i. C Cl.0 t - L 6063VOL. 76, L Non.profjt 0_3U- S- POSTAGEPAID1 Chicago, IJlinoiaPsrmit Ko. 7931 cago MaroonkMCAGQJ ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1967DRUG CONFERENCE 0Vi Op Cn7(_' ^0Pot /V^FoundedIn 1192By JOHN SIEFERTStaff Writer“I could make a case that if ayoung man goes through collegewithout using marijuana, his ab¬stinence bespeaks a rigidity in hischaracter and a fear of hisimpulses that is hardly desirable.”The speaker was a participant inthe National Student Association’sDrug Conference held in Ida NoyesHall over the weekend. The con¬ference was the first of five stu¬dent drug conferences sponsoredby the NSA under a $50,000 grantfrom the National Institute of Men¬tal Health.Participants in the conference in¬cluded students, faculty members,administrators, from several mid-western schools and experts ondrug use. More than 100 delegatestock part.Campus policy toward drug usewas a key topic in the three daysof discussions. According to How¬ard S. Becker, professor of sociol¬ogy at Northwestern University,schools take harsh action againststudent drug users for two rea¬sons:They actually believe all druguse is harmful, and second theyare under intense pressure fromalumni, trustees, and the public tocrack down.Mass HysteriaDr. J. Thomas Ungerleiter of theU.C.L.A. Neurological Institutesaid that most campus drug inci¬dents are a direct result of luridsensationalism on the part of the |press. ‘‘The hysteria began when j the mass media began publicizingLSD as instant happiness. Butafter a few scare stories, a veryfrightened mass media began pub¬licizing LSD as instant death.”Becker stated that it takes ad¬ministrators and the press — asj well as students — to create adrug incident on campus. As anexample, Becker offered the caseof his own administration whichinitially ignored a televised potparty at Northwestern. But aftermany lurid news stories and angrycalls from alumni and trustees, theuniversity called for the expulsionj and arrest of the students in¬volved.Another example of the role ofthe press was offered by Dr. Dan-| iel X. Freedman, chairman of thedepartment of psychiatry at theUniversity of Chicago, who saidthat present reports of chromo¬some damage due to LSD have allthe elements of a scare story. “Idon’t think these findings were justa plot by the establishment to dis¬credit LSD,” Freedman said, ‘‘butthey were prematurely published.”Freedman said that no definiteproof exists that LSD will damagea person’s genetic apparatus.Studies, Freedman said, are al¬most evenly split between thosethat have found chromosome dam¬age and those that have not.Freedman noted that there is noautomatic connection between jchromosome damage and birth de¬fects. ‘‘There is almost no evi- !dence,” Freedman said, “from :European clinics that have used i LSD for over 20 years that thedrug causes defective children.”He added, however, that pregnantwomen should avoid taking thei drug.Sick SocietyAccording to Dr. Joel Fort, so¬ciologist at the University of Cali¬fornia, the use of mind-altering. drugs is an index of a sick, cor¬rupt, and destructive society.“Our society,” Fort said, “treatsmarijuana as if it were a combina¬tion of cyanide and the hydrogenbomb. Real crime mushroomswhile police get their kicks busting! college students.”Fort stated that over one millionj people have used an LSD-type' drug at least once, although he es¬timated that the number of regu¬lar users numbers only in thetens of thousands. These figures,he said, do not include the 250,000Indians who legally use peyote andmescaline as members of the Na¬tive American Church.The responsibility for our pres¬ent drug laws, Fort said, can beplaced squarely on the FederalNarcotics Bureau. Fort said theBureau puts out mainly self-serv¬ing statistics and lies designed toincrease its Congressional appro¬priation.Fort said that the laws againstmarijuana were re-examined onlywhen upper-middle-class citizensbegan smoking grass. As long asmarijuana were confined to thelower classes, ethnic minorities,and hippies, Fort said, legal re¬pression was thought appropriate. | The Maroon—RERGRASS: Why Don't These Young People Stay Home and WatchTelevision like God Intended?'Fort drew a distinction betweenphysical addition and psychologicaldependency on drugs. He remarkedthat law officials stopped stressingthe alleged dangers of physical ad¬diction to marijuana when youthslearned the truth from first handexperience. Now, Fort said, lawofficials are stressing psychologi¬cal dependency. He noted that in¬dividuals can be psychologically de¬pendent on other things besidesdrugs, such as cigarettes, tele¬vision, or potato chips.Dr. Freedman quoted an elderly; law maker in Springfield who said, “Why don’t these young peoplestay home and watch televisionlike God intended!”Freedman discussed the mean¬ing of the drug experience. “TheIndians say peyote teaches. It putsyou in the mind of God.” Freed¬man said the psychedelics enhancethe sense of truth, the sense thateverything is meaningful. Theymake your experience — whetherit is banal, meaningful, or asinine— seem profound.” This part ofthe mind, he said, was exactlywhat William James wrote about,Turn to Page 3Nuclear 25th Anniversary SaturdayPLAQUE UNVEILED: Chancellor Hutchins (far right) shows plaquehonoring first controlled nuclear chain reaction to (from left) Wal¬ter H. Zinn, Sumner T. Pike, Robert F. Bacher, Samuel Allison,Farrington Daniels, William W. Waymack, and Enrico Fermi. The 25th anniversary of the firstcontrolled nuclear chain reactionwill be observed here this Fridayand Saturday with a program feat¬uring distinguished scientists, gov¬ernmental leaders and prominentpioneers of the nuclear age.As part of the program a sculp¬ture—“Nuclear Energy” by HenryMoore—will be unveiled at the sitewhere the first atomic pile wentcritical on December 2, 1942. Thesculpture has been provided forpublic viewing by the B. F. Fergu¬son Monument Fund of the Art Ins¬titute of Chicago.The entire program of seminars,lectures, dinners and a motion pic¬ture premiere will take place with¬in four city blocks of the placewhere the late Enrico Fermi, theNobel Laureate physicist, directedthe experiment in a squash court.The court was under the since-demolished Stagg Field WestStands.Among main elements of the pro¬gram arranged by Herbert L. And¬erson, a member of Fermi’s teamin 1942, now professor of physicsand in the Enrico Fermi Institutefor Nuclear Studies, are: • A reunion of the majority ofthe surviving scientists, engineers,technicians and others who werepresent 25 years ago to witness thefirst reactor as it went into oper¬ation. Acceptances for the reunionhave been received from 33 of theapproximately 42 persons whowere with Fermi at Stagg Field forthe “birthday of the nuclear age.”• A series of seminars on the hist-tory, applications and internationalaspects of atomic energy that willfeature speeches by six N o b e 1Laureate scientists.• The unveiling of Henry Moore’s“Nuclear Energy” by Mrs. EnricoFermi, widow of the physicist. Thework is mounted on a specially-constructed outdoor pedestal at thesite where the first nuclear pile,designed and developed by herlate husband, went critical on Dec¬ember 2, 1942, at 3:36 p.m. HenryMoore is scheduled to attend theunveiling at 3:36 p.m. Saturday.• The Premiere of a 30-minutecolor motion picture, “The DayTomorrow Began.” It will be theculmination of the observance Sat¬urday night. The movie relates the I stories of the people and events in¬volved in the first atomic pile’sdevelopment and operation. The; film was produced by The ArgonneNational Laboratory and was fi¬nanced by the U. S. Atomic EnergyCommission.i • Three major dinners and aluncheon. On Friday, December1, the University’s Visiting Com¬mittee will honor Henry Moore ata dinner on campus. In addition,the Fermi Memorial observancecommittee will be host to mem¬bers of the Fermi team at a re¬union dinner on campus on Friday.On Saturday, invited guests andmembers of the reunion group willattend a luncheon featuring a dis¬tinguished speaker. Also on Satur¬day, a civic dinner for 500 personswill be held as a prelude to thepremiere of the motion picture.A grant of $25,000 has been re¬ceived from the CommonwealthEdison Company of Chicago, toassist in underwriting the interna¬tional event. In addition, the Uni¬versity has contributed thousandsof dollars of its resources to ar¬range the observance.Turn to Page 4CHICAGOBLUES3 Bands A WeekOpen 7 NightsTill 4a.m.MOTHER BLUES1305 N. WELLSFree DeliveryMon. —Thursto allDormitories andFraternity HousesCall 324-5340Nicky'sRestaurant1208 E. 53rd St.we deliver TRADE UP TO AN ELLIPTICAL CARTRIDGEORIGINALLYM4.95 ^NOW519.95EMPIRE 888SE PICKERING VI5/AME-3Pre-owned, reconditioned Tape Recorders, -TV’s, Amplifiers-PRICED TO SELLHiFi STUDIOSCOMPACTCONTACTWhy carry around a wholechemistry set full of potionsfor wetting, cleaning andsoaking contact lenses?Lensine is here! It's an all-i purpose solution for complete: lens care, made by theMurine Company.So what else is new?Well, the removablelens carrying caseon the bottom of: every bottle, that'snew, too. And it’s: exclusive withi Lensine, thesolution forall your contactlens problems.for contacts 1215 East 63rd.OPEN 10 to 6FA 4-8400 8533 S. Cottage GroveOPEN I0-6:30-Mon. &Thurs. 10-9-Sun. 11-5 RARl UNUSUAL CffTSReplicas of Ancient Near Eastern Artifacts and Jewelry(Ca. 3000 B.C. to 100 A.D.)7HB S04,Museum StoreOriental Institute Lobby1155 E. 58th Streety-Open 10 A.M.- 4 P.M. everyday except Monday.Direct From its Nine Month Run in New York!Returns to AARDVARK beginning December 4."H UlOnDERFULLV (OCK-EVED HIUlUmiflTIOn! ,ROBERT DOWNEY’SCHAFED ELBOWS“The best of the pnderground films.”CRIST, WJT.’’Funny, irreverent.” CHICAGO TRIBUNE./wv .. sharp ribald humor.”Aj®Sj/ CROWTHER, TIMES.“Hard-swinging, and wild.”L WINSTEN, POST.* /ttajj “Wild, isn’t it?” DAILY NEWS."No holds barred lampooning.” CUE.“Downey is a genuine humorist.”NEW YORKER.andKENNETH ANGER’SSCORPIOArising“Best of the underground!A beautiful movie!”NEW YORKER.“An arresting change of pace.”WINSTEN, POST.STARTSATIn Piper’s Alley* 1608 Wells*Chicago, M. 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.V'- k ^rcL ^3» 11 fcOb?VOL. 76, b Non - Profit Org.U- S. POSTAGE |paidChicago, I!linoiaPormit No. 79- cago Maroon FoundedIn 1192l ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1967Ov\DRUG CONFERENCEnrc i t100 Delegates DiscussBy JOHN SIEFERTStaff Writer“I could make a case that if ayoung man goes through collegewithout using marijuana, his ab¬stinence bespeaks a rigidity in hischaracter and a fear of hisimpulses that is hardly desirable.”The speaker was a participant inthe National Student Association’sDrug Conference held in Ida NoyesHall over the weekend. The con¬ference was the first of five stu¬dent drug conferences sponsoredby the NSA under a $50,000 grantfrom the National Institute of Men¬tal Health.Participants in the conference in¬cluded students, faculty members,administrators, from several mid-western schools and experts ondrug use. More than 100 delegateslock part.Campus policy toward drug usewas a key topic in the three daysof discussions. According to How¬ard S. Becker, professor of sociol¬ogy at Northwestern University,schools take harsh action againststudent drug users for two rea¬sons:They actually believe all druguse is harmful, and second theyare under intense pressure fromalumni, trustees, and ti e public tocrack down.Mass HysteriaDr. J. Thomas Ungerleiter of theU.C.L.A. Neurological Institutesaid that most campus drug inci¬dents are a direct result of luridsensationalism on the part of thepress. “The hysteria began when the mass media began publicizingLSD as instant happiness. Butafter a few scare stories, a veryfrightened mass media began pub¬licizing LSD as instant death.”Becker stated that it takes ad¬ministrators and the press — aswell as students — to create adrug incident on campus. As anexample, Becker offered the caseof his own administration whichinitially ignored a televised potparty at Northwestern. But aftermany lurid news stories and angrycalls from alumni and trustees, theuniversity called for the expulsionand arrest of the students in¬volved.Another example of the role ofthe press was offered by Dr. Dan¬iel X. Freedman, chairman of thedepartment of psychiatry at theUniversity of Chicago, who saidthat present reports of chromo¬some damage due to LSD have allthe elements of a scare story. “Idon’t think these findings were justa plot by the establishment to dis¬credit LSD,” Freedman said, “butthey were prematurely published.”Freedman said that no definiteproof exists that LSD will damagea person’s genetic apparatus.Studies, Freedman said, are al¬most evenly split between thosethat have found chromosome dam¬age and those that have not.Freedman noted that there is noautomatic connection betweenchromosome damage and birth de¬fects. “There is almost no evi¬dence,” Freedman said, “from iEuropean clinics that have used i LSD for over 20 years that thedrug causes defective children.”He added, however, that pregnantwomen should avoid taking thedrug.Sick SocietyAccording to Dr. Joel Fort, so¬ciologist at the University of Cali¬fornia, the use of mind-alteringdrugs is an index of a sick, cor¬rupt, and destructive society.“Our society,” Fort said, “treatsmarijuana as if it were a combina¬tion of cyanide and the hydrogenbomb. Real crime mushroomswhile police get their kicks bustingj college students.”Fort stated that over one millionj people have used an LSD-typedrug at least once, although he es¬timated that the number of regu¬lar users numbers only in thetens of thousands. Xhese figures,he said, do not include the 250,000Indians who legally use peyote andmescaline as members of the Na¬tive American Church.The responsibility for our pres¬ent drug laws, Fort said, can beplaced squarely on the FederalNarcotics Bureau. Fort said theBureau puts out mainly self-serv¬ing statistics and lies designed toincrease its Congressional appro¬priation.Fort said that the laws againstmarijuana were re-examined onlywhen upper-middle-class citizensbegan smoking grass. As long asmarijuana were confined to thelower classes, ethnic minorities,and hippies, Fort said, legal re¬pression was thought appropriate. The Maroon—RERGRASS: Why Don't These Young People Stay Home and WatchTelevision like God Intended?'Fort drew a distinction betweenphysical addition and psychologicaldependency on drugs. He remarkedthat law officials stopped stressingthe alleged dangers of physical ad¬diction to marijuana when youthslearned the truth from first handexperience. Now, Fort said, lawofficials are stressing psychologi¬cal dependency. He noted that in¬dividuals can be psychologically de¬pendent on other things besidesdrugs, such as cigarettes, tele¬vision, or potato chips.Dr. Freedman quoted an elderlylaw maker in Springfield who said, “Why don’t these young peoplestay home and watch televisionlike God intended!”Freedman discussed the mean¬ing of the drug experience. “TheIndians say peyote teaches. It putsyou in the mind of God.” Freed¬man said the psychedelics enhancethe sense of truth, the sense thateverything is meaningful. Theymake your experience — whetherit is banal, meaningful, or asinine— seem profound.” This part ofthe mind, he said, was exactlywhat William James wrote about,Turn to Page 3Nuclear 25th Anniversary SaturdayThe 25th anniversary of the firstcontrolled nuclear chain reactionwill be observed here this Fridayand Saturday with a program feat¬uring distinguished scientists, gov¬ernmental leaders and prominentpioneers of the nuclear age.As part of the program a sculp¬ture—“Nuclear Energy” by HenryMoore—will be unveiled at the sitewhere the first atomic pile wentcritical on December 2, 1942. Thesculpture has been provided forpublic viewing by the B. F. Fergu¬son Monument Fund of the Art Ins¬titute of Chicago.The entire program of seminars,lectures, dinners and a motion pic¬ture premiere will take place with¬in four city blocks of the placewhere the late Enrico Fermi, theNobel Laureate physicist, directedthe experiment in a squash court.The court was under the since-demolished Stagg Field WestStands.Among main elements of the pro¬gram arranged by Herbert L. And-PLAQUE UNVEILED: Chancellor Hutchins (far right) shows plaque erson, a member of Fermi’s teamhonoring first controlled nuclear chain reaction to (from left) Wal- in 1942, now professor of physicster H. Zinn, Sumner T. Pike, Robert F. Bacher, Samuel Allison, and in the Enrico Fermi InstituteFarrington Daniels, William W. Waymack, and Enrico Fermi. for Nuclear Studies, are: • A reunion of the majority ofthe surviving scientists, engineers,technicians and others who werepresent 25 years ago to witness thefirst reactor as it went into oper¬ation. Acceptances for the reunionhave been received from 33 of theapproximately 42 persons whowere with Fermi at Stagg Field forthe “birthday of the nuclear age.”• A series of seminars on the hist-tory, applications and internationalaspects of atomic energy that willfeature speeches by six N o b e 1Laureate scientists.• The unveiling of Henry Moore’s“Nuclear Energy” by Mrs. EnricoFermi, widow of the physicist. Thework is mounted on a specially-constructed outdoor pedestal at thesite where the first nuclear pile,designed and developed by herlate husband, went critical on Dec¬ember 2, 1942, at 3:36 p.m. HenryMoore is scheduled to attend theunveiling at 3:36 p.m. Saturday.• The Premiere of a 30-minutecolor motion picture, “The DayTomorrow Began.” It will be theculmination of the observance Sat¬urday night. The movie relates the stories of the people and events in¬volved in the first atomic pile’sdevelopment and operation. Thefilm was produced by The ArgonneNational Laboratory and was fi-j nanced by the U. S. Atomic Energyj Commission.• Three major dinners and aluncheon. On Friday, December1, the University’s Visiting Com¬mittee will honor Henry Moore ata dinner on campus. In addition,the Fermi Memorial observancecommittee will be host to mem¬bers of the Fermi team at a re¬union dinner on campus on Friday.On Saturday, invited guests andmembers of the reunion group willattend a luncheon featuring a dis¬tinguished speaker. Also on Satur¬day, a civic dinner for 500 personswill be held as a prelude to thepremiere of the motion picture.A grant of $25,000 has been re¬ceived from the CommonwealthEdison Company of Chicago, toassist in underwriting the interna¬tional event. In addition, the Uni¬versity has contributed thousandsof dollars of its resources to ar¬range the observance.Turn to Page 4NSA Power Conference Arouses Mixed ReactionsMINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (CPS) -The National Student Association’sconference on student power beganwith a disruption and ended withmixed reactions from the dele¬gates.In between, delegates meeting onthe University of Minnesota cam¬pus over the weekend of November16 argued about such concepts aslegal rights of students; social free¬dom; autonomy of student govern¬ments; extraordinary tactics suchas strikes, boycotts and sit-ins; andeducational reform.Friday night NSA President EdSchwartz struck a moderate tone inhis keynote speech.“Student power is an attempt tocreate community between the stu¬dents of the university,” he said.“Students, faculty, and administra¬tion should participate in decisionsaffecting the entire university.” Schwartz called for a resolu¬tion of the conflict between “rhetor¬ic and reality” in university admin¬istration. The student power move¬ment is “a movement to im¬prove the educational climate ofthe university itself,” he said.The NSA president told the dele¬gates that most college administra¬tors and faculty “fear” studentpower because they think studentswant to destroy the university, thatstudent power means “anarchy.”Nonviolence UrgedIn an interview after his speech,Schwartz emphasized that studentpower tactics should be non-vio¬lent. “I have yet to see a situationin which violent tactics are neces¬sary,” he said.But tactics will vary from cam¬pus to campus, he added, and dem-onsrators are not the only meansto achieve goals.Army Students Protest PentagonDecision Against Bowl GameWEST POINT, N.Y. (CPS)-Ca-dets at the United States MilitaryAcademy have expressed their dis¬satisfaction with a Pentagon deci- The West Point Cadets protestedwith a large sign in the dining hallwhich read, “No Sugar Bowl forthe Army team, no sugar bowls forsion that the Army football team the Corps.” Every one of the 324cannot take part in athis year.The Pentagon decision will keepthe Army team from receiving anexpected Sugar Bowl bid. The of¬ficial line from the Pentagon said“accepting an invitation to play ina postseason game would tend toemphasize football to an extent notconsistent with the basic mission ofthe Academy, which is to pro¬vide career Army officers.”The Vietnam war was one factorin the decision.Blackwood RecitalEasley Blackwood, associate pro¬fessor of music, will give a pianorecital at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Man-del Hall.Blackwood will play all the mu¬sic for solo piano written by Ar¬nold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, andAnton Webern.The recital is sponsored by theContemporary Chamber Players ofthe University. Admission will bewithout ticket and without charge.bowl game sugar bowls in the dining hall dis-! appeared, and sugar was heaped inmounds on plates.Cadet dissatisfaction was partic¬ularly acute because the Naval Ac¬ademy and Air Force teams haveplayed in bowl games in recentyears without interference from thePentagon. He also noted a contradiction be¬tween what the university says inits classrooms and what it actuallydoes. “On many campuses, stu¬dents hear their administrators saythat the channels will yieldchange,” he said, “yet they learnthat only working outside the chan¬nels yields change.”Immediately follow¬ing Schwartz’s speech, a group ofUniversity of Minnesota studentsburst into the room and began todebate with delegates on the nextitem of the agenda. A role-playingskit was planned, but the disrup-tors — led by Arthur Himmelman,local prelate of the W.E.B. DuboisClub — insisted on changing theconference schedule to “bring an is¬sue before the delegates and startpeople thinking.”The conference degenerated intoa disorganized debate, and finallybroke up into small groups.‘Their part’Saturday morning, Robert VanWaes, associate secretary of theAmerican Association of Univers¬ity Professors, said the conferencewas an assertion by students oftheir part in the administration ofan ever-changing campus.He listed the impersonality ofcampuses, the irrelevance of curri¬culum, poor teaching methods, out¬dated social rules, neglect of stu¬dent rights, and a lack of a signifi¬cant role for students in the admin¬istration of colleges as the problem ;facing the delegates.Van Waes urged t h e confer¬ence and NSA to strive for immed¬iate wider adoption of the Joint | Statement on Student Rights, especially among administration organi¬zations. The statement has been ap¬proved by NSA and AAUP but stillawaits approval from the AmericanAssociation of Colleges, the Nation¬al Association of Student Person¬nel Administrators, and the Nation¬al Association of women’s Deansand Counselors.NSA must also, Van Waes said,attempt special studies on studentproblems, organize regional confer¬ences, organize individual campusactions, and collaborate with peo¬ple in the academic world. “Wewill create a genuine community,a vehicle for the reconstruction ofAmerican society,” he concluded.The Real ProblemsAfter the speech a student panelreacted, mostly negatively, to whatVan Waes had said. They ac¬cused him of “talking down to us.”Mike Rossman, a leader of theFree Speech Movement at Berkeleyin 1964, said Van Waes hadn’t toldthe delegates what their real prob¬lems were and added that NSA does not guide the student powermovement.Rossman proposed that studentsseek out faculty and get themon “our side. Go into any buildingon a campus and the faculty aresitting in their offices with thedoors open or shut and just waitingfor students to come to talk to themAnd we should; we must, if themovement is to succeed.”An unexpected speech Saturdayafternoon by a University of Alaba¬ma law professor proved to be oneof the highlights of the conference.Assistant Professor Roy Lucas toldthe conference that students couldgain power through the courts.“One of the most effective waysto get student rights is through thethreat of law suit,” he said. “Stu¬dent rights are protected by theconstitution and the courts.”s* Corned Jfor tit1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO, ILL. 60615Phone: FA A-1651ITOITI6HS lor"THE CHANGELING"Tues. Nov. 28, 9-11 P.M.Main Floor LoungeIda Noyes Hall.A Jacobean Tragedy byMiddleton and RowleyTo be produced by UNIVER¬SITY THEATRE duringWinter Quarter ..Directed by Mark RosinFor Information,call 324-1120 ; vuviic. vex i-ioji# # se w.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.liWiscafor thefun ofit!Wisconsin is loadedwith downhill runsand uphill lifts,chalet firesides, well-plowedroads, snow-making equipment,and apres-ski parties. No big mountains. Just theworld's happiest, snowiest, closest-to-home collection ofmoguls, sitzmarks, T-bars, wine skins, and European skiinstructors. Everything's priced to bring you back againand again And Wisconsin’s close enough to make iton a weekend. 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UNIV. of CHICAGO :: STUDENT DISC0UNT-$3.00 :tmmmmmmmmmmm ■■■■«■■■■■■TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at L0 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 2000WIM OFIN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT • F.M. *★★★★★★★The Universityof ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIALCHAPEL59th Street and Woodland Ave.HANDEL’SMeA&ialiTwo PerformancesSunday Afternoon at 3:30December 10Monday Evening at 8:00December 11RICHARD VIK STROMDirector of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRwith members ofTHE CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRANeva Pilgrim, SopranoPhyllis Unosawa, ContraltoWalter Carringer, TenorHenri Noel, BaritoneTICKETS: Reserved $4.50General Admission $3.50UC Fac/Staff $3.00All College and Univer¬sity Students $2.50AVAILABLE AT:Woodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57th StreetCooley's Candles5211 Harper Ct.U. of C. Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueFor Further Information,call MI 3-0800Ext. 3387★★★★★★★★2 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 28, 1967How to Smoke Pot Without Getting CaughtContinued from Page 1what Freud talked about when hereferred to primary processes, andwhat philosophers wrote aboutwhen they referred to two ordersof reality.Freedman commented that theLSD cult has all the trappings ofa fad that will pass over — al¬though not for a number of years.He said that Timothy Leary hadbecome a traveling medicine show— an object of ridicule for thepress. On the other hand, Freed¬man said the discipline that char¬acterizes the rituals of the NativeAmerican Church can make thepsychedelic experience moremeaningful.Freedman added however thatanyone who is fairly intelligentcan handle a bad trip. He said thatstudents can learn from the In¬dians, who teach the novice tothink of higher things, to think ofGod, and thus ride through thepanic of a trip.Dr. Jerome Jaffe, assistant pro¬fessor of psychiatry here, and di¬rector of the Illinois Drug AbuseCenter, listed a few risks of mari¬juana. Occasional feelings of pan¬ic and depression result from highdoses. He added, however, thatusers are able to avoid high doseswhen smoking. Heavy use of thedrug, Jaffe said, creates a slighttolerance but no physical de¬ pendency.The use of marijuana as a re¬placement for the social use of al¬cohol has not received the seriousconsideration that it should, Jaffesaid. He added, however, thatsome feel that a shift in policywould endorse the hedonism thatself-induced intoxication representsand that society can ill affordmaking another intoxicant avail¬able.Puritanism and PotOn the other hand, Dr. RalphMetzner, editor of the PsychedelicReview, pointed out that “much ofthe blind emotional reactionagainst marijuana stems from theaccurate observation that it givespleasure. Anything that givespleasure goes against the deeprooted Puritanism of Americanculture.”Dr. Joel Fort, discussing drugcontrol, pointed out there is a vastrange of ways people can seekmind expansion. Sleep deprivationand gasoline fumes — not to men¬tion over 100 LSD-type substances— can create mind expansion. Hesaid that the present trend is tocontrol them all. He mentionedthat airplane glue is alreadybanned in New York and Califor¬nia.Discussing the dangers of gettingarrested, Becker listed two wayspeople get caught. First, students use marijuana as a weapon in the iwar between the generations. Inorder to shock, they smoke it open¬ly. Second, students smoke mari¬juana openly in order to encourageothers to turn on.Becker suggested that in orderto have fewer drug incidents, stu¬dents reach a tacit agreement withtheir administrations to stop doingthose things that provoke publi¬city — “You don’t bring bad pub¬licity and we won’t bust you.” Inaddition, he suggested that univer¬sities offer programs in “How tosmoke pot without getting caught.”Helen Nowlis, dean of studentsat the University of Rochester, wascritical of the current restrictivepolicy on drug use. “The postureof the University towards drugsis really a prototype of all sortsof things which never really gotout in the open,” she stated. “Ed¬ucation is trying to meet today’sproblems with the elaboration oftechniques that might have beenproper twenty or thirty yearsago.”The Rochester dean also attackedthe validity of the traditional viewof student-University relations. “Inloco parentis might have been allright when all of the studentscame from the same background,”she stated. But you can’t be a par¬ent to 6,000 students whose fami¬lies have very different social andDoctor Raps Abortion LawsBy TIMOTHY S. KELLEYStaff WriterAbortion law reform was dis¬cussed in a speech by Lonny My¬ers, M.D., Chairman of the IllinoisCitizens for the Medical Controlof Abortion, Tuesday at 8:15 p.m.in the Ida Noyes Library.“We feel that this (abortion) is amedical resource,’’ she said, claim¬ing that the physician should makethe decision on whether or not toperform an abortion on the basisof the welfare and choice of thepatient.Dr. Myers, an anesthesiologistand practicing physician, criticizedthe current Illinois law which for¬bids abortion except in caseswhere the mother’s life is threat¬ened.“The reason it’s in the criminalcode, historically, is because ofPuritanism,” she asserted. “Theabortion laws are part of that totalpackage.”Non-CriminalsDr. Myers remarked that pro¬cedure in most Illinois hospitalsdoes not strictly follow the lawanyway, and that some 1.5 millionAmerican women who have hadabortions are not regarded ascriminals.According to Dr. Myers, mostIllinois hospitals follow the generalphilosophy of the model penal codemeasure on abortion, which allowsabortion in three cases: threat ofimpairment to mother, pregnancyresulting from rape, and reason-Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital able probability that the child willbe deformed.While she noted the discrepancybetween law and practice in Illi¬nois, Dr. Myers said that she alsodid not agree with the model penalcode version, and felt instead thatthe law should not enter into thefield of abortion.She also made it clear that shedid not advocate the contrary ideaof mandatory abortions as a birthcontrol measure.The MAROON needs a delivery man forWinter and Spring Quarters. You mustnave an automobile. It must be full sizeIt must run throughout the Winter. Youwill deliver on Tuesday and Friday morn¬ings.Pay: $4 - $7 HR. depending on size ofthe paper.CALL Ml 3-0800 EXT. 3266 or 324-5751STUDENT CO-OPBOOKSTORE#Used books bought and sold# Employment Service# Babysitting Service# Student Loans#Tutors • Rides and Riders# ApartmentsOPEN WEEKDAYS 10-7 PMSATURDAYS 12-5 PMLOCATED IN THE REYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTThe Illinois Citizens for the Med¬ical Control of Abortion, accordingto Dr. Myers, is less than a yearold and has received contributionsfrom some 300 people.She pointed out that three states,California, Colorado and NorthCarolina, had passed laws similarto the model penal code version,and that an Illinois bill for anabortion study commission hadbeen vetoed this fall by GovernorOrro Kerner. economic positions. Students todayto my delight are demanding alarger and larger share in the ed¬ucational hierarchy.”Mounting in legal attack againstthe marijuana laws was an out¬spoken, cigar-chewing attorneynamed Joseph Oteri. A 36 year oldex-Marine captain who currentlyserves as lawyer for the NationalAssociation of Police Officers,Oteri is not the sort traditionallyexpected to favor drug use. He ex¬plains, however, that the mari¬juana law “gripes me. The haz¬ards of marijuana are a myth.And most of the experts on mari¬juana are first class phonies.”Explaining that students can getfive to 20 years with no probationor parole for merely possessingmarijuana on which they know thetax has not been paid, Oteri saidthat “if you have any brains at allyou’ll recognize that smoking potisn’t worth the risk.” He told ofseeing a brilliant MIT sophomorewhom he had defended, beingdragged screaming from the court¬room to serve a mandatory fiveyear prison sentence with no pro¬bation and no parole.From FBN to FDAOteri explained that the firststep toward the legalization ofmarijuana would be the transferof jurisdiction over the drug fromthe Federal Bureau of Narcotics to the Food and Drug Administra¬tion. He expects this within oneyear. “I expect to see the Federalmarijuana laws found unconstitu¬tional very soon,” Oteri said,“because they both require payinga tax and make possession illegal,which is self-incrimination.”Oteri suggested that studentswho are holding pot lock theirdorm doors and not let anyone inwithout a search warrant that ac¬curately describes the premises.“Even if you have signed a con¬tract that specifies that the univer-1sity retains the right to searchyour room, they cannot do so le¬gally without a warrant,” Oterisaid.One of the main proponents ofthe legalization of marijuana inan official position is MichiganState Senator Roger Craig. Craigsaid he plans to introduce a bill;to repeal the Michigan marijuanalaws at the next session of thestate legislature.Craig said he expects no bill to'legalize marijuana to pass in any’;state legislature for many years.:“Nobody is interested in touchingit,” Craig said, “and because ofmy stand on marijuana, I mightnot be in the Michigan legislaturemuch longer.” Craig said the realhope lies in the judiciary strikingdown the present laws as irration¬al and arbitrary.'* V.5 m<700 H A DELL...zfyeaulit and QosmeVic oH'alonRPER AVENUE FAirfax 4-2007«j College Relations Director| c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008j Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:I1 Name:2 Address:iiWe’re holdingthe cards.Get one. Rooms are now up to 20% off with aSheraton Student I.D. How much depends onwhere and when you stay.And the Student I.D. card is free to begin with.Send in the coupon. It’s a good deal. And at agood place.Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns155 Hotels and Motor Inns in major cities.LINCOLNMERCURYSouth Side’s Newest Dealership!NEW CARS FINE USED CARSComplete Line of *6P Mercurys LEASING AND RENTALComets SERVICECougars _ .The New Montego Dai|y- Weekly, MonthlyLincoln Continental All Makes and ModelsHOURS: 9 9 Gaily9-6 Saturday and Sunday8640 South Chicago Ave. ES 5-9800November 28, 1967'■ .7. ' Y , ,, , THE CHICAGO MAROON 3W Sc M ‘ f' ‘ /.i/' . / » \ *Original Reactor Workers to SpeakContinued from Page 1Of the original group of scien-tists and technicians, seven have' died in the past quarter of a cent-[ Ury—Enrico Fermi, Samuel K. Al-| lison, Wayne R. Aronld, Arthur H.Compton, Alvin C. Graves, LouisSlotin, and Leo Szilard. Several wi¬dows of these men have acceptedinvitations to attend the anniver¬sary observance.The observance is scheduled tobegin with recollections of the firstreactor by several survivors—Wig-ner (Nobel Laureate, Physics1963), Anderson, Zinn and Greene-walt. They will speak beginning at9:30 a. m. Friday.The second morning of the anni¬versary program, on Saturday, isdevoted to the international as¬pects of atomic energy. AEC Chair¬man Glenn T. Seaborg will chair apanel of international experts onthe future of atomic energy.At 3:36 p. m. that afternoon“Nuclear Energy,’’the 6000 pound,12-foot high sculpture by HenryMoore, will be uncovered on thesite of the since-demolished WestStands of Stagg Field.Courses OfferedBy SG, NSA inWinter QuarterCourses are presently being setup as part of an “Experimental| College” to begin operations hereI in the winter quarter, accordingj to Eld Birnbaum, Student Govern-,ment (SG) Undergraduate Aca¬demic Affairs Committee Chair- iman.{ SG, the National Student Associ¬ation’, and the conference on thecity and the university are sup¬porting the experiment.The Experimental College willresemble similar experiments and| free universities established atover sixty other colleges.“However, rather than em-' phasizing the availability of other¬wise ‘forbidden’ subject matter,”Birnbaum said, “we will stress abetter kind of relationship of thestudent to his education, his fel¬low students, and his instructor.”Curriculum PlannedOne course already planned is aseminar on the sociology of highereducation, which will explore thesocial factors “responsible for thedisappointing educational experi¬ence of so many students in thecollege.” A number of faculty haveoffered to aid the seminar.A dance workshop based on theprinciples of movement as an artform and as non-verbal communi¬cation is scheduled for 6:30-8:30p.m. every Wednesday. No pre¬vious dance training is required.Other expected courses are oneon The New Jazz, with a local jazzartist participating, and one onfilms. Students wishing to set upother courses may be aided bylimited available resources.Anyone interested in the projectshould call the SG office, Ext.3273, before 5 p.m. or 363-3292 and285-2697 afterwards.PIZZA fPLATTER 1Pizza Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 The trustees of the Art Instituteof Chicago, as trustees of the B. F.Ferguson Monument Fund, pur¬chased the sculpture from Moore.The University has made the areasurrounding Moore’s work avail¬able for public viewing.Ida N o y e s Hall will be thescene of the Friday dinner honor¬ing Moore, who will fly from Lon¬don to be in Chicago for the un¬veiling ceremonies.The Center for Continuing Edu¬cation will be the scene of the re¬union dinner on Friday for the at¬omic age pioneers. The speakerwill be Emilio Segre, professor of physics at the University of Calif¬ornia at Berkeley.The Saturday luncheon will beheld at the Quadrangle Club. Al¬bert Wohlstetter, University pro¬fessor of political science, willspeak on “A Perspective on theImplications of Atomic Energy.”A photographic exhibition of theevolution of the Henry Mooresculpture will be opened at 4 p. m.Saturday—just after the unveil-i ing—at the High Energy PhysicsBuilding.In addition an exhibition ofMoore’s work, gathered from col¬lections in the Chicago area, willbe on display at the School of So¬ cial Service Administration. Theexhibit, entitled “Chicago’s Hom¬age to Henry Moore,” was organ¬ized by Joseph Randall Shapiro forthe Renaissance Society.‘Long Range Benefits’In an article on the “world’sfirst nuclear chain reaction,” AECChairman Seaborg recently wrote:“When the brilliant Italian phys¬icist Enrico Fermi led his team ofscientists to the successful conclu¬sion of their historic University ofChicago ‘pile’ experiment in 1942,envisioned the spectacular long-range benefits to mankind.“Not that any of the members ofthe Fermi team were short sight¬ ed; Dr. Fermi himself had alreadywon the Nobel Prize in 1938. A pro¬tege, young Dr. Herbert L. Ander¬son, who had developed a processfor purifying natural uranium, wasone of two scientists in charge ofconstructing the first atomic pilein Chicago.“Now, 25 years after first initia¬ting and controlling a self-sustain¬ing nuclear chain reaction, mem¬bers of that great Fermi teammay take an extraordinary satis¬faction in the world’s nuclear ac¬complishments. Among these isthe development of civilian powerreactors.”Ml 3-40Wl 3Lwer St,iizic J SlowerFLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS" Ojj Morgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience13i>8 EAST 53RD STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60ol5 1516 E. 53rd StSPLIT OUT.We 11 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•Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.Movie* presented by Inflight Motion Pictures, Inc. Welcome (TWAto the world ofTrans World Airlines'...the all-jet airline4 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 28, 1967By DAVID E. GILLINGHAMAS THE DOMESTIC politicalcosts of the Vietnam War con¬tinue to rise like the casualtyfigures, and the nation preparesitself for the emotional experi¬ence of another election, thereis a wind blowing that may havea profound effect on the freedomof speech in America. The windis not, alas, a wind of progress,but a wind of reaction in theform of renewed Congressionalinterest in the reactivation of the(McCarran) Internal SecurityAct of 1950.The McCarran Act, passedover the veto of President Tru¬man, provided for the SubversiveActivities Control Board, a quasi¬judicial body empowered to in¬vestigate organizations to deter¬mine whether they might beCommunist-action, Communist-front, or Communist-infiltrated.Punitive sanctions may then beimposed on the organization re¬quiring registration with theAttorney-General and listing itsfinances, officers, membership,and printing equipment. In addi¬tion, the organization comesunder a series of proscriptions in¬cluding loss of income tax bene¬fits, loss of employment in cer¬tain capacities, denial of pass¬port, and the requirement thatall information distributed by theorganization be labeled, “Dis¬seminated by , a Commu¬nist organization.”The criteria which the Subver¬sive Activities Control Board(SACB) is to make its decisionsare vague. An organization maybe proscribed if its statements donot deviate from the statementsor policies articulated by otherCommunist organizations or gov-erments, or if it promotes the objectives of, gives funds ormaterial assistance to, aCommunist organization or gov¬ernment. Which is to say, anyorganization formed to oppose the war in Vietnam, sinceit is not deviating from the posi¬tion of the Communist Party andsince it can be said to be pro¬moting the objectives of theParty, it is subject to the sanc¬tions provided by the McCarranAct. And some of our electedrepresentatives wish to see thesesanctions applied.In the seventeen years sincethe act was passed it has provento be legally unenforceable. Notone of the cases initiated by theSACB has been upheld in thecourts. The Supreme Courtchopped away at the unconstitu¬tional provisions of the act andlast year ruled that the registra¬tion requirement was a violationof the privilege against self¬incrimination. Everyone thoughtthat the Court had dealt the acta death blow. But the effective¬ness of the McCarran Act is noton legal grounds. Of the twenty-three organizations cited by theboard, most of them were de¬stroyed either by bankruptcybrought on by the court costs,or by loss of membership due toharassment and vigilante action.The McCarran Act, legally un¬able to function, has been a well-used tool for supressing organi¬zations holding opinions that thegovernment does not like.The act provided the legisla¬tive rationale for McCarthy, hisSenate Internal Security Subcom¬mittee (SISS), and for the HouseCommittee on Un-American Ac¬tivities (HUAC). It is not surpris¬ing, then, that the current re¬newed interest in the McCarran:►> Mm QmIn the December issue of Chee¬tah, writer Rob Ross travels withsmugglers as they make a runfrom Tijuana to Southern Califor¬nia. It’s a scary, nasty, fascinatingreport. And—Tom Nolan writesabout the “groupies”—the girlswho’ll do anything for a star.There are also stories on cam¬pus movies, rock lyrics, “up¬tight” Washington, D.C. and partone of a three part look at theunderground religions. This andmuch more inOSgDVfNow at your newsstands(P.S. For an annual subscription toCheetah, send $5.00 in check ormoney order to Cheetah Magazine,1790 Broadway, N.Y., N.Y. 10019.) < An AnalysisAct originated in these two com¬mittees. The Senate version,drafted by the SISS and broughtto the floor by Sen. Dirksen,would amend the McCarran Actto circumvent the court decisionbased on the Fifth Amendmentby replacing the self-registrationof “Communist” organizationswith registration by the Ator-ney-General. The House version,drafted by HUAC, is even morefar-reaching. It would includecontempt penalties against dem¬onstrators, an immunity clauseto compel and officially protectinformer-type testimony, (testi¬mony which McCarthy extractednotoriously well without the helpof such a provision), a reductionin the evidence needed to labela group a Communist-front, anda prohibition against interferenceby the courts (judicial reviewwould be allowed only after theboard has completed its hearingand come to a decision).So far only the Senate hasacted, and one curious featureof the action is the great secrecythat the proponents of this mea¬sure have imposed upon thebill. It was brought out of com¬mittee without a report, andwhen its opponents began clam¬oring for public hearings on thebill, Dirksen tacked it on to an¬other bill as a rider. Thus, the Senate measure passed almostwithout the public knowing aboutit.An amendment offered by Sen¬ator Mansfield has been adoptedwhich requires that if no casesare brought before the Sub¬versive Activities Control Boardby the Attorney-General beforeJune 30, 1969, the board will goout of existence, but it is uncer¬tain whether this amendmentwill survive the joint Senate-House Conference Committee.Neither the House nor the Sen¬ate measure confront the centralconstitutional objections to theMcCarran Act, that it acts tooutlaw political dissent andabridge freedom of speech byabridging freedom of association.There is little reason to believethat these measures will be le¬gally more successful than theoriginal, given the present dis¬position of the court. There is al¬so little reason to believe thatthe supporters of these measuresdo not know that these attemptsare legally futile. But in thecoming election politicians willwant to show their constituentsthat, while the President con¬ducts his holy war against thered menace abroad, they are do¬ing their part at home. They donot need a legally effective billto show their red-blooded, anti¬communist, American patriot¬ism. A political charade is suf¬ficient. (Dirksen has said he ad-Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE. voeated passage of this measurein Vietnam.)Perhaps we are not on theverge of a new McCarthyist era.Perhaps the American peoplehave learned not to allow theconstant frustration in the flightagainst the demon Communistmonolith abroad in order to es¬tablish the ideal of a “freeworld” to be translated into anmaniacal fear of monolithicCommunist subversion at home.Perhaps the base of dissent istoo broad today for witch hunts .ever to be tolerated. Perhaps.But little sanguinity is permit¬ted by the confidence that thecourts will ultimately void anamended McCarran Act, for inthe process the country will haveto pass through, possibly anotherperiod of political repression,and at the least a strong attackon free speech and free associa¬tion. Times may have changed,and they may not have changed,but we will soon find out forsure, for the anti-libertarians inCongress are gathering forcesfor just such an attack."REMARKABLE!'\m,m r«t''Absorbing... Imaginative! AIKINsuN, Time!.Jean Genet'sstarringDELPHI LAWRENCEwith JAY LANINOrder Seats NowPerfs.thru Dec 20- 7 3U H M lues through Thuis & Suit.8 30 P M Fn & Sat. 2 P M Matinees Nov 30 8. Dec 1GOODMAN THEATRE-CE 6-2337200 S COlUMiOS DRIVE w **Guesswho forgothis NoDozAs Rip Van Winkle failed to learn, there's a time and a place for sleeping. If you findyourself nodding off at the wrong time or in the wrong place, reach for your NoDoz.(You do carry some with you at all times, don’t you?) A couple ofNoDoz and you’re with it again. Arid NoDoz is non habit-forming. * jgr a**z»***NoDoz. When you can't be caught napping.THE ONE TO TAKE WHEN YOU HAVE TO STAY ALERT. FSAFE AS COf FEENovember 28, I9C7 rm: Chicago maroonMICHAEL SEIDMANThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 18?}Jeffrey 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. SatterMarijuana“1 sometimes fear that law enforcement officers arethe sole voices in the wilderness warning that today’slanguor will lead to a spread of marijuana abuse ratherthan its control.”Donald E. Miller, chief counsel for the U.S. Bureauol Narcotics, who made that remark at a convention ofstudent personnel administrators a year ago, may be right.There is increasing evidence that increasing numbersol knowledgeable people are questioning the effective¬ness or justice of harshly repressive laws, which requireimprisonment of two to ten years for possession of mari¬juana.Especially in the cases of student use of pot, tryingto completely stamp out all such use would require “ex¬treme totalitarian measures, the equivalent of. stop-and-frisk laws,” as Northwestern University sociologist How-aid S. Becker put it at last weekend’s conference on drugshere.At the same time that people are realizing that harshlegal penalties arc not likely to prevent many people fromsmoking pot, there are more people who are beginningto wonder why marijuana really needs to be repressed soseverely in the first place.A report issued by researchers at the College ofPharmaceutical Sciences of Columbia University notes,“In terms of behavioral effects, use of marijuana is rough¬ly comparable to abuse of alcohol.” Such effects usuallyconsist of distorted senses of time, hearing, distance, andvision.Only with very large doses of the relatively mild"American type” of marijuana, or with doses of thestronger hashish, are more severe effects experienced,such as hallucinations.Why, then, are students and others thrown in jail forlong periods for smoking a substance which producesmainly a feeling of euphoria?The civil authorities fear that use of marijuana willexpose the user to pushers who seek also to sell hard-corenarcotics. University authorities have similar fears: thattheir students will have close dealings with “undesirables”who are prime suppliers of pot.But isn’t it likely, once smoking the weed were re¬moved from the class of criminal activity, (thereby remov¬ing much of the elaborate cops-and-robbers intrigue thatnow accompanies its supply) that much of the profit tounderground operators would also be removed? It is cer¬tainly people who drank during the Prohibition era forthe thrill of doing something illegal felt less urge to drinkheavily once that era was past.People smoke pot for many different reasons, someinnocent, some pathological. Few of these reasons arelikely to be effectively stifled by the ludicrous laws nowon the books; those whose use of drugs indicates a needfor psychological help will not be any better off for beingthrown in jail for up to ten or fifteen years.It is time some of the hysteria were removed fromuse of marijuana. One of the more effective ways towardthis end is repeal of the absurdly arbitrarily high penalitesfor its possession.a S O'Hare International:Muhammed AH AloneO’Haro Airport has been accu¬rately described as the busiest inthe world, and it is neither un¬usual nor surprising on an es¬pecially busy Saturday afternoonto spot among the mob some cel¬ebrity dashing off to meet aplane. Surrounded by an entour¬age of well-wishers and aids, themighty and the famous rushthrough Chicago on their way toeither coast, pausing for only thebriefest moment for a few hur¬ried autographs and a quickhamburger.Last weekend was a particular¬ly busy one at O’Hare, and asalways if one looked carefullythere were the familiar faces.But there was one celebrity sit¬ting in the TWA waiting roomwith whom nobody bothered.There was no entourage, no bus¬tle, no autographs — just thatone unmistakable black faceamidst an unnoticing sea of whiteones. Muhammad Ali sat allalone, waiting for his plane whilea public with offended sensibili¬ties pa'ssed him by.IF SPORTS figures no longerlive outside the political world,ten-year-olds, thank God, still do.A solitary white boy approachedAli and respectfully asked for anautograph, his more inhibitedparents slowly following him.Ali’s big, handsome face lit up.He threw a few shadow punchesat the boy, willingly scrawled his signature on a scrap of paper,and began chatting quietly withhis parents.This Ali was very differentfrom the one who a few monthsearlier had whipped a Universityof Chicago anti-war rally into afrightening frenzy in response tohis unabashed and embarassingegotism. Quiet, friendly, shy, andinarticulate, he answered ques¬tions as if he had all the time inthe world to spend with the fewfans he had left.YES, HIS case was going wellenough. He figured he could stayout of jail for another year and ahalf or so, and the way thingsare going, who knows what willhappen by then. No, he didn’treally blame the boxing commis¬sion for taking his title away. Heunderstood how boxing enthusi¬asts felt who favored the warand were asked to spend theirmoney to watch him fight. Andno, he didn’t regret refusing in¬duction. Jail was still better thangetting shot up in some Vietnamjungle.Ali still seemed uneasy in hisrole as rallying point for intel¬lectual opposition to the war. Thestrange love affair between box¬ers and intellectuals is an oldphenonenon, but the rocky ro¬mance is no less incongruous forits long duration. Several monthsafter the tumultuous Vietnam Day of Inquiry on this campus(at which Ali spoke) it stillseems ludicrous, demigogic, andeven a bit degrading to use thisbig, inarticulate physical speci¬men to represent the still fairlysubtle arguments against theWar.BUT SEEING Ali all alone inthat Chicago airport emphasizeda quite different point which bothsides missed a few months earli¬er when he had been surroundedby boisterous well wishers in theField House. Ali cannot be ex¬pected to hold his own in argu¬ments about the complexities ofthe war and the grey moral areasurrounding conscientious objec¬tion. But he can understand,more vividly than anyone else,that he was stripped of his titlebefore he was even brought totrial, that he has been forced intoinactivity during the- few preci¬ous years when he was the bestfighter in the country, and thatnow he will have to go to jailbecause of a war in a distantcountry, over obscure and mean¬ingless issues.When the final costs of the warin Vietnam are tabulated, cer¬tainly the destruction of Muham¬mad Ali will not rank among themost serious. But in his shy andbewildered lineliness at O’Harethe other day, he did serve as apoignant reminder of the presentrottenness of American society.Letters to the EditorA Way OutThe solution to the war in Viet¬nam is obvious, yet has beenmissed by all of the major poli¬tical sages. As you know, theUnited States has developed atype of apathy gas that takesaway the willingness to fightwithout doing any harm to thesubject. With proper utilizationof this wonder-weapon, the warwill end according to the follow¬ing timetable.PHASE ! — Twenty billion dol¬lars worth of apathy gas will beproduced and sent to Vietnamfor use by American, South Viet¬namese, Korean, Australian, andNew Zealand troops against theenemy.PHASE II —- Five dollarsworth of the secret weapon willbe captured from American sol¬diers by the enemy.PHASE III - The capturedsample will be sent to Russianand Chinese scientists who willput twenty billion dollars into de¬veloping new and improved apa¬thy gas.PHASE IV - The United Stateswill respond in kind, and a newweapons race will be on.PHASE V — The allied forceswill use the gas on the Viet Congand North Vietnamese who inturn will use it on the American,Korean, Australian and New Zea¬land soldiers, sparing only theSouth Vietnamese who are al¬ready apathetic. At this point, nosoldiers will feel like fighting andno commanders will feel likecommanding.THE ALLIES will accept asfact that that there will always be a Communist Vietnam. TheCommunists will accept as factthat there will always be a non-Communist Vietnam, and every¬one will live happily ever after.The great gas industries whichsprung up during the war in bothcamps will then turn to the de¬velopment of a gas that increasesachievement motivation (McClel¬land, 1951a, 1951b; Winterbottom,1953) counteracting the psycho¬logical obstacles to economic ad¬vancement in underdevelopedcountries, both Communist andnon-Communist.MARCUS K. FELSON, ’69Pass or FailThe following is a direct quotefrom The University of WisconsinMedical School Catalogue:“PASS-FAIL" SYSTEM“The committee does not wishto stand in the way of construc¬tive developments in undergradu¬ate collage education. On the oth¬er hand, it does not feel that itcan satisfactorily select personsfor places in the Medical Schoolwithout a reasonable quantity ofdata on which to base i t sdecisions.“It therefore will reject any ap¬plicant who has not taken coursesand recieved definite gradesin all those subjects that we listas specific prerequisites. Beyondthat, it will not REQUIRE anygrades in other college work.However, in choosing among ap¬plicants who have done equallywell in the prerequisite courses,and who have equal scores on theMedical College Admission Test, the Committee will of course givepreference to those who can showevidence, in the form of definitegrades, of good performance inother course work.”What will happen to the Chica¬go student who unknowingly takesPass-No Pass courses and sudden¬ly finds he can’t get into gradu¬ate school? Could it be that thePass-No Pass system isn’t quiteas flawless as its proponents haveclaimed? .ALAN BLOOM, ’68Vast WastelandIf PBL is merely a leaky fau¬cet in a vast wasteland, as theCulture Vulture says, then per¬haps The Maroon is a five-daydeodorant pad in a tropical rainforest?STEVEN HENIKOFF, ’68JOEL WEINSTEIN, ’68Letters 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.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., put>-lishers of Collegiate Praas Sarvica.THE CHICAGO MABOON November 2H, L%’7GADFLYThe Revolting Student on CampusI (Editor’s note: Mr. Kurlandis a professor at the LawSchool. The following was de¬livered as a talk before LawSchool alumni at a luncheonmeeting on November 15 atThe Lawyer’s Club in Washing¬ton, D.C.)By PHILIP B. KURLANDJim Ratcliffe told me that i tdidn’t matter what subject Ichose to speak about before thisaugust audience. The tone inwhich he said it made it clearI- that my appearance here was■ due to an act of desperation onthe part of the Law School ad¬ministration from which it ex¬pected to salvage very little byway of good will. Jim’s attitudesuggested, too, that this was sosophisticated a group that noth¬ing I could say would be eitherinformative or interesting. Afterall, bringing a speaker to Wash¬ington has all the attributes ofpiping natural gas to Texas. Gasusually flows in the opposite di¬rection.i Given a free hand, I havechosen to speak for a fewminutes about a phenomenonthat is appearing on our cam¬pus and, indeed, on the campusof most universities in this coun¬try. My subject is: “The Revolt¬ing Student.” And my efforts willbe directed to showing that thefacts of life are a bit more compli¬cated than is generally assumed.Let me, if I may then, make anattempt at classifying some ofthe species that might properlybe placed under the generic labelof “the revolting student.” Butfirst I should make it clear thatthese students are a small minor¬ity on campus and almost non¬existent at the Law School. Thetwo or three of these species thatwe do have in the glass mena¬gerie are among the least inter¬esting specimens.MY FIRST category is madeup of that group of students whoare superficially in revolt againsttheir parents and the bourgeoissociety that offered them toomany of the good things in lifewithout requiring them to expen&fcthe effort that used to be neededto acquire them! This is a groupthat has inhabited Americancampuses for several college gen¬erations now. But each genera¬tion has chosen its own mannerof expressing its independence ofits predecessors. The essentialmeans that this group has chosento demonstrate its individuality isby adopting a uniform, a uni¬form appearance and a uniformbehavior. Thus, because theirparents wore their hair short,this generation of “new intellec¬tuals” will wear it long. If theirparents wore loose clothing, thisgeneration is dedicated to tightclothing. Because their parentswere clean-shaven, they are hir¬sute. (The girls have a ratherdifficult time with this but seemto bring it off none the less.) Iftheir parents regarded cleanli¬ness as a virtue, they prefer toabominate it. What their prede¬cessors regarded as beautiful,they think to be ugly, and viceversa. What their parents re¬garded as private, they prefer toindulge in public.Perhaps the prime article ofthe new faith of this group is thenotion that First Amendmentfreedoms are epitomized in the right to use four-letter Anglo-Sax¬on words on all occasions, in allcompany, and at any time. Afterall, this was the great issue ofacademic freedom that helpedbring Reagan to the Governor¬ship of California and, for thisgroup, what’s good enough forBerkeley is good enough for theworld. (To digress for a moment,I must concede that there aretimes when such words are in¬deed more meaningful than thepolite language of an earlier gen¬eration. For example, a professorat the University of Chicagodescribed one of the signs raisedat a recent visit to campus byDow Chemical as saying: “Haveintercourse with Dow.” Some ofthe flavor was certainly lost intranslation.)THIS FIRST group is indeed apathetic group. Lacking the im¬plicit courage to take such vividsteps to sever the silver cord,some of them have had to turnto drugs to destroy their own in¬hibitions. Sex has lost its mys¬tery and romance. And, mostfrustrating of all, none seems todelight more in their antics thanthe parents who are the objectsof the attack.By themselves, this species ofrevolting students would be apassing phase of little more con¬sequence than those who onceswallowed goldfish or squeezedtheir way in telephone booths,except for the damage that theyare doing to themselves. Atworst, they create minor parietalproblems for a university thatmay not have realized that if itis going to act in locus parentisit should condone rather thancondemn these actions and leaveto the ordinary community forcesthe imposition of sanctions ap¬propriate to violators of the law.This brings me then to the sec¬ond category of revolting stu¬dent: those taken up entirelywith* the major social issues ofour time. Unlike the first group— though they are not mutuallyexclusive — the members of thisspecies share their frustrationswith their parents. How, theyask, can a nation, supposedlycivilized, find itself in the dev¬astating posture of fighting a warand leaving unresolved the prob¬lem of reconciling the Negro andwhite cultures? No more able tocome up with easy answers thanthe adults, they tend to resort totemper tantrums, directed not atthose who might have the powerto do something about resolvingthese issues, but rather at theUniversity, because it is there.CERTAINLY THERE is a Ne¬gro problem on campus. It is adifferent problem in the majoruniversities outside the Souththan in the South. The problemhere is, essentially, how does auniversity bring into its studentbody a sufficient number of Ne¬gro students competent to meetthe standards of excellence towhich the university aspires. Ofcourse it is true that the lack ofsuch students derives from adeprivation that American soci¬ety has condoned if not imposedfor many years past. But to rec¬ognize the cause is not to suggesta cure. There are only three ob¬vious courses open to a Univer¬sity. It can admit Negro studentswho do not meet the standardsdemanded of white students andmake fewer demands of them this species and the faculties onthis score. Both are appalled atthe horrors and stupidities ofwarfare. Neither has come upwith any solution for getting offthe back of the tiger and remain¬ing whole. The question may beharder for the older generationthat remembers the 1930’s andthe failure to take timely stepsin Europe to prevent the holo¬caust that enveloped the world.For most, however, the cases aredistinguishable. But even theselack the 100% certainty that gen¬erates the young. And the old¬sters, like the youngsters, feelthe same frustration about theinability to make their voices feltwhere they might do some good.But, most of the faculty, thoughnot all, don’t strike out at thenearest object because an ap¬propriate one is not available.In short, my second species isessentially not by any means adespicable group of revolting stu¬dents. But if their objectives areip *'Perhaps the prime article ofthe new faith is the notion thatthe First Amendment freedomsare epitomized in the right to usefour-letter Anglo-Saxon words onall occasions, in all company, andat any time!Philip B. Kurlandv Cwhile they are in school. But thisis to depreciate every degreegranted to a Negro student, thequalified along with the unqual¬ified. It is to provide a second-class status for Negro students.Or it can lower its standardsgenerally for both white and Ne¬gro students and abandon its no¬tions of excellence. Or it canmaintain its standards for whiteand Negro students with the con¬sequent inability to secure a suf¬ficiently large proportion of Ne¬groes to satisfy the demands ofthose Anxious to integrate theNegro in American academic so¬ciety at whatever cost.Let me assure you that if noneof the universities of which weare proud has solved this prob¬lem, it is not for want of effort.There is no Negro student whois today deprived of an educa¬tion at a first-rate •University forlack of funds. Even if the Uni¬versities were not prepared tosubsidize such students, there isan abundance of foundations whoare. And the only forces on cam¬pus that are pushing for . segre¬gation of the races are two. Thefirst is made up of a group ofNegro students themselves whoprefer their own society to thatof the patronizing, guilt-riddenwhite students. The second forcefor segregation on campus is theDepartment of Health, Education,and Welfare, which is doing itsdarndest through its demands onthe universities to require thatstudents be labelled and treatedas separate groups, categorizedby H E W as “White,” “Negro,”and “Others.”THERE IS, of course, nothingI need tell you about the feelingof despair that pervades thecampuses over the Viet NamWar. There is essentially no dif¬ference between the students of to be admired, their means of ob¬taining them are, at best, inef¬fective and, at worst, destruc¬tive, not of the evils they abhorbut of the values they purportto cherish.THIS BRINGS me to the thirdcategory, and, indeed, the mostrevolting of the revolting stu¬dents. I refer here to the so-called Students for a DemocraticSociety and its ilk. They revealneither the silliness of the firstgroup nor the decent motives ofthe seedhd. To a considerablemeasure they are not students atall, if by students we mean thosewho are registered as such inuniversities. Moreover, the great¬er part of their student, leader¬ship derives from the profession¬al students, for whom the pur¬suit of a degree is a lifetime ef¬fort to avoid going into the hard,cold world that they deplore andfear. They are nationally organ¬ized and externally financed.This group has, essentially, a sin-,gle objective. That objective isto turn American universitiesfrom educational institutions runby faculties into political institu¬tions run by their own cabal.Their models are the SouthAmerican universities which —it will be recognized — havebrought about such model civil¬izations in their own communi¬ties and which are such exam¬ples of high academic attain¬ments.These students derive theirstrength, essentially, from twodevices. The first is their abilityto make use of the first twogroups of which I have alreadyspoken. The second is their ca¬pacity to create incidents thatcause the faculties to divert theirefforts from teaching and re¬search into the nonproductiveactivities that are required to af¬ ford undue process to the insur¬gents. The first creates a broad¬er student base than their ownforces could muster for their pro¬gram. The second has the sameresult as guerilla warfare. Noneof the damage done by individualincidents is of serious conse¬quence, but it creates a desireon the part of the faculties andadministrations to concede a lit¬tle here and a little more there,in the vain hope that such con¬cessions will buy peace and anopportunity to return to whatthey consider their prime obli¬gations of training and research.And such tactics seriously dividethe faculty over the questionwhether punishment should beimposed on the little darlings.The only question, as of now, iswhether the Universities willtake a stand before it is too late,before they discover that theprocess of erosion has turnedthem from educational institu¬tions into political ones.IN SHORT the strength of SDSlies in its nihilistic philosophyand its small but hard cadre wholook upon the universities as astepping stone to power. Its pre¬decessors in recent times —South America to one side — areto be found in the nihilistic stu¬dent movements in Germany andRussia, the one that helped pavethe way for Hitler and the otherfor the tyrannies of Communism.There is about to be a Wash¬ington episode for this struggle.The Senate Judiciary Subcom¬mittee on Subversive Activitiesappears to be ready for a look atthe New Left. (Although why itis styled the New Left is a littlebeyond me, unless lawlessnessand anarchy are to be identifiedsolely with the Left.) That theSDS is a part of the New Left isnot to be gainsaid. That it is sub¬versive is equally clear, if one isprepared to talk of subversion ofeducational institutions ratherthan subversion of the govern¬ment of the United States. Thatits money — and there seems tobe a lot of it — may be comingfrom interests anxious to subvertthe American government is notunlikely. And yet, the EastlandCommittee investigation may,paradoxically, strengthen ratherthan weaken the power of theSDS in the academic community.For like the victims of the HouseUn-American Affairs Committee,the targets of an Eastland inves¬tigation will , find sympathyamong many soft-headed aca¬demics who are prepared to findpersecution even where therereally is only legitimate investi¬gation. The irony then lies in thefact that an attack on the SDSby the Eastland Committee, dis¬playing its usual methods andrhetoric, may make it possible.for this small group to gain thenecessary adherents and protec¬tors within' American universityfaculties to make feasible its de¬struction of American education¬al institutions.So much for today on the re¬volting students. Having broughtyou such joyful tidings from theUniversity campus, I had betterquit now. Some day, however, Ishould like to come back andspeak to you about the revoltingfaculty, a story that is equallyheartening.Copyright (c) 1967 Philip B. Kurlandlift November 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7Calendar of Events I Draft Information Center OpenedPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at The Maroon Of¬fice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sentor brought to the Office at least two daysbefore date of publication.Tuesday, November 28COLLOQUIM: (The James Franck Institute)"The Fermi Surfaces of Sodium and Po¬tassium," Martin H. G. Lee, instructorin physics. Research Institute 480, 4:15p.m.WRESTLING: Scrimmage. North Central.Bartlett Gym, 4:30 p.m.SENIOR MATH CLUB: Albert Frohlich, to beannounced. Eckhart 206, 4:40 p.m.DINNER AND DISCUSSION: John Caweltiand Herome McGann. Private Room,Hutchinson Commons, 5:30 p.m. Every¬body welcome.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING:International House Assembly Hall, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Oriental Institute) "Western Asi¬atic and Hellenistic Influnces on EgyptianArt," Bernard V. Bothmer, curator ofBrooklyn Museum. Breasted Hall, 8:30p.m.CONCERT: Easley Blackwood, pianist, com¬plete solo piano of Schenberg, Berg, andWebern. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, November 29CONCERT: "Music for Two Pianos by Mo¬zart, Cage, and Stravinsky," Rachel Wil¬liams and Barry Slins, Pianists. MandelHall, 12:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Social Sciences) "Rousseau,'Allan Bloom. Kent 103, 1:30 p.m.SWIMMING: Wilson Junior College. BartlettGym, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "The Problem of Ecomomic Im¬perial Interests: Trade Routes, Railways,and Canals," Allan Cunningham, Depart¬ment of History, Simon Fraser University.Soc. Sci. 122, 4:30 p.m.BASKETBALL: Field House and Bartlett*Gym, 7 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub, 7 p.m.22nd ANNUAL LATKE-HAMANTASH DE¬BATE: Discussion on the 3,500 year oldfeud between the latke and the haman-tash. Participants are Professors HowardAronson, Louis Cohen, Morrel Cohen,Morris Janowitz, Marvin Mirsky, andIrwin Weil. Ida Noyes Hall, 7:15 p.m.SIDNEY AND JULIA TELLER LECTURE:(School of Social Service Administration)"The Medical School and CommunityHealth," Dr. Albert Dorfman, professorand chairman of department of pedi¬atrics. SSA Lobby, 8 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia. Ida Noyes lHall Dance Room, 8 p.m.Thursday, November 30LECTURE: (biochemistry) "Gene Expressionin Early Animal Development: RNASynthesis Patterns," Paul R. Gross. Kent107, 12:30 p.m.Ceithaml AppointedDr. Joseph J. Ceithaml, dean ofstudents of the Biological SciencesDivision, has been appointed to thereview committee for medical sci¬entist training applications for theNational Institute of General Med¬ical Science under the U.S. Depart¬ment of Health, Education and Wei- |fare.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933I0% Student DiscountSAMUEL A. BEIL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1 ruPICKUP a DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200WANTEDThousands of college studentsfor resort employment. Fun-Fil¬led jobs with high pay in 37states. The 1968 edition of theStudents Resort Employment Dir¬ectory is now available! Pageafter page of certified jobs atleading resorts. Maps, mileagechart, applications, and help¬ful hints that help you "getthat job". SEND $1.00 for Dir¬ectory to: anDar Publishers,Box 15327, Tulsa, Okla. 74115Niik COLLOQUIUM: (Physics) "Charge Asym¬metry in Leptonic K-Decay," MelvinSchwartz, professor of physics, StanfordUniversity. Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.ZOOLOGY CLUB: "Cell Reaggregation in SeaUrchim Embryos," Giovanni Guidice,University of Palermo, Italy. Zoology 14,4:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: University of Chicago ConcertBand Belfield (Lab School) 244, 5 p.m.Everyone welcome.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Teaching and re¬quests. Hillel House, 8 p.m.POLITICS for PEACE: Meeting to discusspetition campaign and 68 elections. Carsfor office leave Ida Noyes at 7:45 p.m.POETRY THEATRE: Changed to Saturday,December 2. (See Friday Calendar)Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement Reynolds Club, Room 200. Forappointments, call Ext. 3282. Graduate SchoolsNovember 28 — University ConnecticutSchool of Law.November 30 — Stanford School of Law andCornell University Graduate School ofBusiness and Public Administration.GovernmentNovember 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.November 29 — Center for Naval Analyses,Arlington, Virginia. Advanced degree can¬didates in mathematics, economics,physics, and statistics. Will interviewgraduates in these departments for sum¬mer employment.IndustryNovember 29 — Genera! Electric Company,Schenectady, New York. Ph.D. chemistsand physicists. The American Friends ServicesCommittee opened a draft informa¬tion center yesterday in QuakerHouse, 5615 S. Woodlawn Ave. Thecenter is one of only two such of¬fices in Chicago — the other is lo¬cated in the Loop — and servicesthe entire South Side with parti¬cular emphasis on the Hyde Park-University area.Services offered include draft in¬formation and counseling by vol¬unteers trained by the Committee.According to Joseph Steinberger, ’69, “The center is here in orderto help people with problems theymay have with the draft; we arenot above helping people who justwant a 2-S deferment or who wantto organize draft resistance.Questions about conscientious ob¬jection, deferments, draft law, andmorals are answered at the centerfrom 1-5 p.m. Monday through Fri¬day and 7-10 p.m. Tuesday andThursday.The phone number is 363-1248.NEW BOOK BY CAMPUS AUTHORDavid Bakan on Methodby David Bakan S7.50After the New Testamentby Robert M. Grant $6.00The Anguish of Preaching $1.75by Joseph SittlerGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSU3SAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715Make the Qreat Escape. Slip away on a United SkrLift Holiday.If you think the skiing is great,wait until you try the apres ski¬ing. (Or maybe you’d rather justsit at the lodge and watch a mil¬lion stars in the clear, clean skiesover the Rockies.) Swing at thediscotheques. Belt out the songswith the banjo player. (Or go tobed and wake up to another bril¬ liant blue sunny day on theslopes.) You’ll get a great tan.Take ski lessons from the top in¬structors in the world. Spend yourdays with the brightest,friendliestpeople in the world. Skiers—wholove it the way you do.Plan now to make your escapefrom the “nothing” winter of thecity. Call us or your Travel Agenttoday.A United Ski-lift Holiday.Around the clock, it’s a snow ball.Copyright 1967 United Air Lines, Inc. Save 50% of your air fare onyour Ski-lift Holiday withUnited’s 12-21 Club. See yourTravel Agent or any United ticketoffice to find out how easy it is tojoin.-It will be the handiest thing inyour escape kit. Jtythe .friendly skies&United."Hey, Charlie, I just bought myselfa new pair of apres skis."(City) (State) ZIPi > ,* • \8 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 28, 1967THEATER REVIEW aCook Show a Magnificent Musical ExtravaganzaBy BARRY SALINSBarbara Cook treated an enthu¬siastic audience to an evening ofher music last week in the LawSchool Auditorium. The concertwas Miss Cook’s first appearancein a solo format. Our hope is thatthe reception she received willencourage her to continue thistype of performance in the future.In a program consisting oftheater and popular music, MissCook presented songs of Rodgersand Hart, Rodgers and Hammer-stein, Gershwin, Kern and others,and included numbers from mostof the musicals she has starredin. Brooks Morton accompaniedMiss Cook at the piano duringher generous two-hour concert,which was held under the aus¬pices of the Emily Talbot fund.Needless to say, the beauty andwarmth of Miss Cook’s voice ac¬count for much of her success as a performer. But it takes morethan just a voice, no matter howsuperb, to reach her level of ex¬cellence. With Barbara Cook,such excellence is reached by thecombination of her singing andacting skills; a song is not mere¬ly sung by her, it is also actedout. But again, this is not thecomplete answer to her quality,as there are many different waysto act out a song.ONE WAY, for instance, is forthe singer to indulge in theatrics.A prominent example of one whodoes this is Barbara Streisand.When she performs a song, thereaction of the listener is some¬thing like, “There’s Barbara sing¬ing with bitter irony,” or “Hereshe is as a wondering young girl.”What Barbara Streisand does isoften effective, but what her styleproduces is a vast separation of the personality of the singer fromher song.In the case of Barbara Cook,however, there is rarely a gapbetween the melodic and textualcontent of a song and the person¬ality of the singer. Rather thanmaking the audience conscious ofa style and meaning beingbrought to a song, Miss Cookbrings to the audience the mean¬ing already contained in a song.And, indeed, there is meaningin the popular song; usually wefind presented the mood andthoughts of a person in a partic¬ular romantic situation. What isneeded is an individual with intel¬ligence, wit and personal insightwho can glean from the hundredsof such songs written those thatspeak with validity, consistencyand a measure of truth, and whocan communicate the meaning ofthese songs. As her performanceRoundtable to Return to Air Sunday“The Credibility Gap” will be thetopic of the premiere program ofone of broadcasting’s earliest dis¬cussion series, “The University ofChicago Roundtable,” when it re¬turns to the air at 5:30 p.m. Sun¬day, December 3, on WTTW/Chan-nel 11.The series will be offered for na¬tional syndication by the Chicagoeducational station.Senator Gale McGee (D., Wy.) aChicago alumnus and former mem¬ber of the Department of Historyat the University of Wyoming, willparticipate in the first program.Joining him will be Hans J. Mor-genthau, Albert A. Michelson dis¬tinguished service professor ofmodern history and politicalscience here, and Oscar Handlin,Winthrop professor of history atHarvard.The series will be produced byWTTW in cooperation with the Uni¬versity. Topics on succeeding pro¬grams include the effect of govern¬ment policy on research; the Su¬preme Court as legislator; money,taxes and inflation; the responsibil¬ity of the physician; and the citiesand the police.Moderator of the series is Ken¬ neth J. Northcott, professor of old¬er German literature and dean ofstudents in the division of thehumanities.“The University of ChicagoRoundtable” was the first regularnetwork program to be producedentirely without script. It premieredon February 1, 1931, when threeprofessors sat around a card table to discuss the Wickersham Com¬mission report on Prohibition.Within two years, the NationalBroadcasting Company was carry¬ing the program once a week onthe network.Until it went off the air in 1955, itwas regarded as the most popularof all radio discussion programsand was the first such program towin the Peabody Award.RARE ARB UNUSUAL GIFTSReplicas of Ancient Near Eastern Artifacts and Jewelry(Ca. 3000 B.C. to 100 A.D.)THt SUQ,Museum StoreOriental Institute Lobby1155 E. 58th StreetOpen 10 A.M.- 4 P.M. everyday except Monday.NOTICE ABOUT AUTUMNTEXTBOOKSOn Friday December 1st, it will be necessary for the Textbook Departmentof the Bookstore to begin removing Autumn Quarter Textbooks from itssales-floor shelves, in order to provide space for incoming Winter Quar¬ter Books. Before December 1st. , please try to purchase any AutumnQuarter Texts which you may still require.Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue made evident, Barbara Cook issuch an individual.A MARK OF Miss Cook’s suc¬cess is her ability to make anoften-sung number sound new.She did this during her concert,for example, with “A WonderfulGuy” and “I Cain’t Say No.” Thefirst appeared in probably one ofits freshest and brightest read¬ings, while the second—which isso familiar that it no longer pro¬ vokes laughter-funny. -was actuallyA minor shortcoming of the con¬cert was its lack of songs by ColePorter and Kurt Weill. One Beat¬les song appeared as an encore(“Here, There and Every¬where”), but it’s a shame morewere not included in the program.These, however, are truly minormatters when one considers theevening of music that waspresented.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6666EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIUED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES1. What’s a math major doing with 2. That’s what you said about the“The Complete Guide to the spelunking outfit you boughtPriming of the Breadfruit Tree”? last week.It was a terrific buy. Listen—that wasmarked down 50%.3. And the condor eggs? 4. No wonder you’re always broke.Could you refuse 2 dozen But look at the buys I get!for the price of one?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 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdsHATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,50c per line repeat. Count 35 characters andspaces per line.TO PLACE AO: Come or mall with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.50th St., Chicago, III. 50637.HOURS: Weekdays 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINES: Ads must be in by 11 a.m.*wo days before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3256.FOUNDVIRGIN MARY PIN (honest!), from France,found near Billings Hospital. Phone Ext.3255.SUMMER JOBCOUNSELORS WANTED for a small campwith an unstructured program. Unusual op¬portunities for individual initiative. See PaulMeng at 5200 S. Blackstone, BU 8-1100.SKI MEETINGFOR INTERESTED SKIERS—Re: Spring SkiTrip, and others. U. of C. Ski Club, IdaNoyes, 7:00 P.M., Thurs., Dec. 7.WANTEDWant GOOD HARDWOOD DESK to sharebedroom. Call Roger, Ext. 3255 or 557-0659.Grad student seeks APT. for at least twoquarters. Call 324-1683.SITUATION WANTED—Chemist available forfulltime, parttime, or temporary work —643-8148.4-6 ROOM APT. needed in Hyde Park,starting Dec. or Jan. Call FA 4-8200, Ext.311.ROOMMATE wanted—Grad Student will sharebeautiful South Shore Accomodations. KitchenPrivleges, Air Conditioned. Carpeted, Alllinens and utilities furnished, Private En¬trance, Private Bath, Private Phone—8200South—-Car necessary. $45/month. Call 721-3603this weekend or evenings.ROOMMATE wanted — female grad wantssame to share her apt. Lo rent. Call BU 8-1100, Ext. 301.Male grad student needs ROOMMATE tostare 2 bedroom apt., 52nd 8< Dorchester.Available Dec. 15. $62. 50/mo. 288-4887.FOR SALESKIS—Attenhofer metals, A-15 Elites, 210 cmNevada toe and Cable. $140 New—now only$65.00. Call 324-1683.'62 HONDA 125cc., Twin cyl., good shape.Good price. Call Ted at 493-3750.1963 PEUGEOT 404, tow bar, 52,000 miles,no problems. Would consider selling 1964SIMCA 1000 scratched body, instead. Hagglefrom $1000 and $500 respectively, 752-1521.RUGS, DESK—Call 752-8399 after 6:30 P.M.—before December 2.Three Piece Sectional—$75.00, Kitchen Set—$25.00. Call ES 5-6466.DUAL 1019 and K 660 ALL TRANSISTORAMPLIFIER, both for $150.00, Call 256-4785after 7 P.M.ERIC BURDEN AND THE ANIMALS NEWALBUM—played once-stereo (marked SE oninside cover of album). Perfect condition.$2.00. MAROON BUSINESS OFFICE. INH304 or Ext. 3266.PERSONALSPOT! POT! A whole POT of latkes at IdaNoyes, Nov. 29.Visit, write or phone the Student Governmentoffice to sign up for one of these Xmasvacation trips. Since the youth and excursionfares don't apply at holiday peaks, this is thecheapest way to go.GROUP FLIGHTS (leave Friday evening):Boston $95Baltimore-Washington $70Denver $85Los Angeles $175San Francisco $190CHARTER FLIGHT (leave Saturday morn¬ing):New York $65CHARTER BUSSES (leave Thursday & Fri¬day evenings):New York $35Philadelphia $35FLY YOUR OWN CHARTER FLIGHT—LearnNow! Contact Jerry Levy, Campus Repre¬sentative, Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3266.Decorate your room or apartment with awoodcut by Morton Garchik. All are reason¬able priced. HILLEL will continue the exhibitthrough Dec. 15th. tMarshall McLuhan, The ORACLE, SusanBackhouse, S. Ford, the hooker on the Rugbyteam, the Cream, F. Blankner, the Captainsof Industry, Morgan!, Tiglath Pileser I, theDaniel Burnham Committee, Robert May-ndard Hutchins, the Diggers, Ken Kesey, theAAPDVARK, Leroy Jones, Officer Love,Cynthia Bell, Regis Debray, the illegitimatesons of the DAR, Ignazio Silone, David Stein¬berg, Amenhotep IV, Aram Saroyan, GrantRice, Mark Joseph, Mick Jagger, R. Nureyev,P. Jones, K. Kong, H. Miller, P. Fonda, E.Bishop, F. Fellini, M. Blues. Carmina Burana,the Road Runner, Penelope Tree, WilliamBurroughs, the Fifth Army, Grushenka, HughMasakella, the I.F. Sing, plus all the loyalpeople who call between 10 AM and 5 PM onFridays to inquire if there is still a ChicagoMaroon, the 5 A.M. 57th Street Kayak Fleet,G,uillame Apollinare, the Five Horseman ofJhe Apocalypse (all the way with LBJ),Nomads of the Long Bow, J. H. Breasted, theEVER SWEET PEOPLE, and, of course,HULK (incorrectly identified last week asBruce Banner) SUPPORT MAROON ADVER-TIZERS. Trip a take with Marco Polo. 288-5944.WRITERS WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.LATKE POWER!TYPING—Reasonable rates—call before 10P.M. 731-5980.Have any opinions on the professional &Viet Nam?Voice them at “Social Work 8< Viet Nam:Should We Take a Stand?"MUSICAL SOCIETY CONCERT, Wed., 12:30,LMH, Free. Music for 2 pianos by MozartCage, Stravinsky. Libel claims will be rejected as unsolicitedmail.The Maroon Business Office is a bummer.L. Davis.DAVE BELL—Be Cool and stop smokingLSD—MOM.POLITICS FOR PEACE"Petition campaign and 1968 elections" meet¬ing, November 30, Thursday. Cars leave IdaNoyes at 7:45 P.M. for office at 2446 E.75th Street. Politics costs money, please sendchecks to Politics for Peace.ORAL FIXATION?—Try Bandersnatch.Be among the masses of students at the feettheir professors. Latke-Hamantash! IdaNoyes, Wednesday, Nov. 29th, 7:15.LSD — Latke Science Debate. EVERYONE WANTS TO GOTO INDIAIF we can find 150 people, we can fly roundtrip to INDIA for about $500 each. For Info.. . . only a few seats left . . . call Ext,Available Dec. 15. $62, 50/mo. 288-4887.Friday inWEEKENDA special issueon the nuclearAnniversary nebuchadnezzar films“Collegians of America,ARISE!!!Fly Ozark Youth Fare at 1/3 off!”With an Ozark Youth I.D. Card*, you can turn traveltime into at-home time — fly at % off regular fare!For your Youth I.D. Card application form, writeOzark Air Lines, Lambert Field, St. Louis, Mo. 63145.(Travel under ptan not applicable during major holiday periods.)*Card costs $10. You must be under 22 to be eligible.go-getters goOZARKAim Lint*0(1331 SUMMER SCHOOL ON MAUIHAWAII• MAUNAOLU COLLEGE OFFERS an exciting programfor Summer, 1968• TEN SCHOLARSHIPS available — two full tuition,room and board; eight tuition grants. Preferred fields:Asian and American Studies.• 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 is a residential college lo¬cated on the slopes of Mt. Haleakala on the Islandof Maui.• ACTIVITIES include hiking, swimming, surfing, per¬forming arts, social program. Riding and tennis areavailable by arrangement.• FIRST SESSION.• SECOND SESSION: JUNE 10 TO JULY 10JULY 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.Pre-Christmas Tape Sale at Toad Hall15% off on entire stock ofpre-recorded tapes.If the tape you want isn’tin stock, it will be orderedespecially for you.Toad Hall has a Complete Selectionof compact stereo systems ' Oincluding Harmon-Kardon, Scottand Sony, just to name a few.We also have One of the Largest Selectionsof new and used typewritersof almost every conceivablevariety in the Midwest.Fast Repair Serviceon all high fidelity products.Typewr iters too.ooftfcrU fallBU 8-4500 1444 East 57th Street Chicago, III.the Lome of audio elegance10 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 28, 1967MAROON SPORTS H Hli I'UOIf1 HTT i;7’ i , » i IMaroons Will Face Kendall FridayBy JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterThe Maroon basketball squadpromises to continue in its posi¬tion as the finest Chicago athletic team during the coming season. I college champion, Coach JosephAlthough the team plays a very Stampf predicts another successfulrough schedule, including in its op¬ponents nationally ranked Tulaneand Windsor, the national CanadianProtest Fizzles at Wisconsin dribbling year.Stampf contends that the Univer¬sity “should have a capable andinteresting ball club.” He said thathe is very encouraged by the spiritand ability demonstrated so farand feels that team’s progress sofar has been “quite satisfactory.”Stampf warns against overcon-University of Wisconsin President pended as a student, despite a fed-Fred Harrington and over 300 po-: eral court order restraining thelice from all over Wisconsin were university from disciplining lead- -0-on hand at 9 a.m. last Monday to ; ers of the October 18 protest or dis- j fidence, however, insisting that it’sgreet one lone protestor who j ciplining any student for any non “almost impossible to predict winsshowed up at Camp Randall Me-1 academic offense. | and losses with a schedule likemorial Building where army andnavy recruiters sat to interviewstudents.Nevertheless, the University of,Wisconsin might explode in anotherviolent riot against campus recruit¬ing as it did on October 18. “Allthe elements are still there,” saysJoel Brenner, editor of The DailyCardinal.The issue that seems most likelyto bring a new confrontation is thetreatment of Robert Cohen, ateaching assistant who was one ofthe leaders of the October 18demonstration.Harrington insists that Cohen befired, not for any deficiencies asa teacher, but for his role in theprotest.Cohen has already been sus-Who 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. Berkeley Suspension Protest Sputters ours. We’re capable,” he said, “ofwinning or losing any game.”Consistency a ProblemHe finds the biggest problem tobe that of consistency. “We dothings very well at times,” hecommented, “and our goal willhave to be to raise our level ofconsistency, particularly in work¬ing within the framework of ourteam’s organization.”The nucleus of the 1967-68 squadincludes seven returning players.Topping the list will be Dennis Wal-don, ’69, last year’s leading scorer;and Marty Campbell, ’68, secondlast year in points and rebounds and a former leader in points.Joining them will be “Wink”Pearson, ’68, the team’s major“take-charge man”; Gary Day,’68, a tall, steady toward, leaderlast year in rebounds; Fred Deitz,’69, a high scoring guard; andRandy Talon, ’69, another topguard.The Maroons open the season: Friday night at home against Ken¬dall College from Evanston; onSaturday the team will opposeAlma College of Alma, Michigan.Both games will begin at 8 p.m.Admission is free with a valid Uni-' versity ID card.BERKELEY, Calif. (CPS)-TheMovement against Political Sus¬pensions (MAPS) here has sput¬tered to a near standstill.At a November 18 mass meetingat the Berkeley campus of the Uni¬versity of California, plans for dis¬rupting the functioning of the Uni¬versity were cancelled.The Movement has been protest¬ing the recommendation of Dean ofStudents Arleigh Williams thateleven University of California stu¬ dents be suspended for their partic¬ipation in unauthorized campus ral¬lies during Stop-the-Draft Week inOctober.An ultimatum to Chancellor Ro¬ger Heyns that he rule on the sus¬pensions before last Monday alsowas lifted at the meeting, whichwas attended by 1000 students.Heyns, who must pass final j u d g-ment on the fate of the students,was away from the campus andhas not yet announced his decision.Bengali, Polish, Dada, Joyful and Obscenein Original and TranslationPoetry Theatrechanged to: Sat, Dec, 2 8 p. m.IDA NOYES East Lounge“Let your teethe rattle elsewhere. . .A circus where you can laugh (or even cough). 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 schoolLET S TALK TYPEWRITERS!Am I interested in getting a greater value on a purchase of a typewriter? Do I want the best guarantee service available for a new type¬writer? Get the best deal from the best dealer right here on Campus, The University of Chicago Bookstore. Bring in this ad for a free giftpack on any inquiry of a typewriter (Limit to the first 350 inquiries) Ralph, Bob and Jack will be happy to demonstrate any machine for you.Holiday Typewriter Sale withFree gifts totaling as much as $34.95 with the purchase of a new typewriter (listed below) are yours from November 28, 1967 until Decem¬ber 28, 1967.On the purchase of one of the following typewriters:Olympia SM-8, portableOlivetti 44, portableOlivetti 32, portableOlivetti 33, portable Your choice of any combina¬tion of these giftstotaling $7.95 Typit GuideTypitPenCarbon paperTyping paperCorrection paperRibbonHermes 3000, portableOlympia SM-9, portableSmith 1 10, Electric portableOlivetti 21, portable Your choice of any combina¬tion of these giftstotaling $12.95 Pen and penci 1 setCarbon paperInter-changeable typeCorrection paperTyping paperRibbon couponsTypit GuideTypitsSmith 120, Electric portableSmith 210, Electric portableSmith 250, Electric portable Your choice of any combina¬tion of these giftstotaling $24.95 TableInterchangeable typePen and pencil setTyping paperCarrying CaseTypit Guide and typitsCarbon paperTypewriter pad and coverCorrection paperOlympia SG-3, StandardUnderwood TM-V, StandardUnderwood T-M, StandardRoyal 440, Standard Your choice of any combina¬tion of these giftstotaling $34.95 Pen and pencil setTableTypit and Typit guideTyping paperRibbon couponsCarbon paperTypewriter padCorrection paperNovember 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBJY STORE OtTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent DiscountsCHICAGOBLUES3 Bands A WeekOpen 7 NightsTill 4a.m.MOTHER BLUES1305 N. WELLSStvie Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8LANGUAGE TUTORINGGROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE288-0675wlio killed.KennedyA secret is told in silence and certainty in astrangely suppressed 25 page fairytale. SI.to Box 64, Glenville. Connecticut 06830spray bad breath awayWHISPER’new aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Ave.. New Yorfc. N.V. 10017 CUPID IS HEREAT U. of C.Cupid Computer—smashing success at the University of Illinois fortwo years-is now matching computer dates at U.ofC.!FACTS ABOUT CUPIDCross referenced - answer all questions twice - once for your¬self and once to describe your date! You value the import¬ance of each question!Until June - perfect matches keep coming for sixmonths - all dates from the Chicago area!Pretty fast-first dates mailed to you 2 weeksafter joining!Inexpensive - only $4! Cupid isorganized by students - run forstudents!Directions - read them-thenfill out the questionnaireand mail to Cupid! directionsThe Cupid Computer questionnaire contains 25 questionswhich are multiple choice. Choose the answer which bestdescribes you and write the number corresponding to thatanswer in the box at the right in the column marked“YOU”Then go back and answer the questions again - this timedescribing your ideal date. Notice that there are 5 boxes^.v!^n0^ding t0 each question in the column markedYOUR DATE”. The first box on the left (marked 1st) isreserved for your first choice. In it, write the number cor¬responding to that characteristic which you feel is mostnecessary that your date possess. If you have more thanone choice, enter them all - in order of preference - in theboxes marked 2nd, 3rd, etc.EXAMPLEIf you are 21 years old and would prefer a date 22 butwould accept a date between 21 and 26, you might answerquestion 4 like this:4. Age (in years): YOU YOUR DATE(I. 18 or younger)(2. 19) QQ [SJ [6H m mr ~|(3. 20)(4. 2 I) (5. 22) LJ(6. 23-24)(7. 25-26)(8. 27 or older)Finally, Cupid would like to know which question you con¬sider to be the most important. Read the questionnairecarefully and pick the question which you feel is the mostessential. Place a I in the box to the right of that ques¬tion in the column marked “IMPORTANCE”. Next, selectthe question which ranks second in importance for youand place a 2 in the box at the right. Continue this pro¬cess for your 3rd, 4th, 5th, etc. choices until all the boxesin the column marked ” IMPORTANCE are filled. Youshould have used the numbers I through 24 inclusive.15 Sex: (1. Female) (2. Male)Race: (1. Caucasian - white) (2. Negro)(3. Oriental) (4. Other)Religion: (1. Protestant) (2. Catholic) (3. Jewish)(4. Other (5. Agnostic) (6. Atheistic)Age (in years):(1. 18 or younger) (2. 19) (3. 20) (4. 21) (5. 22)(6. 23-24) (7. 25-26) (8. 27 or older)Height (in feet and inches):(1. 5' or shorter) (2. 5'1" to 5'3") (3. 5'4" to 5'6")(4. 5'7" to 5'9") (5. 5'10" to 6') (6. 6'1" or taller)Weight (in proportion to height):(1. very thin) (2. light) (3. average) (4. heavy)(5. very heavy)Physical Attractiveness:(1. under average) (2. average (3. above average orgood looking) (4. beautiful or handsome)Color of hair: (1. black) (2. brown) (3. blond) (4. red)Length of hair: (1. short) (2. average) (3. long)Color of eyes: (1. blue) (2. hazel) (3. green) (4. brown)Intelligence: (1. low) (2. moderate) (3. average)(4. superior) (5. genius)School year: (1. Freshman) (2. Sophomore) (3. Junior)4. Senior) (5. Graduate)Area of Interest: (1. fine arts) (2. humanities)(3. natural science) (4. social science) (5. business)Belief in God:(1. no) (2. do not care) (3. yes. But not very religious)(4. yes. Go to church weekly) (5. Very religious). Moral code: (1. very liberal) (2. moderately liberal)(3. average) (4. conservative) (5. very strict). Scope of reading: (1. narrow) (2. average) (3. wide). Drinking: (1. never) (2. sometimes) (3. often)(4. whenever possible). Smoking: (1. never) (2. sometimes) (3. often)(4. always). Children: (1. dislike them) (2. they're O.K.)(3. love them)I. Politics: (1. liberal) (2. middle road) (3. conservative). Dancing: (1. not interested) (2. fairly interested)(3. love it). Sexual Experience: (1. none) (2. little) (3. average)(4. much) (5. very much). Dress and grooming: (1. unconcerned about clothes)(2. average) (3.well dressed)k Sense of Humor: (1. very little) (2. some) (3. humorous)(4. very humorous)i. Philosophical awareness: (1. unconcerned) (2. average)(3. pensive) [][][][][][][][][][]c: c: c: c: c:[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]c ] c:: ] c: c:(Last name first: one letter per box: abbreviate if necessary)[ ] c 3:: c 3 c ] c ] c ] c ] c i z i c: c: c ] c d e 3 n a c n c ]address c : c ] c ] c ] c ] c ] c ] c i [ i : i c ] [ ] c ] c : c n t i c n c :C3C3C3C3C3C3C3CDCDC3C3C3C3ClC3CaC3CDphone r n r i c : - c ] c : c : c :)[iii)(niiiiiiiiiiiimmmi».».»milm111Clip out the questionnaire along the dotted line and mail to:Cupid Computer,Box 67,Champaign, Illinois 61820The service charge is $4.Please include the charge with the questionnaire.12 THE CHICAGO MAROON November 28, 1967