Harper LibraryV 61 Archives Univ. of Chgo.Chicago, Xli« 60637 Chicago, IllFoundedIn 1892VOL. 76 NO. 31 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1968The MaroonDISTINGUISHED VISITOR: Vice-President Humphrey leaves Hutch¬inson Commons on Thursday while a crowd of students demon¬strate in the rain outside.Vice-Presidential VisitNot Concealed-ClaffeyBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorUniversity officials continued toinsist yesterday that they made nospecial effort to keep Vice-Presi¬dent Humphrey’s recent visit tothis campus a secret.Humphrey, who spoke Thursdayevening at a testimonial dinner forex-Senator William Benton held atthe Reynolds Club, was greeted bya spontaneous anti-war demonstra¬tion.Michael Claffey, assistant vice-president for public affairs, statedyesterday that Humphrey, alongwith President Johnson and mostother people who have had politi¬cal connection with Benton, hadbeen invited to the affair about onemonth ago, but that the Vice-President had declined the invita¬tion.“Sometime between three andfour o’clock that afternoon, Ilearned that there was possibil¬ity of his coming,” Claffey stated.“But up until six o’clock, I wasn’tcertain. Obviously if we had knownhe was coming, we would have letthe press know about it.”“Just Came In”Claffey also stated that the Uni¬versity had not made any specialarrangements with the police tohandle the demonstration. “The lo¬cal police just came in,” he stated.I would assume that when you startgetting a crowd gathering, there’sa build-up of police.”Student Government PresidentJeffrey Blum, ‘68, who helped or¬ganize the makeshift demonstra¬tion, agreed that police had beenfair with the demonstrators, but hewas openly sceptical about admin¬istration assertions that Hum¬phrey’s visit had not been kept se¬cret in an attempt to ward off anydisturbance.“It would seem to me that whenthey invited him they might havetold the campus about it,” Blumsaid. “One of the points about Vice-President Humphrey is that hecan’t go anywhere without tryingto sneak there. By allowing him todo so, the University goes alongwith that conception of Americansociety.” See editorial on Page 4.Blum said that, he first heard ofHumphrey’s planned visit when hereceived a call from HannahFrisch, a graduate student in hu¬manities who was in the Reynold’sclub that evening and heard ru¬mors that the Vice-Presidentplanned to attend the affair.Blum immediately contacted oth¬er students in apartments, as wellas in Pierce Tower, New Dorms,Harper Library, Ida Noyes, andthe Blue Gargoyle. A small groupof demonstrators greeted Humph¬rey when he arrived at the dinner,and by the time he left at 11:25p.m. the crowd had grown to about300.Poor Taste?While University officials refusedto call the demonstration “disrup¬tive,” or beyond the bounds ofproper protest, they did argue thatsome of the chats and remarkswere in poor taste.“You have to remember,” Claf¬fey asserted, “that the Vice-Presi¬dent’s visit was an expression ofpersonal affection for a man whofought the other McCarthy whenvery few others did.”University officials also insistedthat the demonstration had no ef-Turn to Page 7 College AnnouncesPlans for LAC '68Michael Claffey By JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorPlans for the third annual Lib¬eral Arts Conference (LAC ’68),which will be held April 3-7, wereannounced yesterday by AssistantDean of the College Karl Bemes-derfer.Centering on “College: Mythand Reality,” the Conference willhave two main approaches. Thefirst, according to Bemesderfer,is the utopian college, with out¬side speakers talking about theirideas of the perfect collegiate in¬stitution.The other, closer to home, willconsist of student-organized semi¬nars, which could have topics suchas University courses, drugs, andthe relation of academia to theoutside world.Bemesderfer stressed, however,that his office would not be ar¬ranging seminars this year. “Ifthe students want any seminarsthis year, they will have toarrange them themselves,” hesaid.As last year, the Conference willbegin Wednesday afternoon with akeynote address by Dean of theCollege Wayne Booth entitled“Who Killed Liberal Education.”There will be other speakers dur¬ing the morning sessions on Thurs¬day, Friday, and Saturday.The speakers will be William Ar-rowsmith, Martin Kamen, and Ed¬gar Friedenberg from outside theUniversity; Booth, Roger Hilde¬brand, and Joseph Schwab fromChicago.Arrowsmith is professor of clas¬sics at Wesleyan University. Ka¬men is director of the Photosyn¬thesis laboratory in Paris andprofessor of biochemistry at theUniversity of California at La Jol¬la. Friedenberg is professor of so¬ciology at the State University ofNew York at Buffalo.Hildebrand is director of the En¬rico Fermi Institute and professorof physics, while Schwab is prof¬essor of natural sciences and ofeducation.Evenings will be devoted to en¬tertainment, including the worldpremiere of “Caligula,” a play byDaryl Hine of the English Depart¬ment, and the American premiereof a film by Jean-Luc Goddard.Also scheduled are a perfor¬mance by the Second City com¬pany and the showing of “rushes”from a film on Chicago studentlife being made by Holden Aust.The Contemporary Music Societywill present a concert. RoscoeMitchell and Joseph Jarman havebeen invited.In addition, a student group isscheduling a dance for Saturdaynight, April 6.Since the purpose of the Confer¬ ence (according to Booth) is to getpeople out of the intellectual rutinto which they may have fallen,the Bandersnatch plans to stayopen after its normal closing time,and students holding dinners forfaculty members will be re-im-bursed up to $1.25 a head, Bemes¬derfer said.Meetings in CobbMost events are scheduled forCobb Hall, although its official re¬dedication has been postponed un¬til the middle of June. The audi¬torium in Cobb, called theQuantrell Auditorium, will be usedfor most of the major events, un¬less the size of the crowd de¬mands the use of Mendel Hall.Seminars can be scheduled forCobb and for other buildings aswell if their number is large, al¬though this will be unlikely if last See full schedule on Page 2.year’s relatively poor turnouts arerepeated.During the first LAC two yearsago, seminars were held all overcampus, with a great variety oftopics discussed by some of thebest-known and most highly re¬garded professors in the Univer¬sity. Bemesderfer expressed thehope that things would be no dif¬ferent this year.He pointed out that the LAC co¬incided with the weekend in whichthe Chicago College Bowl teamwould be on television from NewYork, and suggested that a TVset be set up in Quantrell as afitting climax to the activities ofthe Conference.McCarthy VictimAt Editors SpeechBy ROGER BLACKManaging EditorSpecial to The MaroonWASHINGTON, D.C. — SenatorEugene McCarthy (D, Minn.), theonly announced candidate for theDemocratic presidential nomina¬tion, was made pointedly awareSaturday that not all the peoplewho attend conferences of studenteditors are mild-mannered liberals.McCarthy was speaking at apress conference during a confer¬ence on “Alternative Futures andPresent Choices” sponsored by theU.S. Student Press Association, theorganization which runs CPS, theCollegiate Press Service.Just after the press conferencebegan, Berkeley student and Co-Chairman of the National Mobil¬ization Committee Jerry Rubincame running up to the platformbrandishing a newspaper with theheadline REDS FREE 2,000 PRIS¬ONERS IN HUE.Rubin shouted to McCarthy,“People are free! People arefree! What do you think of that?”McCarthy replied quietly, “Whatdo YOU think of that?”Then Rubin and several friends,all bizarrely dressed, climbed upon the platform with McCarthy andsat at a long table on either sideof him, making faces, gesturingobscenely, providing a scene likeone from some surrealistic movie.They booed when an editor stoodup to apologize for them to Mc¬Carthy.A Hasty RetreatLater, a group of hippies made jtheir way into the hall, beating a ilarge tin drum, and carrying an j See editorial and a columnon Page 4.ornate black coffin. When McCar¬thy saw them coming, he quicklythanked the student editors andleft.The pallbearers meanwhilemarched to the foot of the podiumand threw open their coffin, whichcontained several hundred McCar-thy-for-President buttons and anAmerican flag. An outraged NBCphotographer, who said that hehad just returned from Vietnam,tried to engage one of the hippiesin a fist fight, but was soon re¬strained.Conference co-ordinator DavidLloyd-Jones later apologized forthe disruption.The convention was notable forits distinct dissimilarity with theusual college newspaper conven¬tions, with their headline work¬shops and classes on how to writeproper lead paragraphs, and work¬shops on headline writing.Light Shows and HippiesInstead, the Conference, held inthe enormous, posh Sheraton ParkHotel, was full of light shows, mov¬ies, television effects, and hippies.The hippies were brought in bythe organizers of the conferencewith the ostensible purpose of“blowing the minds” of the Con¬ference participants.By Saturday afternoon the con¬ference had been thrown into acomplete uproar, either because ofthe total lack of communication atthe seminars (some vogue wordsTurn to Page 2Friedman Testifies against WorMilton Friedman Milton Friedman, Paul SnowdenRussell Distinguished Service Pro¬fessor of Economics, testifiedagainst the gold standards Thurs¬day before the United States Sen¬ate’s Committee on Banking and ICurrency.Friedman called for the aboli¬tion of the present gold reserverequirement. According to Fried¬man. the gold standard require¬ment “limits narrowly the powerof the government of the financial jcommunity to alter the quantity ofmoney. It subjects the country toan automatic and impersonal dis-1cipline.”With the removal of the gold cover a free price market for goldwould exist, thus removing thefixed price of $35 an ounce forgold.Free Market PriceFriedman said, “We should letthe price of gold be a free marketprice, not a pegged price. Thatwould have no adverse economiceffects — domestically or interna¬tionally. And it would take backthe loaded guns we have handedto foreign holders of dollars —no¬table to General de Gaulle.“In the interest of plain honesty,the gold reserve requirementshould be removed. Legal require¬ments should conform to reality. | not serve as a cloak to conceal' the true situation.”He also pointed out that a freeprice might increase the price ofgold as shown by the increase ofsilver from $1.29 to $2 an ouncewhen the U.S. Treasury was forcedj to free the price of silver.Monetary RestraintFriedman charged that the menon the Board of Governors of theFederal Reserve System, the pres-! idents of the Federal Reserve: Banks, and the Secretary of the; Treasury are “able and disinter¬ested public servants.”He emphasized the need for Standardmonetary restraint based on theguidance of men “who run ourmonetary system, to provide aneffective restraint to replace theineffective gold cover.” This wouldstabilize the economic growth ofthe nation and would help offsetany inflation or deflation of prices,he said. The policies needed bythe monetary system would be leg¬islated by Congress.Friedman testified that the pres¬ent U.S. gold crisis should be ur¬gently acted upon by Congress.Legislated rule by Congress wouldrestore a favorable climate forthe propagation of capitalism.Strobe Lights, Hippies, and Some Maroon ThingsContinued from Page 1were “hang-up,” “medium,” “up¬tight,” “groovy,” “bag,” and“turned on” being bandied aboutfreely and sometimes interchange¬ably) or because the great major¬ity of the “straight” editors werenot prepared to have their minds“blown.”Saturday ShenanigansBefore the McCarthy press con¬ference, Lloyd-Jones staged a gen¬eral meeting of the convention topresent what turned out to be abogus resolution against the warin Vietnam. The resolution preci-pated a flurry of debate, name¬calling, parliamentary shenani¬gans, counter-resolutions, andgeneral confusion, with the finalresult that the original resolutionwas tabled.At that moment Lloyd-Jonesstood up and said one point ofview remained to be presented.All the lights went out, and ontoscreens at the front of the hallwere projected several motion pic¬ture clips: shots of bombs falling,buildings exploding, pans of na-paim victims, and in the middle,a color film of some oblivious stu¬dents milling about in academicrobes.Immediately after the film a voice came over the loudspeakersystem, identifying itself as “Cap¬tain Jurgensen of the MetropolitanPolice Force,” and announcingthat the films were contraband, tobe seized immediately, and thateveryone was to leave the hall orface arrest.The Whole IssueWith the exception of thoseeditors who left in disgust, theyclaimed, when the films firststarted, no one left the room, butthe meeting was thrown into con¬fusion.Groups of the hippies stationedaround the room started applaud¬ing a man who got on a chair inthe middle of the room and startedexclaiming “The whole issue islife. Anyone who opposes this isagainst life and in favor of death.”Confusion outside the scheduledmeetings was provided by guestsof the Conference — such as per¬ennial gadfly Robert Theoboldand architect-genius BuckminsterFuller — and also by some non-invited people — such as Realisteditor Paul Krasner, disaffiliatedCPS staffer and now LiberationNews Service editor Ray Mungoand a whole crowd of refrigeratorsalesmen who had come for anoth¬er convention at the hotel. The largest part of the action,though, was furnished by the hip¬pie contingent, which includedLinn House, a San Francisco per¬son; Abbie Hoffman, a resident ofthe East Village; Ron Thelin, soft-spoken publisher of Haight-Ash-bury’s Free City; and Peter Rab¬bit, described by the conferenceprogram as a former advertisingcopy-writer who “poaches deerand does other things at DropCity near Trinidad, Colorado.” One of the larger social eventsof the Conference was a huge par¬ty given Saturday night by TheChicago Literary Review, whichis seeking to expand its circula¬tion across the country. A spokes¬man for the Review said he wasnot sure whether the party at¬tracted any new subscribers. Infact, he said, he was uncertainwhether any one there remem¬bered the party at all.Maroon Managing Editor Roger Black circulated a resolution atj the conference commending Lloyd-Jones and the other organizersI of the Conference.The resolution concluded “That1 while great quantities of bullshithave been slung about obfuscating1 some of these alternatives, quitej obviously many of us have been5 turned on or alarmed or nause-| ated and perhaps we will go homewith changed ideas of what col-| lege papers should be.”WAR DISCUSSIONProfs View Draft Resistance4 p.m.4 p.m.10:30 p.m.7 p.m.9 p.m.10:30 p.m.7:30 p.m.8:30 p.m.10:30 p.m.8 p.m.4 p.m. Tentative ScheduleLAC '68Wednesday, April 3Wayne C. Booth, “Who Killed Liberal Education."Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall.Daryl Hine's "Calligula." Quantrell Auditorium.Thursday, April 4William Arrowsmith and Wayne Booth. Discus-Second City. Mandel Hall.Contemporary Music Society. Cloister Club, IdaNoyes.Friday, April 5Roger Hildebrand and Martin Kamen. Discus¬sion. Quantrell Auditorium.Holden Aust, feature films of Chicago life.Quantrell Auditorium.Doc Films. World premiere of a film by Jean-Luc Goddard.Mandel Hall.Saturday, April 6Edgar Z. Friedenberg and Joseph Schwab, Dis¬cussion. Quantrell, Cobb Hall.Undecided big name entertainment, CloisterClub, Ida Noyes.Sunday, April 7College Bowl. Channel 5. “I support the right of a nation¬al state to institute military con¬scription, hopefully for only thelast resort,” said Reuben Smith,assistant professor of history, ata discussion on draft resistanceheld Sunday night in the Episco¬pal Church at 5540 Woodlawn Ave.Speaking with Smith was LawProfessor Geoffrey Haazrd.:“I’m not a classical pacifist,”Smith continued, making it clearthat his objections were againstthis war in particular, rather thanagainst any war.Smith commented that manypeople feel that, in protesting thewar through conventional chan¬nels, “we have attempted to ap¬peal to men of good sense, fortheir good sense, and we’ve runout of gas.” He indicated, how¬ever, that he had not completelylost faith with conventional meansof dissent.“Reasonable men may differ,”Smith said. He expressed respectfor those who feel that time hasrun out for conventional methodsof protest, such as writing lettersto Congressmen. Hazard took a position slightlyto the right of Smith. He warnedagainst a “truly isolationist psy¬chological withdrawl” which, hesaid, might accompany an Amer¬ican departure from Vietnam.Hazrd called upon those facedwith the decision of how to re¬spond to the draft call to “put toone side any kind of group senti¬ment, whether it’s the nationalgroup or the ‘in’ group.”This point was disputed by someChicago students present, whofelt it unrealistic to expect de-Rusk Protest FlopsTwo hundred and fifty students! and members of Students for aI Democratic Society demonstratedat the commencement exercisesof Loyola held Sunday on theNorthwestern University campus,but the object of the protest, Sec¬retary of State Dean Rusk, failedto put in an appearance.Instead, Rusk appeared at therequest of President Johnson onthe television program “Meet thePress” to discuss the Vietnam con-! flict. cisons entirely apart from groupinfluence, and who implied thatgroup pressure should play a rolein individuals' decisions about thedraft.Hazard also criticized “obstruc¬tive dissent,” claiming that it in¬dicated a lack of faith on the partof the protestor in “any residualsense of (public) conscience.”“It’s saying that you don’t seeany prospect of persuading themajority,” he asserted, addingthat many students participatingin obstructive dissent “manageto make themselves repulsive.’’NOTICEThere was an error (not ours'in the 1/30 Maroon.The rep. for the AmericanNational Bank will be at theUniversity today, Feb. 6.rather than Feb. 8 as in ad-verti sement.Reservations Now Being Taken ForEUROPEAN CHARTER FLIGHTSDeposit of $50 required for each seat reserved. Until April $40 will be refunded in case oflcanc ell at ion.Open only to members of the University of Chicago, their spouses, parents, and children.Prices quoted are estimates. Any excess collected will be refunded.PIZZAPLATTERPina, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price.11480 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 j [ iF EXAMINATIONSTACHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimberk Plaza*200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 ORA JUNE 14 - SEPT. 20 ChicagoLondon $220ORB JUNE 25 - SEPT. 4 -ChicagoParis/London $31008 C JUNE 25 - SEPT. 2 New YorkEondon/Paris $285080 AUG. 0 - SEPT. 2 ChicagoParis/London $290Student Government Office Ida Noyes Hall Room 2162 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 6, 1968The MaroonA NEW LEAF? Blackstone Rangers have turned from violence toworking for a better community, they say. "Police harassment" isstill a problem.Mighty Blackstones ClaimCredit for Crime Reduction 2nd District Peace VotersSupport Weinstein, CousinsBy JUDIE RESELLStaff WriterMore than 400 Second Congres¬sional District Voters Committedto Change (VCC) supported RabbiJacob Weinstein and Eighth WardAlderman Bill Cousins for nomina¬tion as delegates to the Democrat¬ic National Convention at ameeting Saturday at Chicago Vo¬cational High School.“You cannot contain the enemywhen the enemy is part of whatis supposed to be your friends,”Cousins commented in attackingU.S. Vietnam policy. AlthoughWeinstein was unable to attend, hesent a letter giving wholeheartedsupport to the convention and itsgoals.Quentin Young and Tim Black,a candidate for alderman of theFourth Ward, were selected as al¬ternates in the event that Wein¬stein or Cousins will not be able; to run.VCC voted not to support, underany circumstances, anyone whosupports President Johnson. Theyconditionally endorsed Senator Eu¬gene McCarthy, contingent uponhis anti-war stand, to allow for thepossibility that McCarthy’s peacecandidacy may not last until elec¬tion day.The PlatformVCC endorsed a platform callingfor:• An end of the war in Vietnamand change in the foreign policyThe Blackstone Rangers, ac-1 ers go to jail for draft resistance, that has made the war possible;By CAROLINE HECKStaff Writer | asked what communication the! Rangers had with the University,“What we’re trying to do is keep j Cogwell answered with one word:the money in the community,” a j “None.”member of the Blackstone Rang¬ers said about his organization ata Sunday night lecture entitled “ABlackstone Ranger Speaks.”Three Rangers were present atthe lecture, which was part of asupper and discussion series spon- Rangers’ ViewsCogwell commented on theRangers’ views on other topics ofthe day:• Robert Taylor Homes housingdevelopment — “Get a bulldozerand tear them all down. Let thesored by the University’s Luther-1 PeoPle ™°ve where they want to.”an Church at Chapel House. • Riots and violence — “ItThe discussion was led by Mick- takes two to be violent.”ey Cogwell, 22. who said he was a • Education — “They don’tchief of the group. Other Rangers teach us enough. They don’t spendpresent were Larry Williams and enough time on us.”Richard Curry. There was an aud- • The draft — “I don’t fight forience of approximately 25. nobody. There’s a war going onControl South Side right here.” When asked if Rang-cording to Cogwell, is a group of7000 which has control over the emtire South Side of Chicago. Thegroup's focus has changed sinceits formation in 1957. Then, Cog¬well stated, the group’s aim wasviolence, while now the Rangerswork on programs for improvinglife in the Woodlawn area.The Rangers work in connectionwith The Woodlawn Organizationon teaching and employment pro¬grams. They have staged a majorproduction, part of which was re¬cently presented on the SmothersBrothers TV show.Cogwell attributed a 50 per centdrop in the crime rate in the areato the Rangers’ work, saying,“Police don’t stop the crime rate.We stopped it.”Police CriticizedThe speakers were critical of thepolice, particularly of the SpecialGang Intelligence unit, which is anew department that is “out tobreak the gangs up.” When askedif there was police brutality, Cog¬well said yes, citing specific in¬stances. He has been harassed bypolice, he claimed, because he isan important Ranger. Harassmentmay range from traffic tickets—Cogwell has received 20 in onemonth — to frame-ups — Cogwellmentioned two important Rangersin jail now on what he claims is aframed murder charge.Cogwell also mentioned policecorruption, stating that police pay Cogwell answered,find them.” “If they can • Government actionend poverty, secure to seek tofull racial equality and cope with the prob¬lems of our cities; and• Local action to bring aboutneeded social change on the SouthSide.Equal importance was attachedto international policy and to do¬mestic issues.Cessation of bombing in NorthVietnam and negotiation of an im¬mediate cease-fire in the Southcoupled with negotiation with theNational Liberation Front for safewithdrawal of U.S. troops werethe bases of the foreign policyplatform. The platform also includ¬ed recognition of Red China, cur¬tailment of the CIA and an end toresearch and production of chemi¬cal and biological weapons.Against the MachineThe national domestic policyplatform promised tax structurereform, pollution control, freehealth care for all who need it,and free tuition for higher educa¬tion. Local priorities were enforce¬ment of open housing, improve¬ments in education, and actionagainst machine politics.As part of a panel discussion ofthe goals of the convention, Rich¬ard Flacks, assistant professor ofsociology at Chicago, referred torecent struggles in Vietnamese cit¬ies as a new stage in the war.“This may well be the last mo¬ment when accepting the offer ofNorth Viet-Nam for cessation ofbombing and subsequent negotia¬tion could lead to salvaging somehonor from the situation,” he said.Warning against putting toomuch faith in the two-party electoral system, Flacks empha¬sized the problems of seeking so¬cial change “through the ballotbox. We have to start buildingwhere we are the new party thatis in our hearts.”Cannon FodderBlack emphasized race issues inhis discussion. “Black boys arebeing used as cannon fodder inVietnam and as scapegoats in theU.S.,” he commented.Black described the recent em¬phasis on control of violence in thestreets as aimed against the blackcommunity. Rev. John Fry of theFirst Presbyterian Church ofWoodlawn agreed, referring towhat he called the Gestapo tacticsof the U.S. government — “bothin Hyde Park and in Vietnam.”At the caucus for the FifthWard, which includes the Univer¬sity, Hyde Park, and parts of Wood¬lawn, over 125 people, over half ofthem Chicago students, worked toset-up a practical mechanism forachieving the group’s goals. Mem¬bers of Students for Political Al-! ternatives and Politics for Peaceparticipated.The Fifth Ward elected threerepresentatives to the central com¬mittee of VCC — labor union re¬searcher Paul Booth, Carol Travisof the Public Aid Department, andsocial worker Milt Cohen.Another ward meeting is sched¬uled for February 15 at 8 p.m.Booth stressed that people areneeded to work in the ward andurged that those intersted in op¬posing the present foreign and do¬mestic policies attend the meeting.ALICE'S RESTAURANTStudents Organize Draft Counseling“Alice’s Restaurant,” a group of intricacies of draft resistance, heten draft-eligible Chicago students cited prison, fine, suspended vot-who organized at the beginning of ing rights in some states, and dis-the quarter, last Tuesday made ability in licensing and employ-momentum to their resistance ment as possible consequences ofmovement with a discussion of the resistor.“Alternatives to the Draft. j “Draft resistance may weighRichard Spiegelman, ’68. said heavily against any applicant forthe goals of the group’s members j a federal job,” he added, quotingare two-fold: to make informed, a pamphlet prepared by a groupindividual decisions about the ! at the Yale Law School,draft through “mutual soul-search- Alice’s Restaurant has announceding”; and to inform others of le-1 an open meeting tonight in the Idagal and personal problems of j Noyes Library to plan a resistancedraft resistance, encouraging them j and anti-Vietnam program forto form their own small discussion ; graduation week. Graduting sen-groups. j iors and first-year graduate stu-Keynete speaker S t a u g h t o n dents were especially urged toLynd, who teaches at Chicago i attend.State College, considered alterna phasized the importance of unityand communal activity in the areaof political protest.Charles Isaacs, a first-year lawstudent and chairman of thegroup, announced plans to re-I search the request of the StudentHealth Organization concerningthe draft of doctors. Isaac alsostated that plans are being pro¬cessed for a possible draft infor¬ mation service to be setup nextquarter.Law Students Against the Warwas formed early this quarter todiscuss the role of the law studentin the anti-war movement. Discus¬sion is centered around the legalaspects of draft counselling andresistance with respect to the gen¬eral character of the local draftboards.tives to the draft in light of hisown draft board confrontation in1953. “The draft is like somethingelse,” he remarked, “a differentkind of decision.”‘Can You Refuse?’Lynd, granted a IAO status(non-combattant medic) in the Ko¬rean War, described the long-range implications of both rightpeople to testify against the Rang-1 and wrong decisions. The confron-ers. When asked about why people tation. he advised, continues longwill make deals with the police, after the initial decision.Cogwell said, “When you’re poor 1 “Can you refuse to serve in the Law Students MeetStaughton Lynd, professor ofhistory at Chicago State College,addressed the newly formed LawStudents Against the War Wednes¬day night on the legal aspects ofdraft, counselling and resistance.Lynd discussed three types oftest cases which effect draft resis¬ters and anti-war protesters: thelegality of the draft and the war;the necessity of a belief in a Su¬preme Being to obtain conscien¬tious objector status; and the free-vou need the money.” The Rang- I United States Army and then go dom of speech in draft counsellingers have plans to charge thepolice with false arrest after theupcoming murder trial.Cogwell commented on theRangers’ connections with the cityand with the University: “This isthe only program he (Mayor Rich¬ard Daley) doesn’t control.” When to work for Dow Chemical” he I and demonstrations,asked. Lynd said that the significance“I feel for you,” Chicago Associ- of these cases was not so much inate Law Professor Jerome Skol- the individual care, but that theynick told those gathered in the enable the protest to continue byIda Noyes Library for the discus- providing some sort of direction,sion. | In order to have an effective draftAddressing himself to the legal resistance movement. Lynd em The Maroon DAVID TRAVISBUKKA DOES HIS THINGCountry Blues Singer Bukka White, one of the hits of thethree day University of Chicago folk festival last weekend, talkswith some of his admirers at a folk workshop. The festival, theeighth sponsored by The Folklore Society, was the most successfuli£ the Society's history. I rFebruary 6, 1968 THE .CHICAGO MAROONEiM I The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerDemonstrations..Somehow, we just can’t buy the notion that lastThursday’s demonstration against Vice-President Hum¬phrey was in “poor taste.” It is one thing to attack directaction campaigns on the grounds of their political effec¬tiveness or ideological consistency, but it is somethingelse to complain about matters of etiquette while a viciouswar is going on in Vietnam.Given that war, it is difficult to take seriously thecomplaints registered by guests at the Benton dinner andsome University officials about “taste.” It is, of course,unfortunate that the demonstration should have marreda dinner for as dedicated a public servant as Benton, butit seems to us that the war is a good deal more unfortun¬ate, and that with casualties mounting daily, protestsagainst the conflict should be accorded a certain priority.But the really important thing about last Thursday’sdemonstration was not its propriety but rather the starkfact that it happened at all. Despite cold, miserable weath¬er and almost total secrecy, 300 students gathered infront of the Revnolds Club and waited for hours in a driv¬ing rain storm for the privilege of telling the Vice-Presi¬dent of the United States what they thought of him.It has come to the point when officials of the Ameri¬can government can no longer face their own people with¬out touching off bitter and persistent protests. We thinkthat says something about where the war has taken usand about the present state of the American democracy. JEFFREY KUTAWashington Conference:Little Traffic of IdeasWASHINGTON, D C. - News¬week Editor-Publisher KatherineGraham probably still hasn’t re¬covered after her visit to lastweekend’s College Editors Con¬ference here. Newsweek annual¬ly foots about $15,000 of the billfor the event, which annuallyexposes around 500 editors froma wide variety of schools to peo¬ple like Walter Lippman and Jo¬seph Alsop in programs filledwith speeches, panel discussions,and other standard conferencefare.Except this year.The Conference was billed“Alternative Futures and Pres¬ent Choices,” and even before itbegan member papers of theU.S. Student Press Associationwere warned that they shouldn’tsend people who would expect tobe able to sit back and betaught how to put out a “good”newspaper or whose mentalitiesexcluded acceptance of newideas.FOR EXAMPLE, a Conferencetimetable described the activi¬ties. There were several“games,” like the one called“Making It,” “A session by In¬ teraction Signal Inc. ‘A presen¬tation/reception by you in awarmth to meet more of thenow which accumulates into thefuture. A psychic communica¬tion center.’ ”There was a series of inter¬views constructed by RobertTheobald under the catch-title“The Facilitator" which was tobring together people for giveand take discussion, Europeanand American films, some ofthem being shown for the firsttime in the United States, allwith a message; and an exten¬sive use of other media besidesthe printed word — flashingstrobe lights, closed-circuit tele¬vision, “meditation” sessions.“COMMUNICATION” was thekeyword, and the fact that civi¬lization is going to decay unlesspeople stop broadcasting at eachother like machines and startcommunicating with each otheras human beings was the moral,poignantly brought out in theSaturday afternoon eruption overVietnam. It was all aimed atmaking people experience thingsand then think about what they’dexperienced. “Irrelevant,” said the editorof The Tulane Hullabaloo, andmore than a hundred partici¬pants, largely from conservativesmall and Southern schools,agreed. Many got together andtold each other how absurd thewhole thing was, how everyonewas being made a fool of, andhow it might not be a bad ideato drop out of the U.S. StudentPress Association altogether.THEY WERE afraid of whatthey couldn’t understand, whichconsisted of most of the Confer¬ence program. They would havepreferred to sit back and listento a Times man tell them aboutcity hall reporting or magazinemake-up, or to chew the fat withother editors about homecomingspecials or the proper degree ofadministration censorship.Most of them, after the Con¬ference was over, went home totheir little newspaper offices andsnuggled right back into theirlittle ruts. And it was too bad,because they were just the peo¬ple the whole thing was aimedat. They were the Establishmentof tomorrow.PAULA SZEWCZYKThe Anti-War Movement:Strategy Dissent Grows... DemonstrationsIn contrast to the demonstration against Vice-Presi¬dent Humphrey stands an event at the College EditorsConference in Washington this weekend. There a smallgroup of people invaded a press conference being con¬ducted by Minnesota Senator and Presidential candidateEugene McCarthy for a gathering of about 350 collegeeditors.The intruders, one of them an invited participant tothe conference, ran up onto the podium where McCarthywas speaking, interrupted his speech, and stayed on thepodium to boo down an apology from the floor for theirbehavior. Others in the same group later brought Mc¬Carthy’s talk to a premature end by carrying in a coffinfilled with McCarthy buttons and dumping it on theground before him.Most of the group were people not invited to the Con¬ference, who justified their actions as “doing their thing,”and who became vulgar and abusive if queried further.The inconsistency of their acts, in destroying a scheduledevent of a conference for several hundred people (whowere, ostensibly doing their thing) did not appear obviousto them.Anytime an administration acts in such a way thatits leaders are subject to consistent protest wherever theygo, it is high time that administration started re-examin¬ing its policies to see why people are so highly strung.The government already knows why so many are upset,and a change in policy is necessary. It is only to be hopedthat the more peaceful demonstration achieves its purposebefore more people are inspired to abandon the demo¬cratic ideal and adopt the second, rather totalitarianmethod.4 THE~CHICAGO MAROON February ]6, 1968 The anti-war movement is cur¬rently faced with a deep politicalstruggle between the studentsfor a Democratic Society (SDS)and the Student MobilizationCommittee (SMC). There existsan over-growing dissention overthe strategy to be taken by themovement: whether to mobilizeor to organize. SMC was attackedrecently at the SMC convention atChicago as an “opportunist, elit-ite” organization.Chicago SDS has refused tosupport the national student strikeon campus called by the SMC atthat conference although a coali¬tion of the W.E. DeBois Club, theCommunist Party, and the YoungSocialist Alliance (composed ofTrotskyites) was solidly behindsuch an action.But Trots were denounced byleft-Wing organidations besidesChicago’s SDS for misleading stu¬dents into direct confrontationswith the police. The SDS fromQueens College charged that SMChas been caught many times con¬ferring with police, thus inti¬mating that the committee was be¬hind many unnecessary violentactions. Rumors have it the Trotsare plotting to gain full control ofthe anti-war movement for theadvancement of their own inter¬ests — the revolution.AS DESCRIBED in a recentissue of Ramparts, the Trotsseem to have had the OctoberWashington March beautifullyplanned in order to arouse thesentiments of the students at thedemonstration by leading theminto confrontations with the U.S.all over the nation and variousleftiest groups, to consist ofthe New York Working Commit¬tee and one representative from each affiliated leftist group. Withthis strategical move, the Trotsmarshalls. Knowing the studentswould be incensed by the violencein the march, the Trots arousedtheir feelings in order to help fur¬ther the Trots’ own plans. Thisresulted in a more militant anti¬war movement.Realizing the danger which SMChas placed the movement in, SDShas been working to gain back itsleadership position in the move¬ment by calling for a “grass rootsorganizing plan.” Thus since theformation of SMC in April 1967,SDS has been the dissenting voicein the vote for massive demon¬strations when it seemed thatthese strikes would not be effec¬tive. So far, the student activisthas been caught up in mobilizingfor demonstrations but never hasbeen doing any real organizingamong the liberal faction of thepublic. More than anything, SMChas obscured the issues it is pro¬testing and has alienated the lib¬eral sympathetic public from themovement.THE NUMEROUS conventionsand conferences called by SMChave successfully blinded the stu¬dent into thinking he has a realvoice in the organization of manyof the plans of the movementwhen in reality the SMC has al¬ready decided policy regardlessof opinions of other leftist organ¬izations. At their last conferencehere, SMC changed its own struc¬ture from the 80 members fromwere able to gain control of theSMC.The seriousness of the anti-warmovement lies with the way SMCmanipulates students at the mas¬sive demonstrations — by turningthem into a display of sad, funny,and unnecessary confrontations with the police. The SMC’s holdon the movement lies in its suc¬cess to plan massive demonstra¬tions which only alienates thepublic from the movement. SDSis in the process of exerting itsinfluence on campus to lead stu¬dents away from such tactics toa more effective strategy ofworking with the public in orderto solidify the dissention over thewar.ON THE WHOLE SMC is be¬coming good for an occasionalouting for fun and games andnothing else. The anti-war move¬ment, with strong support fromSDS, is forming a responsiblefront for the public by engagingmore people in projects relevantto their interests. The confronta¬tion between SMC and SDS willprobably come in April with thestudent strike on campus. If thestrike fails, the anti-war move¬ment will fall into the hands ofSDS. thus weakening SMC’s lead¬ership.With the growing dissent overthe war and the general dissatis¬faction with the Johnson Admin¬istration, the movement needs on¬ly responsible leadership to or¬ganize effective protest whichSMC is not able to provide withits wild ideas which only succeedin making the headlines and noth¬ing more.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 thedemic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Preas Service.EditorsLetters to the/Mock Convention Reverse RacismYour article on the Mock Re¬publican Convention (The Ma¬roon, January 31) was generallyaccurate, but there were two mi¬nor errors which I would like tocorrect.First, the platform did notcome out specifically for a guar¬anteed minimum income, but ra¬ther for the conversion of ailprograms designed to help thepoor into cash grants to be giv¬en on some simple criterion, suchas income. A guaranteed mini¬mum income would be one suchprogram, as would a negativeincome tax.Second, the paragraph oppos¬ing involvement in future Viet-nams was not defeated, but sim¬ply lost in the shuffle when aforeign policy plank covering abroader range of issues was sub¬stituted for the initial draft, andthe first half of that initial draft,which was specifically concernedwith Vietnam, then inserted intothe broader plank.LET ME now turn from TheMaroon’s excellent article to itspatronizing editorial. It is per¬fectly true that neither Nixon noranybody else who has a shadowof a chance of being electedcomes very close to being a per¬fect libertarian; those of us whowrote the platform that The Ma¬roon liked so much think Nixoncomes closer to what we wantthan. either Rockefeller orJohnson.In the last election, the Re¬publican Party ran a candidatewho came as close to what wewanted as, given political reality,we have any hope of getting, acandidate pledged to abolish thedraft and drastically cut govern¬ment spending. If we succeed innominating our first choice thistime, Governor Reagan, I amsure The Maroon, in appreciationof our principled position, willgive him the sar-ip enthusiasticsupport that it gave to SenatorGoldwater in 1964.I HAVE not yet seen a Ma¬roon editorial attacking those onthe Left who support Bobby Ken¬nedy, although Bobby’s civil lib¬erties record (attorney for theMcCarthy committee, advocateof wiretapping, chief post-McCar¬thy practitioner outside of HUACof harassment by Congressionalcommittee), is far worse thanNixon’s.One more point, on a differentissue. John Moscow, in a gener¬ally reasonable column on drugs(The Maroon, January 31),claims that they cannot be le¬galized because of treaty obliga¬tions. It is my impression thatthe UN convention on drugs ob¬ligates the signatories only tomake drug use illegal within thenext 25 years; if we legalize itnow, I doubt that it will be po¬litically possible to make it il¬legal 25 years later, even if theUN is still around.DAVID DIRECTORFRIEDMANDepartment of Physics(Editor's note: Mr. Friedman,son of Paul Snowden Russell,Distinguished Service Professorof Economics Milton Friedman,was a delegate to the YoungRepublicans' mock national po¬litical convention held on cam¬pus the weekend of January26.) Moving into Blackstone HallWinter Quarter, I was surprisedthat a girl I had known slightlyin New Dorms would not ac¬knowledge my hello. It turns outthat (guess what?) there is ra¬cial tension present ih this se¬date little dormitory community.It seems possible, for instance,when we are confronted withclues like the fact that one whitegirl was locked out on the roofby a group of Negroes, wholaughed while she pounded onthe door, or by an elevator graf-itti campaign which ended whensomeone piously suggested underthe statement BLACK POWERthat we should “hate the sin butlove the sinner’’ and was ans¬wered “how can I love someonedirtier than my ass-hole?”Most of the girls find it easierto ignore all this, having theirown significant lives to lead, butthis hostility has involved me ob¬sessively. I feel like the whitegirl who burst into tears whenshe asked Malcolm X what shecould do and he said, “Nothing.”AGREED, I feel badly becausemy little pride is hurt, like TheMaroon reporter who had to bevindictive because she was “leftout” of a meeting. The girls in¬volved seem to be some of themost intelligent and alive around.I like the music they play. I’dlike to be palsy-walsy so I couldfeel like a good white liberalchick. I don’t blame them for notwanting to be used to mop upwhite guilt.But I think there is somethingelse involved here. It is that theoppressed and persecuted peoplecan easily take on the values andmethods of their oppressors. Thegroup of Negro girls telling theMaroon writer that he’d betterwatch it or their boy friendswould tie him up a little is aclear example of Ku Klux Klantactics. The hostility is also com¬pletely undifferentiated. You’rebeat before you begin; if you’rewhite you're an enemy. It’s allbased on skin color, just as Ne¬gro hatred and persecution is.I REALIZE there’s validity inthis too — that all of us are soburdened with racism that we allmake these divisions somewhereinside of us, and in differentways. I accept the now tritestatement that white “liberals”and “welfare” workers are oftensoul-destroying in more subtleand perhaps even more under¬mining ways than a red-neck.But this hostility is not built intoskin-color; Malcolm saw that inAfrica. Its built into the system.Racism can be seen in one senseas an attempt to clearly definewho it is permissable to hate andtorture. This has to end up in de¬flecting the hate from the peoplewho’ve actually made you angryto the nameless ones providedby society. Anger may be human,but there is nothing inevitableabout this perversion —■ its stilla miserable trap and I object toits rationalization.THE OTHER night, while Iwas returning late from the “ThePawnbroker,” m y elevatorstopped at the fourth floor. Twogirls got on, to go down. I said Iwas riding to the fifth floor. Iwas coughing and looking gener¬ally out of it, and one of the girlsasked me if I had a cold, andwas it cold outside. I said itwasn’t a cold, but that I’d beendestroyed by a double feature of“The Comedians” and “ThePawnbroker.” The girl asked if they wereany good and I mumbled a fewthings. She held open the eleva¬tor at my floor to finish a sen¬tence. I started to say somethingand her friend said c’mon, we’vegot to go home or something tothat effect. As the elevator wentdown I heard her say angrily,loudly, “TOM, TOM, holdingopen the elevator to talk to thatdamn JEW!”After years of going out withJewish boys and feeling wistfulabout not belonging to the clab(mothers asking, “Is she Jew¬ish?”) there’s satisfaction thatthis label gives me some mem¬bership and breaks down thatseemingly clear-cut barrier. Iguess it will have to be somegrandchild or great-grandchildwho’ll have the experience of be¬ing called a “dirty nigga” bysome relic of American racism.I hope this descendent will beable to cope with the situationbetter than the contingent,“black” and “white” over hereat Blackstone Hall.AMEY MILLER, ’69AristocratsThe University of Chicago Stu¬dents for an Aristocratic Societywould like to clear up any embi-guities which might have arisenin connection with our demon¬stration in front of the ReynoldsClub Thursday night.We were NOT in any way acounter-demonstration, nor dowe, as an organization wish tooppose the peace movement. Theaim of our organization is thepromotion of the ideals of aris¬tocracy, or “rule by the best,”as defined by the ancientGreeks; we are not fascists.Our demonstration of Thurs¬day night was directed at griev¬ances c her than the war in Viet¬nam.ALFRED H. C. KELLY II, ’69ANDREW J. RIEDLMAYER, ’69FREDERICK I. WRIGHT, ’68Chicago Students for an Aristo¬cratic SocietyConfusedI must complain that the car¬toon “Tug of War”. (The Ma¬roon, January 26) has consider¬ably added to the confusion of afirst-year student who alreadyhas many things to be confusedabout.When I first arrived at Chi¬cago, the newspaper situationseemed quite simple. Maroon is,after all, a shade of red, and TheMaroon’s selective reporting, dis¬tortion of facts, editorializing inthe news columns, and the usual¬ly doctrinaire and irrational ed¬itorials seemed fairly representa¬tive of the school of journalismpracticed by Pravda and otherextremely leftist journals.Then my confusion began. Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society de¬clared that The Maroon was byno means radical enough andstarted putting out its own pap¬er. Since they change the nameof it with every issue, let mehereafter refer to it as the “SDSrag.”NOW, PERHAPS wrongly, atthat time I saw an easy distinc¬tion. It seemed that the Maroonwas approximating the Moscowparty line, while the SDS rag fol¬lowed that of Peking. The gen¬eral tenor of both papers seemed,for a time, to reflect this hypo¬thesis. Furthermore, the SDSrag’s great affinity for monosyl¬labic, four-letter words might betaken as an attempt to better ap¬ uum11 ‘ii , »proximate Chinese, a languagemade up almost entirely of one-syllable words.But alas, then almost simultan¬eously came your two cartoons onViet Nam. The one in The Ma¬roon showed LBJ and a Vietnam¬ese peasant having a tug of warwith a rope made up of soldiersend-to-end, with the Vietnamesewinning six soldiers to two, withthree contested, and LBJ losinghis balance,.THE SDS cartoon showed aVietnamese in a rice paddy,watching two B-52’s fly overheadand saying, “ . . . and I thoughtthey were cutting down on airtravel abroad!!!” With these twocartoons, my structure crumbled,and my world-view fogged over!Perhaps I may regain some de¬gree of control if I attempt to an¬alyze the reasons these cartoonsshocked me so.First, the SDS cartoon is al¬most entirely correct in its pres¬entation of facts. After all, UncleLyndon IS thinking of cuttingdown on air travel abroad, andwe do have B-52’s that fly overSouth Viet Nam. They fly too highto be seen, but this discrepancyis only minor.The Maroon cartoon, on theother hand, represents things asthey distinctly are not. The Viet¬namese kill-ratio is three to onein favor of Saigon and allies, andthe United States certainly is notsuffering acutely for lack of man¬power. And what could Uncle Hoand his friends to the south be do¬ing to make LBJ lose his bal¬ance? If we are not winning thewar, we certainly are not losingit, and as I said, the kill-ratio isin our favor.PERHAPS LBJ could be losinghis balance if all sorts of littleSDS-ers, Maroon editors, andsuchlike were seen pushing himfrom behind, but this is notshown, and we must take the car¬toon as it stands.Now, you ask, why does thiscontrast dismay me? BecauseMoscow is supposed to be thehome of the half-truth, and Pe¬king of the outright asininity. Yethere I find the role of the two pa¬pers reversed.Furthermore, the SDS cartoonis funny. Now, as far as I know,the Chinese Communists are nev¬er intentionally funny, or at leastthey don’t laugh at the samethings we would. The Russians,on the other hand, have a cer¬tain streak of humor within them,as witness Krokodil, the satiremagazine, and even some of thepolitical cartoons in Pravda.A third element compounds myconfusion. The two Vietnamesepeasants, especially the one inthe Maroon, are distinctly seedy-looking. If you would investigatethe cartoons in, say Krokodil, oreven the Chinese cartoons onesees from time to time, you wouldlearn the Party concept of thepeasant is clean, strong, andhandsome. He is often two orthree times as large as LBJ, tosignify the unity of the entirepeople in “resisting American im¬perialism.” So seedy peasants arenot part of ANYONE’S partyline.Well, there you have my pro¬blem. I am confident your all¬wise (or at least always opin¬ionated) staff may explain allto me and release me from myconfusion. But, I beg you, hur¬ry! I feel my control over my ac¬tions slipping. A few more daysand I may go out and join theYoung Republicans.PATRICK MCGUIRE, 71 Lipsch ServiceDespite his allegation to thecontrary, Mr. Lipsch did not meetany “old College” students whileresearching his latest Gadfly,(The Maroon, January 31) sincethey would have knocked out thejargon, stereotypes, and ad ho¬mines reasoning which marblehis argument.However, parts of his articlecontain irrefutable logic — foot¬ball does, unfortunately, have aplace in the present College.Hence, I would like to explore afew implications of his article,rather than make a counterargu¬ment.Football, as he mentioned, hasa symbolic value at the college.As a symbol, anti-football wouldappeal to students who thoughtthe College was different fromother schools.OR WHO were too totally im¬mersed in the investigation andquestioning of existence to toler¬ate something so intellectuallyflatulent as football.Or who were so aggressivelyindependent in thought that anyattempt to solidify opinion be¬hind “our team” would have beenpre-existential absurd.Or who were so casual in theirstudies that the implications, ser¬iousness, depths and heights thatthey encountered did not neces¬sitate the alteration of gut-bust¬ing grade grubbing and utter fri¬volity.Or, in Mark .Twain’s words, stu¬dents who never let their learn¬ing interfere with their education.UNFORTUNATELY, the “oldCollege” is now viewed throughthe mists of memories long-re¬membered, and hence has the us¬ual myths, legends, and stereo¬types hanging around it.However, it once was possibleto believe, with a minimum ofimagination, at one point in therecent past, that one was amonga community of scholars, oper¬ating with an open mind on thegrounds of existence, intellectual¬ly committed only to the investi¬gation of ideas and methods, andthe search for purity, truth, intel¬ligence, sanity, etc. (a far anddistant cry from either a“Church” or the “Left”).So much for the pipe-dreams.The “old College” is dead. TheCollege is now just another col¬lege — little harder than most, alittle more expensive, but stillmerely a place where one canwaste four years doing intellectu¬al drudgery as well as in hun¬dreds of other places.It deserves football.P.F. BRAZITIS, ’66Madison, Wisconsin.AcknowledgementI would like to publicly thankRoger and John for conferringupon me Friday the highestaward The Maroon can give —the title of “Siefert.” It was thegreatest thrill of my life to findit inserted at the top of my SGarticle. I shall do my best to re¬main worthy of the honor theyhave so generously given.JOHN RECHT, 71Editorial AssistantThe Chicago MaroonLetters to the editors must besigned, although names may bewitheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.r February 6, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5MAROON SPORTSMaroons Rebound, Crush Grinnell College 80-56By JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantIt’s really-a shame Grinnell hadto be visiting Chicago Saturdaynight; after all, we all know thatthis small college always fields anice bunch o’ basketball players.Really would have been much morefun to beat someone like, say LakeForest.Because, you see, there was verylittle doubt of the outcome of thatChicago-Grinnell game. After suf¬fering upset losses to inferior Ober-lin and IIT teams in successivecontests, the whole squad knew—was certain—that whomever theySDS Begins LeafletDistribution at MillsThe University chapter of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS) has begun an anti-war leaf-leting program at nearby U.S.Steel mills. Friday the group plansto distribute leaflets at severallarge mills in East Chicago.SDS members say that the work¬ers are being exploited by theircompany, the union, and the gov¬ernment. The steel workers unionleadership, according to an SDSleaflet, is on close terms with thecorporations and the government,and has “sold out the workers onthe last two contracts.”SDS plans to fight this “exploita¬tion” by helping the “rank-and-filers” to realize their strength.This, the leaflet states, will even¬tually result in the workers’dictating “a union policy that won’tsell out the workers needs to helpJohnson fight the war.” faced would go down in terrible de¬feat. This week, it happened to beGrinnell.The final score, incidentally, wasa mere 80-56. At the half, however,the Maroons led 56-28 and could af¬ford to give the reserves a chancefor the final 20 minutes or so.Campbell Top ScorerMarty Campbell, Chicago’s topscorer at 19.1 points per game,paced the University return to thegame of basketball by scoring 26points and pulling in 13 rebounds.Coupled with his 22-point perform¬ance against IIT Friday, this wasmore than enough to move Camp¬bell into third place in the all-timeChicago scoring race.This Grinnell victory, which setthe University back on the winningmark with a 12-3 record, becamenecessary after the Maroonsdropped a thriller to Illinois Insti¬tute of Technology Friday, 54-52.Playing a very lax game andshooting 11 percent worse than us¬ual, the Chicago five was neverable to mount a strong attack. IITlead throughout the game and, al¬though the University pulled withinone near the end, the visiting Tech-hawks hung on to the victory.SwimmingFour separate team records were ;! swept aside Friday as the Chicagoj swim team fought in what Univer- ji sity Coach Moyle called “one of the !best quality meets we've had in a ;long time.”Although the team as a whole;lost 60-43 to powerful Valpariso, jindividual finmen capped all theglory for the Maroons. VeteranMike Kochweser opened the streakin the second event of the meet, j the 1000-yard freestyle, by settinga new team record of 13:01. In thenext event Steve Larrick, Chicago’stop swimmer this year, raced to avarsity and pool record in the 200-yard freestyle with a time of 1:56.7.Larrick continued his fantasticperformance by tying his own re¬cord (set last weekend) in the 100-yard freestyle and then teamingwith Mark Tindall, Carl Johnson,and Chuck Calif to set a new teammark of 3:33.3 in the 400-yard free¬style relay.Johnson and Calef also camethrough for individual victories, asCarl took the 60-yard freestyleevent and Chuck won the individu¬al medley. Dave Carlson also tooka Chicago first by winning the 200-yard butterfly.The swimmers travel to IllinoisInstitute of Technology tomorrowto compete in a double dual againstIIT and the College of DuPage.GymnasticsChicago’s gymnastics squad fin¬ished a close third to Ball State andIndiana State Universities at Mun-cie, Indiana on Saturday. Chicagostotalled 95.70, while Ball State fin¬ished with 114.35 and Indiana with259.70 points.Against Ball State, the Maroongymnasts took first in two eventsas Mark Sackett won the free exer-•ise competition and Gorden Grobbetied for the top in the still ringsevent. A1 Mangurten took second inthe parallel bars, and Don Marsfinished fourth in both the longhorse and still rings.Chicago had little success againstthe finely tuned Indiana team. Uni¬versity competitors finished higherthan fourth in any individualevents. TrackThe University’s freshman andsophomore trackmen scored an ov¬erwhelming 87-36 victory over Wil¬son Junior College on February 1at home. Sophomore Ken Thomasdominated both squads as he wona total of five events and took asecond for a total of 28 points in asingle meet.All together, the University wonnine of thirteen events, took secondin ten, and third in seven. Maroonrunners swept all three top spots inthree events, and took first and se¬cond in four others.Star-of the-day Thomas won boththe high and low hurdles, and tookthe high, long, and triple jumps.He finished second in the polevault. Also taking first for Chicagowere Jim Haydon in the 440-yarddash, Rich Jochmaan in the shotput, and Mike Burger in the polevaault.Lonn Wolf scored 11.5 points by seconding Thomas in both hurdlesand the high jump, while the Chi¬cago Mile Relay team of DaveChase, Dave Rosenbush, John MeLess, and Wolf won the meet’s on¬ly relay event.FencingChicaago’s fencing squad drop¬ped meets to area giants MichiganState and the University of Illinoisin a double dual at Champaign, Il¬linois on Saturday. The Universitylost 18-9 to Michigan and 19-8 to Il¬linois.With five beginners making upmore than half of his regularsquad, fencing Coach Nelson feelshis major weakness is depth.“We have,” he says, “one good,experienced fencer in each wea¬pon.” Thus we will have troublewinning dual meets, in which threemen compete in each weapon, but“should do very well in the na¬tionals” in March.ANOTHER QUANTRELLAward for Better TeachingCalendar of EventsPersons or organzations 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, February 6CONFERENCE: (Pathology), "Nucleic Acidsof Cancer Cells I," Dr. Harris Busch, Bil¬lings P-117, 3 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (The James Franck Insti¬tute), "X-ray Diffraction and ComputerStudies of Nucleic Acids, "Robert Lang-ridge, professor of Bio-physics, Research480, 4:15 p.m.Wednesday, February 7FILM: (Doc Film), "Metropolis", Soc Sci122, 7:15, 9:15 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Mathematics), "The Spaceof Closed Curves on a Manifold", WilhelmKlingenberg, Professor of Mathematcis,University of Bonn, Eckhart 206, 4:30 p.m.FOLK AND SQUARE DANCING: AssemblyHall, International House, 1414 E. 59th,8 p.m.9 sp bold head to followFILM: (Sights and Sounds of India) "Ra¬jasthan Tapestry", Rosenwald 2, 12:30 p.m.-ECTURE: (Business) "Advertising: MarketCase History of Successful New ProductIntroduction by Johnson's Wax," CharlesS. Winston, presdient of Foot, Cone &Belding, Business East 103, 1 p.m.MEETING: Division of Physical Sciences,Eckhart 133, 3:30 p.m.CADRE MEETING: Ida Noyes. Wednesday7:30 p.m. All but police informers invited.ALUMNI BANQUET: Ray Scherer, NBCWhite House Correspondent will speak,Lutheran School of Theology, 1100 E. 55thSt., 7 p.m.MEETING: Student Currculum Committeeof the Social Sciences Collegiate Division,Soc Sci 302, 2:30 p.m. Anyone interestedis invited..ECTURE: (Biochemistry), "The Pro¬grammed Synthesis of Three Enzymes dur¬ing Cellular Slime Mold Development",Maurice Sussman, Brandeis University, Ab¬bott 101, 4 p.m.FILM: (Doc Film), "Twentieth Century,"With John Barrymore and Carole Lombard,Soc Sci 122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dancers from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Pre-Med Club), "The Impactand Meaning of Recent Developments in Molecular Biology," Dr. Mehran GoulianCONCERT: (Musical Society), BeethovenTrio, O P. 11 and Duo #2, Mandel Hall,12:30 p.m.Thursday, February 7CONFERENCE: (Pathology), "Nucleic Acidsof Cancer Cells 11", Dr. Harris Busch, Bil¬lings P-117, 3 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), "Scattering The¬ory of Covalent Bonding in Crystals andMolecules", J.C. Phillips, professor of phy¬sics, Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: (UC Concert Band), LabSchool, Belfield 244, 5 p.m.LECTURE: (New Collegiate Division) "Erosand Knowledge," David Bakan, Ida NoyesLibrary, 7:30 p.m.DANCING: (Israeli Folking Dancing), HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn Ave., 7:30 p m.LECTURE: (Math Club), "Foundations ofModern Algebra," A. Adran Albert, El-akim Hastings Moore distinguished serv¬ice professor of mathematics, Eckhart 206,8 p.m.FILM: (B-J Cinema), "Rubens" and "MarcChagall," B-J Judson Dining Room, 8:30p.m.MEETING: Radical Research, Ida Noyes213, 3:30 p.m.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200:Graduate School(Call Ext. 3282 for appts.)February 7 and 8 — Harvard Law School,Cambridge, Massachusetts. February 7:Afternoon group meeting in the ReynoldsClub South Lounge. February 8: Individualmorning interviews.Teaching(Call Ext. 3279 for appts.)February 6 — Oakland Community College,Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Anticipate theneed for instructors (with an M.A.) in allthe major fields of study.February 7 — Montclair Pubic Schools,Montclair, New Jersey. No informationavailable at this writing. Call this officea few days before recruiting date for spe¬cific needs, and appointments.Business, Industry, Government(Call Ext. 3284 for appts.)February 6 — Mitre Corporation, Bedford,Massachusetts, Washington, D.C., Atlantic City, New Jersey, Houston, Texas, Florida.All degree levels in mathematics and sta¬tistics. M.S. and Ph.D. levels in solid statephysics.February 6 — Gulf Research and Develop¬ment Company, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,Merriam, Kansas. All degree levels inmathematics, statistics, chemistry (all spe¬cializations), and physics (atomic, solidstate, particle).February 6 — United States Public HealthService, Chicago, llinois and major citiesnationwide. Male graduates of any depart¬ment for positions as Program Representa¬tives in Service's Syphilis Eradication pro¬gram.February 6 and 7 — United States Office ofEducation, Washington, D.C. Representa¬tive will speak to candidates in sociology,business and economics, history, politicalscience, mathematics, data processingguidance and counseling, psychology andEnglish (no Ph.D. cand.), at all degreelevels. Call Ext. 3282 for appointments.February 8 — City of Chicago, Civil ServiceCommission, Chicago, Illinois. Will inter¬view for a variety of civil serice positionsincluding those in biological and chemicallaboratories, personnel, statistical science,and psychology.February 8 and 9 — National Security Agen¬cy, Washington, D.C. Interviewing Mathe¬maticians and Statisticians at all degreelevels as well as students in other depart¬ments who passed the Professional Qual¬ifications Test.SKI ASPEN$175.00Leave Chi. March K>, -1:finArrive back in Chi. March ‘2-1.Includes all train, bus, deluxe.quad rexttn priv. balh (no dorms(on this trip), all low lickels, out¬door pool, taxes, skiing vail andAspen.Northwestern U. Ski GroupCall Dick 764-6764 or 767-3765 Chicago has received from thefamily of a former trustee a giftthat will make possible a new ap¬proach to curriculum problems,Dean of the College Wayne Boothannounced today.The gift will provide up to one-half normal salary for one to threequarters for nontenured Collegefaculty members, allowing themtime either to improve coursesthey already teach or to developnew ones.The new program will be knownas the Quantrell Award for theImprovement of Teaching. It ismade possible by a grant fromthe Quantrell family of Bronxville,New York.The College already honors itsfaculty members who are foundto be excellent teachers by grant¬ing Quantrell Awards for Excel¬lence in Undergraduate Teaching,the nation’s oldest prizes for out¬standing undergraduate instruc¬tion.Booth said that, while course de¬velopment has usually beenhandled by reducing the teachingSAMUEL A. BEILBUY SHELL FROM BiO."SINCE IruPICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE. foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ r foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313Half Price Sale ContinuesOne Week MoreNew titles added daily. Watchthe shelves for bargains in allsubjects.General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. load of the faculty member inter¬ested in developing a course, “thenew award will provide funds tocover this reduction in the teach¬ing load and will make course de¬velopment somewhat independentof budget fluctuations.”Winners of the new award willbe determined by the CurriculumCommittee of the College, a fac¬ulty group led by Norman F. Mac-lean, William Rainey Harper pro¬fessor of English.McNeill HonoredThe Divinity School honoredchurch historian John T. McNeillat a special dinner last Wednesday,at the Quadrangle Club. McNeillreceived his Ph.D. degree from theDivinity School and served as amember of the faculty for nearlytwo decades.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone 324-7998OPEN SUNDAYSDIRECT MILL OUTLETHas wtiat you need from a *10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants A Mill Returns at tractionot the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYSERVICEto your satisfactionOVALITY 1XOKKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanicBody work & paintingTO''! ,VGFree Estimates on ALL Work326-2550LESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours: Daily 8-7Sat. 9-510% Student Discounton Repair Order Parts.Convenient to all majorexpressways. Lake ShoreDrive; 1C, and ‘‘El”.THE CHICAGO MAROON February 6, 1968Benton Honored at Testimonial DinnerContinued from Page 1feet on the dinner itself. “I don’tthink it was as big a thing as TheMaroon made it out to be,” saidone high official who asked not tobe identified. “It didn’t take awaya thing from what went on inside.”While the demonstration was go¬ing on outside, President GeorgeBeadle was awarding the first Wil¬liam Benton Medal for Distin- quished Service to William Bentonhimself. Benton was given theaward as a “visionary public ser¬vant, perceptive student of foreignaffairs, staunch supporter of educa¬tion, discriminating publisher, as¬tute businessman, co-founder ofUNESCO and of the Committee forEconomic Development, creatorof the ‘Voice of America,’ whosetalents he has shared freely withhis fellow men.”Rev. Holman Dies at 85The Reverend Charles T. Hol¬man, professor emeritus in theDivinity School, died Saturdaymorning in the Illinois CentralHospital after a brief illness. Hewas 85 years old.Holman had retired June 30,1947, from the Chicago faculty. Atthe time, he was professor of pas¬toral duties. He had been associa¬ted with Chicago for 24 years atthe time of his retirement.Holman was the author of threebooks and numerous articles. Hewas one of the pioneers in investi¬gating the implications for theclergyman in his role as a coun¬selor and of the new insights made available by research andclinical work in the psychologicaland social sciences.Born in Cheltenham, England,on February 6, 1882, he receivedB.A. and M.A. degrees from Mc-Master University at Hamilton,Ontario, Canada. He also receiveda bachelor’s degree in divinityfrom Chicago (1915). He did grad¬uate work in psychology and phil¬osophy at Indiana University.Services will be private. A mem¬orial service is being planned anddetails will be announced in sev¬eral weeks, a family membersaid. In replying to the tributes, Ben¬ton stated, “My present difficultyis perhaps illustrated by the storyof George Bernard Shaw attendingthe opening of one of his earlyplays. After the final curtain, in re¬sponse to cries of ‘Author! Author!’he went to the stage amid a tre¬mendous ovation.“When the audience became si¬lent, loud, eloquent, and profoundboos were heard from one man inthe gallery. ‘Sir! Shaw called out,‘you, sir in the gallery — I agreewith you. But who are we twoamong so many” ”Speakers at the dinner, in addi¬ tion to Humphrey, included:• Robert M. Hutchins, presidentof the Center for the Study of Dem¬ocratic Institutions and formerpresident of the University of Chi¬cago;• Paul G. Hoffman, managingdirector of the United Nations De¬velopment Programme, formerpresident of the Ford Foundation,and former trustee of the Universi¬ty;• Paul H. Douglas, former U.S.Senator from Illinois and formerprofessor of economics at Chicago;and• Fairfax M. Cone, chairman ofthe University’s Board of Trustees. Humphrey at dinnerStudents Sought To Liven Up CampusStudents interested in organizinga dance or concert for the SpringQuarter will meet Thursday at 8p.m. in the Wallace House Lounge.Money will be available for theactivity, but the source is uncer¬tain at this time although SkipLandt, director of Student Activi¬ties, has expressed interest in theproject. According to Landt, relevantquestions are “Should the commit¬tee be entirely student-run or spon¬sored by Student Activities?Where should the funds comefrom?”“No money has been set asideyet, but there seems enough in¬terest,” said Landt. “It’s worthlooking around. Hopefully the com¬mittee will be self -supporting af¬ ter a period of time.”Dorm units are another possiblesource of money, according to Mit¬chell Pines, ’69. Pines will chairthe committee and is taking anactive part in forming it.Students who cannot make themeeting but are interested in thedance can call Pines at 1514Pierce.Federal Budget Reveals School Construction CutsWashington (CPS) — PresidentJohnson has asked Congress formodest increases in federal stu¬dent aid programs during fiscal1969, but the increases will be off¬set by severe reductions in highereducation construction funds.In his budget message to Con¬gress last week, the President re¬quested an increase of $112 millionfor existing student financial aidprograms. But the budget ^hows adecrease of $82 million in theamount of federal funds for con¬struction grants to colleges.The Administration’s budget alsoasks $23 million for proposed newlegislation in the area of federalassistance to students. This appar¬ently refers to President Johnson’spromise in his State of the UnionMessage that he will recomjnendpassage of an Educational Oppor¬tunity Act “to step up our drive tobreak down financial barriers sep¬arating our young people from col¬lege.”Details of this $23-million studentaid legislation will be included inthe President’s education message,which will be sent to Congresswithin the next few weeks.The Administration’s 1969 budgetrequest also includes an increaseof about $86 million for educationalresearch in the Office of Educa¬tion, and an increase of nearly $70million for teacher training.Teacher Corps RevitalizationAbout $18 million of the increasefor teacher training is designatedMusical SocietyThe Musical Society will presenta concert in Mandel Hall tomorrowat 12:30 p.m. The Beethoven Trioopus 11 and the second Duo forclarinet and bassoon will be per¬formed by Ann Garfield, ’70, piano;Dennis Cohen, ’68, cello; and MarkLevy, ’68, clarinet. Admission iswithout ticket and without charge.« Corn.ll 3(orU W.M 1645 E. 55th STREET W.3? CHICAGO, ILL. 606155 Phone: FA 4-1651 HhfvW. It. W. # # ffc # M jfc Hf. for expanding the Teacher Corps,which received a severe financialbeating by Congress this year. Ifthe President’s request is acceptedby Congress, the present TeacherCorps of 1,000 members would beexpanded to bring 1,500 new mem¬bers into the program this comingsummer, and 1,500 more in thesummer of 1969, for a total of near¬ly 4,000 Corps members by the endof fiscal 1969.Despite these increases, the bud¬get outlook for education in fiscal1969 remains gloomy for two ma¬jor reasons:• As a result of the rising costsof the war in Vietnam, a fiscallyconservative mood prevails in Con¬gress, and cutbacks are expectedin nearly all of the Administra¬tion’s requests.• Higher education presently issuffering not only from the lackof sufficient appropriations in Fis¬cal 1968, but also from the across-the-board cutbacks in federalspending ordered by Congress latelast year. Higher education con¬struction funds, for example, werecut by about $150 million this year,about one-third of the entire year’sbudget appropriation.SDS Draft CounselingNew York (CPS)—Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) has setup a drop-out counseling servicefor students “who feel college ischanneling them into a moldrather than helping them becomeindependent, dynamic humanbeings.”SDS’s New York office is com¬piling a list of activities for poten¬tial dropouts. The organizers ofthe program, Michele Clark andJonathan Lerner, say the activitiesinclude organizing projects and working on underground newspa¬pers. These are all “non-establish¬ment” and are intended to permit“those dissatisfied with the systemrepresented by the academic com¬munity to explore themselves andothers in a dynamic and freeway.”SDS makes the list available toany student who is consideringI dropping out of school.Lerner and Miss Clark hope toeventually have regional counsel¬ors throughout the country, muchas SDS and other organizationsnow provide draft counseling. Infact, one of the jobs of these coun¬selors will be to help draft-eligiblemen who lose their deferments bydropping out.In a statement about the project,SDS said it was being set up be¬cause “We want to erase the word‘failure’ from the concept of drop¬ping out of college. It is not a fail¬ure to quit a system which dehu¬manizes you, just as it is not cow¬ardly to refuse to shoot a Vietnam¬ese. It is not cowardly to cut theumbilical cord which keeps you inthe university when you realizethat the university is creating youin its own image: obedient, bored,tense, passionless, infinitely in¬tractable like clay rather than in¬definitely open like the sky.”Would-be dropouts can write forfurther information to MicheleClark and Jonathan Lerner, SDSNew York Regional Office, 41 Un¬ion Square West, Room 436, NewYork, N.Y. 10003.Classified Research HitWashington (CPS)—More than400 French and Japanese univer¬sity scientists yesterday aske<their American colleagues to refuse to allow their universities tobe used for military and secret re¬search. Citing the “ethical and profes¬sional responsibilities” of the sci¬entists to refuse to permit theirdiscoveries to be used for destruc¬tive purposes, the professors saida continuation of military researchon American campuses would“lead to the determination of anever-growing number of world sci¬entists and universities to inter¬rupt their relations” with involveduniversities.Among the 433 signers of thestatement are Nobel Prize winnersAlfred Kastler, Shoichi Sakata,Shinichiro Tomonaga, and HidekiYukawa.The statement specifically desig¬nated research on chemical andbiological warfare and other tech¬niques directed against civilianpopulations as a “grave violation”of professional ethics. The signersalso supported American profes¬sors who have opposed the war inVietnam.Those who organized the drivefor signatures on the statementsaid that scientists in other coun¬tries are also expected to endorsethe statement or prepare one oftheir own.Hershey Letter ProtestedNew York (CPS)—Three-hundredand twenty-five professors from 32law schools have come out againstSelective Service Director LewisHershey’s memorandum to draftboards that anti-war and draftdemonstrators be reclassified anddrafted. The professors signed a state¬ment supporting efforts by theAmerican Civil Liberties Union(ACLU) to get the memo re¬scinded. The ACLU has filed suitsin support of men reclassified un¬der the order and has asked col¬lege presidents to urge the rescind¬ing of the order. Four studentgroups have also filed a generalsuit against Hershey asking for aninjunction to stop enforcement ofthe memo. That suit is expectedto be heard sometime in February.The list of professors signing thestatement included professors fromsuch law schools as Harvard, Col¬umbia, Yale, New York Univer¬sity, Cornell, Rutgers, Wisconsin,Duke, and Michigan. No law pro¬fessors from Chicago were listed.Students, FacultyTo Review PhysicsStudents and faculty will take acritical look at Chicago’s physicsprogram in a panel discussion at4 p.m. tomorrow in Ryerson 251.The discussion will ask whymany undergraduates leave phy¬sics and will examine the logic andusefulness of the candidacy exam.Participants include Sol Krasner,adviser to physics students; Eu¬gene Parker, professor of physics;David Greenberg, physics gradu¬ate student and author of “Gradu¬ate Problems in Physics,” the“crib” book for the candidacyexam; and Don Villarejo, researchassistant in physics.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT TENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES THE OFFICE OF STUDENT H0USIN6is now accepting applications for positions on its staff in theUniversity Houses for the 1968-69 academic year. Positionsinclude Resident Headships and . Assistant Headships. Ap¬pointments are open to students working for advanced degreesin the University or to members of its faculties. Undergradu¬ates, twenty years of age or older, will be considered forAssistantships. Persons interested in applying for staff posi¬tions may obtain further information in the Housing Office,Administration 201.February 6, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat.For non-UniversIty clientele: 75 cents perline, 60 cents per line repeat. Count 35characters and spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0600, Ext. 3226.COMING EVENTS"ISRAEL AND YOU" U.C.S.Z.O. Seminarconcerning opportunities for Work, Study,Scientific Research, Travel and Settlementin Israel. Sunday, February 11, 1:00 P.M. —4:00 P.M. HILLEL HOUSE — 5715 S. Wood-lawn.RIDERS WANTEDLEAVE TODAY OR TOMORROW FORBEAUTIFUL L.A. Share Expenses with Tail,Handsome Gentleman with Super Car. Call324-5751, evenings.CONCERTMUSICAL SOCIETY PRESENTS CHAMBERWORKS OF BEETHOVEN ON WED. in LMH12:30. Free.TRIPSFLORIDA EVERGLADES — BOAT TRIP —Spring Interim on March 16—23, Call HickoryX 2381 or 324-1449.TOUR EUROPE — 36-58 Days. $1395-1995.All Costs Included. Call Vivian at 667-3531.STUDENT PROGRAMS FOR WORK, STUDY,AND TRAVEL IN ISRAEL. Come to "IsraelAnd You" Seminar on Sunday, February 11,1:00 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. HILLEL HOUSE,5715 S. WOODLAWN.DRAWINGSTHE UNDENIABLEDRAWING NIGH. MISCELLANY ISFREE!CULTURE VULTURE? colour film studyof Chagall and of Rubens and their art!8:30, 2/8, iudson dining room. IFREE!THE FUTURETHE UNDENIABLE MISCELLANY SOONWILL BE!!?!JOYROSCOE MITCHELL IS ROLLO MAY.ROSCOE MITCHELL IS THE MAHARISHIHear the Roscoe Mitchell Art EnsembleTonight 8 P.M., Reynolds Club Loung. PHOTOGRAPHS OF FOLKFESTIVAL PERSONALITIES5x7 or 8x10CALL DAVID TRAVIS1402 PIERCE FOR RENTSUBLEASE March 1, modern 2 bedroom, 2bath apt. 2 blocks from Lake, air cond.,dish washer. Call FA 4-3400, Ext. 106 days,288-7543, evenings.ONE ROOM APARTMENT to SUBLET. Call288-2065, nights only.APARTMENT WITH LAKE VIEW. Partlyfurnished. 2Vi rooms. SUBLET. 493-2039.RENT 7 ROOM APARTMENT — $225/month.4 bedrooms & 2 baths — Furnished. FourGirls only: Available July 1. Must sign leaseimmediately. 924-9213.ROOMMATES WANTEDSITUATION WANTEDTYPIST AVAILABLE — Electric typewriter— Standard Page Rates — Flexible. Manu¬scripts preferred. 90 words/minute. 2321Rickert, BU 8-6610.WANTEDWOMAN OF PLEASURE for Flint HouseGuest Room. Experience required. No Rickertor Wallace amateurs accepted. Apply toAllan Rosenbaum, Ext. 3518. IHC Approved.Inexperienced Construction Workers TOBUILD BRIDGE — 2 Sessions, First onFebruary 9. FOR TIME AND LOCATION —SEE Personals. IDEAS WELCOME.WORKMAROON STILL NEEDS RELIABLE —STOP — VERY RELIABLE — STOP —DELIVERY MAN OR WOMAN FOR MON¬DAY TRIP C. 1:00 P.M. TO HINSDALE,ILLINOIS. Please call EXT. 3266. — STOP —ASSISTANT MANAGER or DOORMAN FORHYDE PARK THEATRE. Apply Evenings. Share exceptional APARTMENT. Male Grad.Student, Jr. or Sr. Spring Quarter. $35/month. 57th & Drexel, 324-8930.ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHARE APART¬MENT. 53rd and Greenwood. $65/month. CallMike Shapiro after 9 P.M. 643-0231.BONNIE AND CLYDE NODRESS — at the Wash PromIf you thing PROMS are blase' —you haven't tried Wash Prom, 1968.Wishing can make it so — BANDERSNATCH.Photographer desires YOUNG FEMALE TOMODEL. Creative Rewarding Work. 493-6074.WILL PAY and SUPPLY FOOD AND LIT¬TER to anyone who will board our two six-month-old cats for the next 3 months. ForDetails, Call SA 1-5728.ZETA: Brigid's Eve. If ye be that whycheye say, Contact Cyfoeth: 234-5560 on 2/9/68,7 to 10 P.M.DAS EROTISCHE WIRD ANS UNSERERAUSGABE ANSGELASSEN!DO YOU HAVE THE MAINLINE PROS¬PERITY BLUES?YOGAYogi Sri Nerode conducts individual YOGAINSTRUCTION IN HYDE PARK in bodilyrelaxation and tranquility, Classical Breath¬ing, and Higher Meditation. Anyone inter¬ested may call DO 3-0155.FOR SALECO-OP APARTMENT. 6 room efficiency.Real Fireplace. South Shore Drive. Seen byAppointment. Call SA 1-8816 A.M.PORSCHE COUPE, 1964, AM-FM Radio.Wire Wheels. Excellent Condition. $2195. CaliMike Orloff. CA 7-3203.CAFE EUROPA FOR SALE.1440 E. 57th StreetCall 363-4732.After 6 P.M.DEPENDABLE COLD WEATHER STARTER.Super '56 Chevy needs home. Comes com¬plete down to her snowtires. Call Gene (684-1138) or Rich (643-4937).AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE. Radio and Heater.Mint Condition. $1395. Call Mike Orloff atCA 7-3203.TRAVELMarco Polo Handles Your Travel. BU 8-5944.PERSONALSGod Bless Dr. Spock.BEST GRAFFITTI FOR FEBRUARYMoby Dick is not a social Disease.Keep sending in your groovy ideas for theBEST AWARDS for FEBRUARY — Printedat no cost if they are cool. One brown seal fur coat.One otter coat, size 16-18,One red wool coat lined in nutria, brand-newsize 12-14ALL FINE, EXCELLENT CONDITIONBy appointment only, HY 3-1074, 11-8 P.M.EXEXHIBIT, SHOLOM ALEICHEM LITHO¬GRAPHS by ANATOLI KAPLAN. From theJewish Museum, New York City. At HILLELuntil February 20th."Consistenby to Nonsense is the foundationof the greatest of all errors in the world;"—John Locke — A Public Service quote fromthe BANDERSNATCH.Broaden your experience — See TIGER BIO-MAJORS: Informal Faculty and PizzaWOMAN AT THE BANDERSNATCH. February 9, 8:00 p.m. 5642 Kimbark.Buffet, Blackfriars, Blues band,Beardsley, Brilliant Dance-Band andBeautiful Miss U. of C. All At Wash PromFebruary 17. BE THERE!THE JARMAN CO.BRIDGE 1February 9, 8:00 P.M.Ida Noyes HallFEEL FREE!SUPER BED FRAME: Brand new, un¬touched by human hands, half-price, steel,on wheels: Call Roger, 667-0659.MAIDENSWe are maidens of the Mortar BoardAt Chicago educatedFrom the wicked clutches of romanceWe have all been segregated.We're all very pureWe're all very goodWe all always do exactly what we shouldWe all go to class and learn facts so rareAnd if when we speakWe show our savoir-faireIt is the only way that we can beWe are maidens typical of UC.We know how to sewWe know how to knitWe know how to thinkAt least a little bitWe know how to danceWe know how to dreamAnd also we know the difference betweenA women's club and a fraternityWe are maidens typical of UC.SendThe MaroonHomeHoward Hawk’s TWENTIETH CENTURYLionel Barrymore, greatest ham of all time, with Carol Lombard on the Twentieth Century Limited. Soc Sci. 122. 7:15 and 9:15. 75c. Wed. Doc Films Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OFTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY J-925SStudent Discounts Fritz Lang’s METROPOLISA look at things to come, from 1926. Bureaucracy against the Workers. Tonight. Soc Sci 122. 7:15 and 9:15, 75C. Doc Filrmm...^JSeauttj and @osinellc Gfa I,5700 HARPFR AVENUE onFA Max 4-2007LEARN ABOUT OPPORTUNITIES FOR WORK, STUDY,SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, TRAVEL, AND PERMANENTSETTLEMENT IN ISRAEL.COME TO"ISRAEL AND YOU"A seminar being sponsored by U. of C. Student Zionist Organi¬zation on Sunday, February II, from 1:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M.j N0TE: After the seminar, personal counselling will be avail¬able for those with definite plans for travel and settle¬ment in Israel. ADDING MACHINE AND TYPEWRITER SALETypewritersSmith Super Sterling Was $107.50 Now $ 89.00Underwood Studio 44 Was $102.00Adding Machines Now $ 80.00Olivetti Quanta Was $168.50 Now $139.50Olivetti Quanta R Was $139.95 Now $119.95All machines with one year complete guarantee. Time payment planfor Students, Faculty and Employees.Offer good until supply lasts.Trade-In’s accepted.Plus - With adding machine purchase, a free Income Tax guideValued at a $1.95Typewriter DepartmentThe University ol Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.THE CHICAGO MAROON February 6, 1968