem of the peopleversus the government, but, asit says, of “a people” versus an¬other, in other words, in the es¬timation of the signees, it was aninter-national war, not a civilwar! The basic reason wasstated in one of Edmund Burke’sspeeches on conciliation: that tobe 3000 miles across the ocean(in a time of sailing vessels) ne¬cessarily produced a separate na¬tion.It might be added that whenthe U.S. was formed it was in¬corporated, as it were, by a con¬stitution. This constitution givesrights and demands obligations. It does not permit the right ofrevolution.In order to bolster this unten¬able argument about a revolu¬tionary nation fighting against arevolution, Morgenthau uses afavorite device of rhetoric, hedops names. This time he dropsthe name of the General Synodof the Netherlands ReformedChurch. No argument is strongerthan its inherent reason andfacts. And, indeed, this trick ofrhetoric does not assist Morgen-tau’s case. The church said tothe National Council of Churchesof the United States:The nation in whose behalfthe war is supposedly beingfought is being slowly butsurely brought to ruin by thesubtlety of the chemical andContinued on Page EightMorgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd St.SPLIT 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,anywhere—you’re onfor just half our regularCoach fare. And you’rein for the full treatment. Atmealtime, plenty of goodfood. On many long hauls,stereo and hi-fi music tomake 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 Welcometo the world ofTrans World Airlines♦Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc. >L n ; . •Movies presented by Inflight Motion Pictures, Inc. ...ine till-Jcl dlrilFlCNovember 17, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE\f.iJ ’ tvV‘G. WU&ttVdfc.tik ’G*aV«*YiVThe Missile Nobody Needs William E. Jackson Jr.I THE NEW ■October t». i«*7. H centsREPUBLIC IWhat AilsAmerica?Hans J. MorgenthauGene, No! Joe Ceroid Vi. JohnsonA Pilgrimage Mary EllmannKennaris Memoir* John LukacsPresident Dumping "yinuacus jiWhat AilsMorgen than?'Continued on Page Sevenconventional weapons usedand by the complete social,cultural, and spiritual disso¬lution with which it is threat¬ened. A nation’s “liberation”is sealing its doom.This is a monstrous exagger¬ation in every respect.So then the church went onto announce this, that “your na¬tion is losing the confidenceplaced in it, since it is (castingdoubt on) the sincereity of itspleas for freedom and jus¬tice. ...” Churchmen are notsound witnesses on war, for theyhave a professional commitmenttowards peace at any price.But we, laymen, cannot permitsuch an unholy opression while itis in our power to prevent.In the course of the discussionon Vietnam, Morgenthau says:(The United States) acts up¬ on » the assumptioiT that it'isdefending South Vietnamagainst agression. If onlyNorth Vietnam left its neigh¬bor alone, to quote Mr.Rusk’s celebrated phrase,there would be no trouble inSouth Vietnam.I challenge him to show thatDean Rusk said this, especiallyas he uses the phrase “to quoteMr. Rusk’s celebrated phrase.”I challenge him to produce thecontext as well. As Morgenthausaid last April in The Maroon an“intellectual” is devoted to truth.Here is a chance to show it.In another phase of the morosemeditations:However, fruitful negotiationswith the government in Hanoiare impossible not becausewe refuse to cease uncondi¬tionally the bombing of theNorth. . .but because we seekto gain at the conferencetable what we have been un¬able to achieve on the battle¬field: the destruction of theViet Cong as an organizedpolitical force.Morgenthau is distinctly pre¬mature. As an amateur strate¬gist (all out of books, without anyexperience of war), he ought toknow that even in Malaysia ittook the British about a decadeto suppress the Communist guer¬rillas. He ought to know that thenatural terrain of Vietnam, theexistence underground of bunkersand hideaways built over manyyears, long before any U.S.armed forces ever reached Viet¬nam, require a long time to over¬come. Time, patience, and thecourage of the soldiers will event¬ually accomplish it.As for the enclave theory, Gen¬eral Gavin’s theory, the mereconsideration of what an un¬limited supply of Soviet artillery of various kinds colild db’to en¬trenched camps, and a contem¬plation of the fall of Tobruk hrWorld War II, shows that thistheory was always nonsense. AsI write, Gavin himself is tryingto say (Meet the Press, Sunday,Nov. 12, 1967, 12:10 p.m.) thatWestmoreland is carrying outjust what Gavin was thinking of!Bosh then, and bosh now.I now turn to the question ofthe Presidency. There is noabuse to which Professor Mor-ganthau will not descend to vil-lify Mr. Johnson. It is summar-izable in this instance (throughbrevity’s need) in this statement.The integrity of the Americanterritory and institutions, theMonroe Doctrine, the balanceof power in Europe and Asia,those are the interests ofAmerica; the war in Vietnamis the President’s; it meansnothing to America.This is the fruit of Morgenthau’sinability to adjust his antiquatedideas of war, learned in Ger¬many in World War I and laterin the conventional warfare ofWorld War II, to the meaning ofnuclear weapons. He has talkedand written a good deal aboutnuclear strategy, as about manyother things he has not thorough¬ly thought out. But the fact isthat we live in an age of catas¬trophic weapons that move, per¬haps quite unstoppably, at therate of 17,000 miles an hour, toconsider rockets only. The dis¬tances of world politics are now“missile-minutes.” America’ssurvival, the survival of thelands that fringe America, thesurvival, say, of India, requirethat the U.S. get as close to theheartland of nations that presentthe military equivalent of a“clear and present danger.”They must be deterred from throwing their political weightabout and using their weapons,weapons. This is especially so ifby a ring of convincing counter-a nation, like China, is liable togo mad from time to time.IRBM’s are needed as well asICBM’s. That’s the long and theshort of it. This defines Ameri¬ca’s national interest in South¬east Asia.As Morgenthau’s lamentationsproceed towards their end, thenon possumus, he becomes moreand more incredible. He tries totie the increasing violence in theU.S. to violence and Vietnam(and to race).It is, then, not surprising thatthe combined impact the crit¬ical issues discussed abovehave had upon American so¬ciety has been both disrup¬tive and disintegrative. Therefusal of large groups of po¬litical conscious Negroes toparticipate in the life ofwhite Americans amounts tothe disruption of Americansociety into two separate andhostile societies. The aliena¬tion of many intellectuals andthe retreat of the more sensi¬tive and morally committedyouth from political life areindices of disintegration.But he has failed to notice thesignificance of three facts of thetwentieth century. (1) Despair,and anomie, and refusals to obeyauthority found their philosophyin Camus and Sartre, to nameonly two who are, in a sense, po¬litical philosophers. They pre¬ceded Vietnam. (2) The loss ofcontemporary authority of almostall kinds was brought aboutlargely by Freud’s removal ofguilt from the human character.(3) Britain, that has no Vietnamwar and has very little racial dif¬ficulty (alghough some) com¬ pared with the U.S.A. has had anextraordinary six-fold increasein crimes of violence against theperson between 1954 and 1965.And what about the provos?Something is wrong with his per¬ception of facts or his reasoning.Finally, so far as this responseto the litany of lamentations (He¬gel!) is concerned, he is boundto repeat his untruth that “if thepowers-that-be have the courageof their convictions, they mustsonner or later do openly whatat times they have tried to do sur¬reptitiously. . .stifle the d i s-sent which they equate with dis¬loyalty or treason.” Thus, mostfalsely, he draws the mantle ofthe bloodied martyr across hispoor, poor, body.No dissenters in any society atwar ever in history have beentreated with the magnanimity(and financial rewards) thatthey have from American socie¬ty, and in respect of magnanimi¬ty and protection from the Ad¬ministration. On dissent, fromMorgenthau has much gained somuch enjoyment and prosperity,I refer the reader to the sapientobservations of one of our mostdistinguished historians, Profes¬sor Daniel Borstin (Chicago SunTimes, Sunday, Nov. 12): “Dis¬agrees ask what about the warin Vietnam. Dissenters ask whatabout me? Disagreers seek solu¬tions to common problems, dis¬senters seek power for them¬selves.”Professor Finer, emeritusprofessor of political science,served on the faculties of theLondon School of Economics,Harvard, and Yale before com¬ing to Chicago in 1946. He isthe author of several books onpolitical theory.r% THE EMILY TALBOT FUNDPresentsA CONCERT GIVEN BYBARBARA COOKACTRESS AND SINGERWINNER OF THE TONY’ AWARD,THE THEATRE WORLD AWARD. ANDTHE VARIETY CRITICS POLL.Sunday, November 19, 8:OOP.M.Law School AuditoriumADMISSION IS WITHOUT TICKET AND WITHOUT CHANGE. HU E. 60 ST.8 WEEKEND MAGAZINE- November lY,' 1967m Hp| -ot The Maroonf^Wf*** * « *'■* **111 *’fAdvertisementWe, the undersigned, out of asensitivity that arises from ourracial origin, would like to reactin this letter to the announce¬ment carried on the back coverof the Friday, November 3 Ma¬roon, concerning University Na¬tional Bank’s new president. Oneobjection is to the use of theterm “negro” in uncapitalizedform. The correct grammaticaltreatment of the name used forany ethnic group involves capi¬talization of the first letter, asthe name is considered a propernoun. The effect of this gram¬matical deviance is to offendthose to whom it refers.Further, it is also unclear tosome of us exactly what responsepeople are expected to have tothis ad. Is the ad trying to im¬ply that “things are getting bet¬ter,” and that opportunities foradvancement are equal for allthose who work hard? We knowthat this is not so.BUT ALTHOUGH this ad care¬fully evades the reality of racialdifferences, we find on the otherhand that special mention ismade of this man’s race for thepurpose of announcing his statusas bank president. We object tothis. Why should he be intro¬duced as a “more than compe¬tent” “Negro” banker and a“high grade” “Negro” citizen?His acceptance should be basedupon his skills as a banker orbank president, and his raceshould be irrelevant.Also, what is meant in this adis tone of phony over-glorifica¬tion? It tends to imply that, infilling this position, the extent ofthis man’s overly outstandingqualifications compensates forhis being a “Negro.”After the revelation that Uni¬versity National Bank’s new pres¬ident is a “Negro” it becomesrelevant to ask: And what otherpositions of importance or respon¬sibility are filled by “Negroes”at this bank, besides the presi¬dency? Considering this, the factof having a “Negro” presidentmight be considered inconsequen¬tial.In summary, some of us knowthat this type of publicity is con¬sidered a social must, but leav¬ing aside for the moment orupersonal reactions to its purpose,we feel that it could at least becarried out in some better fa¬shion without blatantly insultingus or insulting our intelligence.DAVID LOGGINSand 49 other “Negro”students and residentsof the Hyde Park—Woodlawnarea.Free Speech?As disturbing as is Dow’s re¬cruitment on campus, more omi¬nous is the haste with which somany people have seized uponthe principle of free speech andrefused any substantive discus-stion of Dow and the war’s rela¬tion to the University or of this“principle” itself. With knee-jerk alacrity “free speech” hasbeen invoked to condemn as in¬herently totalitarian any sugges¬tion of stopping Dow’s recruit¬ment on campus.First, there is a real questionof whether recruitment for hireby offering material incentives issimply equivalent to speech. Butignoring that as everyone elsehas, the “free speech or neutraluniversity principle” is a sham, nonetheless. Is there really any¬one who would contend that un¬der no circumstances would hetry to prevent some organiza¬tions’ recruitment on campus?No doubt, the administration andmost of the free speech stalwartswould of course deny access tosome illegal group. Yet, at thesame time, they refuse to acceptas relevant the contention bymany that the war in Vietnam isin fact illegal — that the UnitedStates is acting in violation of theGeneva Agreements and theCharter of the United Nations;that the United States is commit¬ting war crimes with napalm;and that Dow is a willing accom¬plice in violation of the Nurem¬berg Laws.It is also likely that many whonow invoke “free speech” forDow would grant, for instance,that they would have refused ac¬cess to a discriminatory employ¬er, even before such hiring wasmade illegal in 1963, or to themanufacturer of gas chambers ifthe U.S. were practicing a policyof genocide. Yet if it is grantedthat certain situations would de¬mand a limit of recruitment —whether because the company it¬self denied freedom or becauseits practises were criminal—weshould be debating whether thoseconditions exist in the Dow case.INSTEAD, however, thosewhose moral or political sensibili¬ties have not yet been over¬strained deny in mock horrorthat moral or political criterionare relevant. Simply becausethey themselves have not yetreached the point of revolt, theydeny that revolt is even allowed.Instead, “free speech and uni-sersity neutrality” are invokedas absolutes by those who arenot at present moved to action.Yet no such absolute exists. Evenby law, a “clear and present dan¬ger” constitutes grounds for lim¬iting free speech and overt ac¬tion. Many people believe that astate of clear and present dangerhas existed in this country for along time; most gravely sincethe election of the peace candi¬date in 1964. About the latterpoint there can be honest dis¬agreement-freedom of speechcannot be limited flippantly.Unfortunately, there has beenno such discussion by those whoare either comfortable with Dowand the war or by those whosepriorities honestly do not yet jus¬tify civil disobedience. Instead,these “libertarians” label as Fas¬cist those whose politics ormorals dictate an alternativecourse and piously invoke the“principle” of free speech toavoid justifying their own posi¬tions or discussing the issues.“Free speech” is a wondrousthing indeed.B. ARONSON, ’68Laurel WreathAnthony West’s letter (Maroon,November 7) voices an opinionquickly gathering adherents oncampus. Jeff Blum’s fanatical“one voice: one university” atti¬tude has at least stirred somestudents from complacency withrespect to Student Government.The West letter is particularlytimely with respect to the Gadflyby Jerry Lipsch. Mr. Lipschwould like to see the administra¬tion bestow Jeff Blum with alaurel wreath, a gavel, and abullhorn. We are gratified thatthat the administration realizesthe danger of bestowing power ona potential dictator (witness the letter from Bill Phillips demon¬strating that SG is not even in¬ternally representative.) The cur¬rent Burstein proposal for rede¬signing SG may not be a pana¬cea, but it does promise to be ahealthy improvement. $4370 is anextraordinary sum for the spon¬sorship of SDS activities underthe guise of a university commu¬nity endorsement.ELLIOT FELDMAN, ’69LAWRENCE R. SAMUELS, ’68STEPHEN B. VANCE, ’69New CriterionAs I read your correspondenceweek after week I am coming torealize that you have solved oneof the most insistent problems ofadministration in an efficient,though word-consuming manner.In the future we should requireour faculty coming up for reap¬pointment to write a letter to theMaroon. Since scholarship andteaching ability are no longermeaningful criteria, exposure tothe readership of the Maroonwould at least permit the widercommunity to judge the extrava¬gancies of megalomania, para¬noia, monomania, verbosity,taste and decency to which teac-ers are occupationally subject.Your recent columns havegiven ample test to this methodand there can be no doubt thatthis institutional innovationwould serve us well in the fu¬ture. We might, to be sure, oc¬casionally lose a man unwillingto wear his heart on columns ofpulp, but this is small beside theobvious advantages we havegained through your open, if one¬sided hearing.ROGER WEISSAssociate Professor of theSocial SciencesA DifferenceMichael Seidman’s thoughtfulcomments on student disciplinedeserve a reply.The ultimate values that col¬lege disciplinary proceedingsseeks to protect are differentfrom those safeguarded by theprocedural due process of crim¬inal courts. The disciplinary com¬mittee is primarily concernedwith the welfare of the studentswho appear before it.A criminal court is concernedwith rendering justice, whichmeans both that innocent menare not convicted and that gulitymen are appropriately punished.To insure that justice has beendone, the law requires that crim¬inal trials be public; that thestate prove its case without theassistance of the defendant if heso chooses; and that a perma¬nent and complete record bemade of the proceedings so thata reviewing court can see whatoccurred in the court below.One of the by-products of thissystem is that the public hasconfidence in the judgments ofthe courts. An acquitted mancan generally return to normallife without shame; on the otherhand, a man convicted after allthe possible advantages havebeen given him will bear thestigma of criminality long afterhe has served his sentence.If, as Mr. Seidman suggests,we alter our disciplinary pro¬cedures to make them resembleprocedures of criminal courts, wewill in the process create thepossibility of stigmatizing ourstudents. (This same observation applies to the argument for “opendecision-making” in tenure andadmission committees, two othersources of student discontentmentioned by Seidman.)NOTWITHSTANDING this ar¬gument, and others that mightbe made, there would be a casefor the kind of change Mr. Seid¬man advocates if it could beshown that fundamental fairnessis not being accorded our disci¬plined students. But with the ex¬ception of a reference to the “ju¬dicial circus” which followedlast year’s sit-in, Mr. Seidmanconcedes that this is not thecase.Further, the disciplinary pro¬ceedings of last spring were ex¬ceedingly fair. The studentswere repeatedly and clearlywarned that their proposed con¬duct would subject them to dis¬cipline, so that Mr. Seidman’srequirement that students benotified when conduct will vio¬late a rule was satisfied. Thepresence of student observersdid ensure that the decisions asto punishment were reached onthe basis of rational argument.And finally, the students hadpreserved for them the right totake appeals which, in appropri¬ate cases, were granted.The only substance to theclaim that justice was not doneis the implicit suggestion that“due process” really means“the students always win”. Idon’t believe that and neitherwill Mr. Seidman, if he reflectson the matter.KARL BEMESDERFERAssistant Dean of the CollegeNovelty ShopIt was with a deep sense of af¬fectionate recognition that I readMr. Carl’s letter on the lament¬able condition of nearby book¬stores. Coming here last yearfrom Berkeley, my impluse wasto demand why not, when thebook I wanted was not in stock.But I learned from these ex¬periences. The first week of thisfall’s classes, I — without theslightest hesitation — walked di¬rectly to the order department ofour campus novelty shop andfilled out the requisite pieces ofpaper. It is now whatever weekit happens to be, and my bookhas not yet arrived from the erst¬while reputable Macmillan com¬pany.But there are compensations.And I have decided not, after all,to write letters of warning to allprospective students and spatterthe campus with grafitti. Be¬cause we at Chicago live in anenvironment which carefully, ifunwittingly, represents that ofthe Lyceum of the 4th centuryB.C.Not only do we, at Chicago,have the opportunity to studyAristotle to a depth unparalleledat any other institution within thenatural boundaries of the UnitedStates, but we have also a postalcommunication and book servicesystem which closely imitatesthat which the Philosopher him¬self must have enjoyed.MARSHA SIEGELCivil LibertyIt is strange, after the battlesof the late fifties and early six¬ties on this campus, to find one¬self, on this very same campus,having to defend civil libertiesfrom an assault by the Left. Themood of several speakers at the Dow demonstration and of thegadfly by Messrs. Aronson andBlum is disturbing. It is disturb¬ing because it raises the questionof whether Dow Chemical Com¬pany ought to be allowed to re¬cruit on campus. From the civillibertarian point of view the an¬swer is clear.It is, I think, a legitimate ques¬tion to ask whether, say DowChemical, has a right, on its de¬mand, to space in the Universityin order to advocate a position orrecruit employees. It is not clearat least to me whether they do ordo not have such a right. But thatis not the question here. Thequestion here is whether studentsor academic units of the Univer¬sity have a right to invite Dow oncampus and have a right to Uni¬versity facilities in which to re¬ceive them. The answer to thatquestion, I submit, is clear andunequivocal. They obviously do.THE LEFT maintains that itis not the right of an “illigiti-mate, immoral institution” to“recruit on campus” and there¬fore “to be tacitly supported.”The distinction between advo¬cacy of a position and recruit¬ment of personnel is specious andsophistic. Most non-academiciansdo not come to campus to engagein academic niceties. They cometo convince and, in the ultimate,to recruit for their cause. A civillibertarian recognizes these mo¬tives but chooses to ignore or su-press them in favor of the rightsof men to speak and to listen toone another regardless of motive.THE NOTION of “illigitimacy”is equally specious. Civil libertar¬ians have held that certainlynothing short of criminal incite¬ment is grounds for suspension offree speech and even thesegrounds are held by some to beinsufficient. But clearly a breachof moral sensibilities is notgrounds for denial of free speech.If Dow Chemical is to be re¬stricted from campus recruit¬ment, the very least that must beshown is engagement by Dow incriminal—not immoral—activity.Even then, the history of civilliberties on this campus woulddictate (following the cases of anumber of Communist clubs aswell as that infamous organiza¬tion, the Committee for the Re¬moval of University Administra¬tors by Force and Violence) thatthey be recognized and accom¬modated.Finally, to say that the admis¬sion of Dow to campus “impliestacit support” is to say that thisUniversity has supported the KuKlux Klan, the Nazi Partyand the Communist Party. Astrange institutional position.Civil libertarians, if they are toremain consistent, must defendthe looliest of cusses and themost immoral of causes. Theymust defend the rights of evenone student against the combinedmoral indignity of the other 6000.Any student has the right to in¬vite anyone to the campus forany non-criminal purpose. Thatis the commitment of the civillibertarian. It is unfortunate thatsome seem to have abandonedthe cause.JERRY HYMANDepartment of AnthropologyLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewitheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.November, J7,19Q7 THE CftiQAGO MAROON 7North Vietnam Most Democratic State—Davis“Our purpose is really to try to |reduce the ability of this countryto pull the trigger ... to slow itup, to put our bodies in front ofthe machine so the people of theworld won’t be chewed up sofast,” declared Rennie Davis at ameeting of Citizens for a Demo¬cratic Society Wednesday night atthe Hyde Park Co-op.Davis, who has recently returnedfrom the Bratislava, Czechoslova¬kia, Conference on Vietnam and atour of North Vietnam, predicteda qualitative change in the atti¬tudes of white America towardgovernmental war policy.Once the facade of liberalism isbroken away, Davis said, “a greatdeal of confidence in what we maydo . . . our response will be veryoffensive. I base that confidenceon a spirit that is developing whichis not unlike the spirit and con¬fidence and determination every¬where in Vietnam.”Hits Civilian BombingStating that there is “no questionthat civilian targets are hit overand over again,” Davis called this tactic part of an overall militarystrategy whose aim is to destroyNorth Vietnam as a symbol of suc¬cessful socialism.He said he felt, on the contrary,that “we should be very open tolearning about and understandingthis experiment in North Vietnam.... It may be the most demo¬cratic example that exists today of decentralization and putting powerat the grass roots.”‘Spirit and Courage’Citing the example of a youngVietnamese who, while being exe¬cuted for the attempted assas¬sination of Robert McNamara,shouted “Long live Viet Nam!Long live Ho Chi Minh!,” Davisstated:“This kind of spirit and courage is alive everywhere in Vietnam.— It is time for Johnson and Mc¬Namara to know that this spiritis alive everywhere in Vietnam,that it’s spreading.”Davis was one of the organizers of Students for a Democratic So¬ciety and of JOIN and is a mem¬ber of the Union of White Organ¬izers. He is presently engaged informing a city-wide student move¬ment in Chicago.over¬nightcase! You get one with everybottle of Lensine, aI removable 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.for contacts JESSELSON’SSMVINfl HYN PARK fOR OVRR H TRAMWITH THI VIRY BIST AMD FRBWffTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 8-9186 1140 I. flri AUDITIONS-AUDITIONS-AUDITIONSfor "THE CHANGELING”Monday, Nov. 20th, 7-11 P.M.East Lounge, Ida Noyes Hall.A Jacobean Tragedy by Middleton and RowleyTo be produced by UNIVERSITY THEATRE duringWinter Quarter ...Directed by Mark Rosin.For Information, call 324-1120Griffith’s THE BIRTH OF A NATIONThree cheers for the KKK in the first Masterpi ece of the cinema. Soc. Sci. 122 tonight at 7;00 and 9:00. Still only 759. Doc. Films.For liberal arts majors‘Professional Qualification Test—A prerequisite toqualify for a career position with the National SecurityAgency.December 9,1967Contact your Placement Office forlocation of test nearest you, or write to NSA(address below) right awaylIf you expect to receive a liberal arts degree be¬fore September 1968 register for the ProfessionalQualification Test. Taking and passing the PQTdoesn’t commit or obligate you to anything, but weurge you—even if you are not now fully certain ofyour future interests—to investigate NSA careeropportunities.An Agency of national prominence, this uniqueorganization is responsible for developing "secure"communications systems to transmit and receivevital information. How and why does that affect you?Because NSA has a critical and growing need forimaginative people—regardless of your academicmajor.You will participate in programs of national impor¬tance, working in such areas as: Cryptography (the making of codes and ciphers), analytic research,language research, data systems design and pro¬gramming, and administrative managementAt NSA, your professional status and earningpower grow rapidly from the day you begin, withouthaving to wait for years of "experience." Startingsalary of at least $6,700 (for bachelor's degrees),regular increases, excellent advancement possibili¬ties ... and all the benefits of Federal employment.Another advantage is NSA’s location, convenientto both Baltimore and Washington and a shortdrive from ocean beaches and other recreationalattractions.Plan to take the PQT. It could be your first step toa great future IIMPORTANT: THE DEADLINE FOR PQT APPLICATIONSIS NOVEMBER 27. PickupaPQT Bulletin at your Place¬ment Office. It contains full details and thenecessary registration form.Applicants must be U. S. cit¬izens, subject to a completephysical examination and back¬ground investigation.national security agencyTHE > CHIC AGO/M'ABOON College Relations Branch, National Security Agency, Ft. George G. Meade, Maryland Attn: M321 • An equal opportunity employer, M&FN6$embet'17;' 1967Calendar of Events of InterestFriday, November 17art EXHIBIT: "The Tragedy of SovietJewry." Hillel House. For informationregarding hours, call 752-1127.PETE SEEGER: Benefit performance forthe Highlander Folk School. OrchestraHall. Tickets available from Mrs. HarrySchneiderman, 555 South Everett, Chi¬cago.DEBATE: "Future of the American Negro".Herbert J. Storing, professor of politicalscience, vs. Al Raby, former Chicagoassistant to Martin Luther King. Soc.Sci. 122. 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Center for Middle EasternStudies), "Arabic Poetry and Politics,1947-67: A Literary Perspective," and"The Reaction of Arab Poets to thePalestine Tragedy," 'Kelly 413, 4 p.m.SEMINAR: (Department of Biophysics), JonApplequist, "Phase Transitions in Macro¬molecules,'" Research Institutes 480, 4p.m.FILM: "The Gospel According to St. Mat¬thew." Disciples Church, 57th and Uni¬versity, 8 p.m. 75c.LECTURE: "Should Universities be Demo¬cratic?", Alan Gerwirth, professor inDepartment of Philosophy, Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn. 8:30 p.m.LECTURE: "The Russians are Coming," theRussians are Coming!" College of Com¬plexes, 105 W. Grand Ave., 9 p.m. $1.DOC FILM: "The Birth of a Nation," byD. W. Griffith, Soc Sci 122, 7 and 9:30p.m.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP:Ida Noyes Hall, Library, 7:30-9:45 p.m.Saturday, November 18GUIDED WALKING TOUR OF THE QUAD¬RANGLES: Leaves Ida Noyes Hall at10 a.m.CROSS-COUNTRY: Central College Con¬ference; Open Frosh Four-Mile at Wash¬ington Park, 11 a.m.CROSS COUNTRY: Central Collegiate Con¬ference Champions at Washington Park,12 noon.CROSS-COUNTRY: Albion College at Wash¬ington Park, 1 p.m. IS STUDENT POWER FLOWER POWER?(Baptist Graduate Student Center), Rev.Larry Hill. Baptist Graduate StudentCenter), 5:30 p.m.SPEECH: (S.D.S.), "SNCC After the HavanaConference," by George Ware, CampusDirector of SNCC, Ida Noyes CloisterClub, 8 p.m.LECTURE: "The Causes of U.S. Involve¬ment in Viet Nam," by John Berthelsenof Newsweek. College of Complexes, 105W. Grand Ave., 9 p.m. $1.Sunday, November 19RADIO SERIES: WFMF (7 a.m.), WAIT(10 a.m.), WNIB (11 a.m., Saturday).Wayne C. Booth, "Deceptive Narrativein Modern Fiction."UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Rev.Blakemore, "Pluralism or Polarization,"Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 a.m.CHESS CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, Sun Parlor,3-6 p.m.CELLO-PIANO RECITAL: (Musical Society),works by Bach, Mozart, Schubert, Shos-tokovitch played by Ellen Karnovsky, cel¬lo, and Bill Heyashi, piano and harpsi¬chord. Ida Noyes Library, open to thepublic without charge.SUNDAY NIGHT AT CHAPEL HOUSE:(Lutheran Church), "Reflections on Com¬munity Organization in Cicero," by twostudents of the UC Divinity School.Chapel House, supper (75c) at 5:30, dis¬cussion at 6:30 p.m.FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub, 7:30 p.m.FILM: Jack Levine, "Images of LeonardBaskin," Hillel House, 7:30 p.m.I FILM FESTIVAL: German and Swedishfilms presented by the Graduate Ger¬manics Club. Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30 p.m.Admission $.75.CONCERT: (The Emily Talbot Fund), Barb¬ara Cook, Law School Auditorium, 8 p.m. Monday, November 20FILM: (sponsored by the Introduction to theCivilization of India course), "Sights andSounds of India: Buddhism and Jainism"Rosenwald 2, at 7 p.m. Admission freeand without ticket.ART EXHIBIT: Woodcuts by Morthon Gar-chik. All prints for sale. Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn. Open through December15.SDS MEETING: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30 p.m.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following willbe visiting the Office of Career Counselingand Placement, Reynolds Club, Room 200.For appointments call Ext. 3282.Graduate SchoolsNovember 20—New York University Schoolof Law.TeachingNovember 20—Ponoma State College Rohn¬ert Park, California. Vacancies exist inthe following fields for Ph.D. candi¬dates or persons holding the doctorate:political science, history, economics, ge¬ography, accounting, French, English,philosophy, art, biology, education, phy¬sics, mathematics, and psychology.Industry & GovernmentNovember 16 and 17—Los Alamos ScientificLaboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico.All degree levels in chemistry (inor¬ganic and physical), Mathematics and jphysics (atomic, cosmic radiation, solid jstate, particle). Postdoctoral appoint- |ments also available. Will intervieW^B.S. |and graduates in above departments for jsummer employment. November 17 — Mitre Corporation, Bedford,Massachusetts; Washington, D.C.; Atlan¬tic City, New Jersey; Houston, Texas;Florida. M.S. and Ph.D. candidates inmathematics, physics, statistics, or com¬puter science.November 20 Aerospace Technology Divisionof the Library of Congress, Washington,D.C. Two years of equivalent in physicalor natural sciences with good readingknowledge of Russian or Chinese. Willalso interview students for summer workwho will complete two or three yearsof academic work in June 1968 withat least l'/2 years of Russian.November 20—United States Army MaterialCommand, Research and DevelopmentInstallations nationwide. All degree levelsin chemistry, physics, mathematics, orstatistics. Ph.D.'s in microbiology also.November 21—Asiatic Petroleum Company(Royal/Dutch Shell). M.S., Ph.D., andPostdoctorals in chemistry, physics, math¬ematics, statistics, and geophysics whoare nationals of Great Britain, theNetherlands, Belgium, France, Germany,Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Italy, andSwitzerland.November 21—Oak Ridge National Labor¬atory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Ph.D. can¬didates in chemistry (analytical, inor¬ganic, physical), mathematics, physics(atomic, solid state, particle), and sta¬tistics. Resistance's HarrisWill Speak HereDavid Harris, former studentbody president at Stanford andnow head of “The Resistance, aWest Coast draft resisting-group,will -speak against the draft thisMonday at 8 p.m. in Judd Audi¬torium.Harris entered Stanford as a for¬mer all-state football player andformer president of his high schoolstudent body. He soon becameactive in Civil Rights activity andby his sophomore year he wasworking for the Student Non-hiolent Co-ordinating Committee,jt the end of his junior yearHarris ran for student body pres¬ident on the most radical platformStanford had ever seen. No one ex¬pected him to win, but he won bythe greatest majority in Stanfordhistory. He resigned his post anddropped out of school in February.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbirk Plaza1200 East 53rd StraatHYde Park 3-8372 AAAI AND UNUSUAL GIFTSReplicas of Ancient Near Eastern Artifacts and Jewelry(Ca. 3000 B.C. to 100 A.D.)THB so a,Museum StoreOriental Institute Lobby1155 E. 58th StreetOpen 10 A.M.- 4 P.M. everyday except Monday. THE COMMUNICATIONS STORYMORE AND MORE ELECTRONIC IMPROVEMENTSARE BEING DEVISED AND DEVELOPED . . . ANDTO THINK OF IT, IT ALL STARTED WITH A WEE*HEP’ MAN, WHO WORE ’KNICKERS’WITH ‘BUCKLES’,FLEW A ‘KITE’, ATTACHED A ‘KEY’ AND KNEWTHAT THERE WAS A N E E D FOR LIGHT.IN ALL PHASES OF A CITY’S GROWTH, AND WEARE NOW SPEAKING OF OUR OWN BACK YARD,CHICAGO, WHERE THERE IS THE NEED,THERE WILL SURELY BE THE MAN, NOT NE¬CESSARILY WITH ’BUCKLED-BREECHES’ AND A’KITE’, BUT HE WILL COME UP WITH THAT KEYTO ‘OLE MOTHER INVENTION*.The General Telephone Answering ServiceCall CE 6-5300 2 24 hr. answering service only $5.75/mo.Guesswho forgothis NoDoz Starts Monday, Nov. 13th7-9-11 P.M.Jean-Luc Godard’sswinging lookat youthand lovein Paristoday! “The New YorkFilm Festivalaudiencegave it anovation!’—Archer Winsten,N.Y. PostAs Gulliver discovered, falling asleep at the wrong time can be downright embarrassing,even for a Big Man on Campus. Ah, well, it can happen to the best of us. Your eyelidsdroop. Your attention wanders. You’re drowsy all over. Quick! Take a couple of NoDoz.NoDoz really works to help you stay alert. Keep some handy, in yourpocket, your medicine chest, the glove compartment of your car. >NoDoz. It’s non habit-forming. Take NoDoz. Show ’em they can’tkeep a good man down. | ■THE ONE TOTAKE WHEN YOU HAVE TO STAY ALERT. moviehappening!A study of themores ofParisianyouth!”/ \/ Jean-Pierreleaud V.1 Best Actor Berlin Film j!V Festival 1966 JROYAL FILMSINTERNATIONAL PRESENTSJEAN-LUC GODARD,.Stamnq JEAN PIERRE LEAUOCHANTAL GOYA MARLENE JOBERT MICHEL Of BOROCATHERINE ISABELLE DUPORT EVA BRITT STRANDBERGBIRGER MALMS1EN Based on a story by GUY de MAUPASSANTWritten lor the screen and Directed by JEAN-LUC GODARDNovember 17, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repea*. 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.two days before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.HYDE PARK PARTIESDance to the BLUES MESSENGERS at 5400Greenwood, tonight, Friday, the 17th, 9 P.M.-3 A.M. All single girls welcome. Guys musthave invitations. Beer will be served atlow prices (girls who want to stay andcome early may get free beer).Sounds funky.RIDES & RIDERSRIDE WANTED to Philadelphia for Thanks¬giving. Call Harvey at 324-8930.New York RIDE WANTED for Thanksgivingfor 2 people. Kathy—684-4999.rTdERS WANTED to West Palm Beach,Florida for Thanksgiving Vacation in fullyequipped twin engine airplane. ProfessionalPilots. $65.00 Round Trip. Call 324-8787.RIDERS WANTED to New York. Leave 11/21-285-6529.WANTEDLOVEWant to share DREW ODD LAT. STUDIESsubscription. Mine ran out. 667-5511.Maroon editor desires good HARDWOODDESK to share bedroom. Roger. Ext. 3265or 667-0659.TO PLACE CLASSIFIED ADSAds for Friday's paper must be in (underdoor, thru window, etc.) on Wednesday; adsfor Tuesday's paper must be in on Friday.WORKDirector of Humanistically Oriented Chil¬dren's Program seeks TEACHERS for Sun¬day mornings, 10:30 to 12:30. Call 922-5561 or643-4753. INDIAIF WE CAN GET 150 PEOPLE—WE CANFLY ROUND TRIP TO INDIA FOR ABOUT$500 EACH!!! Call Ext. 3269 days, 667-5190,evenings.FOR SALEFender Jazzmaster $1755.00; Electrovoicemike $45.00; Danelectro Reverb $30.00. Call493-3037.KNIGHT KG60 60 watt amplifier $60.00.KNIGHT KG870 70 watt amplifier $70.00.Dual 1C19 changer complete $99.95, all inperfect condition 256-4785, after 7 P.M.BRAND NEW '56 CHEVY. Betsy takes outany car in her class. Prospective ownershould prepare references and call GENE(684-1138), who will haggle from $105.00.Slightly played DYNAKIT SCA-35 AMP-PRE¬AMP. AR turntable. Electrovoice speaker$125.00 takes all. Eves. 752-3291.Dual 1019 and K660 ALL TRANSISTOR AM¬PLIFIER, both for $150.00. 256-4785 — after7 P.M.Fifteen year old RHYTHM AND BLUESRECORDS. 725-6507, after 6 P.M.PERSONALS"the only unnatural sex act is that whichyou cannot perform." KinseyJOY etant une essence surconcentree esttres coloree, il est preferable, vu sa tena-cite, de I'employer directment sur la peauou sur le mouchoir a tres petite dose.There are approximately 3 billion people onthis earth, of whom 12 million—less than onehalf of one per cent—are classified as Jews. . . But the Jews are heard of totally outof proportion to their small numbers . . .the furniture in the Western world is Grecian,but the house in which Western man dwellsis Jewish.Boy Dylan >n DON'T LOOK BACK. Jean-LucGodard's MASCULINE-FEMININE. AndyWarhol's I, A MAN. FINNEGANS WAKE,TITICUT FOLLIES, WARRENDALE EX¬TERMINATING ANGEL, the return ofCHAFED ELBOWS, For One Dollar we willsned you a ticket good for one admission atany time (regular price $1.75) and a monthlybulletin for a year listing AARDVARK'sfeatures and underground programs. YOUONLY LIVE ONCE. DO IT NOW. AARD-VARK CINEMATHEQUE. 1608 North Wells,Chicago 60614.GRAND OLE OPRY STARS Sam and KirkMcGee come to Campus tonight. * 8:30 inIda Noyes Hall. Admission $1.75, Students$1.50.LITTLE GOODIE TWO SHOES — SUCKSOME JACK.The woodcuts of Morton Garchlk will be ondisplay at Hillel until December 15th. Allare for sale. Oh paisley-painted girl wiith flowing goldenlocks, please don't cut them.Someone whom I am is no oneSomething I have done is nothingSomplace I have been is nowhere.I am not me.What of the answersI must find questions for?Is RAG a moral monster?Where have all the apartments gone?Housing Teach-In.Saturday 1:00 P.M.5600 Woodlawn—Hyde Park Union Church.Rev. Larry Hill .speaking at the BaptistGraduate Student Center, Sunday, November19, Supper (25c) at 5:30. Program at 6:00.25c?Shelly Berman (of Hyde Park fame) atMister Kelly's, Nov. 13-Nov. 26.Learn to FLY—1st lesson FREE—Call JimLeyden 493-0166. Campus Rep., Cessna Air¬craft Student Pkg. Plans, Financing, WOW.WOW is a slow flutter.writers workshop— PL 2-8377.And from many menSuddenly wise, I fight the dream.Camus, I shall scream but one awesomequestion, does death exist?Camus, I want to know.Benton Harbor Moishe: Fish gotta swimand birds gotta fly. I'm gonna love oneman till I die—can't help lovln that man ofmine.See JACK LEVINE and IMAGES OF LEON¬ARD BASKIN at Hillel, Sunday, 7:30.who killed Kennedy?To catch dead leaves as they fall.Leaves always fall.Both Louie and Balkan Sobranie were here.We smoked Louie.Entropy's . . . , I can't go on.CITIZENS FORUM wants to bring the Anti-War movement to television: Meeting—Tues¬day evening at 7:30 P.M., Ida Noyes.Professor Alan Gewirth, Dept, of Philosophy,will speak at Hillel on "Should Universitiesbe Democratic?" Friday, November 17th,8:30 P.M.Fantastic!Live entertainment lives at the Bandersnatch—Friday and Saturday nights.SPEND AN HOUR with robert frost:the death of the hired man,a masque of reason,and other dialogue poems,ida noyes, Sunday at 3:30, FREE."Among the sex sins on the books in Wash¬ington State is having intercourse with abird."DESK CLERK needed 3 nights a week, 4P.M.-12 A.M. to stay through summer. $1.50per hour plus dinner. Call Ext. 3696. Mr.Fullop.ACTOR-MODELS—Male 8. 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, staggy mannerisms and technique. Ama¬teurs preferred, especially those who haveread Norman O. Brown's LIFE AGAINSTDEATH and have heard Mahler's RESUR¬RECTION Symphony at least once. Principals .paid $30.00 per day. Send a resume if youlike, send an essay if you've got a beautifulmind, or send a photo that speaks for itself.Write to PROJECT ONE, AARDVARK CINEMATHEQUE, 1608 North Wells, Chicago,Illinois, 60614. YOU CAN HAVE AHi-IWAN VOICESend tod*y for FREe, booklet“Voice Power St Personal Power’by Eegene Feuchting er. Juet tendJour name, address and age.\l»Ued in plain sealed envelope.No obligation. .WriteToday!rtcrecT wet mutme. immt j;Jfil.JickMi II*, Men 1,111Not only can we sing and dance but alsowe KUMSITZ. Saturday, November 18, 8:30P.M. at HILLEL HOUSE. POSITION AVAILABLE: Twilight Zone —Ready for immediate occupancy. Sweet Six¬teenth.But Marie, why Hook?CRUEL LANDLORD forces abandonment of2 five-month old cats, m/f, all black withBurmese features, people oriented, will boardnext summer if required—other deals pos-siblePlease help!—Phone SA 1-5728.I shake my head ... it fall off.TONIGHT—make it to the Rickert Loungefor FREE FOOD and JOYFUL SONG. 9-11P.M. wiith Barbara Cook, star of Broadwayhit musical, "Music man," 'and "Candide."I want to go to Alaska. MEMO TO: Chicago MaroonSUBJECT: The advertisement "WhoKilled Kennedy."Considering what has transpired, i.e.Suppression.. We will take legal umbridgewith whomsoever seeks to further suppressthis "fairy tale."E.G. If the Manchester book can be adver¬tised, and other similar books, we seeno reason why this book cannot be.Denver?Mason City?Feoria?Make Love not Entropy.HOOTENANNY TONIGHT in Rickert Lounge,9-11. Enjoy free food and Barbara Cook.an afternoon's Frost/sunday aft'n.Meeting of LIBERAL ARTS CONFERENCECOMMITTEE in Cobb 116 on Monday at4:00 P.M.Call Lasz'o after 6 P.M. if you wouldlike to buy CAFE EUROPA at 1440 E. 57thStreet . . . 684-9398.unlikely swallow of a summer nighta bon fire worshipper to his children'sdead and dying ancestorsan old man lighting a fire"Do you work?""Of course" he saysdefending to the death his Adam'sright and power.White smoke risingroad winding by twice travelled night andday.When he workedburnt old leavesThe Indian summer of a beating breast.POLITICS FOR PEACE: CANVASSING,12:45, Sunday, Ida Noyes.J. Levy—I love you.TAKE A TRIP —with Marco Polo? 288-5944.SAM AND KIRK McGEE from SUNNY Ten¬nessee play old time string band music atIda Noyes—tonight—at 8:30.LEARN TO LEARN TO LEARN TO LEARNTO FLY! Call Jerry Levy, Campus Repre¬sentative, Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3266.Reserve November 29th for the Latke- Ha-niantash Debate. At Ida Noyes."This Is the Maroon Business Office?—looks more like the setting for the IRISHWHISKEY REBELLION." tAbout that giant electric prune . . .U. THEATRE R. GROUP:R. FROST/I. NOYES/3:30 SUNDAY.Gone to Urban Renewal, everyone.Sat. 1:00 P.M.5600 Woodlawn—Hyde Park Union Church.EQQ COZIESStocking staffers for people who likecozy eggs. Danish import. )l ca. ppd.Different ThingsP.O. Bes 2347. Wtlliaa»barg. Vs. 2318$"CITIZENS FORUM is a dangerous left-wingpropaganda Organization."Douglas Kimble of "Let Freedom Ring"CELLO-PIANO Recital—Ellen Karnofsky andBill Hayashi Sunday INH Library, 3:30,FREE.What is your opinion of the qualify ofMEAT sold in your neighborhood??? Don't miss the New Coffee House (with En¬tertainment) in the Old Harper Theatre—American coffee only 20c—open ca. 7:30.GORILLA HUMOR CLUB-Meeting Sundayat 4:00 A.M. to discuss the triump of thebagel over the hamburger bun.morgan lives!Hi to everyone at the Alumni Office,even you Betsy!A Friendly SwitchboardSitting here writing things on paperInstead of sticking the pencil into the air.Four attractive, but dateless, graduate wornen would like to know where to find someof the men who think there is a shortageof woman in Hyde Park. Can anyone helolie?Try Smedleys, girls.Will H. L. Hunt try to kick Citizens Forumoff the Air? Listen to WTAQ A.M., 1300K.C. every MONDAY AND THURSDAYFROM 12:15 to 12:35 P.M.Country Music—TONIGHT!!!KUMSITZ — Israeli singing and dancing;slides taken during the SIX DAY WARSaturday, Nov. 18, 8:30 .M. at HILLEL.Looking for an apartment?Housing Teach-INSaturday 1:00 P.M.HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH,5600 Woodlawn.Green screams enfold my night.SCRATCHYSoothing LAVOPTIK Eye Washrelieves burning, itching eyelids, re-Ircshes eyes. LAVOPTIK. Eve Washwith eve cun included, at all drugeisifREWARDFor Lady's Gold Watch, "GOLDIE",493-2040.APARTMENTS FOR RENTNearby, economical, 2 room unfurnishedapartment—$77.50. Call Williams, MU 4-23006043 Woodlawn.Female grad, student desires girl to sharespacious 1 bdrm. apt. in near north area,call 642-8293 after 5:30, weekdays.Young working woman grad, student wishesto share 1 bdrm. apt.—modern, quiet, fur¬nished, spacious. Call 667-0543, after 10 P.MeAST HYDE PARK.ROOM FOR RENTAvailable sleeping and study room in quiethome—5475 S. Ellis. Call Sat. • tafernoonDO 3-1918. Male Pref.Nice reasonable room near campus for rentCALL Ml 3-9257.PROTESTHELP KILL UGLY RECORDS!Send bitrh certificate ashes to the ALICE'SRESTAURANT MASSACHEE GOOD-TIMEPROTEST C/o WUCB.Ashes forwarded to Victor Lundberg.What kind do you smoke?Whatever kind you smoke,you owe it to yourself to,try MONZA Pipe Tobacco.Your favorite pipe will giveyou more pleasure whenyou choose this importedblend of the world’s finetobaccos.move up toTHE IMPORTED PIPE TOBACCOONLY 301 A POUCH MONZAPIPE TOBACCOBMONZAFor a COMPLIMENTARY pouch of MONZA PIPE TOBACCO,send 10* to cover postage and handling with thiscoupon to:ROMICK’S INTERNATIONAL, INC.P.O. BOX 3033, DEPT. 151NO. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. 91606(Please Print)NameStreet City‘"••State .ZipJO T'HE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 1967 I’ve Got My Eye On The Manin a VAN HEUSEN*"417’ VANOPRESS SHIRTAnd what an eyeful he is! A physique aswell-built and manner as smooth as hispermanently pressed . . . VANOPRESSshirt. A swingy style that matches the“417” authentic tailoring of his button-down collar and V-Tapered fit. Switched-onstripes or colorful solids in dress or sport,Van Heusen has them all. Will I keep himin sight? You’d better believe it!Build up your following with Passport 360,the influential line of men’s toiletries by Van Heusen,MUSIC REVIEWAn Enjoyable Evening of Gilbert and SullivanBy MAHONRI YOUNGA little old lady who loves Gil¬bert and Sullivan was arguingwith a young man; feeling thatshe must do something to justi¬fy her position, she told him:“You should go to an amateurperformance of a Gilbert andSullivan opera and look at thehappy, joyful faces of the peopleon stage, all of whom are obvi¬ously enjoying themselves tre¬mendously singing and acting inG. & S.”The young man, to whom noterms seemed too extravagant incondemning G. & S., quickly re¬plied: “Yes, but think of the poorpeople who have to watch it.”His pity appears to be unneces¬sary, for at the Saturday nightperformance in Mandel Hall of“The Gondoliers,” the membersof the audience as well as thoseof the Gilbert and Sullivan OperaCompany seemed to be victimsof some most extraoi dinary spell — the enchantment of a G. & S.opera.ONE OF the strange results ofthis enchantment is that, no mat¬ter how well or badly it is done,G. & S. is always enjoyable, andthis production was no exception,even though (and I have no de¬sire to press hardly upon them)this group is in no way a dis¬tinguished operatic organization.The spirit of the productionwas quite acceptable — therewas no attempt at the vulgarand farcical exaggeration thatcan ruin even G. & S. — butstrong objection must be made tosome deletions and interpolationsin Gilbert’s text, for it so hap¬pens that if there is an institutionin Great Britain which is not sus¬ceptible to any improvement atall, it is the Savoy Operas.THE SOLOISTS were mostlyexcellent definitions of the adjec¬tive “amateurish” — and I donot mean that expression in itscomplimentary sense. Their per¬ formances lacked the polish ofeven some other amateurs I haveseen; but that is not of the great¬est importance. In return for theadvantages of seeing a live per¬formance of a G. & S. opera, wemust be willing to accept lessthan professional quality. Thoughsome may consider it impudencepersonified to present opera with¬out singers and actors, most ofus who attended one of these per¬formances are doubtless gladthat the Gilbert and Sullivan Op¬era Company decided to do justthat.IN THE role of the Duke ofPlaza-Toro, Ray Lubway seemedto be trying to act in the style offamous professional G. & S.comedians (presumptuous mor¬tal!), and succeeded to such aremarkable extent that he farsurpassed his colleagues with hisrestrained and polished comiccharacterization. Through it’s notin the range of belief to expectfirst-rate acting from an ama¬ teur, he almost gave it. It is dis¬tinctly opposed to the law ofaverages that more than onesuch actor could be found in anamateur company; and that lawwas safely maintained.Another interesting point wasthe casting of Joyce Russe andErnest Arnett in the minor rolesof Casilda and Luiz; this is avery singular occurrence, forthey have the best voices in theCompany and would seem suitedfor larger parts (though Casildaand Luiz do have some importantmusic to sing).THE CHORUS is a much moreessential part of a G. & S. operathan of most other operas; can¬dor compels me to admit thatthis Company’s chorus was total¬ly inadequate from visual anddramatic points-of-view, as thechorusters failed utterly to re¬spond to or take part in the ac¬tion. Their vocal contributionwas not much better. The orchestra, similarly, wasnot everything it ought to be;though its playing compared fa¬vorably to that of the orchestraof a certain professional com¬pany I could mention. ThoughSullivan’s score calls for thirteenwind parts, the Mandel Hall or¬chestra pit contained only sevenwind players; which is, in itsway, a drawback, as it does notimprove Sillivan’s exquisite windorchestration.THOUGH THIS production of“The Gondoliers” was far fromperfect, we must make some al¬lowance for this amateur group.It was an enjoyable evening for$2.50; and, when you come tothink of it, it’s really very cheap!CLASSIFIED ADDEADLINESAll Classified Ads must besubmitted TWO days beforepublication.Wed. for Friday publicationFri. for Tuesday publication1. You buy theHi-Fi componentsystem of your choice. 2. Toad Hallbuys half of yournext 100 records.Monday thru Friday — 10 A.M. to 10 P.MSaturday — 10 A.M. to 10 P.M.Sunday — 12 Noon to 6 P.M.Enjoy the music you love the way it was meant to be enjoyed. First—select your ^ity engineered component system from Toad Hall. Second—let Toad Hall help youbuild that important and impressive record library.At Toad Hall you choose from only the finest Hi-Fi instruments available. In our ele¬gant listening studio you'll find a system to fit every home, to match every budget.And you'll hear components as you would in your very own living room.Once you've selected the system of your choice, you automatically become a mem¬ber in the Toad Hall Record Library.* You'll purchase any records you desire forone year—regardless of label, performer, or price — at 50% off. No exceptions.if the record you want isn't in stock, it will be ordered especially for you.And don't forget about our unique "price policy". We not only guarantee the low¬est possible price in the Chicagoland area, but should anyone offer a subsequentsale price within 30 days following your purchase, we will REFUND the difference INCASH, So for a truly "sound" investment visit the original Toad Hall.1444,East 57th Street. We’ll be, loofcmg.for yo»-< ' ■'* <V'< < < V t t lYt * \Y.V. fanmthe home of audio elegance1515 N. SheridanWi ImetteAl 6-4800November'Vvi .» t < l'HE tCHlCAQQ IflAROQN12 7BUILDING WITHTHE COMMUNITYCity planning experts throughout the world have hailed the Hyde Park Kenwoodcommunity as an outstanding example ot the most enlightened type ot urban renewal.Spearheaded by the University of Chicago, the community has dedicated itself toreplacing with imaginative new homes, apartments, and other structures those buildingsthat are beyond saving, while reclaiming and renewing other rundown buildingsthat can still be utilized for modern day living.As a result the community has achieved a unique charm and character as a preferredand stimulating place, to live. It is also a shining symbol of racial integration workingfor the betterment of the entire city.University National has been a part of Hyde Park Kenwood for nearly 50 years. We havebeen proud to see the strides the community has taken and have been pleased to grow with itNow under the leadership of our new president. Norman Simon, we rededicate ourselvesto helping Hyde Park Kenwood achieve even greater future growth.We have embarked on a half million dollar modernization and expansion programThis investment in the progress of tne comtnunity will enable us to serve betterthe banking needs of the area.The exterior of the bank building is being refurbished, but no radical architecturalchanges will be made so as to preserve a landmark long familiar to area residents.The interior will be completely rebuilt and new conveniences, including data processingequipment, installed.Ai the same time we will provide more financial support to the community itselfRehabilitation through private resources has been the basic means of rebuilding inHyde Park Kenwood. We intend to put our funds to increasing use right in this area tosupport that approach.We look forward to many more years of being of help to and growing with the communityUNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615 V-IZ... /TELEPHONE MU 4-1200 It mstrength and service IQ3 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chicago Clearing House Association Federal Reserve SystemTHE CHICAGO MAROON November 17, 1967