]6 2 0. 5 r, ■* Orq^•2*2 7 CijJL.... '•et,oHI. MSyJ.Wmpol 20 MaroonoVOL. 76, NO. 20 JESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1967 12 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSUniversity-Society Ties ArguedHOUSING LACKIS CRITICIZEDHyde Park, in order to solve itshousing problems, will have to ex¬pand North and South of its presentboundaries.Winston Kennedy, former realestate manager for the Universityvoiced this solution at a housing“teach-in” Saturday at the HydePark Union Church. No one pres¬ently responsible for the real estateor housing operations of the Uni-versty would agree to speak at theaffair.The program was presented bythe Hyde Park Tenant’s ActionCommittee to inform the publicabout the University’s role in areahousing and to propose solutions toto current problems.In answer to a question regard¬ing the University’s expansion intoWoodlawn, Kennedy pointed to the“South Campus” already plannedbetween 60th and 61st Sts. as partof such expansion and said that thearea north of 63rd St. in Woodlawnwould have to be opened up for Un¬iversity housing in order to allevi- !ate the pressure on housing in HydePark.‘Low Rent’Regarding the University’s pres¬ent policy in Hyde Park itself, Ken¬nedy cited the new apartment See editorialand cartoon on Page 4.<; - $ ^ W£M fSbuilding at 57th St. and DorchesterAve. and the University’s buying ofhotels in northeast Hyde Park torent to students as examples of itspolicy of maintaining low-rent hous¬ing for students in Hyde Park.Apartments in the building at57th and Dorchester rent for $260per month.Bob Gordon, a representative ofthe Kenwood-Oakland CommunityOrganization and of the Hyde ParkPlanning Committee, reviewed thehistory of Hyde Park housing.He explained that in the past, theUniversity was faced with the pro¬blem of creating a communitywhich would attract faculty andstudents. To combat deterioration,housing units were torn down butwere never replaced.Thus as the University gained fa¬cilities, the populationand rents soared.Gordon stated that the coopera¬tion of student, tenant, and busi¬ness groups would be required tosolve this problem. He commentedthat “when we were pushing thepoor out, we should have seen thatwe would be next.” The Maroon —RERTEACH-IN: Bob Gordon asks cooperation of student, tenant, andbusiness groups to alleviate the housing shortage.Mrs. June Dolnick, an authorityof Chicago Urban Renewal, com¬mented that “the University is go¬ing full circle in its approach to theproblem.” She claimed that urbanrenewal in Hyde Park has merelydecreased consisted of moving tenants fromone neighborhood to another, withno provisions made for new dwel¬lings. borhoods, and near their jobs. Ac¬cording to Mrs. Dolnick, peoplepushed out of Hyde Park must re¬ KALVEN, ET AL.CALL ACTIVISMINVALID ROLEThe concept of the University asan activist institution was attackedyesterday as Professor of Law Har¬ry Kalven and other members ofthe Chicago faculty debated “TheRole of the University in Politicaland Social Action,” a report byKalven.“My impression of the issue thereport is dealing with,” Kalven ex¬plained, “is the different images ofwhat the University should be do¬ing.”Speaking of the report itself, Kal¬ven pointed out that the Universityshould take part in community act¬ivities only so much as these acti¬vities relate directly to Universityactivities.Moral Questions ‘Complicated’He concluded that due to com¬plexities of independent businessrelations between economic instit¬utions, “examining moral positionslocate in substandard housing with *n economic world is an ex-Victims of urban renewal are le¬gally entitled to be relocated inhousing that is within their in¬comes, located in acceptable neigh- no aid from the government.Leon M. Depres, Fifth Ward al¬derman, viewed the housing situa¬tion more optimistically. He de¬clared that the University is HydePark’s greatest asset, so long as itdoes not try to “chew up the neigh¬borhood.” Depres concluded bysaying Hyde Park is the best ex¬ample of a stable interracial com¬munity to date.CHICAGO NEXT FOCUSSNCC Cited in Liberation StruggleRobert Brown, a worker for theChicago Student Nonviolent Coor¬dinating Committee (SNCC) gavea passionate speech Saturday nightat Ida Noyes defending blackpower and SNCC’s activities withinthe movement.He also warned that SNCC wasmoving its base of operations fromRobert Brown The Maroon deep South to Northern states. Thefocal point of SNCC’s activities willbe Chicago, the scene of next sum¬mer’s Democratic Convention, hesaid.Tracing the history of the blackliberation struggle in the UnitedStates and outlining SNCC’s placein that process, he placed SNCCsquarely within the tradition of thefreedom movement.Black nationalism and racialpride were stressed by many ear-1lier black leaders, particularly byW. E. Dubois earlier in the century,he noted.Dubois and MalcolmBrown said that these earlierleaders, Dubois and Malcolm X.,had pushed for recognition by theAmerican Negro of his place with¬in the world-wide movement of col¬ored-peoples for freedom and self-determination.SNCC, he said, has much to learnfrom the successful revolutionsagainst colonial rule in Asia, Africa,and Latin America. Stokely Carmi¬chael’s visits to Cuba, Algeria, andVietnam marked his realization ofthis common bond between colored-peoples in their global struggle forself-determination. Black people in this country havealready developed revolutionaryconsciousness, Brown maintained.He cited as evidence the increas¬ingly frequent and violent rebellionsof the past summer. He gave SNCCsome credit for this developing con¬ sciousness, though he stressed theobjective conditions of ghetto lifewere largely responsible.In response to a question, Brownsaid that he nor anybody else couldpredict when a riot would betouched off. tremely complicated effort.’Other members of the panel, in¬cluding Professors John HopeFranklin, George Stigler, GwinKolb, and Gilbert White, echoedKalven’s views on the report.Kalven asserted that the Univer¬sity must remain neutral in mostpolitical and social relations to pre-ical and social relations to pre¬serve the freedom of inquiry thatmust exist within the University.He allowed, however, that the Uni¬versity may become politically ac¬tive “to protect itself” and that theUniversity must sponsor the socialside of issues in which it engages asa corporate entity.White, a professor of geography,later admitted that “the record hasbeen very poor,” as far as the Uni¬versity’s corporate activities havegone.The University, he added, is “notplaying a large enough role in ac¬tive development in Woodlawn.”University Is Invited to Drug SessionsUniversity of Chicago studentsand faculty will be welcomed atall of the plenary sessions of theNational Student Association’sdrug conference this weekend atIda Noyes Hall.They will not, however, be per¬mitted to attend the private work¬shops that will take up most ofthe conference time. These haveto be reserved for delegates, ac¬cording to NSA Coordinator CarolChav.Four plenary sessions will beopen:The first, starting at 1:30 p.m.on Friday, will feature Drs. Dan¬iel Freedman and Jerome Jaffefrom Chicago’s Department ofPsychiatry. Also speaking thenwill be Dr. Joel Fort, a sociolo- See editorial on Page 4.gist at the University of Califor¬nia at Davis. They will discuss the“Psychopharalogical Aspects ofStudent Drug Involvement.”On Saturday at 9:30 a.m. a dis¬cussion on “Historical, Legal, andSociological Aspects of StudentDrug Involvement” will includeHoward Becker from Northwest¬ern; Alfred Lindesmith from In¬diana; Joseph Oteri, a Boston law¬yer involved in narcotics cases;and Michigan State Sen. Roger E.Craig.Michael Aldrich, a student atBuffalo campus of the New YorkState University, Dean Helen Now- lis of the University of Rochester,Dr. Willard Dalrymple of Prince¬ton’s Health Service, and Dr. Ed¬ward Hornick of the Albert Ein¬stein Medical School will speak oncampus policy regarding studentdrug use on Sunday morning,again at 9:30.Drs. Ralph Metzner of the Psy¬chedelic Review and J. ThomasUngerlwider from the UCLA Med¬ical School will also speak.Peace Corps Supports Extended DefermentsWASHINGTON (CPS) - ThePeace Corps has announced it willbegin intervening on behalf ofPeace Corps volunteers seekingdraft deferments for two years ofoverseas service.In a major policy shift, PeaceCorps Director Jack Vaughn, con- cerned by mounting induction callsfor volunteers serving overseas,said he will take an “active role” infuture deferment cases before thePresidential Appeal Board, thecourt of last resort for draft re¬classifications.In the past, the agency has per- formed only an informational func¬tion-advising volunteers and train¬ees of Selective Service laws andprocedures and confirming to lo¬cal boards the fact of the volun¬teer’s service.In future appeals, however,Vaughn plans to write letters to theOscar Mayer FouThe Oscar Mayer Foundation hasgiven Chicago $100,000 to establishthe Oscar G. Mayer Ph. D. fellow¬ship at the Graduate School of Bus¬iness, it was announced today bythe University and the Foundation.The gift, in the form of an endow¬ment, will help outstanding candi- indation Gives CLdates for the Ph. D. in Business tofinance their studies. The fellow¬ship memorializes the late chair¬man of the Oscar Mayer & Com¬pany meat processing firm.In announcing the gift, Oscar G.Mayer, Jr., a director of the Foun¬dation and chairman of the OscarMayer & Company, commented j licago $100,000that “the Graduate School of Busi¬ness of the University of Chicagowas always regarded by my fatheras one of the finest schools of itskind in the world.“We feel that an Oscar MayerFoundation grant in his name, tohelp the school in its expansionprogram, is highly appropriate.” local boards describing the circum¬stances in each case and urgingboard members to grant a defer¬ment until completion of the volun¬teer’s overseas tour.“We have a serious situation,”Vaughn said. “Pulling a volunteeroff a productive job at mid-tour isunfair to the nation, the host coun¬try, the Peace Corps, and the indiv¬idual.”Peace Corps volunteers have lostabout 60 deferment appeals beforethe three-man board in the last sixand one-half years. “Virtually allof these have occurred in the pastyear,” Vaughn said.Of the approximately 25 volun¬ teers who have already returned tothe United States for draft induc¬tion, two were disqualified forphysical reasons and returned totheir overseas assignments.Chicago Ranks 36thWASHINGTON, D.C.-The Uni¬versity of Chicago is the thirty-sixthlargest contributor of Peace Corps1 Volunteers of colleges and univers¬ities nationwide, according to re¬cent reports released by the agen¬cy.As of October 16, 1967, at least130 Volunteers — including 59 nowserving overseas — had been sel¬ected for Peace Corps service.MUSIC REVIEWRoscoe Mitchell: Prophet of a Musical ReligionBy TODD CAPPNames. Roscoe Mitchell is aname now. You see it listed in jazzmagazines along with other names— Charles Lloyd, Louis Armstrong.You see it again in the ChicagoSun Times, where a reporter linksit with some term like “major in¬novator.” You can even see it onalbum covers, if you know theright “underground” record stores.People are beginning to know Ros¬coe Mitchell’s name, but as yetfew know his music, know that heis more than a name.Who is Roscoe Mitchell? A de¬mon. A God. He is Nietzsche. Heis Hesse. He is Charlie Parker andJohn Coltrane, Lester Young andJelly Roll Morton. He is JohannSebastian Bach and John PhillipSousa. A prophet and a messen¬ger, sent to remind us of ourtransgressions and our glories.Music can be theology or reli¬gion, orgasm or lovemaking.(D&L: Does religion helpyou to live, toplay?C: It’s everything forme; my music is athanks to God.— Interview withJohn Coltrane byMichel Delormeand Claude Len-issois, Jazz Hot,September, 1965.)Does Roscoe Mitchell make areligion of music? Does he lovethe saxophone? Does he celebratethe gift of life unequivocally? Yes,yes, yes!Sunday night, a concert at Lin¬coln Center, a South Side settle¬ment house. Roscoe brought his al¬to together with six other saxo¬phone players who share his loveand committment, each a priest ofa slightly different denomination,and two drummers, to bear thetorch of primeval fire.Fred Anderson (tenor) offeredthe invocation, reminding us of thesounds a saxophone can produce,and the responses we can generatewithin. A voice alone, crying free¬dom.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital Then, to remind us of the roleof structure, order, discipline, asaxophone quartet playing Bach’sFugue in G minor. Freedom anddiscipline. Flux and order. Roscoelikes both, sees the beauty in theforms of each, and realizes thatboth must be mastered if one isto achieve wholeness. He revelsin them, explores them as fully ashe can, separately, preferring tokeep them pure, uncontaminated.SOME STRUCTURES: My OldKentucky Home. “We are proud tohave in the house today, directfrom Kentucky and a shining ex¬ample of the American Way, Col.Sanders!” And there is Col. San¬ders, a little kid with a mask,turkeytrotting around the stage be¬fore being routed by a pair of hipboots wearing a pith helmet. Ros¬coe plays a mournful harp.March music! Three Cadets andEl Capitan. Choose your own fan¬tasy. Mine saw halftime, with thefamous Purdue marching band outon the field. Leading the paradeis the evergorgeous Golden Girl,who looks strangely like a ghostlygorilla mask.Then there is Railroad Bill, whonever works (and never will).During a solo, a ladder is placedon stage, cans of shaving creamand Coke and a drumstick repeat¬edly dropped from it. Structuringtime by taking the square root oftwice the distance times the accel¬eration of gravity.Seven horns holding the samenote for two minutes before reach¬ing a crescendo.OTHER VOICES: Byron Bowie(tenor), a broad belly laugh madeup of lots of little chuckles. JuliusHemphill (alto), crashing andbashing through the modern jun¬gles. Abshalom Benshlomo (alto),alone in the desert, confident of building his own civilization. Mau¬rice McIntyre (tenor), a ragingThunder God. Anthony Braxton(alto), a vivid manifestation of thewrathful and benevolent dietieswhich rip you insidp out, thenThe drummers: Thurman Barker,make you whole.who flows, and Alvin Fielder, whoI rolls, both capable of feeling and| transmitting time in its subtlest■ nuances, or letting it get up by it-1 self and walk, stomp, strut, orslither away.And Roscoe Mitchell. The voiceof authority: a great orator likeTrane, Ray Charles, Mahalia Jack-son, Martin Luther King, MalcolmX, Ali Akbar Khan. When hespeaks, you sit up and listen. Thevoice of experience: who seems toknow more about you than youyourself, who plays nurseryrhymes to get at the roots of thecollective unconscious. The voice:who can make you discover yourown, and shout along with him.The concert ended as Roscoe,accompanied by both drummers,at the top of his voice and in abobbing frenzy, was joined by allthe other horns. Individual asser¬tions became collective statement,the referent reduced to the mostbasic level of all — central energy.SUNDAY’S CONCERT was partof a series, presented by the Asso¬ciation for the Advancement ofCreative Musicians. Founded in1964 by Richard Abrams, compos¬er, pianist, clarinetist, and vision¬ary, the AACM (of which all theconcert’s participants are mem¬bers) has endeavored to provide aplatform for this music, to show the people of Chicago their cityand their world. For although eachartist has a personal vision and auniquely inflected speech, they allshare a common language, the lan¬guage of Chicago. A languagewhich has been refined in thethree years of the AACM’s exis¬tence, and also expanded with theinflux of fresh voices. Bowie andHemphill, for example, recentlymigrated here from St. Louis.)As it did a generation ago, Chi¬cago has again produced a newmusic. A music which, unlikemuch of today’s, dignifies lyricismand delicacy (but not fragility) aswell as power. A music whichrarely confuses volume with inten¬sity. A music neither ashamed ofits past nor afraid of its future. Amusic which never demeans itself,yet seldom takes itself too seri¬ously.The new music of Chicago can¬not be given a name; it can onlybe heard. Hear it at two AACMconcerts on campus this week: theAnthony Braxton group, tonight atIda Noyes, and Richard Abrams’already legendary twelve-piece Ex¬perimental Band, Sunday night atMandel Hall. Hear it on record:Sound, by Roscoe Mitchell on Del-mark; forthcoming releases byAbrams, Joseph Jarman, and Les¬ter Bowie on Delmark, and Mitch¬ell, on Nessa. “If a patron buys froman artist who needs money(needs money to buy tools,time, and food), the patronthen makes himself equalto the artist: he is buildingart into the world; he cre¬ates. If he buys even of liv¬ing artists who are alreadyfamous or already making12,000 pounds per year, heceases to create. He sinksback to the rank of a con¬sumer.”— Ezra Pound, 1915And what of Roscoe Mitchell?He is buying a bass saxophone andtaking it home to practice.BANDERSNATCH| The Bandersnatch will be |% closed Thanksgiving Week- §i end, Thursday, Friday, and |I Saturday except for the 1free W. C. Fields coffee gI hour 9 to 10 p.m. Friday. IWho 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-**'*'* /ours to ponder in silent certainty.Send $1. to Box 64, Glenville, Conn. 06830.LANGUAGE TUTORINGGROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE288-0675 U.C.FILM FESTIVALThere will be $100.00 inprizes for the best stu¬dent-made films at theLiberal Arts ConferenceU. of C. Film FestivalApril 5 1968. The dead¬line for entries is March15, maximum length willbe 15 minutes.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELCOMMUNITY SERVICEOFREPENTANCEandTHANKSGIVINGThanksgiving Day, November 23, 1967 11 a.m.RABBI HAYIM G0REN PERELMUTER"To Hear the Unbearable Word” You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1 2655 5. Doty Ave.646-4411 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorERJCANN CANDYCOMPANYfamous j^or continental connectionsWe will occupy during the month of Decembera store at 7107 South Crandon with a full line ofkitchen fresh Candies, Cookies, Lebkuchen,Alpine Torte (Dobosh Torte) and ChristmasStoll enStore Hours: Weekdays 9air: to 4omFor further information call before December 1st FA 4-4295during December MU 4-6066Ask For Our Mail Order ListWe mail anywhereOur products are also available all year round at theCO-OP Supermarket at 55th Street and Lake Park.THE. CHICAGO. MAROON'ETHER OR‘. .Holton Dissociates Michelson. EinsteinDescribing Chicago as “thehome of relevant, decisive exper¬iment,” Harvard Physics Profes¬sor Gerald Holton asserted minim¬al influence of Michelson’s exper¬iments on Einstein’s theories lastnight in the Law School Auditori¬um.Concluding the Monday LectureSeries, Holton spoke on “The Irrev-evance of Crucial Experiments.”“The deDate here is a little likethat around the Warren Report,”Holton suggested. In both cases, theargument would go on forever butfor the fact that people lose interestin it.“Looking at Einstein’s paper it¬self gives the best evidence that noexperiment was the triggeringpoint for the paper, ” Holton said.He quoted Einstein’s comment that“pure thought can grasp realityjust as the ancient dreamed.”“What the Michelson-Morely ex¬periment experimented with wasnot the ether but with one’s ideasabout the ether” Holton concluded.He traced the concepts of etherfrom Copernicus to Einstein. paper Einstein relegates most of19th century science to superflu¬ity.”“Isn’t there one place where Ein¬stein says that this crucial experi¬ment was crucial?” Holton asked /rhetorically. “This almost hap¬pened,” he said, but quoted fromEinstein the idea that while exper¬iments such as Michelson’s maysuggest hypotheses, the creativeprinciple resides in pure mathemat¬ics.MAROON SPORTSEagles Win IM Football TitleThe high-flying Eagles, divisional place finish in the cross-countryIM football champs, scored a squad’s final dual meet of the sea-smashing 19-0 defeat of undergrad- son but the team as a whole lostuate champs Phi Gamma Delta 23-32 to Albion.to cop the all-University footballcrown on Friday.The Business School squad helda slim 6-0 lead at halftime butcame roaring into the second halfwith two TDs and a single extrapoint. Ed Petrick scored two Eaglemarkers himself in that wild secondhalf; Fred Jacobs picked up the Murray ran the tough rain-soakedcourse in 22:19.8 and took the onlyfirst-place finish the team hasscored all year. Jeff Melby finishedfourth for the Maroon squad andwas followed home by Mike Rau-worth, eighth; Joe Frank, ninthand Mike Klein, tenth. The Calendar., . . , . .. . , ,. - The c-c squad has two tourna-other touchdown in the first half, | men(s |eft £efore the end of thewhile Milam Fitts scored the p.a.t. ,running year. On Saturday theThompson South and Delta Up- j top runners will compete in the 71stsilon scored respective divisional! Annual National Senior Individual“It is incredible to a physicist how ! victories in the annual IM turkey ; and Team AAU Cross-Countrymany times this experiment was trot on Friday. Championships. This meet is spon-repeated,” he said. Holton emphasized the tendencies to try to ex¬plain the results in terms of theconcepts of ether already widelyaccepted.Holton described Einstein’s paperon relativity as markedly differ¬ent from all papers on the subjectwritten prior to that timeSG 'P-N1 PetitionsCirculating HereStudent Government (SG) is cir¬culating a petition among Collegestudents for institution of an option¬al pass—no credit grading systemwhich a student might arrange inall, some, or none of his courses athis discretion.The petition is addressed to theCollege Council and the Masters ofthe Collegiate divisions. Accordingto Ed Birnbaum, SG Undergradu¬ate Academic Affairs Committeechairman, it seeks to allow students in the College house division; hewas closely followed by Gary Met¬calf of Chamberlin and RichardMurray, also of Thompson South.Although Delta U took the over¬all fraternity title, Phi G’s MikeI*n Jthe ' ®er8er won Individual frat honors.Phil Brzozokski took second for thewinners and Tim Ennis of Psi Up-silon finished third.Steve Pierce from CCS won thegraduate and overall titles with atime of 5:17 in the mile run. DaveMcMarshall took the divisional sec¬ond spot.Harrier Pat Murray camethrough with a tremendous first Persons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at the MaroonOffice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then besent or brought to the office at least twodays before date of publication.Tuesday, November 21ART EXHIBIT: William Levitt Paintings.Reception to meet artist. Lexington Hall456.BUSINESS MEETING: (Graduate School ofBusiness) Reynolds Club, North Lounge.Open to students interested in business.3 p.m.COLLOQUIM: (The James Franck Institute)"Holomorphy and Phase Transitions: ABasis for Scaling Laws," Michael H.Coopersmith, Western Reserve. ResearchInstitute 480. 4:15 p.m.ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN COUNCIL: "TheDynamics of Hope." Chapel House. 4:30p.m.DINNER AND DISCUSSION: James M. Red-field. Hutchinson Commons, the privateroom. Open to everyone. 5:30 p.m.DUBOIS CLUB: Chapter meeting. WayneEvans (National Executive Board). IdaNoyes Hall. 7:30 p.m.WASH PROM COMMITTEE: Meeting. IdaNoyes Hall. 7:30 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Interna¬tional House. 8 p.m.CONCERT: Anthony Braxton, ContemporaryMusic Society. Ida Noyes Hall. 8 p.m.ABORTION: Dr. Lory Myers, head of IllinoisCitizens for Medical Control of Abortion,will speak. Ida Noyes Library. 8:15 p.m.Wednesday, November 22LECTURE: (Biochemistry) "Studies on Vita¬min B12 Biosynthesis," Herbert C. Fried¬man. Abbott 101. 4 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub. 7 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from Scan¬dinavia and the British Isles. Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room. 8 p.m.Thursday, November 23CROSS COUNTRY: Central 5000-meter runat Riis Park, 10 a.m.COMMUNITY SERVICE of repentance andthanksgiving: Rockefeller Memorial Chap¬el. 11 a.m. Rabbi Hay Goren Perelmuter,"To Hear the Unbearable Word."„ , , 1 on Friday, November 24ton Park course beginning at l:30., NSA DRUG conference: Medical aspects.Ida Noyes Hall. l:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m.VIROLOGY CLUB: "Is the Entire SV40Genome Integrated in Transformed Mouse... , o • i Kidney Cells?" Dr. Saul Kit, Baylor Uni-Association of the AAU S Senior j versify. Ricketts. 4:30 p.m.5000 Meter Championships Thurs-1 ECUMENICAL CH'ISTIAN C0UNCIL SE“'South's Pat White took first spot sor«< by the Chicago Track Cluband will be run over the Washing-A few members of the Maroonsquad will also run in the Central campus drug use. Ida Noyes Hall. 9:30a.m. to 12 noon.CHESS CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall. Sun Parlor.3 p.m.FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub. 7:30 p.m.Summer InternshipsApplications for summer internships invarious Washington government agencies areavailable in the Office of Career Counselingand Placement, Reynolds Club, Room 202.All students are eligible for the program.Application deadlines for necessary tests arenear. Apply now.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement Reynolds Club, Room 200. Forappointment call Ext. 3282.Graduate SchoolNovember 21 — University of Chicago Gradu¬ate School of Business.Business and GovernmentNovember 21 — Oak Ridge National Labora¬tory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Ph.D. candi¬dates in chemistry (analytical, inorganic,physical), mathematics, physics (atomic,solid state, particle), and statistics.November 21 — Asiatic Petroleum Company(Royal/Dutch, Sheii). M. M„ 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 22 — United States Defense SupplyAgency, Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin.Positions in chemistry, finance, industrialrelations, mathematics, physics, program¬ming, and contract negotiations.November 27 — Unilever, Ltd., England.British nationals at the Ph.D. or Post¬doctoral levels in chemistry, mathematics,physics, or statistics.November 28 — United States Naval ResearchLaboratory, Washington, D.C. All degreelevels in chemistry, mathematics, physics,and statistics. Will interview D.S. candi¬dates and graduates in above depart¬ments for summer employment.day morning on the Washingtoncourse.Not Under GodThe Maroon apologizes for theerror which was made with regardto Leonard Krieger’s lecture of No¬vember 13, in which he was quotedas saying, “The world of historyis under god and the population ex- Repentance ServiceA community service of repent-ence will be held at 11 a, m.Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, inRockefeller Chapel.Rabbi Hayim Goren Perelmuter,of Temple Isaiah Israel, 1100 EastHyde Park Blvd., will conduct theservice. The subject will be: “ToHear the Unbearable Word.”Clergy and rabbis from Hyde Parkand Kenwood will participate in theservice.plosion . . .” Mr. Krieger actuallythe right to be graded on a pass— said, “The world of history has un-no credit (P—N) system in any I dergone an intellectual populationcourse or all courses he takes,while in no way binding other stud¬ents to this procedure. The studentcould opt for either the standard(A-B-C-D-F) grading or the P—Ngrading method in any course.The petition is being circulated inlight of the nearing College Coun¬cil decision on grading reform, ac¬cording to Birnbaum.mm m. ' mmFLIGHTSStudent Government (SG) |is currently seeking a newdirector for its charterflights program. Interested ,students should contact Jef- •'frey Blum or Leo Schlos- |berg in the SG Office by 1tomorrow.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933I0% Student Discount explosion.PIZZAPLATTERPizza., Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1160 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 s!J DiscountART MATERIALS• PICTURE FRAMING• OFFICE 8c SCHOOLSUPPLIES• FILINGDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 INAR: Art and the Church. Chapel House.4:30 p.m.INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP:Ida Noyes Library. 7:30 p.m.Saturday, November 25NSA DRUG CONFERENCE: Historical, legal,and sociological aspects. Ida Noyes. 9:30p.m.-12 noon, and 7 p.m.-10 p.m.CROSS COUNTRY: U.C.T.C. Open Four-Milerun at Washington Park. 1 p.m.RECEPTION AND DANCE: Presented by PanAmerican Students. International House.7 p.m.Sunday, November 26NSA DRUG CONFERENCE: Aspects Ofwho killedKennedyA secret is told in silence and certainty in astrangely suppressed 25 page fairytale. $1.to Box 64, Glenville, Connecticut 06830CORNELL ELECTRONICSERVICEFAST andDEPENDABLESERVICETV • RADIO e TAPE RECORDERPHONOGRAPH e ANY BRANDFOREIGN AND DOMESTICTRANSISTOR OR TUBECOMPONENT STEREO • HI FIPL 2-77301635 E 55th St AN ERRORThe Winter Quarter willbegin on January 3, 1968,not January 8 as printedin the original UniversityCalendar.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.Style Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8ANTHONY BRAXTONin concertTUFS. 71 rev. IDA NOYES 8:00 P.M.SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI SKISPEND CHRISTMAS INASPEN$169Leave Chicago December 16th at 4:30 P.M.Arrive back in Chicago December 24th.Cost includes ALL TRAIN, BUS, TOW TICKETS,PLUS LODGING IN ASPEN, ALL MEALS ON TRAIN,BREAKFAST DAILY, POOL, AND TAXES.Sponsored by the Northwestern University Ski GroupFor information, call Dick at 764-6264 or 262-3765.SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI SKI IHE COMMUNICATIONS STORY (coni.)As an added service to THE GENERAL TELEPHONEANSWERING SERVICE, President Earl J. Kuntz hasfound a key to a need in ‘Communications’ that has beenoverlooked, and devised the new “Mini CommunicationsCenter”, which is a TWENTY-FOUR HOUR ANSWERINGSERVICE at a very small price per month.This service has been especially presented to the Uni¬versity students and faculty in Chicago and Suburbs, in¬cluding all active Young Chicago. Personal businesscards will be issued to each subscriber and can be passedout to their associates and friends. It is purposelygauged to close-up the communications gap and enhancesocial insurance.24 hr. answering service only $5.75 per/mo.call CE 6-5300November 21,1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3\ m1 '4Hfcl The Chicago Maroon |•ft1 CJFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor .. ..Michael SeidmanNews Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor Roberto ArrozLiterary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertEdward W. HearneDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus David A. SetterGetting WorseTwo years after the housing sleep-in, we must con¬clude from the only available evidence that the Univers¬ity’s housing policy has grown from bad to worse.The only housing the University has made availableis comprised of hastily-bought hotels with limited kitchenfacilities in the northeast corner of Hyde Park; the EleanorClub, with equally limited facilities; and the new buildingat 57th and Dorchester, with more than sufficient facil¬ities for a middle-class married couple (including airconditioning and a master bedroom) and renting to singlestudents at $250 per month per apartment.Meanwhile, adequate and inexpensive apartments be¬tween 60th and 61st Sts., housing hundreds of studentsand many Negroes, are slated for destruction this year tomake way for the “South Campus.” When asked whetherthe University had made provisions to relocate the dis¬placed students, Dean of Students Charles O’Connell saysthat he does not know.It is the refusal of responsible University officials toreveal information to students concerning this issue whichso vitally concerns them that is most frustrating. Twoyears after his predecessor was heckled at the housingrally, Mr. O’Connell has professed ignorance of the Uni¬versity’s policy and University officials have declined todiscuss the matter at a conference on the University’srole in area housing.This is hardly the appropriate behaviour of an in¬stitution which values “free discussion” and “civilizeddiscourse.”Drug ActionMore than thirty years have passed since the narcoticslaws currently on the books were put there — a span oftime during which countless myths, rumors, and untruthsabout the then little known subject of drug effects havebeen allowed to flourish.The National Student Association’s Conference onDrugs, which will be held this weekend at Chicago, willprovide much-needed answers to the uninformed beliefsabout “narcotics” that are still prevalent today. It is thefirst large-scale intercollegiate drug conference ever held,and it is about time that such a systematic effort to ex¬amine one of the more frustrating social problems of ourtime is being made. And it is particularly appropriate,we think, that it is being organized by students — whomthe problem disproportionately concerns.Yet students should not be forced by inaction on thepart of their schools to take action themselves. Universi¬ties, particularly those like Chicago, have a responsibilityto examine pressing social problems and then act in aconcrete manner to produce the changes that are foundto be desired. Posession of the truth must not be limitedto academia’s elite.Discussion of the “drug problem” that will take placethis weekend should not end on an academic note. Anyanswers that are arrived at should be effectively trans¬mitted to the society at large so that desired changescan be effected. Student HousingDAVID L. AIKENLetter Grades, Pass—No Pass:Choice May Ease PressuresLast spring, a faculty commit¬tee on grading recommendedthat students in the Collegeshould have options available totake some courses for grades ofPass or No-Pass, instead of theusual scale of letter grades.Included in this proposal weresuggestions that each of the re¬quired “core” courses shouldhave some sections open whichwould be graded P/N, and thatthe student could choose to takesuch a section for one course.He would also be able to takesome elective courses, and indi¬vidual study, on the P/N basis.Up to one fourth of a student’scourses could be taken on thisbasis.The report was a reasonablyfresh, well-planned approachtoward dealing with some of theproblems connected with gradingwhich had been unearthed in thecommittee’s diggings.AMONG the more notable ofthese problems was the definitetendency for undergraduates hereto have lower grade point aver¬ages than students of comparableability at other equally “good”schools. This was traced to theinstructors’ slowness in recogniz¬ing that you can’t treat studentsat a highly selective school asif they were all from the generalrun of the mill, and still expectthem to maintain their self-con¬fidence.The whole point of a Pass/NoPass system would be to allevi¬ate some of the intensely com¬petitive pressure that strains theendurance of many very capable students. How many students doyou know who can do good workbut have trouble getting anythingout of their studies when they’retense with worry? There are lotsof them in every entering class;there are fewer of them in eachgraduating class.FROM THE students’ point ofview, any method of taking offsome of the pressure, and ofmaking it possible to take acourse for the sake of learningwould be more than welcome.Since many schools have suc¬cessfully tried some form ofpass/no pass grading system,the grading committee herethought it should be tried here.They had plenty of evidencethat it could work, since severalschools with similar problems ofacademic pressure, such as CalTech, Princeton and Brown, hadalready begun using this systemwith some success.As with many proposals whichare not really all that radical,but just new enough that they’renot already standard practice,the Pass/No Pass idea was metwith rather cold stares fromsome faculty members here.Basically, it seems, many fac¬ulty do not trust students to putin enough work on their courseswithout the external, mostly arti¬ficial goad of grades.PART OF the problem, itseems, is that faculty in manycases see education as leadingthe student through a pre-set ob¬stacle course, and awarding littlemedals in the form of grades tothose who manage to survive. Ifyou can’t lead ’em, push ’em with the threat of failure, someseem to think.Maybe it’s idealistic to imaginecourses — even in the naturalsciences — that students wouldactually want to experience justbecause they think they’re learn¬ing something valuable. But amodest revision in the gradingsystem such as was proposedlast spring is not all that high-flown an idea; it would servesimply to lift us out of the muda bit.As it now stands, the CollegeCouncil has postponed a final de¬cision until next January, so itcan sound but student opinion onthe matter. There are many fair¬ly complex issues that can betalked about, such as how muchof a student’s course work shouldbe graded on a P/N basis, andwhether it should be only forelectives outside the student’sown field.Whether or not all the detailsof last spring’s report are ap¬proved, it is important that thebasic problem be kept in mindduring these discussions: there’stoo much artificial pressure, toolittle freedom to learn withoutgoads.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. 60437. 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 Preas Service.4 THE CHIGAGO MAROON November 21, 1967I.Slade Lander Takes a New Look at the Student and LSDTHE CUBE is the answer.That is how some studentsview LSD.Especially those who take it.They view LSD as a possiblesolution to personal dilemmaswhich confront them.The “typical” user at the Uni¬versity of Chicago is not a hippie.He is rarely a member of a drugunderground. Nor is he drawn toacid by the influence of friends.He tries LSD in an attempt toresolve his personal dilemmas.These dilemmas may be aliena¬tion, emotional dissatisfaction, orpersonal relations. LSD is onepart of his attempt to deal withthem.THESE FINDINGS are basedon interviews of 28 student LSDusers last year and on responsesto a questionnaire distributed toa random sample of Universitystudents.The questionnaire results indi¬cate that social contact with LSDusers is not the main cause forstudent use of LSD. A personwho did not want to take LSDand a person who did were justas likely to have friends who hadtaken it. In other words, contactwith LSD users is not a prere¬quisite for a desire to use LSD.But there is a relationship be¬tween the desire of a student to use LSD and what he predictsthe reaction of his friends willbe. Students who want to takeLSD feel that their friends wouldreact more favorably than stu¬dents who do not want to takeit.ALSO, a student who wants totake LSD is more likely to knowsomeone — not necessarily afriend — who has taken the drug.Obviously LSD use cannot beremoved from a social context.The most apparent reason is theproblem of obtaining the drug.It is necessary, first, to know a“source” — a person who sellsdrugs.Second, the source must eitherknow that the potential buyer is“safe” or be assured by a mu¬tual acquaintance that he is safe.They must share the knowledgethat they are engaged in thesame dangerous game whichothers cannot know of or under¬stand.Thus, there must be a feelingof some values mutually held be¬tween the source and the poten¬tial drug user.IN RETURN for satisfyingthese social prerequisites, the po¬tential user receives LSD. Butalso, he gains access to a groupof people who can give him folkknowledge about the drug’s use and support for the student’sfirst experiment with the drug.As an interviewed student des¬cribed it, “It was the fact thatsomebody in our circle of friendshad taken it and could describewhat had happened. Before thatall we had to do was read peri¬odicals or books and it was pret¬ty hard to distinguish the propa¬ganda and non-propaganda in theliterature.”There are two things strikingabout this statement. First,a friend who has taken LSD isnot necessarily an unbiasedsource of information. It wouldbe less difficult to distinguish be¬tween fact and propaganda inliterature than in a person whohas taken LSD and who mayhave needs to make converts orto proselytize for the drug. Theperson would be able to supplya first hand description of theeffects of LSD. But he would bein no position to give any object¬ive data on relative merits anddangers of the drug.SECOND, the student had beeninterested in LSD before he hadhad contact with any drug users,and his interest was active. Hewas not intellectually comparingthe merits and dangers of LSDbut was trying to obtain informa¬tion upon which to base his act¬ions. However, the determining factor of his choice was havingfirst-hand reports from drugusers.This indicates that his choicewas based not on his rationalfindings, but on some predisposi¬tion.A potential LSD user needs toacquire folk knowledge of thedrug. He needs to know the bestconditions under which to takethe drug, how to interpret hissubjective experiences, how todeal with his experiences if theyare frightening. Thus a potentialuser will actively seek out thisfolk knowledge from drug users.As one interviewed student putit, “I had talked to a number ofpeople who had taken it (LSD)before (I took it) and they hadgiven me a fairly good descrip¬tion of what it was like. They ex¬plained it about as well as youcan explain a trip to someonewho hasn’t taken LSD.” Withoutthis knowledge, the LSD experi¬ence would be much more anxi¬ety-provoking and much less en¬joyable to the novice drug user.RESULTS INDICATE that stu¬dents who want to take LSD havesignificantly greater opportunityto obtain the drug. It may beargued that opportunity to obtainLSD creates the desire to use it,but the interviewed students re¬futed this. Some interviewees states thatthey had an active interest inLSD before having any actualcontact with anyone who hadtaken it. Because of this interestthey sought out LSD, knowledgeabout the drug, and hence drugusers.Other users deliberately post¬poned their initial use of LSD.for one or more of three reasons.FIRST, some waited until ex¬ternal pressures or concernswere relaxed. One student post¬poned taking LSD until hisgrades improved while anotherwaited until he received a draftdeferment as a conscious ob¬jector.Second, some users experi¬mented with lessor drugs, especi¬ally marijuana, with the deliber¬ate intention of “practicing” forLSD. The potential users wouldincrease the dosages of marijua¬na, evoking more extreme highs,until they felt confident that theycould control any experiencecaused by marijuana. Then theywould “graduate” to LSD.This does not mean that allLSD users smoke marijuana be¬fore taking LSD. Nor, more im¬portantly, does it mean that useof marijuana will necessarilylead to use of LSD.CULTURE VULTUREPRODUCTION did not go exact¬ly as planned during the thirdand final night of UniversityTheater’s play Each in His OwnWay.As a large portion of the Chi¬cago community is aware, (seeThe Maroon review elsewhere inWEEKEND of the play) one ofthe many features of the impro-visational section included a nu¬bile female dressed in nothingbut a fur coat and high boots;during the intermission between the first and second acts, thisfemale removed the coat andsauntered through the returningaudience into the hall.Word of this filtered throughthe campus and community andSunday night numerous peopledecided suddenly to attend thefinal performance.Unfortunately, word of thishappening also filtered to certainmembers of Chicago’s finest.A short while before sched¬uled curtain time, two membersTHEATER of the vice squad cornered U-Tdirector James O’Reilly andthreatened him, the girl in ques¬tion, and the entire cast witharrest if the event under con¬sideration took place.The scene: intermission be¬tween acts one and two, Sundaynight. A girl, dressed in a furcoat and high boots, slowly re¬moves the coat. The cops areamazed as she exhibits herlovely — skirt and blouse.Pirandello as Soeio-DramaTHE GREAT TWIST in LuigiPirndello’s “Each in His OwnWay’’ (presented in Mandel HallFriday, Saturday, and Sundaynights) is somehow making theaudience believe that what theyhave seen on stage is a thinly-disguised dramatization of a realevent, and that the people in¬volved in that event are at thetheater sitting in the audience,reacting to the play and finallystopping the perfor nance.As a playwright, Pirandellodemands that the audience havethe same social standards as thecharacters onstage and to someextent share their reactions:then he butchers them by turn¬ing their narrow social formsback upon them, implicatingthem on several levels, andchanging them from observersinto participants. By using arealistic entr’acte, Pirandellowidens his stage to include them,and everyone standing casuallyin th° lohhv finds himself in theposition of a guest at the play’sopening parly, shocked at the in¬discreet display of emotion; dis¬oriented at having the normalprops of his life removed; won¬dering what is really going on;unsure, finally, of his own posi¬tion.THE AUDIENCE leaves thetheater not sure of what theyhave seen, not sure what func¬tion they have performed, notsure what has been real andwhat was plarned carefully bythe playwright and the director.Perhaps their own reactionswere planned by the director:perhaps they are as much actorsas the people whose names ap¬pear on the program. All of thephilosophical questions formallydiscussed by the characters on¬stage become immediate: weare not who we are; we do notknow why we do what we do; weare all slaves to convention; weare all playing games.THE PLOT was difficult to fol¬low; we were soon so confusedthat the ironies and conflictingstories became ludicrous. Thesets were extremely formal, andso were the actors. In fact wedid not get involved in thedrama at all; we felt nothing forany of them, for their tormentseemed ridiculous and theirFranklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd Street posturirg made Pirandello’s lan¬guage seem trite. We were al¬ways aware that we were watch¬ing actors reading lines, and notdoing it very well.The only character we were in¬terested in was Larry Unruh’sDiego Cinci, an ambiguous,omniscient fellow who talked agreat deal and commented cyn¬ically on the proceedings be¬tween suave puffs on his ciga¬rette. Unruh dominated the stageat all times, and for one mo¬ment, describing the death of flyhe had been watching for hours,conveyed real emotion and madethe audience feel something. Itwas the most honestly thrillingmoment of the evening, thoughperhaps out of place. For I as¬sume that O’Reillev directed hisactors to emote rather than act,intending to stress the non¬reality of it all. The non-commu¬nication between performers andaudience probably fitted into hisrewor' ing of Pirandello and setus up for the interlude extrava¬ganza; it also bored us to death.THE iNTERMlSbiCnv and theending made up for that. As soonas he got away from Pirandello’sexact script, O’Reilley becameextremely exciting. He used acombination of blatant theatri¬cality ard socio-drama. Thesocio-drama did not come off:despite the sincerity of the Inter¬lude Company insidiously placedamong us, despite the crowd-psychology thing that made usready to believe anything in ourconfusion, despite the appear¬ance of O’Reilly himself inwork-clothes and opening-nighttemper, we did not really be¬lieve that what went on in thecorridor was spontaneous andunrehearsed.The facts that Pirandellowanted to convey in the interludewere played down, almost lost:it was not clear, for example,that the lady who was yelling atO’Reilly had run backstage andslapped Joan Cagen and thatwas the reason the actors wereyelling and walking out of thetheateh. This is just as well,since we wouldn’t have believed it anyway. O’Reilley made itvery clear that he cared morefor effect than socio-drama: im¬mediately after professing baffle¬ment at the irate lady who hadpushed past him, he ceremoni¬ously led a naked girl throughthe crowd. He must have knownabout her in advance.ALTHOUGH IT screwed up Pi¬randello’s interior drama, theUT production was very Piran-dello-esque and very successful,mainly because of the use ofaudience plants. They were im¬provising (which would havepleaseu Pirandello a lot) andthey were doing an entirely dif¬ferent kind of acting than thepeonip wearing costumes andmakeup. They brought the wholeidea ui uieaiei-ai iificiality o.;elevel closer to reality, andthough after a few minutes wefigured out that they werephonies and that it had all beenrehearsed, we were still discon-ee~tod. Obvio^slv that guy takingtickets is a member of the com¬pany. But is the guy sitting nextto me an actor? is my date col¬laborating with O’Reilly? AmI? Wow!And finally, at the end of theplay, after the actors hadstopped screaming and justwalked out of the theater andword got around that the playwas over, there was a feeling inthe audience that the play wasnot really over, and that if theactors would not continue it, wewould. Everything we did or saidfrom then on was a part of“Each in His Own Way,” and al¬though not on the intellectualmulti-faceted level Pirandelloplanned, we were still ensnared,we were still indicted. We knewit, too. Lots of people who hadnothing to do with UniversityTheatre were yelling and fight¬ing. I myself ran up to anofficial-looking ushcr-actor andtold him that I was Joan Cagenand the girl on stage was an im¬poster and what did they thinkthey were doing using myname? I’m not Joan Cagen, ofcourse. I don’t think I am. . . .BARBARA BERNSTEINDR. AARON ZIMBLER, Optometristin meNEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT TENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES Is art never safe?•As the quarter comes to aclose and everyone realizes withalarm how much work they haveleft to do, cultural events oncampus begin to thin out and ifthere were lots of cultural eventsaround, not very many would goto them, so it’s probably just asgood.ArtToday however a few thingsare happening. A show of Wil¬liam Levitt’s paintings in Lex¬ington Hall will be introducedstarting at 4. Art students whowould like to meet Levitt and toorganize an Art Students Asso¬ciation are expecially invited.Yesterday two shows opened:Woodcuts by Morthon Garchikat Hillel House, (all the printsare for sale through December15. And Jaina Art in India, paint¬ing, sculpture, and architecturein photographs and reproduc¬tions from the collection of In¬grid Aahl in Foster Lounge,Monday through Friday, 9 to 5,until December 8.FilmsChafed Elbows and KennethAnger’s Scorpio Rising will beshown Tuesday and Wednesday,7, 9, and 11 p.m., at the FirstUnitarian Church (57th and Woodlawn). Student price is$1.00.TheaterThe Cherry Orchard will beshown at Harper Theater on No¬vember 21. Special preview willbe Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday,and Saturday at 8:30 P.M., andprice is $1.50.MusicFollowing The Cherry Orchardis the Harper Theater CoffeeHouse featuring the New Com¬pass Players and Glen Yarbor¬ough, at 11 p.m. and 1 a.m.At 8 tonight Anthony Braxton ofnew wave fame will give a con¬cert in Ida Noyes, sponsored bythe Contemporary Music Society.Next Tuesday (there will notbe a WEEKEND on Friday) theContemporary Camber Playerswill present Easley Blackwood,the pianist and composer, play¬ing the complete solo piano mu¬sic of Schoenberg, Berg, andWebern. Blackwood’s skill andaccomplishments are wellknown. Get tickets, if you possi¬bly can.Budding barber shop quartetsingers interested in singing inharmony, do not miss the meet¬ing today of the (SPEBQSA) atWoodlawn Residence, 5544 SouthResidence, 667-3435.wIIImduring the Thanksgiving holidayswe invite you to visitOUR UNIVERSITY SHOPYou’ll find a wide choice of suits, tweedsport jackets, topcoats and warm outer¬wear in sizes 36 to 44 . .. all with ourdistinctive styling and taste. Also fur¬nishings and other items.Our 3-piece Suits, $90 to $105Tweed Sport Jackets, $55 to $10Topcoats, $95 • Polo Coats, $ 135Tropical Worsted Tuxedos, $95Outerwear, jrom $37.50ISTAKISHIDMItgjgens irBoys furnishings,(fats echoes346 MADISON AVE, COR. 44TH ST., NEW YORK, N.Y. 1001746 NEWBURY, COR. BERKELEY ST., BOSTON, MASS. 02116pittsbuach • Atlanta • Chicago • *an franciico • lo* anceles2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE November 21, 1967IillThp Desperate JourneyWhen LSD became a properconcern for the popular presssuddenly last year, Time, Life,Newsweek, the Ladies HomeJournal and all the rest leapedinto the breach with a greateffluvia of folk myth, generalrumor, and trash. After con¬sidering the mess they hadmade of the subject, the mediamen launched a second volley,adding whatever informationthe doctors and psychologistshad scrambled together, withthe result that most peoplewere more confused than ever,and thus tended to simply re¬vert to their original prejudicesabout acid.To get away from this con¬fusion, I decided to try to getto the peovle who took aciddirectly. Twenty-eight studentsresponded to an ad / placed inthe Maroon last year. The re¬sponse was of course random;the reasons people respondedwere various. Some just cameto be interviewed to find outwhr* the other people had talk¬ed about. Also the word some¬how not about that I was anarc from the FDA.As a result my impressionshe highly biased. But at'east they are a fresh start.THE USE of drugs I found, isincorporated in a student’ssearch for a set of values alter¬native to those which confronthim. The reasons for this searchare obviously rumerous. Butthree major ones are alienation,emotional dissatisfaction withself, and an inability to formu¬late adult values and seeking —through drugs — a regression toa more juvenile means of inter¬personal interaction and experi¬encing pleasure.The alienated student can seekin drugs a means of openly re¬belling against the standards ofthe society, of formulating val¬ues, and of gaining into a sub¬culture, aleviating the pain ofhis alienation.Through LSD, it is possible tofind “uncommited commitment.”A student who takes LSD haspassively, but irrevocably, “com¬mitted” himself to a course ofaction for at least the next sev¬eral hours. Further, taking LSD,though generally condemned bythe society, is a private act af¬fecting no one other than thedrug user and which requires nocommitment to, but merely com¬mitment against, values. Yet itis an action which completelyengulfs the drug user.Although the students inter¬viewed felt that the greater so¬ ciety was supressing the use ofdrugs out of ignorance and fear,they were almost unanimouslycritical of Timothy Leary and hisvalues. Though this was in partbecause they viewed him as a“kook,” it may also be becauseof an inability to accept a set ofvalues associated with LSDwhich require personal commit¬ment.Students view LSD itself as be¬ing able to supply a set of val¬ues. Kenneth Kenniston, anauthority on alienation amongcollege students, stated that1. such is the cultismand propaganda that sur¬rounds drugs, especiallythe hallucinogens, thatmany students havecome to feel the statesinduced by these drugswill automatically pro¬duce a revelation of life’smeaning, or at least anexperience which itselfwill be highly significantand illuminating.The same opinion was less arti¬culately, but more pointedly, ex¬pressed by an interviewed stu¬dent:I think that part of thereason people take it(LSD) is, like, an “in”feeling. This is the sym¬bol of our generation.But I think also that peo¬ple look, like whenyou’re my age it’s prettyconfusing and what LSDis might be the answer,and you want it now. Ithink that’s why peopletake it. And I think also,people, you know, youget afraid, and you justwant something, some¬thing to, like, satisfy,and the pill is alwaysthere.Although most alienated stu¬dents do not accept it, LSD doesoffer them a ready-made set ofvalues which they may adopt,and admittance into a subcul¬ture which offers acceptancewithout demands and communitywithout commitment.Motives for taking LSD stem¬ming from emotional dissatisfac¬tion are more varied, more per¬sonalized, and more complex.The following reasons are pre¬sented as being neither collec¬tively all encompassing nor in¬dividually complete.Some students felt that it ispossible to achieve insight intotheir emotional state by usingLSD. Some compared the use ofLSD to psychotherapy. It wasFor The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 felt to be superior to psycho¬therapy in that it was more ex¬pedient and was less detatchedor intellectual. One interviewedstudent, when asked why hisfriends took LSD, stated:They take it for the samereasons that they wouldgo to a psychiatrist ex¬cept it’s cheaper andquicker. In some re¬spects a more emotion¬ally satisfying way ofworking problems out,because instead of beingtold about it, it happensto you.Another felt that he had gaineda better understanding of him¬self through LSD:I think I’ve gottin toknow myself a lot better.I’ve gotten to know a lotof what’s hidden or un¬conscious or something.Quite a bit of that I’vebecome aware of whileI’m on trips and I cansee it in myself when I’mnot on trips now. I canlook at myself, I think,with a little better per¬spective than I did be¬fore.A third felt that he was able torelive childhood experiences andfelt that, through several LSDexperiences, he could both reacha better understanding of his up¬bringing and emotionally re-ex¬perience events which were up¬setting. In all cases studentsstressed being able to “exper¬ience” under the influence ofLSD and implied that this exper¬iencing was intrinsically thera-putic.This assertion, however, washeld by a minority of the stu¬dents interviewed. Indeed, therewas considerable scorn of thisoutlook expressed by users atthe other extreme — those stu¬dents who took LSD “for fun.”LSD can also serve as a test.A student who is unsure of ordissatisfied with his emotionalstate would take LSD to assurehimself of his emotional sta¬bility. One student expressed thisin describing his first experiencewith LSD:It was very shocking;very enlightening; veryterrifying; very confus¬ing. I came out feelingthat I had somehow in¬creased my worth just by the fact that I had gottenthrough such an ordeal.Personal dissatisfaction is ob¬viously common among collegestudents. But some students feelthat this dissatisfaction can bedealt with by the extreme ex¬perience provided by LSD. A stu¬dent interviewed traced his useof LSD to his personal dissatis¬faction and then went on to stateI think that’s character¬istic of other people Iknow that use it (LSD),also. They’re people whoare dissatisfied withthemselves; they feelthat the failings in theirlives are internal; thatfor one reason or anotherthey can’t be or do whatthey want to. For emo¬tional reasons or otherreasons they take acid.In such a state a student mayseek an answer through an ex¬treme experience — an experi¬ence extreme in the sense thatit is totally removed from anyprevious experiences. Such anexperience can serve as the fo¬cal point for future personal in¬tegration.The experience with LSD pro¬vides a role in which the indi¬vidual’s uniqueness becomes ad¬ vantageous, rather than disad¬vantageous. The LSD experience,however, provides an experiencewhich is unique not only in itsdifference from the individual’sother life experiences, but alsoin that the individual’s experi¬ence is different from the exper¬iences of those around him tak¬ing the drug. But, despite thisdifference, the experience ispleasurable and is easily com¬municable to those who share it.Continued on Page FourContact Users..It’s clear to see ]IF YOU ARE 21 OR OYER, MALE OR FEMALE,HAVE A DRIVER-S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-4692 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 you can’t get ’emwetter, betterM+riHQ SOLV)^!• Don’t paymore...• Comparewith othersand SAVE...• Priced up toV3 less thanotherleadingsolutions.This ONE Solution . . .WETS • CLEANS • SOAKSAn antiseptic wetting, cleaning andsterilizing agent. Just a drop guaran¬tees a smoother surface when in¬serting your contact lenses. Endsirritation . . . Cleans better, too. Re¬tards build-up of foreign substanceson lenses . . . When used for soak¬ing, ANDREA DUMON solution keepslenses free from harmful bacteria.(larifea VunufyNEW YORK • CHICAGOLOS ANGELESNovember 21, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3ACIDContinued from Page ThreeEven the other end of the spec¬trum — taking LSD for fun —seems indicative that fun cannotbe attained through more con¬ventional means; that the druguser has essentially lost the abili¬ty to attain satisfaction from theexperiences which are offered inconventional life. Students men¬tioned combining LSD and sexand having heightened sensitivi¬ty. But that the two should becombined at all would seem toindicate that the students wereunable to obtain complete satis¬faction from sex alone.This dissatisfaction with selfmay be paralleled with a dis¬satisfaction with personal rela¬tions. LSD provides the contextfor a social “game” or a meansfor social interaction which ap¬pears significant to the partici¬pants but in which they do notrisk intimacy. LSD provides ameans of interaction on a child¬like level. A student intervieweddescribed his preparations for aforthcoming “acid party”:I think ... I think atrip is very childlike. Wedo ... We just went outthe other day and boughttoys at a toy store. Andthis . . . these are acidtoys. We’re going to usethem when we take atrip: finger paints, cray¬ons,' some stuff, I don’tknow, it’s called super-stuff or something . . .Just stupid little toythings like that.This was the extreme case. Butmore common was the descrip¬tion of feeling, while under theinfluence of LSD. that commu¬nication was extremely good be¬tween the people sharing the ex¬perience and that there wasa strong rapport, yet, after theexperience, realizing in retro¬spect that there was no extreme,meaningful communication. An¬other student, who always tookLSD in groups, described thissense of supposedly expandedcommunication:When you take acidwith somebody else andyou talk to each other,you make a conscious ef¬fort to keep on the samelevel and, if things workout properly, you have anumber of the same ex¬periences; you keep your¬self on the same level.The second time we hada very serious and in¬tense conversation andwe were all verypleased. We thought wehad a sense of commu¬nion and that we hadgained in our ability tocommunicate with eachother. In a group taking LSD, all ofthe members share the same ex¬perience or similar experiences.Because the LSD experience issuch an extreme experience —extreme in the sense that it isunrelated to or uninterpretableby previous experiences — eachindividual in the group will looktowards the norms formed bythe group for a basis to interprethis experience.There is a significant differ¬ence between the friendship pat¬terns of LSD users and non-LSDusers. LSD users have morefriends who have also taken LSDthan non-LSD users. This wouldindicate that after a student hastaken LSD he either seeks outas friends other people who havetaken the drug or attempts toconvert the friends that he al¬ready has to using the drug. Thismay be done for several reasons.Just as it is necessary to at¬tain social contacts to initiallyobtain the drug, so it is neces¬sary to maintain these contactsto have ready access to LSD.Because the use of LSD is notgenerally condoned, it will benecessary to justify the act tomove into a circle of friends whodo condone its use. Further, sucha group can also provide thegroup norms necessary for inter¬preting the LSD experience it¬self.Taking LSD is connected witha search towards alternative val¬ues. There is a tendency for thestudent to seek out the friend¬ship patterns which most closelymirror his own personal val¬ues or to change the values ofthe friends he has.If he has formed no values, hewill seek them through the groupnorms. This does not mean thatthis author feels that the use ofLSD by itself causes a changein values. However, the use ofLSD as part of a search for al¬ternative values will more firm¬ly commit a student to thatsearch.Further, through LSD a stu¬dent may come in contact withgroups having group valueswhich the student feels offer analternative set of values. Whenasked if his use of LSD hadchanged him, a student repliedVery little in terms of di¬rect experience. Since. . . over the period thatI have been using itI have changed in amore philosophical thanpsychological way. And alot of that has been be¬cause of my connectionwith these fifteen ortwenty people (who takeLSD) who have acted asa pretty important com¬ponent or stimulant or... oh, I’m not sure ofthe word. But as part ofthe group. So maybe as akind of secondary fash¬ion it (LSD) has hadinfluence. But in terms of discovering thingsabout myself or changingmy view of the world ithasn’t.Although the use of LSD itselfhad not changed him, it hadbrought him in contact with asocial group that did.In any case the use of LSDcannot be viewed as an isolatedincident in a student’s life. It isindicative of student’s search foran alternative to some personaldissatisfaction. It does not meanthat a student is sick or mis¬guided. It merely means that heis seeking, perhaps tentatively,perhaps desparately, a solutionwhere all others have failed tothe problems which confront usall. Those who view and seek tosupress the use of LSD as mere¬ly an isolated incident in a devi¬ant subculture will be not onlyunsuccessful but detrimental intheir efforts.S.L.LSDContinued from Page OneALTHOUGH students who hadexperienced lesser drugs weresignificantly more anxious to tryLSD, this does not mean thatthere is a cause-effect relation¬ship between the use of mari¬juana and the use of LSD. Manymarijuana users do not take LSDand some LSD users have takenLSD before marijuana.But a person strongly desiringto try LSD will do so regardlessof his previous experience orlack of experience with drugs.Third, some users waited untilthe immediate conditions werefavorable to taking LSD: freetime, no pressures, good spirits,friends who could be with them.In one extreme case, thesethree reasons combined caused adelay of two years between thedesire to take LSD and actuallytaking it: “I had had the LSDfor about five or six months be¬fore I took it and had been think¬ing about taking it for two yearsand working toward it, so tospeak. It’s something I wanted todo sometimes. I may not do itagain. I could at any time.”THOSE ABLE to obtain LSDwith a minimal amount of socialcontact with users often use ex¬tremely bad judgement in takingthe drug.Two students who had obtainedthe drug through the mail fromfriends in other cities took itin the dormitory alone. Sincethey did not know anyoneon campus who used LSD, theydid not discuss the use of thedrug with anyone. Nor did theyinform anyone that they weretaking the drug.A third student used even poor¬er judgment in his initial experi¬ence. “There was a jar labeled11 pff.1.1STALK! PASCALLCiLERYj cSuffillLiHfS Brown ’n Serve Rolls| 12 count■fcL66Li>riIr~=="”CRANBERRY SAUCE•'sale DATES, ’.yip; thru wii)., NOV. 15-K303 c J TISFlfOS JP CfRTIflfOGT'1226 E. 53rd ST. IN THE NEW S3KIMBARK PLAZA NEW STORE HOURSMon. Tues. Wed.9 to 7:30Thurs. Fri. 9-9Sat. 9-7:30 - Sun. 9-5 ‘morning glory seeds, one and ahalf doses’ (in the apartment Iwas visiting) and there was verylittle in the jar so I figured thishad already been taken and thiswas just a little left over and Ijust swallowed them and thatwas my first trip. It was verysimilar to LSD. . . .SOCIAL CONTACT with drugusers and familiarity with theirfolk knowledge on drug use,rather than being an incentivetowards the use of LSD, seems toserve as a precautionary influ¬ence. Student users interviewedwho had had social contact withdrug users and who were assuredof being able to obtain the drugtended to delay their initial useof it.Perhaps to the disappointmentof most readers, the interviewdid not concern itself with des¬criptions of what the actual LSDexperience was like. However, itdid reveal taking LSD is a socialevent — students very rarelytake the drug alone. The precau¬tion of having someone “around”is not generally used.ALTHOUGH students generallyplan for their first trip, suceed-ing trips tend to become morespontaneous. One intervieweedescribed the conditions for tak¬ing LSD as “always in a group.And just wherever we are — insomeone’s apartment always. Weusually go into it in a fairly casu¬al way.. ..“Something usually happens tomake it a pretty splashy experi¬ence. Since most of the peoplehave been using it (LSD) prettylong, for quite a while, it’s notsomething that you necessarilymake a lot of plans for.”Although LSD is almost alwaystaken in some private place suchas an apartment or a dormitoryroom, students are surprisinglymobile. While under the influenceof LSD they go for walks, go folkdancing, attend concerts, or, asin one case, attend class.Some students combined LSDwith sex, claiming to haveheightened sensitivity during thesexual experience, and one inter¬viewee claimed to have over¬come frigidity under the influ¬ence of LSD.ALMOST ALL of the students interviewed stated that at sometime during their experiences un¬der LSD they were uncomfort¬able to varing degrees. Three ofthe 28 interviewees had had “badtrips,” or experiences whichwere extremely upsetting.A “bad trip” is best describedby one of the students who hadone.“The terror is a .... I canbest describe it in the hallucina¬tion that I had. I had gone to theend of the universe. It was con¬ceived as an extrapolation ofthree dimensions.“And there was this mem¬brane, infinitely thin, and I wasbeing propelled toward this thing.It was sort of pulsing and therewas a vast void behind it.I knew that if I touched thatmembrane it would be rent. Iknew that beyond that mem¬brane was the Outside, capital“0”. I blacked out as I cameclose to it. .. .“You find out that you cannotbreak through beyond a certainpoint. There is a point beyondwhich you cannot go because the‘I’ that is feeling you going iswhat is going. . . . After that youdon’t take LSD for a long time.Eight months.”ANOTHER student who hadhad a bad trip described it inmore personal terms. “I becameintensely aware of personal prob¬lems and unable to stop thethought, unable to break the cir¬cle of thoughts. Very, very un¬comfortable. Very tortured, help¬less. . . .“I don’t know how to describeit. A very, very sick feeling.Wishing a wish only that it wouldstop. Why can’t I break out fromthis?”All three students deliberatelyreframed from using LSD aftertheir bad trips. Although one stu¬dent eventually gave up LSD,none of them gave it up becauseof their bad trips.One student sought medicalhelp at a hospital other than Bil¬lings following his bad trip. Hewas given an anedote for LSDand told “to go home and sleepit off.”Mr. Lander is a fourth-yearstudent in the tutorial studiesprogram in the social sciencescollegiate division."PHONE-IN”24 Hour Telephone Answering Service$5.75 PER MONTHCE 6—5300General Tel. Answering Service 30 W. WashingtonGOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERNY 3-2559lEat More For Lost!Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders4 WEEKEND MAGAGINE November 21, 1967Letters to the Editors of The MaroonPersonal AttackHerman Finer’s “What AilsMorgenthau” in The ChicagoMaroon of November 17 is writ¬ten in the finest tradition of de¬molishing an argument by abus¬ing its author. It is a crude at¬tempt at character assassination.Hans Morgenthau will survive it.But it demeans rational debate,the academic community, andgood journalism to allow a vic¬ious personal attack to take theplace of objective analysis.After all, Morgenthau did notattack the President of the UnitedStates, he criticized what he anda steadily increasing part of theAmerican people consider thePresident’s misguided foreign pol¬icy and its effect on the domesticscene.EDWARD LOWINSKYDepartment of MusicFootball ReturnsWhile I was walking with theanti-Dow pickets past BusinessEast on the 6th, I heard a stu¬dent yell from the stairs in frontof that building, “Bring backBIG-Time football.” 1 was struckby the nature of the remarksince it dug a little deeper thanmost taunts from disagreeingcrowds. In a word, the protestagainst Dow had all the aspects of a football rally. The only thinglacking was a football game onthe following day.I think that it is more than ob¬vious that the SDS and SGorganizers of this rally-protest-picket and, more importantly,those involved in the marching,have lost all sight of what theyare rallying for or against. Toillustrate my point, I noticed asign when I first arrived at theQuad. The sign read “FDow.”I APPROACHED the individ¬ual and asked him if he thoughtthe sign appropriate to the ideabehind the rally. He said yes. Ithen asked him if he thought itmight be able to convince thosemillions of Americans who areneeded in the anti-war move¬ment to see the horrors of ourinvolvement in Vietnam. His re¬ply was that the TV or moviecameras would never photographthe sign so what differencewould it make.I fear that this individual has been caught up in his own logic.This crusader against mech¬anized society producing mech¬anized wars saw only that amechanical device would notcapture his four-letter word andthus the use of this word wassomehow justified. After all, ifthe referee doesn’t see you graba face mask, then your act ofgrabbing that face mask is alsojustified.The only question I can ask ishave the students and othershere at Chicago lost all vision ofthe purposes of the anti-warmovement. Is it only a diversionsince there isn’t big time foot¬ball?I would inplore these individ¬uals that if they truly wish tostop this war, they must concen¬trate on the people who can stopit. Why not start off with a doorto door leaflet session in SouthShore or in Evanston? Thesepeople are voters. They can dosomething. They can change theSAMUEL A. BEUBOY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE in*PICKUP * DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lak« Park493-5200 Vosne Romanee1962 YinfaqeBurgundy.SPECIAL *4yfi A FULL GALLON OF COLDDRAUGHT BEER*1 39PER GAL69C per Helf Gal.Gill a/id Cm/hz/u/HEADQUARTERS FOR CUT RATE LIQUORS1238 EAST 47TH ST. HE 6-6500We Deliver • 2 Drive In WindowsV* Block West of Ouf-r DriveGuesswho forgothis NoDozEven NoDoz couldn’t help this guy. But it can help you, when you’re overstudied orunderslept —or in any situation where your attention wanders and your eyelids be¬gin to droop. It can happen to anyone. When it happens to you, popa couple of NoDoz. NoDoz really works to help you stay alert.NoDoz is non habit-forming. Wherever you’re going, take NoDozalong for the ride.THE ONE TO TAKE WHEN YOU HAVE TO STAY ALERT. officials in Washington by theircumulative votes. If this is notwhat the Peace groups reallywant, then set up a picket tom¬orrow to “BRING BACK BIG-TIME FOOTBALL TO THE UOF C”; after all, it would bemore in keeping with the spiritof Monday’s rally.CHRISTOPHER W. NUGENTMAT Program Letters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld 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.UNIVERSITY SYMPHONYORCHESTRAAUDITIONS DEC. 2, 2—4 P.M.1967-68 CONCERTO CONTESTThe winner of these auditions will play a Concertowith the Orchestra in the Winter Quarter Concert.For Information: Call ext. 2613 or 667-24141. What’s a math major doing with“The Complete Guide to thePruning of the Breadfruit Tree”?It was a terrific buy. 2. That’s what you said about thespelunking outfit you boughtlast week.Listen—that wasmarked down 50%.3. And the condor eggs?Could you refuse 2 dozenfor the price of one? 4. No wonder you’re always broke.But look at the buys I get!5. If you want a good buy, why don’tyou look into Living Insurance fromEquitable? At our age the cost islow, and you get solid protectionnow that continues to cover your familylater when you get married. Plusa nice nest egg when you retire.I’ll take two!For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: James L. Morice, Manager, College Employment.The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F ©Equitable 1967November 21, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONTYPEWRITERSSalt of name brand typewriters - Portable - Standard - Electric.<Re£^inj done by Factory trained mechanics on typewriters andadding machines.by the month on Portable, Standard and Electric type¬writers. and also adding machines & calculators.Typewriter DepartmentTha University off Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.South Sidei Newest Dealership!nt-.n t.AKS FINE USEn CARSComplete Line of *6? Mercurys LEASING AND RENTALComets SERVICEThegNew Montego Daily' Weekly' Month,yLincoln Continental AI1 Makes and ModelsHOURS• 3-9 Caily9-6 Saturday and Sunday8640 South Chicago Ave. ES 5-9800November 21, 1967 II won'tgo into business whenI graduate because:□ a. I’d lose my individuality.□ b. It’s graduate school for me.□ c. My mother wants me to be a doctor.Can’t argue with c), but before you checka) or b)—pencils up! There have been somechanges. Drastic changes in the businessscene. But changes in the vox populi attituderegarding business ... especially on campus... just haven’t kept pace.Take the belabored point that businessturns you into a jellyfish. The men who runmost of the nation’s successful firms didn’tarrive by nepotism, by trusting an Ouijaboard, or by agreeing with their bosses. Alongthe way, a well-modulated “No” was said.And backed up with the savvy and guts to¬day’s business demands.In short, individuality is highly prized inmuch of the business world-the successfulmuch. Even when the business is big. LikeWestern Electric, the manufacturing and sup¬ply unit of the Bell System.We provide communications equipment for our Bell System teammates, the Bell telephonecompanies. This takes a lot of thought, deci¬sions, strong stands for our convictions, (andsometimes some mistakes ... we’re human,every 160,000 of us). ,Individuality pays off. Not only in raises,but in personal reward as well. Like an engi¬neer who knew deep down that there was abetter way to make a certain wire connector—and did. Or a WE gal who streamlined time-consuming office procedures, and saved ussome $63,000 a year.Rewards and accolades. For saying “No.”For thinking creatively and individually. Fordoing.Not every hour is Fun Hour, but if you’vegot imagination and individuality-you’ve gotit made. With a business like Western Electric.We’ll even help you answer b) with our Tui¬tion Refund program. Come on in and gofor President!Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM6 THE CHICAGO MAROONo * 'Maroon Classified AdsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,40c per line repeat. Count 35 characters andspaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60437.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.SITUATIONS WANTEDCHEMIST AVAILABLE for fulltime, part-time, or temporary work . . . 643-8148.FIRESStrike up Sparks with Upper Flint! COFFEEHOUR, 9-11, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22, RickertLounge. APARTMENTS TO SHARE WORKTwo male grad students need roomate toshare apt. Private bedroom. Kitchen facili¬ties. 53rd and Harper. $44/month. 288-1262.WANTED PART-TIME SECRETARY WANTED for SGCharter flights. Minimum salary $2.00 perhour. Apply SG Office, INH.LATE PERSONAL... . . . UADni,mnn SIGN UP NOW in SG office for ChristmaskaArnnm fZL ^ * VaCatiOO thPS tO B 3 11 i DIO CC / W3 S h i t C O .DESK to share bedroom. Roger at Ext. 3265or 667-0659.WORKDirector of Humanistically Oriented Children'sProgram seeks young men for Sunday morn¬ings, 10:30 to 12:30. Call 922-5561 or 643-4753.Counselors wanted for a small camp withan unstructured program. Unusual opportun¬ities for individual initiative. See Paul Meng,5200 S. Blackstone, BU 8-1100. $70.00: New York, but $35,Denver, $85.00Boston, $95.00L.A., (H-A), $175.00S.F., $190.00 plane $80.00PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENTThe Maroon apologizes to J.K.M. Inc. for theommission of the following note in the TOADHALL ADS of 11/14 and 11/17: OFFER INLIEU OF ALL OTHER PROMOTIONS ORSPECIALS —100 RECORD LIMIT. 580 Pentagon Marchers ConvictedThe Department of Justice hasannounced that of 683 persons ar¬rested in the October 21-22 Penta¬gon demonstration, 580 adults havebeen convicted of federal law vio¬lations ranging from disorderlyconduct to simple assault and con¬tempt of court.Most of these resulted in jail sen¬tences and fines. Cases against twohave not been tried and forty-threehave been dismissed.Though the majority of the sen¬tences were suspended on good be¬havior, 51 persons have served orare serving jail terms ranging upto 35 days, according to AttorneyGeneral Ramsey Clark. Fifty-eight juveniles were turned over to youthauthorities or parents.Convicted demonstrators paidfines totaling $7,944.SKICHRISTMAS IN ASPEN$169Leave Chi Dec 16th 4:30pmarrive back in Chi Dec 24thIncludes all train, bus,lodging in Aspen, tow tickets,all meals on trains, breakfastdaily, pool, taxes.NORTHWESTERN U. SKI GROUPcall Dick 764 6264 or 262 3765We still want job with high pay, few hours,and super-inferesting, creative work . . .Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3266. BANDERSNATCH Lonely Hearts Thanksgiving9:00 to 10:00 P.M. FR Fri. EveningW.C. Fields FREE COFFEEFree Free Free Free Free Free Free Free FreeFOR SALECAFE EUROPA —For Sale — 1440 E. 57thStreet, Call Lazio after 6 P.M. — 684-9398.Eric Burdon and The Animals, WINDS OFCHANGE. Their newest album, stereo, playedonce, perfect condition. $2.00. Call Ml 3-0800,Ext. 3266.DUAL 1019 and K660 all transistor amplifier,both for $150.00. 256-4785 after 7 P.M. SUMMER SCHOOL ON MAUI!HAWAII• MAUNAOLU COLLEGE OFFERS an exciting programfor Summer, 1968UHER 4000-L REPORT —$250 or best offer— Call 324-8145 after 4:30 P.M.PERSONALS • TEN SCHOLARSHIPS available — two full tuition,room and board; eight tuition grants. Preferred fields:Asian and American Studies. [^College Relations Director■ c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C, 20008• Mease send meI a Sheraton StudentS I.D. so I can save upJ to 20% on• Sheraton rooms.TYPING — reasonable rates —call before 10P.M. — 731-5980.Will H.L. Hunt try to kick CITIZENS |FORUM off the air? Listen to WTAQ A.M.,1300 K.C., every Monday & Thursday from12:15-12:35 P.M.The WOODCUTS OF MORTON GARCHIKwill be on display at Hillel until December15th. All are for sale. • LIBERAL ARTS courses from freshmen to senior level,special offerings in Asian/American studies, workshopsin American music and drama, painting under well-knownvisiting Artist. Credits are transferable.• FULLY ACCREDITED as an independent Junior Col¬lege, Maunaolu College of Maui is planning to offerfour-year curriculum for Bachelor of Arts degree by1971.If you missed your copy of the SDS news¬letter, don't despair — copies are available inthe Student Activities office in Ida Noyes.fly? Fly? FLY?Lessons available NOW — phone J. Levy,Campus Representative, Ml 3-0800, Ext.3266.POLITICS FOR PEACE: convassing, 12:45,Sunday, Ida Noyes.Student Loans now available at the StudentCO-OP. Maximum $25.00 for 3 weeks.HAPPY THANKSGIVING, LOVE ANDOTHER OBSCENITIES ... the businessstaff . . .Support the SDS newsletter and get it mailedto you (Be an entrepreneur). Supporting sub¬scription is only $5.00. Send orders to SDSNewsletter, Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th Street,Chicago 60637. Please use a Faculty ExchangeAddress if possible — stamps cost extra.Beauty Is as beauty does.Only CHILDREN see monsters. CJ & MB.Take a trip with Marco Polo — 288-5944.Reserve November 29th for the LATKE- jHAMANTASH DEBATE. At Ida Noyes.WRITERS' WORKSHOP. PL 2-8377.Do you know as many kids as we do whoblame their troubles on RAG dolls. MB 8,CJ.CITIZENS FORUM wants to bring the Anti-War Movement to television: MEETINGTuesday evening at 7:30 P.M., at Ida Noyes.Where in a time of sunshine does the rainfall so clean? In the Vineyard, Free.The Stench of Iniquity is actually the re¬frigerator. CJ & MB.There will be $100.00 in prizes for the bestStudent-Made films at the Liberal Arts Con¬ference University of Chicago Film FestivalApril 5, 1968. The deadline for entries isMarch 15, Maximum length will be 15minutes."The point 3, or the "interval" mi-fa, wasthe place where the "shock" came in whichgave do 192 of the second octave." • ACTIVITIES include hiking, swimming, surfing, per¬forming arts, social program. Riding and tennis areavailable by arrangement.• FIRST SESSION: JUNE 10 TO JULY 10• SECOND SESSION: JULY 12 TO AUGUST 10• WRITE Summer School AdmissionsMAUNAOLU COLLEGE OF MAUIPaia, Maui, Hawaii 96779Maunaolu College has a few openings for SpringSemester January I I to May 12, 1968.DANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANOS IN AMERICAObscenity is a state of mind.ANTHONY BRAXTONIN CONCERTTuesday 21, November Ida Noyes8:00 P.M.Beautiful, affectionate, playful kitten. PARTPERSIAN, MALE, 4 months, Very patientwith children. 684-8251.Naughty Bird seems to have run afoul ofthe lovers guild. NB.CITIZENS FORUM IS A DANGEROUSLEFT-WING PROPOGANDA ORGANIZATION. . . Douglas Kimble of "Let Freedom Ring."INDIA Rip out this ad now and.bring it toCheetah this weekend for aSPEC'L UNIV. of CHICAGOSTUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00■■■■■■■■ ■■■■»*■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR. $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.If we can get 150 people, we can fly I(FREEDOM!) ROUND TRIP TO INDIA foronly $500.00 each (usually $1200.00 on acommercial flight) — Call Ext. 3269 days,667-5190 evenings. GROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at L0 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 2000WIOB OPIN FRIDAY. SATURDAY. SUNDAY AT 8 P.M. Name — —AddressReservations with the special low rate are confirmed in advance(based on availability) for Fri., Sat., Sun. nights, plus Thanks¬giving (Nov. 22-26), Christmas (Dec. 15-Jan. 1) and Julythrough Labor Day! Many Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns offerstudent rates during other periods subject to availability at timeof check-in and may be requested.“Ah, to be young again!To fly Ozark at Vi off!”Fly Ozark Youth Fare and save 33!/3% ... with confirmedreservations. If you’re under 22, write or call Ozarkfor a $10 Youth I.D. Card application.(Travel under plan not applicable during major holiday periods)CALL —726-4680 go-getters goOZARKNovember 21, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7CHICAGOBLUES3 Bands A WeekOpen 7 NightsTill 4a.m.MOTHER BLUES1305 N. WELLSFree DeliveryMon.-Thursto allDormitories andFraternity HousesCall 324-5340Nicky'sRestaurant1208 E. 53rd St.we deliverCOMPACTCONTACTWhy carry around a wholechemistry set full of potionsfor wetting, cleaning andsoaking contact lenses?Lensme is here! It’s an all¬purpose solution for completetens care, made by theMurine Company.So what else is new?Well, the removablelens carrying caseon the bottom ofevery bottle, that'snew, too. And it’sexclusive withlensine, thesolution forall your contactlens problems.for contacts TRADE UP TO AN ELLIPTICAL CARTRIDGEORIGINALLY*44.95NOWEMP1REssssE *19.95■ PICKERING VI5/AME-3Pre-owned, reconditioned Tape Recorders, -TV's, Amplifiers-PRICED TO SELLHiFi STUDIOS1215 East 63rd.OPEN 10 to 6FA 4-8400 8533 S. Cottage GroveOPEN I0-6:30-Mon. &Thurs. 10-9-Sun. I 1-5 RANT ANN UNUSUAL GISTSReplicas of Ancient Near Eastern Artifacts and Jewelry(Ca. 3000 B.C. to 100 A.D.)THC sua,Museum StoreOriental Institute Lobby1155 E. 58th StreetOpen 10 A.M.- 4 P.M. everyday except Monday.Direct From its Nine Month Run in New York!Returns to AARDVARK beginning December 4."R IHOnDERFULLV COCK-EVED HRlLUCinflllOn!' , , ,,ROBERT DOWNEY'SCHAFED ELBOWS“The best of the pnderground films.”CRIST, WJT."Funny, irreverent.” CHICAGO TRIBUNE... sharp ribald humor.”crowther, times./rSnIY “Hard-swinging, and wild.”. /Sw WINSTEN, POST.*“Wild, isn’t it?” DAILY NEWS.“No holds barred lampooning.” CUE.“Downey is a genuine humorist."NEW YORKER.andfckt KENNETH ANGER’SSCORPIO% RISING^N“Best of the underground!^ A beautiful movie!”NEW YORKER.“An arresting change of pace.”WINSTEN, POST.STARTSATIn Piper's Alley* 1608 Wells*Chicago, IN. 60614Extra 6:30 — 8:00 — 10:00 P.M. Daily11:30 P.M. Showr F Friday, Saturday. The HOME of New Cinemain ChicagoCall 337 —4654THE CHICAGO MAROON November 21, 1967