W a«n *** ■ -*• Harpdr LibraryW 61 Archives Unlv« ot Cbgo.Chicago, ill* 60637 ■ wr T'jf IT' a ut vThe Chicago MarVOL. 77, NO. 27 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1968 8 PAGESTuition Raised Again to $2100Beginning Next Academic YearWayne C. Booth Nathan SugarmanGrading Proposal PassedBy Council CommitteeBy BARBARA HURSTStaff WriterThe Committee of the CollegeCouncil Friday decided on a newgrading proposal which it will rec¬ommend to the Council at the fullmeeting on January 30.The Committee agreed on thefollowing points:• Common core courses (thefirst quartet) should be taken onan honors-pass-fail basis.• For courses required by thestudent’s division which fall out¬side of the division, (the secondquartet), honors-pass-fail gradingwould be adopted. Courses fallingwithin the division would remainon an A — F basis.• Grading of free electivecourses would be decided by the ap¬propriate divisional governingboard with the agreement of theinstructor.• The divisional governingboard would retain the option forgrading in those courses within astudent’s major field of concentra¬tion.Similar to Students’This proposal is similar to oneproposed by a group of studentswhich met last Thursday with themajor exception that the commit¬tee leaves the option of grading tothe divisional governing board asopposed to a student option.Members of the Committee at¬tending the meeting were NathanSugarman (spokesman), professorof chemistry; Saunders MacLane,professor of mathematics; HerbertAnderson, professor of physics;Karl Weintraub, associate profes¬sor of history; Eric Cochrane, pro- See editorial on Page 4fessor of history; and Wayne C.Booth, dean of the College.Also attending in an advisorynature was Jay Lemke, a mem¬ber of last year’s fact-finding com¬mittee, which originally suggesteda change in grading policy. Absentwere Richard McKeon andHewson Swift. MacLane substi¬tuted for Gilbert White, professorof geography, who is presently inAfrica.Representing the Thursdaystudent meeting at the committeesession were Ed Birnbaum, ’68,chairman of the student govern¬ment committee on undergraduateacademic affairs; Jeffrey Blum, ’68president of SG; Alan Lahn, ’69,stand-in representative for Inter-House Council; and Colleen Miner,’69. Other student representativeswere Candace Falk, ’69, and Lar¬ry Silver, ’69, both from the Hu¬manities Division Council.Two-Hour MeetingThe six students were presentat the two-hour meeting to discussgrading alternatives with the com¬mittee prior to the committee’sbrief adjournment for private dis¬cussion and a final vote.Booth began the meeting bysummarizing the proposed alterna¬tives to the present system. Hesaid that at the last meeting of theCommittee, members were leaningtoward a proposal essentially likethe new proposal, but providingfor honors-pass-fail in the first andsecond quartets.The Committee seemed ges-Turn to Page 3 The University of Chicago willincrease its tuition and fees by $40per quarter for a total of $2100 peryear when the Autumn Quarter be¬gins in 1968.The increase follows a tuitionhike of $90 per quarter to $1980 peryear last year.The new 1968 tuition figure forfull-time students is comparable totuition at other leading privateuniversities such as Stanford($1,920); Harvard ($2,000); and Co¬lumbia, Princeton, and Yale (all$2,150).A decrease in money fromcontracts and in tuition incomefrom graduate school enrollment —both due to the war in Vietnam —made the tuition increase neces¬sary, according to Y)ean of Stu¬dents Charles D. O’Connell.This year’s enrollment in theQuadrangles of 8561 was expectedto increase to 8755 next year, andacademic budgets and faculty hir¬ing were made on this basis. How¬ever, the University now expectsa drop in graduate enrollment often to 25 percent so that next year’sexpected enrollment is now 7913 —842 less than first anticipated.Financial Aid GuaranteedThe University’s guarantee of fi¬nancial aid to all students showing“real financial need” will remain.The estimated freshman budgetwill increase from $3750 to $3870and scholarships will be granted onthat basis.The University’s expenditures forstudent aid will increase from $5,-263,000 this year to $5,295,000 nextyear, despite the drop in enroll¬ment. This increase in student aidis to compensate for the rise in tu¬ition and the continuing cutback ingovernment fellowship funds.Aid to undergraduate students isnot expected to suffer from theUniversity’s financial squeeze.This year $1,183,000 in unendowedscholarship grants was made fromgeneral University funds. This fig- See editorial on Page 4ure is expected to increase nextyear.O’Connell stated that he does notforesee an increase in fees forroom and board next year.Draft Situation UnclearWhile the tuition increase is anattempt by the University to antic¬ipate the effect of the draft ongraduate enrollment, the SelectiveService situation is still not clear.Although leading educators an¬ticipate a 50 percent drop in grad¬uate enrollment, O’Connell said hefound that difficult to believe. Nev¬ertheless, the University is doingeverything in its power to decreasethe variable factors in graduate ad¬missions and thus make its predic¬tions more sophisticated, he said.Since women and foreign stu¬dents will not be affected directlyby the draft, O’Connell has askedgraduate deans to keep their eyesopen for them.He is also encouraging graduatedeans to overadmit next year with¬out admitting students from out¬side the pool of qualified appli¬cants. This is possible because Chi¬cago receives many more applica¬tions from qualified students thanit has places to fill.In the coming weeks the graduate deans are expected to meet withtheir admissions committees todiscuss the situation and determinepolicy.Applications EncouragedO’Connell is encouraging Collegeseniors to apply to graduate schoolthis year even if they anticipatebeing taken by the draft. “In thisway,” O’Connell said, “studentsestablish credentials which mightbe difficult to establish after atwo-year absence from an academ¬ic environment.”Although some graduate schoolsand divisions plan to guarantee re¬admission to drafted students, noneplan to commit financial aid tothose students.The tuition increase applies to allareas of the University, with threeexceptions. Rates for the Univer¬sity’s extension division, the Ex¬ecutive Program, and the 190/MBSprogram of the Graduate School ofBusiness are expected to show onlyslight increases.Gilbert L. Lee, vice-president forbusiness and finance, also an¬nounced that tuition fees will be in¬creased for the University of Chi¬cago Laboratory School in 1968. Theincreases will be $75 for a total of$675 yearly for kindergarten andnursery school and $150 for a totalof $1350 yearly for all other grades.University IssuesDrugs StatementBy JOHN SIEFERTStaff WriterDean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell and Dean of the College WayneBooth will release their long-prom¬ised statement on University drugpolicy today.The statement, which the deanssaid was designed to expand andSPLIBS Eject Maroon WriterA Maroon reporter was thrownout of a planned meeting ofSPLIBS, the black power group oncampus, yesterday evening in IdaNoyes.The reporter, Paula Szewczyk,entered the library before the meet¬ing started and was requested toleave by the only person there, whodid not identify himself. When sherefused to leave, Ida Noyes custo¬dian Walter Jeschke together withtwo guards removed her.The chairman of the meeting ex¬plained that it was to be open onlyto'Stack students, but denied theexistence of any membership re¬ quirements. He said that he wouldbe “uneasy” were Miss Szewczykor any other non-black per¬son there.Jeschke explained that the meet¬ing was open only to members.He said that any group that wantsto close a meeting to persons notmembers of the group may do so,citing previous meetings of the Stu¬dents for a Democratic Societywhere with his help uninvited po¬lice officers were ejected.The SPLIBS meeting, scheduledfor 6:30 p.m., was adjourned at7:45 p.m. when only five peoplehad shown up. See statement text on Page 6and editorial on Page 4.clarify the University’s position onstudent drug use, warned that useof either marijuana or LSD “threat¬ens the University community.”Booth and O’Connell gave fourreasons why they oppose the useof illegal drugs:• They bring underworld figuresonto campus.• They bring law-enforcementagents onto campus.• They lead to student arrests.• They lead to “dropping out”which is “antithetical to the stateof mind of a serious scholar.”O’Connell, commenting on thestatement, said that he did notwant it to add to the growing hys¬teria about student drug use.“We’re seeing a repeat of that vi¬cious reaction against marijuanain the 1940’s. It’s that kind of emo¬tionalism that has made rationaldebate almost impossible.”Turn to Page 7NSAt STUDYDow n *A J O IDemonstrationsMinneapolis, Minn. (CPS) — DowChemical Company recruiting wasby far the leading cause of studentdemonstrations this fall, accordingto a study done by the NationalStudent Association (NSA).The NSA study said there were27 demonstrations in which thepresence of a Dow recruiter wasthe cause. Recruiting by the armedforces was a distant second, caus¬ing eight demonstrations, followedby recruiting by other government agencies such as the Central Intel¬ligence Agency and university de¬fense ^ contracts with six each;black power and racial integration,four: compulsory ROTC and thequality of cafeteria food, threeeach; college social rules, the war,and safer road crossings, two each;and the campus building programand demands for better education,one each.The study said there were 71demonstrations at 62 schools, in-AAC Passes Rights StatementThe MaroonWORKING SIDE BY SIDEUniversity of Chicago students helping mentally handicapped in¬dividuals learn factory skills needed to become self-supporting.The students, members of International Voluntary Service, partici¬pated in a workcamp held last Friday at the Chicago VocationalCenter.Chicago Receives $100,000 GiftCharles P. Schwartz, a promi¬nent Chicago attorney, has given$100,000 to the University, Presi¬dent Beadle announced Friday.The gift will be used to establishthe Charles P. and Lavinia S.Schwartz Citizenship Fund, whichwill concern itself with citizenshipeducation at all levels, includingkindergarten, elementary school,high school, and college.The types of projects to befunded by this gift include scholar¬ship and research, curriculum andmaterials of instruction and action-oriented experimental projects. The Fund will be administered bythe Graduate School of Education.Schwartz received his Ph. B.(1908) and J. D. (1909, cum laude)degrees from Chicago.He was a leading figure in de¬veloping the idea of teachingEnglish and citizenship together tothe foreign-born, and wrote basicbooks for this program. He actedas legal counsel for Hull Houseand for Jane Addams personallyuntil her death. He is a long-timetrustee of Hull House and now ofthe Hull House Association. Minneapolis, Minn. (CPS) — TheAmerican Association of Colleges(AAC) has approved a joint state¬ment on the rights and freedomsof students.The statement was drafted thissummer by representatives of fiveorganizations, the American Asso¬ciation of University Professors(AAUP), the National Student As¬sociation (NSA), the National As¬sociation of Student Personnel Ad¬ministrators, the National Associa¬tion of Womens Deans and Coun¬selors, and the AAC.The AAC, most of whose mem¬ bers are small college presidents, |becomes the third group to act on jthe statement. NSA’s national con- jgress approved it this summer andthe AAUP’s national council did thesame this fall.Thus NSA leaders were surprisedat the overwhelming 220-50 vote in jfavor of the statement. Represen¬tatives from NSA, the AAUP, andthe AAC were the most instrumen¬tal in drawing it up last summerand the AAC was the most conser-!vative of these. The AAC’s resolu- jtions committee had urged that theconference withhold action for ayear. volving 14,564 students. The studyexcluded demonstrations against ar¬rests resulting from earlier demon¬strations and any demonstrationnot focusing on a social, political,or educational issue. The study in¬cluded only demonstrations organ¬ized locally.NSA said 477 demonstrators werearrested by civil authorities. In 95of those, charges were dropped.College administrators threat¬ened 1,728 citations against demon¬strators and punished 730. Thesepunishments included 32 expulsions,60 suspensions, and 422 probations.The remaining protesters receivedsome form of warning.Ml 3-31135424 S. KimbarkQuality Service on allimported cars^ foreign car hospitalCARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas wtiat you need from n $10 Used *X1JRug, To a Custom Carpet Speoaliiing inRemnants ft Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 5. Doty Ave.646-4411 SKI AS PEN$175.00Leave Chi. March 16, 4:30Arrive hack in Chi. March 24.Includes all train, bus, deluxequad room priv. bath (no dormson this trip), all tow tickets, out¬door pool, taxes, skiing vail andAspen.Northwestern U. Ski GroupCall Dick 764-6764 or 762-3765CLASSIFIED ADDEADLINESAll Classified Ads must besubmitted TWO days beforepublication.Wed. for Friday publicationFri. for Tuesday publication McCarey’s SIX OF A KINDW.C. Fields joins Burns & Allen and Charlie Ruggles. A bank employee has $50,000. absconded funds hidden in his suitcase,and doesn’t know it. Not-so-often seen Fields’ Hick. Wed. Soc Sci 122. 6, 8. and 10. 75<t. Doc Films.SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE ltttPICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. How soon after graduationwill somebody let you-m [ft* MULL... 7>. \ .^JSeaulu and (Cosmetic Q^alon. 5700 HARPER AVENUE FAirfax 4-2007SomeUuna to- Qo*tUden,Tomorrow evening while relaxing in your spaciousdormitory room meditating on the manifold ever-multi¬plying mysteries of life, consider this: DO YOU REALLYWANT TO LIVE IN A U of C DORMITORY NEXTYEAR?For three seconds consider the advantages. Thenput on your coat and drop by 5472 Ellis where Z.B.T. willagain be explaining the special somewhat unique advan¬tages of fraternity life on campus.Z. B. T. RUSH SMOKER5472 ELLIS AVENUE7:30 - 10:00 PM run a bank?Before you’re thirty, maybe. If you’re good enough.That’s precisely what happened with Del Ross.He’s the manager of our Forest Hills office.Responsible for 3000 accounts. $4.5 millionin deposits.Then there’s the international scene to con¬sider. We’re going to need an even larger team ofyoung bankers overseas within the next few years.Of course, everybody doesn’t get to runa Chemical New York office. Here or abroad.Only good people.ChemicalNew YorkCHEMICAL BANK NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY If you're good, schedule an interview with our repre¬sentatives. They’ll he on campus, January 29th. Orsend a letter, long or short, to John R. Canhani orMichael C. Giorgio, Chemical Bank New York TrustCompany, 20 Pine Street, New York, N.Y. 10015.2 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 23, 1968Committee of Council Approves Modified H-P-FContinued from Page 1erally to opppose a pass-no creditoption. MacLane objected to theidea on the grounds that the pro¬fessor must retain the liberty ofthe option.Objecting to both the student op¬tion and the P-N system, Sugar-man stated, “I’m not sure that Iwould allow you as students to im¬pose upon me as a teacherthe burden of the P-N.”Workable System?Moving to a more practical as¬pect of grading Weintraub asked,“Is this system going to be work¬able? That’s what worries me most. It’s the R’s that will com¬plicate it.”Sugarman agreed that, “the bur¬den of workability is on the ad¬viser, to advise you what youmust do to get a degree. Then theRegistrar will have a harder timeof keeping things straight.”Booth read a letter from the Bio.logical Sciences Division reportingon a poll conducted in that divi¬sion which showed a strong agree¬ment for earlier proposals.The feeling was that a grade ofpass should be added to presentgrades and that an N should beequivalent to the present R. The letter also stated that should a Igrade of N be adopted, more N’s ■would probably be given than F’s.The poll showed a desire forconventional A-F grading for firstand second quartets, with a passavailable in free electives at thestudent’s option, providing the in¬structor gives consent.Williams Favors P-NA more controversial letter re¬ceived was from David G. Wil¬liams, chairman of last year’sfact-finding committee. OriginallyWilliams maintained that honors-pass-fail for all courses or onlythose in the first two quartetswould be a mistake. structor in English, brought intodiscussion another somewhat con¬troversial point. In what Boothtermed a “very well-informed let¬ter,” Stein explained that whilemost staffs he talked with werehappy to work with honors-pass-fail grading in common-corecourses, there was much confusionabout what an “honors” shouldmean — whether it should beawarded as a substitute for an Aor B, or whether it should be usedfor only exceptional students.Stein found that general feelingwas in favor of the latter defini¬tion of honors, but that faculty members were willing to “goalong with ” honors-pass-fail.Members of the Committee haddifferent ideas about the definitionof honors. Anderson said, “Myfeeling would be to have a broad¬er definition of H.” Miss Falk saidthat “honors should be very, veryselective.”Dean Booth suggested the pos¬sibility that “if honors encom¬passed both A and B, the facultycould grade in essentially thesame way it does now and gradeswould just be translated intohonors-pass-fail.”PINES REELECTEDSERVICEto your satisfactionQUALITY WORKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanicsBody work & paintingTOWINGFree Estimates on ALL Work326-2550ESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours:8-7, Sat. 9-510% Student DiscountOn Repair Order PartsConven ient to al I major express-ways. Lake Shore Drive, 1C & ‘L’PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800IHC Selects Its OfficersMitchell Pines, ’69, was re¬elected president of the Inter-House Council (IHC) by acclama¬tion at its meeting late Thursdayevening. Steve Cope, 70, andMary Ann Maziak, ’68, were elec¬ted vice-president and secretary-treasurer respectively, both by ac¬clamation.Fourteen of twenty-six memberswere present at the meeting.Anne Hamblin, 70, Upper Flintrepresentative, said the FacilitiesCommittee is currently circulatinga questionnaire to the dorms re¬garding “general and specific fa¬cilities,” conducting a food surveyin the dorms, and sponsoring abetter description of University fa¬cilities to be sent to first-year stu¬dents before they come to campus.According to a Campus LifeCommittee report, delivered byPines, the student escort servicefor Woodward women will be ex¬panded.Bill Phillips, 70, Lower Flintrepresentative, asked the IHC topass a proposal to open LowerFlint’s first floor lounge toescorted women guests twenty-four hours a day. The remainderof the House would be still closedto guests at the specified times. Phillips said he made the pro¬posal because students are not al¬lowed in the Woodward’s centralunit after 3 a.m. The vote was sixto five to table the motion untilthe next meeting, to be held onMonday. Pass-fail has been a success in |Liberal Arts I, the letter ex- |plained, and should be maintainedso long as great supervision andcare are exercised. Williams saidhe still favored a pass-no creditoption in the first two quartets,explaining that pressure should belifted for first-year students.A letter from Robert Stein, in- DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESAtmosphere for AchievementIf you are an MBA contemplating acareer in aerospace, your next tenyears are critical ones. The exposureyou get to major projects, the caliberof your associates, the quality andavailability of educational institutionsfor advanced study, and therecognition you get for personalachievements will all count heavilytoward building your reputation andyour income.At Convair you will find managementsensitive to the importance of yourpersonal development and you willwork in an atmosphere of achievementside by side with some of the mostcapable people in our industry.The Convair Division of GeneralDynamics, as one of the largest and most highly sophisticated aerospaceand research firms in the world,provides a positive atmosphere forachievement... and recognition.Convair’s efforts are in completesystems and programs, which includespace launch vehicles, electronicssystems, commercial and militaryaircrafts, and oceanographic research.MBA’s will be assigned to one of twohighly critical groups—EngineeringAdministration or Economic Analysis.One of the nice things about workingat Convair is living in San Diego. Twogreat bays and 70 miles of sparklingbeaches provide all-year fishing andaquatic sports. A world famous zoo,mountains and 65 year ’round golfcourses add to the fun. San Diego is aGENERAL DYNAMICSConvair Division family city just 15 miles from Mexico.As the nation’s 16th largest city, SanDiego offers excellent schools, culturalattractions, and professional sports.If you’re an MBA looking for apromising career and a delightful placein which to live and raise your family,you belong at Convair.Interview Dates; February 7-8See your placement officer toarrange a personal on-campusinterview with our representativesor write toMr. J. J. Tannone, Supervisor,Professional Placement and Personnel,Convair Division of General Dynamics,5491 Kearny Villa Road, San Diego,California 92112.San Diego, Californiai ~ v * An Equal Opportunity EmployerJanuary 23, 1869 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3MICHAEL SEIDAAANCes3 The Chicago Maroontv*' Founded in llflJeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business Manager'. m : Moynihan s Prediction:End of Big GovernmentTuitionAs far as it goes, the University’s announced plan toraise tuition next year is admirable.As the cost of tuition skyrockets, however, it is be¬coming obvious that this financial device is not alwaysequitible. As this newspaper pointed out last year, stu¬dents from middle-income families are getting a raw deal.If Chicago needs more tuition funds, it would dobetter to raise tuition to a maximum for those who canpay it while instituting for the rest graduated rates orrebates closely correlated with financial well-being.DrugsPerhaps the best that can be said for the long awaitedO’Connell-Booth statement on drugs is that it could havebeen much worse. The statement steers clear of the alarm¬ist nonsense and paternalistic threats which other uni¬versities have resorted to recently and presents the caseagainst pot in remarkably clear and lucid prose.Frankly, we are impressed with the first three pointsDeans Booth and O’Connell make. Obviously, it is desir¬able to keep students in the University and the policeand Mafia out of it. Yet the complexities of the issue aresuch that these premises do not necessarily lead to theconclusion Mr. O’Connell and Mr. Booth draw.The unstated assumption behind this argument isthat a University rule will deter students from usingdrugs and thus keep the police and Mafia off campus.The Booth-O’Connell report presents no evidence for thisargument, and until some can be found, there will remainno justification for University meddling in this field.As to the deans’ last point, one might as well arguethat masturbation is “often associated with a tendencyto ‘drop out.’ ” Unfortunately the notion of resident headspolicing the dorms for this “violation” is only slightly lessludicrous and frightening than the situation which pre¬sently exists.GradesThe Committee of the College Council’s moderateproposal for a grading change involving a limited use ofhonors-pass-fail is little more adequate than the pass-nocredit and student option proposals it rejected.If an honors grade is no more than the equivalentof an A or B and a pass the equivalent of a C or D, whatthen is the new system but an abbreviated albeit slightlyimproved version of the old one? And if an honors gradeis reserved for the few really outstanding students takingthe course (as is quite possible, considering the Chicagofaculty’s past stinginess with A’s and B’s), would this notjust increase the cruel rat race for a transcript that gradschools will look favorably on?We recognize the disadvantages to Student Govern¬ment’s proposal for a student pass-no credit option on allcourses. Nevertheless, a compromise could be reached thattakes from both the SG and the Committee of the Councilproposals. This is to require honors pass-fail grading inall College courses except electives, where the studentwould have a P-N option. It is disheartening that the Com¬mittee recommended that the decision on grading in thissensitive area not be guaranteed to students and that theP-N alternative was found nowhere in its proposal. Daniel Patrick Moynihan is be¬coming one of the great icono¬clasts of our time.The man who has already ar¬gued that the root of the Negroproblem may lie in family struc¬ture and that the draft couldpossibly play a socially usefulrole, Moynihan had the audacityto assert on educational televisionlast week that big governmentmay not be the wave of the fu¬ture. The old New Deal coalitionmay hold together long enough toreelect President Johnson, Moyni¬han suggested, but the vast num¬bers of people who will be votingfor the first time in 1972 and 1976have seen what their liberal fath¬ers have wrought, and they don’tlike it one bit.If Moynihan’s arguments soundfamiliar, that’s because they are.Conservatives from Herbert Hoo¬ver to Barry Goldwater havebeen predicting the imminent de¬mise of the welfare state formore than a generation, and thepolitical success of these two menis a good barometer of the ac¬curacy of their predictions. Butwhat makes Moynihan’s predic¬tion interesting is that it comesnot from a Neanderthal conserva¬tive, but from a man who isgenerally indentified with the lib¬eral community. And what makes it important is that he may verywell be right.A QUICK SURVEY of issuesmost important on Americancampuses today reveals a trulywidespread disaffection withstrong central government. Tothe extent that this disaffectionforms a coherent philosophy, itis represented by the impreciseand over-used, yet still suggestivephrase “doing your thing.” When“doing your thing” is used tomean a rejection of the paternal¬istic invasions of individual free¬dom for the sake of some overrid¬ing social goal, it expresses thegrowing feeling that the welfarestate is imposing false, usuallymaterialistic values upon peoplewho would be better off if tnevcould develop their own.Hippies represent the most ob¬vious and radical form of thisnew disenchantment. Their totalrejection of American society andvalues for the sake of individualdevelopment is the logical ex¬treme to which the argument canbe taken.Yet among all sorts of campusgroups who are not willing to goto this extreme, “doing yourthing” also an important part ofthe new value structure. Whereascampus politics of a generationago was dominated by grauos de¬ manding more governmentalpower to aid in unionization, helpredistribute the wealth, and per¬form numerous other tasks, SDSand groups like it today demandinstead a decentralization of pow¬er and “participatory democ¬racy.”SIMILARLY, criticism ofAmerica’s Vietnam policy and ofher general arrogance in interna¬tional affairs frequently takes theform of demands that other coun¬tries be allowed to “do theirthing.” And what is the blackpower movement and the demandfor “maximum feasible participa¬tion of the poor” if not restate¬ments of this same ideal in thecontext of Negro and disadvan¬taged minorities.Viewed in this light, it is notsurprising that the Michiganchapter of the reactionary YoungAmericans for Freedom recentlyannounced their support for thelegalization of marijuana. Thenew interest in individual identityand privacy synthesizes the liber¬tarian traditions that form theroots of both left and right wingideologies. The grand coalitionthat may emerge from this syn¬thesis is likely to be a potentpolitical force for years to come.Letters to the EditorsTravel TaxIt is possible that Americansmay be required to pay a perdiem tax on vacations spent out¬side the Western hemisphere.Ostensibly, such a measure is in¬tended to discourage travel andto help redress the balance ofpayments. In fact, any such taxon travel is a special tax in sup¬port of the Vietnam “war,” sincethe major cause of our interna¬tional fiscal weakness is our ex¬traordinary expenditure on mil¬itary activities overseas. The tot¬al spent on Vietnam will soon—or perhaps it already has—cometo exceed the total spent onWorld War II.I call on all persons who arerepelled by the Vietnam “war”to recognize that any travel taxis a special tax for Vietnam, andshould be avoided, if necessaryby not traveling. Furthermore,I call upon the Student Govern¬ment of the University of Chica¬go, and indeed upon all studentgovernments and all groups ar¬ranging group and charter tripsoverseas, to cancel their travelactivities whenever any specialtax for war becomes a tax forthe travel costs.KENNETH I. ROTHMANInstructor in SociologyPass-FailWith all the current discussionof pass-fail going on it is inter¬esting to note that no one hasyet defined what will be meantby these terms. When the aver¬age faculty member has thechoice of giving the student eith¬er a pass or a fail, it’s absurd tothink he’ll give 95 percent of theclass passes (i.e., those who now get A-D) and very few fails. Itis a simple law of math thatwithin a given population if thenumber of categories fall, thenjust more members of the pop¬ulation will be put into eachcategories. Is this in the interestof the students? I think not.The stigma of the “F” in anysystem is incredibly strong. Weat Chicago should look carefullybefore adopting any grading sys¬tem which will increase thenumber of failing grades givenout.ALAN BLOOM, ‘68NostalgiaThe article in last week’sMaroon (January 19) about“Eat” in Hyde Park restaurantsmade me kind of hungry, but italso reminded me of restaurantsI used to eat in on the nearNorth Side when Chicago’s tui¬tion was $100 a quarter.On north Clark St., near Bug-house Square, you could go intoTokyo Restaurant and get a bigbowl of jowl soup for a nickel,tripe stew for a dime, pigs’ earswith cabbage for 15 cents, dogmow and potatoes for ten — allwith bread and butter and pud¬ding for dessert.Close by was another cafe¬teria-style restaurant namedBacillus Ternainopolis for its rep¬utation. This place was reallyout of this world. For breakfastyou’d get oatmeal, two friedeggs, hot cakes, syrup, and but¬ter, all for 15 cents — coffeefree. A friend of mine who’dworked in the kitchen of thisplace said the flour used for hotcakes had living things crawlingaround in it, but you couldn’t tell the difference after cooking. Theeggs, too, were just abouthatched before frying, but theywere eggs just the same. Yougot your belly full. Why worryabout little things? Bacillus Ter¬nainopolis! Gone now.In the event you were low ondough there was a five-story loftbuilding around the corner whereyou could both eat and sleep,too, for a dime. The manage¬ment furnished you with allthe old cakes and rolls you couldeat, black coffee included. Thenyou’d go upstairs into one of thelofts and flop on a bench. If youdidn’t have the dime you couldget the works for a nickel, onlyyou’d have to walk up to the 5thfloor under the rafters and nobenches along the walls. Thisplace was known as “The Cake-flop.”Yes, Bacillus Ternainopolis,Tokyo Restaurant, and Cakeflop,I survived and still remember.WERNER WEHLENLetters 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 16 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chariermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.January 23, 19684 THE CHICAGO MAROONMl IIMAROON SPORTS V, oDribblers Crush Roosevelt' Halt Lake Forest FiveThroughout University history,1Chicago sports team have alwaysset up very rough schedules on theBOX SCORESChicagoPlayer F.G. F.T. Pts. RooseveltPlayer F.G. F.T. Pts.Waldon 4 4-6 12 Voight 2 0-0 4Cay 2 0-0 4 Guinn 1 3-3 5Campbell 7 2-2 16 Ray 7 4-5 18Talan 5 3-5 13 Stevens 3 1-1 7Pearson 4 2-2 10 Newell 8 10-14 26Diitz 0 2-3 2 Gunn 0 0-0 1Ferry 4 0-0 8 Brown 2 0-1 4O'Brien 2 0-1 4 Reimer 0 0 0Daw 3 1-2 7 Lindland 0 0 0BartlettAndryMadsenTweedChicagoWaldon 1 0-0 21 1-2 30 1-4 11 0-0 234 16-27 843 7-7 13 28 18-24 64Lake ForestBroda 6 9-12 21Day 2 0-0 4 Hogan 1 1-2 3Campbell 11 7-9 29 Josepher 2 0-0 4Talen 5 4-5 14 Maiman 4 0-0 8Pearson 0 1-2 1 Micali 0 0-0 0Dietz 1 3-3 5 Russo 2 0-0 4Daw 1 0-0 2 Shethar 6 2-3 14Ferry 0 0-0 0 Lanman 0 0-0 023 22-26 68 21 12-17 54Boo Hoo BrownHappens ThursdayCharlie Brown (Altman), jang¬ling, bearded, self-styled “Boo Hooof the Berkeley Bag of the Neo-American Church,” will give aspeech at 3:30 p.m. Thursday inthe Ida Noyes Library.His speech, entitled “The NewAge: or It’s What’s Happening,Baby!” will be sponsored by Stu¬dent Government.Brown is an announced candidatefor the California Legislature in1968, and says he is curently takingan LSD and religion test casethrough the courts.Brown (“this mortal body is 27years old, but the spirit is eternal”)says that the Neo-American Churchhas three basic principles. “Thefirst is that LSD and other psyche¬delics are the New Age Sacrament.I’m not sure I can remember theothers.”Rossman Is AppointedKurt Rossmann, former researchassociate at the Eastman KodakCompany Research Laboratories,has been appointed a professor ofradiological sciences in the Divi¬sion of the Biological Sciences.Concurrently, Rossmann was ap¬pointed the director of the sectionof radiological sciences in the De¬partment of Radiology.NOTICE!The Reynolds Club Bar¬bershop will be closedSaturdays beginning Feb.I, to conform with newregulations of the FairLabor Standards Act. Hrs.Mon.-Fri. will remain 8:30a m. to 5 p.m.Carl AlkineManagerMOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBIY STORE OtTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9255Student DiscountsEVE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 promise that better contests areplayed if the level of competitionis high. In other words, it has be¬come an Athletic Department pol¬icy to often eliminate very easyteams from the Chicago sportsschedules and insert more difficultteams in their place.On the basis of this policy, the1968-69 varsity basketball schedulewill include such squads as UCLA,Houston, Louisville, and North Car¬olina—because nobody else seemsto be able to halt the Maroon five.Over the weekend the teamscored their tenth and eleventhvictories of the season by crushingRoosevelt 84-64 Friday and aveng¬ ing their lone early season defeatby stopping Lake Forest 68-54Saturday.Chicago’s leading scorer, MartyCampbell, continued his fantasticyear by topping Maroon scoring inboth contests. He played one ofthe best of his career Saturday ashe completely dominated bothsquads, scoring 29 points and pull¬ing in 16 rebounds.Other active winter sportssquads also performed very wellin weekend action. The swim teamevened its record at three andthree with a tight victory over theGreat Lakes Naval Training Sta¬tion on Saturday; leading by onlyfour points after ten events, the finmen came through with vitalwins in the 200 yard breast strokeand 400 yard relays to secure thevictory.On Friday, the track pickedup season-opening twin victoriesover McMaster and DePaul Uni¬versities as John Beal scored a to¬tal of 36 points taking two eventsagainst McMaster and threeagainst DePaul. POLICE SPEAKER'' A police department expert|| on self-defense will speakin Woodward CourtWednesday at 8 p.m. Thepolice were invited to comeby Mitchell Pines, president; of the Inter-House Council,following a series of rapesI last quarter in which four? Chicago co-eds were at¬tacked.* , V-'Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.Fritz Lang's YOU ONLY LIVE ONCEHenry Fonda is the innocent man convicted of murder. His girl friend helps him escape, and they are hunted like animals.Tonight. Soc Sci 122. 7:15 and 9:15. 75$. Doc Films.Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regularkinds of guys. Except bigger.And that can be an advantage.How? Well, for one thing, you've got more going foryou. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an excitingand vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About market'ing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for the future.Come to work for this giant and you'll begin to thinklike one.Because you're dealing with bigger problems, theconsequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilitiesheavier. That means your experience must he better—morecomplete. And so, you'll get the kind of opportunities only agiant can give.Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals.Men that you'll be working with, and for. Marketing andsales pros working hard to accelerate your advancement.Because there's more to do, you’ll learn more. In more areas. You may handle as many as three different assignmentsin your first two years.You'll develop a talent for making hard-nosed, imagina¬tive decisions. And you'll know how these decisions affectthe guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you'llhave been there.If you'd like to be a giant yourself, and you’ve gotbetter ideas in marketing and sales, see the man from Fordwhen he visits your campus. Or send your resume to FordMotor Company, College Recruiting Department.You and Ford can grow bigger together.THE AMERICAN ROAD, DEARBORN, MICHIGANAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.What’s it liketo sellfor a giant?Actually I'm quite big on it.January 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON| Drug StatementWe have been asked to comment on the following statement ofUniversity policy which appears on page 45 of the 1967 edition ofthe Student Handbook:The use or distribution of hallucinogenic drugs, such asmarijuana and LSD, will not be tolerated on the Universitycampus or elsewhere on its property. Infractions will resultin disciplinary action by the University which may lead tosuspension or dismissal.We recognize that the physical, legal, and moral problems ofusing marijuana are quite different from the problems of usingLSD and other hallucinogens. There are at least four ways, however,in which — whatever their other differences — their use threatens theUniversity community. The first three are obvious and concern therelationship between the student or University and the outside com¬munity. The fourth is more subtle and addresses itself to the relation-!ship between the student and the University.FIRST: MARIJUANA, LSD, and other psychedelic drugs travel |in bad company. Their use brings into the community criminals whomake their livelihood from their illegal transportation and sale. Suchpersons are often engaged in other criminal activities as well. Their jpresence on campus should be of real concern to the Universitycommunity. The best way to keep such people out of the communityis not to buy their goods.Second: the misuse and illicit traffic in drugs will inevitably bringpolice into the University community. Everyone at the University iobviously has a strong interest that the police offer protective enforce¬ment of law and order in the University neighborhood. But there arefederal and city police whose sole duty it is to enforce the laws against ithe illicit sale and use of drugs. At some universities, police havemade raids on dormitories in order to arrest students involved in the juse of drugs. At other universities, undercover policemen have circu¬lated among students, with or without cooperation from the universi¬ties themselves; and the police have even recruited student informers.Students at the University of Chicago rightly feel that they should beable to hold formal and informal social gatherings without the intrusionof policemen and informers. The best way to forestall unwanted policeintrusion into the community is to avoid activities which it is theduty of the police to prevent.Third: the law sets penalties for even a first conviction on thecharge of possessing hallucinogenic drugs that are so severe as tojeopardize a student’s entire career. While some may feel that thepenalties for illegal possession of marijuana are excessive, the penaltiesare a fact of life. Under Illinois law, the minimum sentence for afirst conviction for possession is two years; the minimum sentence fora first conviction for sale is ten years.Fourth: the use of both marijuana and LSD is, for a variety ofreasons, often associated with a tendency to “drop out.” In somecases, “dropping out” is simply a euphemism for hospitalization dueto severe LSD-induced psychological disorders. In far too many cases,a student on drugs finds it increasingly difficult to do his academicwork, so that he may be strongly tempted, or eventually forced, todrop out of school. “Turning on” and “dropping out” have no usefulrelation to a student’s educational purpose or to the purposes of anacademic community. Indeed, these effects of marijuana or LSD, when¬ever they occur, are antithetical to the state of mind of the seriousscholar and to the intellectual life of the University itself.EACH OF THESE REASONS is a cause for serious concern. Theircummulative effect seems to us to justify not only University concernbut a firm University policy against student use of hallucinogenic 'drugs.Members of the Department of Psychiatry who are especially well-informed about the effects and mechanisms of psychedelic drugs areavailable to student groups interested in learning more about thesesubjects. Physicians on both the medical and psychiatric staffs of theStudent Health Service are also prepared to discuss problems of druguse with individual students in the confidential terms that alwaysapply to the doctor-patient relationship.Much of the recent public discussion about student drug use hasbeen badly informed and dangerously misleading. We do not intendthis statement to contribute to the confusion. As reliable scientificinformation becomes available to us, we shall try to make it availableto students. Meanwhile, we have confidence in the mature judgmentof Chicago students and their ability to separate fact from fantasy.WAYNE C. BOOTHDean of the CollegeCHARLES D. O’CONNELLDean of StudentsTHE DEPARTMENT OF MUSICTHE FROMM MUSIC FOUNDATIONpresentTHE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORalph Shapey • Music DirectorSoloists: Esther Glazer • violin; John Cobb • pianoA program devoted to the music ofSTEFAN WOLFEFriday 8:30 P.M.January 26, 1968 Mandel HallAdmission free but with ticket only.Tickets available at Concert Office, 5835 University Ave. It you don't agree thatbusiness destroys individuality,maybe it's because you're anindividual.There’s certain campus talk that claimsindividuality is dead in the business world.That big business is a big brother destroy¬ing initiative.But freedom of thought and action, whenbacked with reason and conviction’s cour¬age, will keep and nurture individualitywhatever the scene: in the arts, the sciences,and in business.Scoffers to the contrary, the red corpus¬cles of individuality pay off. No mistake.Encouraging individuality rather thansuppressing it is policy in a business likeWestern Electric—where we make and pro¬ vide things Bell telephone companies need.Because communications are changi fast,these needs are great and diverse.Being involved with a system that helpskeep people in touch, lets doctors send car¬diograms across country for quick analysis,helps transmit news instantly, is demand¬ing. Demanding of individuals.If your ambition is strong and your abili¬ties commensurate, you’ll never be trulyhappy with the status quo. You’ll seekways to change it and—wonderful feeling!—some of them will work.Could be at Western Electric.Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM6 THE CHICAGO MAROON January 23, 1968Deans Booth, O'Connell Issue Drug StatementContinued from Page 1O’Connell said that a first of¬fense would not be reason for ex¬pelling a student. He said that theDean of Students Office has re¬ceived no appeals in disciplinarycases involving drug use this year.This would indicate that violationsof drug policy have not yet comeup before the disciplinary commit¬tee.Reached for comment, Dr. Rich¬ard Moy, director of the Student Health Service, said that the state¬ment by O’Connell and Dean of theCollege Wayne Booth said more bywhat it left out than by what it in¬cluded.“The first thing I noted,” Moysaid, “was that the statement saysnothing about disciplinary actionagainst students for off-campusdrug use.”Moy said that he felt this wasan important exclusion. “Some ofthe points the deans make are rele- ilvant only to use on the Universitycampus. What students do in theirown apartments is a matter of con¬cern, but it is ultimately their ownbusiness.”Moy said that the Student HealthService will not be put in the roleof an informer. “Medical informa¬tion is a privileged communicationwith legal safeguards for the pa¬tient,” Moy said. “Medical recordsare the property of the StudentHealth Service and are not underCalendar of Events41Persons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information on Cal¬endar forms available at The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sent orbrought to the Office at least two days be¬fore the date of publication.Tuesday, January 23LECTURE: "Carbohydrate Metabolism inTumors," Dr. George Weber, PharmacologyDepartment, Indiana University MedicalCenter; Biochemistry of Cancer Lecture(pathology); Billings P-117, 3 p.m.COMMITTEE OF THE COUNCIL: SwiftCommon Room, 3:40 p.m.CHURCH UNITY WEEK EVENT: InformalEcumenical Service, Bonhoeffer House, 4p.m.COLLOQUIUM: "Superconductivity in theLa-Se System," Philip E. Seiden, PhysicsDepartment, University of Indiana, andIBM Research Center, New York, ResearchInstitutes 480, 4:15 p.m.FILM: "You Only Live Once," directed byFritz Lang; Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. Admission 75 cents.ORGAN RECITAL: Edward Mondello, Uni¬versity Organist, Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30p.m. Informal Lectures: "After the SixDay War: Three Conversations," N.C.Bassiouni, Law School, De Paul University,holds the second "Conversarion"; Hillel , House, open only to those who sign up inadvance.Wednesday, January 24SLIDES: Sights and Sounds of India—"ThePolitical Art of Asoka," directed by IngredAall, Rosenwald 2, 12:30 p.m.WEDNESDAY INVITATIONAL LECTURE:"The Business Outlook for 1968," WalterD. Fackler, Irving Schweiger, and BerylW. Sprinkel of Harris Trust 8, SavingsBank; Business East 103, 1 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: Physical Sciences,Eckert 133, 3:30 p.m.ALUMNI MEETING: Arthur Mann, speechand reception, Phoenix, Arizona.FILM: "Six of a Kind," directed by LeoMe Carey; Social Science 122, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. Admission 75 cents.LECTURE: "Self Defense" sponsored byI.H.C., Woodward Court, 8:00 p.m.RECRUITING VISIT: Sperry Gyroscbpe Com¬pany, Great Neck, New York, AdvancedDegree candidates in Mathematics, Statis¬tics, and Solid State Physics call ext. 3284for appointment.Thursday, January 25UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Cain," by LordByron, Rockefeller Chapel Chancel; 8:30p.m. Tickets required — Phone ext. 3581.LECTURE: "Metabolic Tegulation in Tu¬mors," Dr. George Weber, Pharmacology Department, Indiana University MedicalCenter; Biochemistry of Cancer Lecture(pathology): Billings P-117, 3 p.m.CHURCH UNITY WEEK EVENT: Ecumeni¬cal Service, Rev. John Hondros, St. An¬drew's Greek Orthodox Church; Rockefel¬ler Chapel, 4 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: "New But True Results inSuperconductivity," Bernd T. Matthias,Physics Department, University of Califor¬nia, San Diego; Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEETING: Gros-venor Cooper, speaker, Cleveland, Ohio.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Teaching andrequests, Hillel House, 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Psychotherapy and the Dae¬monic." Rollo May, William Alanson WhiteInstitute and the New School for SocialResearch, New York City, sponsored bythe New Collegiate Division; Ida NoyesLibrary, 7:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: UC Concert Band, Belfield244 (Lab School) 5-6:30 p.m. Open to allstudents, faculty and employees.FILMS: "3rd Ave El," Marcel Marceau in"In the Park" and two more short films;Judson Dining Room, B-J. Free admission,8:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Some Comments on Fermi'sWork in Rome" By Ugo Fano, ChicagoAcademy of Sciences, 2001 North ClarkStreet; 7:30 p.m. the jurisdiction of the dean of stu¬dents.”Why Pick on Drugs?Jeffrey Blum, president of Stu¬dent Government, described thestatement as “so vague as to addalmost nothing to the students un-1derstanding of the University’s in- itentions.” .Blum asked: “Why drugs—andnot basketball, science fiction, orsnowball fights—are inconsistentwith the academic life is left unex- jplained, except by understandingthe fears about drugs held by mostadults, from President Johnson toDean O’Connell.”Jerome Skolnick, associate pro¬fessor of sociology and an authori- jty on criminal justice, said that it jwas most important that the state¬ment mentions no University pen¬alties for possession.“As far as I can see,” Skolnicksaid, “possession is not an infrac-jtion of University regualtions. If astudent is holding drugs in his roomand goes elsewhere to use them, itis not an infraction.Jerome H. Jaffe, assistant pro-,fessor in the psychiatry department,took issue with the University pro¬hibiting student drug use becauseof its high risk factor. “Lots ofthings students do” Jaffe said,“such as burning draft cards, may |bring excessive punishments by thelaw, yet the University doesn’t add; its own punishments to them aswell. I think it would be extremelyunfortunate if Chicago were to useits own police force to detect stu¬dent drug use on campus.”Jaffe said he found the state¬ment not a corporate position onwhether drug use was good or bad,but as a statement about the prob¬lems that face an institution.Effectiveness DoubtedHoward Becker, professor of so¬ciology at Northwestern Universityand an expert on the sociologicalaspects of student drug use, saidhe found it difficult to ascertainChicago’s drug policy out of thestatement issued by the two deans.“I doubt that their statement isgoing to convince anybody,” Beck¬er said, “and I doubt that it willmake drug use less common. Stu¬dents and faculty are going to ar¬rive at their own conclusions aboutdrug use—from their own experi¬ence.”Becker said he found it question-albe wisdom for the University tomake rules against things it can¬not stop. “If I were dean of stu¬dents at the University of Chicago,”Becker said, “the drug policy Iwould establish would be no drugpolicy at all. Quite frankly, it’s noneof the University’s business.”Maroon Classified AdvertisementsWANTEDRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat. Count 35 characters andspaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.HOURS: Weekdays 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. BE A STATISTIC!DEADLINES: Ads must be in by 11 a.m. : Volunteers needed for an experiment on visuTYPIST AVAILABLE. Electric typewriter.Standard page rates-flexible. Manuscriptspreferred. 90/words/minute. 2321 Rickert,BU 8-6610.TUTOR DESPERATELY NEEDED FORPHY SCI - need help with problems-324-5751. PERSONALSI FOLK GUITAR TEACHER for advancedI (kind of) student. Call 324-0439. Hail Osiris,the chief of Amentathe lord of eternityspreading out in everlastingness,lord of adorations,chief of the company of his gods;and hail Anubis,dweller in the tomb,great god, chief of the holy dwelling SIX STRING BANDS, BLUES BANDS, FID- > Come with me to the Bandersnatch. Tonight.two days before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext 3266. JAPANESE FILM GROUP presents, in color,"KWAIDAN", directed by Kobayashi. Satur¬day, January 27, 6:30, 8:30. 75c Breased Hall.Oriental Institute, University & 57th.ASSISTANTSHIP al and auditory acuity. One hour on inter-j esting tasks. If interested, Call Ext. 4774.PHOTOGRAPHERS AND PHOTOGRAPHS—Iany kind-funny, filthy, or arty etc. Full credit Introducing the Meat Market at Alpha Deltagiven. Come up sometime to the Third Floor Phi-5747 University Friday, January 26 atat Ida Noyes. Unlimited exposure. , 8:30 P.M. DLERS, AUTO HARPISTS, and BAGPIPES???? Only at The U.C. FOLK FESTIVAL:February 2, 3 and 4. 10 P.M.The Hitchcock CHEENIX is coming Fridaynight at Ida Noyes.Dance to THE MEAT MARKET atAlpha Delta this Friday-5747 University, 8:30, IT'S FREE!!!IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYWEEK—Ecumenical Service in Rockefeller—Thursday, Jan. 25, 4:00 P.M.—Preacher: Father John Hondros, pastorof St. Andrew Greek Orthodox Church, Chi¬cago. SHTEVE — If every hermaphrodite were aschizophrene, which half would you choose?Wash Prom features Otis Rush, February17, What more need we say?Dear Katy B.: Lonely Chinese student des¬perately desires companionship on night flightto Cairo, Chuck.VIRGINITY?NOTE TO ALL OUR SUBSCRIBERS—As ofGRADUATE STUDY AND RESEARCH INTHE FIELD OF MATERIALS: Graduate re¬search assistantships available for psyhicists,chemists, engineers in outstanding researchgroup. Stipend—$2880/12 months (half time),plus dependency allowances and remission ofall tuition and fees. Post doctoral positionsand fellowships also available. For informa¬tion and applications, write to:DirectorMaterials Research LaboratoryThe Pennsylvania State University1-112 Research BuildingUniversity Park, PA.-16802 FOR SALECAFE EUROPA FOR SALE—1440 E. 57th St.Call 363-4732. after 6 P.M.Never worn heavy Sweater—hand made inSpain—fit Male and Female (med-large)684-5086HOUSE FOR SALELeaving UniversityMust sell deluxe 14 year old 2 story, all¬brick home, 3 spacious bedrooms, liv., din.,oak panel den, Mod oak-cab kitchen, refrig.,stv., dishwasher, garbage disposal, washer-dryer, complete air cond., w/w carpeting,drapes, fin. basement. Large fenced yard andpatio. Lovely area in S.S. Near 80th & Phil¬lips. Conv. transpt. to U. C. Upper 20's. Call731-5131.ROOMMATES WANTEDTwo Grad. Women want third for Hyde ParkApt. Own room. $43.00. Call 363-1245.Young female undergrad wants to room orshare apt. with 2 or more male stud. CallAME at 363-0718.SUBLETUniversity Apartments, North building, 6thfloor, <iew of Loop, Lake. 1 bedroom. Feb.1st Occupancy. Present rent $165.50/per mo.Landlord prefers new lease. Call 324-1315evenings, or FA 4-1414, MRS. MARSHALL.APARTMENT WANTEDImmediately or Spring Quarter: 2 bedroomApartment. Call BU 8-1100, Room 804.FOR RENTApartment—3'/2 rooms $125.00/month. RingJoseph Faltman, 2422 E. 74th Street, ReadyImmediately.2'/2 room Sublet, E. Hyde Park, $100, Un¬furnished, Lou X3680 days or 643-5058. What’s it liketowofkfor a giant?Depends on the giant. If thegiant happens to be Ford MotorCompany, it can be a distinctadvantage. See your placementdirector and make an appoint¬ment to see the man from Fordwhen he is here on:February 7I d like a big job pleaseCARS FOR SALE1961 RAMBLER. Good condition, starts wellin cold weather. Has good heater. $350. Call392-0970 after 7.DEPENDABLE COLD WEATHER STARTERAdorable '56 Chevy needs home. Comes com¬plete down to her snowtires. Call Gene(684-1138) or Rich (643-4937).FREEOne Male and One Male (or hermaphrodite)kitten to be given away to good providers.Wild, gassy kittens. House broken. Call 324-5751 or come to 1442 E. 60th Place. "JEWISH VISIONS OF GOD: A HISTORICALAPPROACH," a lecture by Rabbi NathanGaynor, Hillel Director, University of Illinois,Champaign-Urbana, Friday, Jan. 26th, 8:30P.M. Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn. , BUSINESS OFFICE has taken over the run-I ning of the Subscription Service—Pleaseaddress new and old complaints to Room304, 1212 E. 59th—we will handle them per¬sonally.The FOLK FESTIVAL is getting close. Goodseats are going FAST—get your tickets NOW! at the Mandel Hall Box Office.WASH PROM blends the soft strains of RossAnderson's Orchestra with the now soundof Otis Rush's Blues.IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYWEEK — Ecumenical Service at BrentHouse. Wednesday, Jan. 24, 4:00 P.M. Hear the John Klemmer Quartet, Wednesdaynights only, at the New Baroque, 1510 E.53rd Street . . . received 5 stars for his firstalbum from DOWNBEAT . . . You must beover 21.We killed feminity — Tiger Woman of the !Bandersnatch.Blues Records at the Fret Shop!AFTER THE SIX DAY WARProf. N. C. BASSIOUNI, Law School, DePaul University, Egyptian and Americanexpert on International Law. In conversationat Hillel. Tuesday, 7:45 P.M. EXHIBIT: "Old Testament and Post BiblicalLife." At Hillel until January 30. All Printsfor sale.IK*«W4IWOKI- Charles O'Connell's New Criterion for Col¬lege Admission.TRIPAdvantages of traveling alone at group rates.82 days in London, Paris, Copenhagen, Lenin¬grad, Moscow, Kiev, Odessa, Istanbul, Athens,Rome, Madrid for $1375. No group activitiesthere. Call 2545 or DO 3-3548.TUTOR WANTEDTo teach Italian two evenings a week. CallMrs. E. Snyder. 561-4540 or RA-5132.TRANSLATOR WANTEDMed. student to translate hospital report intoGerman. Segall, eves. PL 2-6291.OBSERVE ALL NORMAL PRECAUTIONSIN DEALING WITH EXPOSED ELECTRICALWIRING AND NOTE THAT YOUR WATT¬METERS READ ONLY TO 75 WATTS. YOUSHOULD NOT CHANGE ANY CONNECTIONSEXCEPT BULBS IN THE SOCKETS.Russian taught by highly experienced nativeteacher. Rapid method. Trial lesson at nocharge. Call CE 6-1423 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.BLUES, BLUEGRASS AND BAHAMANMUSIC — February 2, 3, and 4.CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITY WEEK— Ecumenical Service at Bonhoeffer House —Tuesday, Jan. 23, 4:00 P.M.SPRING VACATION!Freeport, Bahamas, March 16-23, 7 nights,8 days. Jet Air Trans. Hotel, and Extras.$189.00 Skokie Vacations. 677-0570. LECTURE"The ROLE OF ISLAM IN WORLD HIS¬TORY" Lecture by Prof. Marshall Hodgson,Chairman, Committee on Social Thought,Sponsored by the Muslim Students Association,Friday, January 26, 8:00 P.M. Home Room,International House.CHEENIXFly high at the Hitchcock CHEENIX, Fridaynight at Ida Noyes.CONCERTWOW! U.C. CONCERT BAND at Lexington,3:00 Sunday, Jan. 28, GEE WHIZ!ILLINOIS COMMITTEE FOR MC CARTHYNEEDS $$$ NOW!!!Make checks payable to MC CARTHY FORPRESIDENT. Send to:Alan Bloch, treasurer120 S. La SalleRoom 2102Chicago, Illinois 60603Beardsley is noveau and everywhere at WashProm.Otis Rush? ? ? ? ?QUOTE FROM WVON — "The greatest ac¬complishment the Negro has made in 1968is io exist." .HAPPYBIRTHDAYLARRY CLARY! REVOLUCION!"3rd Avenue EL," and Marcel Marceau's"In The Park," 2 movie shorts, 8:30, 1/25,judson dinging d room. Free!!!COMING EVENTGirl who called about Pea-Coat: You havea very nice voice. 1416X.Nice voices don't pick no cotton. S.F.People are still dying of starvation in India.A child's heart stops beating. Are you in¬human? Do something.Concert Band plays rarely performed works—like the U.C. Alma Mater.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING AT HILLEL,THURSDAYS.Oozed—up citywrapped in a blue mista silk blue decimal breathing infibrous flesh.GIRL: EAT your cooking at our expense.TERMS. Call Terry: 684-9018 after 6 P.M. 1968 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION! MockRepublican Nominating Convention, January27, Contact John Turner, 1503 Henderson,FA 4-9500, To be Delegate.KUMSITZ — Student Zionist OrganizationBrings Excitement! Israeli singing and FolkDancing; Refreshments.Saturday, Jan. 27, 8 P.M. Hillel.WORKCounselors wanted for a small camp withan unstructured program. Unusual opportu¬nities for individual initiative. See PaulMeng, 5200 S. Blackstone. BU 8-1100.PARTIESLet yourself go Friday night at the bestdance of the year—Hitchcock CHEENIX atIda Noyes.January 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON* ***** ir'k'kiririfickir'k'k'kick'k'kiirk'k'k'k'kick **¥¥¥¥t¥¥¥¥¥¥t 10,000 BOOKS GO ON SALE TODAY!It's that time again.The Bookstore’s gigantic hexacentennialstock clearance sale begins Tuesday January 23rd.1/2 PRICE !Huge quantities of titles in Medicine, Literature, Mathematics, History, Physics, Political Science,Business, Chemistry, Religion, Biology, Philosophy and Egyptology plus more at xk price.ONE WEEK ONLY !First come, first serve.Sale continues only as long as stock lasts. ****3**3****General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore 35802 S. Ellis l^ *¥ if*'kick'kirk'kiriKit'kickiriK'kick'ki< 1k it 'kirickictckickicic'k'kiKickick'k'k'kick *THE CHICAGO MAROON January 23, ivw