Harper LibraryW 61 Archives Univ. of Chgo.Chicago, 111, 60637Chicagi Ot<J‘ \‘5^\ FoundedJin 1892VOL. 76, NO. 35 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1968 8 PAGESMiss University of Chicago The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISGeorge WashingtonJeanette LaVelle IsNew Miss Chicago - # \yrcnwcyChicago GuaranteesDraftee EnrollmentBy BARBARA HURSTEditorial AssistantMiss Jeanette LaVelle, 70,waltzed down the white-carpeted;Ida Noyes stairway Saturday to be¬come the dimpled darling of theUniversity of Chicago.Her coronation took place at theWashington Promenade, Chicago’sforemost high societal function,which annually marks the debut ofmany of the University’s most tal¬ented and well-bred young ladiesinto the land of fun and fashion.Highlighting the evening was theGrand March around Ida NoyesHall, led by Miss LaVelle, who wasescorted by Dean of the College1Wayne C. Booth. Miss LaVelle’s,escort for the evening, PaulSuckow, lent his arm to Mrs. Boothas the foursome led close to fivehundred guests in a grande prome-1nade around the floor. Followingthe first quartet were Miss Chi¬cago’s five princesses — the othercontenders for the coveted title —and their escorts.Dress Is VariedDress for the evening varied, butpredominant were the long gownstraditional for such an affair andthe more casual short formals. Theaward for the most well dressedand creatively outfitted co-ed pres¬ent was said to have gone to MarkPoKempner, '69. who appeared ina quasi-Chinese style floor-lengthgown, sporting long full sleeves, aloose bodice, and a free-flowingskirt.PoKempner looked stunningwaltzing around the floor, with rus¬tling skirts and a Pepsodent smile.Miss LaVelle, whose fashionranked second only to PoKemp-ner’s, appeared in a powder blue,low V-necked sleeveless gown. Ac¬cessories included shoes.The Blackfriars presented a ser¬ies of short satirical sketches onthe Vietnam war and the Great So¬ciety. Music was provided by theRoss Anderson Dance Band and the Otis Rush Blues Band.The most sparkling entertainmentof the evening came from WalterJeschke, custodian of Ida NoyesHall, who was dressed in his cus¬tomary George Washington cos¬tume. Emceeing the Miss Chicagoceremonies, he opened and closedthe proceedings by pounding hisstaff. Jeschke also supervised dec¬orations and the technical set-upof the Prom.“This Prom was very favorablecompared to others,” Jeschke re¬marked afterwards. “I think thisyear’s Miss U. of C. is a tremen¬dous choice. The two bands workedout very well, lending both the tra¬ditional and modern touch. It’s thefirst time we’ve done that.”One random observer, veteranProm-goer Alan Bloom, ‘68, com¬mented, “I have never seen such a(spectrum of everything. Walterseemed to fit in better with thegeneral style of clothing than manyattendants.“This is the first Wash Promwhere you couldn’t tell the Black¬friars players from the attendants.But it’s the most exciting Prom I’veever been to.” By MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorThe University moved quickly jyesterday to reassure its malegraduate students made vulnerableto the draft Friday by a newSelective Service directive. The di¬rective virtually eliminates gradu¬ate school deferments for thosewho had not completed one year Iof graduate work by last year.In a statement released yester¬day, Chicago commits itself to re¬enroll all students in good standingwho are drafted, enlist, or chooseconcientious objector status. Italso extends this pledge to studentsnot currently registered but whohave formally accepted theiradmission to the University andare prevented from registering bythe draft.Prior to yesterday’s statement,none of the University’s divisionswith the exception of the BusinessSchool had made such a guaranteeand a number of them had ex¬pressed doubt that they would beable to readmit all of the returningveterans who are expected to floodChicago in two years.Memorandum to BeadleThe University statement is inthe form of a memorandum toPresident Beadle from Dean of theCollege Wayne C. Booth, Dean ofthe Graduate School of BusinessGeorge I’. Shultz, Dean of the Div¬ision of the Humanities Robert PLStreeter, and Dean of StudentsCharles D. O’Connell. It resultsfrom an extensive study which thedeans have been conducting, and itimmediately becomes official Uni-! versity policy.The statement also commits theUniversity to “endeaver to makeavailable to all returning studentsJ those not now receiving aid as wellas those who are — a combination of grants, loans and student em¬ployment which will provide the fi¬nancial resources they may needto resume their studies.”In addition, the University hadpledged to give returning studentsan opportunity to enter with ad- jvanced standing and a chance toresume their studies in the middle ;of the year so far as this is1practical.Caught off GuardAlthough most University officialsmaintained a calm outer facade inthe face of the new draft directive,it was obvious that they were wor¬ried about its effects. While mostof the University’s graduate andprofessional schools have been ex¬pecting the bad news for some See text of the deans' letter onPage 3 and an editorial on Page4.time, the deans of the PhysicalScience and Biological Sciences di¬visions were caught off guard bythe directive.“I was rather surprised by thenews,” said Dean of Students in thePhysical Sciences Division Sol H.Krasner, “and given the oportunityin 1968, I intend to express my op¬position to it at the polling place.”Earlier government recommenda¬tions had led those in the naturalsciences to believe that the studentsTurn to Page 3Beadle Approves PlanOf Student Life GroupBy JOHN SIEFERTEditorial AssistantPresident Beadle yesterday an¬nounced his acceptance of the rec¬ommendations of the Student Fac¬ulty Committee on Campus StudentLife for the election of the Commit¬tee’s permanent student members.The Committee will be composedof eight students and live membersof the faculty. Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell will serve aschairman and Assistant Dean of theCollege Karl Bemesderfer will actas secretary to the Committee.The Committee is to advise theDean of Students on all areas ofcampus life, including housing,dormitories, parietals, residence re¬quirements, registration, and ad¬missions.NEW HEAD SOUGHTHughes Resigns as Bookstore ManagerMO RONFor instructions on how toread Friday's Maroon,phone Merrill Printing Co.,Hinsdale, Illinois. The University Bookstore is look¬ing for a new manager.The recent resignation of CharlesF. Hughes, who had headed theBookstore for little more than ai year, was not due to any “unusualproblems,” according to admini¬strators closely connected withBookstore operations.There had been speculation thatHughes’ resignation came afterpressure by employees.Hughes “decided to go into busi¬ness for himself in Detroit, hishome town,” said Eugene L. Mil¬ler, business manager of campusoperations. “He intends to open apaperback shop there.”Hughes, now in Detroit, couldnot be reached for comment.Richard C. Wade, professor ofhistory and member of the Student-Faculty Bookstore Committee, See editorial on Page 4.gchoed Miller’s statements, addingthat “there was no more frictionthan normal, apparently.”According to Wade, there areproblems in the Bookstore. “Thefirst problem is space and its allo¬cation. The second problem is find¬ing competent personnel, and thethird problem is how one folds instudents with the reorganization ofsections.”There are some problems withthe programs now being introducedin the Bookstore, also. “None wereapparently decisive in Hughes’leaving,” said Wade, however.According to- Miller,, Bookstorepolicy will remain the same atleast until a new manager is ap¬pointed. Charles F. Hughes Although the Committee’s recom¬mendations will not be binding,they are expected to be very in¬fluential.ProportionsThree members of the Committeewill be elected from the College,one from the Division of the Hu¬manities, one from the Division ofthe Social Sciences, one from theDivisions of Biological and Physi¬cal Sciences combined with theMedical School, and two from theremaining professional schools, nei¬ther in the same school.Thus the Committee will consistof five faculty members, five grad¬uate students, and three studentsfrom the College.Any full-time registered studentin good standing is eligible forelection. Nominating petitions arenow available from the Secretaryto the Dean of Students, Adminis¬tration Building Room 201. FortyI signatures from the student’s con¬stituency are needed to gain aplace on the ballot.The deadline for submitting nom¬inating petitions is 4:30 p.m. March1.On March 4, the Registrar willrelease the names of the candidatesto the press and the Universitycommunity. On March 11, the Reg¬istrar will mail color-coded ballotsto all 8334 registered students.Ballots must be returned to theOffice of the Registrar by mail, Fa¬culty Exchange, or in person by4:30 p.m. March 15. They will becounted by the Registrar with stu¬dent observers present.Elections results will be an¬nounced on March 18.The election of the Committee isthe University’s most major stepto date in implementing the recom¬mendations of last year’s PageCommittee for more student par-Turn to Page 3Two Students Suggest Changes in Social Science CurriculumTwo members of the Social Sci¬ences Collegiate Division StudentCouncil last week submitted toMaster of the Division Donald Le¬vine a report outlining problems inthe curriculum of the Division andsuggesting some specific changes.The recommendations, outlined by Paul Burstein, ’68, and JohnHarris, '68, list five specific pointswhere action is needed:• A tutorial studies program, likethat in the humanities, should existfor social science.• There is a need for revision ofcertain course reading lists; speci¬ fically, background reading mater¬ial should be added to requiredreading so that students would notonly have factual material to workfrom, but a common backgroundat the beginning of the course.• The class size in the common-core courses is smaller than thatProfessor Charges Containment of Negroespassing fair housingThe federal government is carry¬ing out economic programs thatattempt to keep Negroes in theghettos, an economist and formerfederal official charged Sundaynight.Kenneth R. Hansen, former as¬sistant director of the UnitedStates Bureau of the Budget andnow professor of economics atBerkeley, made this assertion lastnight on “The University of Chi¬cago Round Table”, the weeklytelevision discussion program.Criticizing the federal programs,Hansen said, “The preponderanceof our federal programs, while be¬latedly addressed to the problemsof the central city, may be implic¬itly developing a pattern . . . thatis a compensatory approach to theghetto where we say: ‘We willmake rather nice places ... in thiscentral city as long as everybodystays put and doesn’t try to moveinto one another’s back yard.’ ”In discussing “The Shame of theSuburbs,” Hansen was joined byRichard C. Wade, professor ofAmerican history at Chicago, andJack Pahl, president of Elk GroveVillage, a suburb with a populationof 18,000 northwest of Chicago.Analyzing the crisis, he said, “WeLynd Urges ProtestBy Med Students“The kind of service required ofan army doctor is in direct con¬trast to the basic principle of theHippocratic oath: to treat thosewho are in need.”With this assertion, StaughtonLynd extended his counsel againstthe draft to students. The ChicagoState College professor of historyspoke at a lecture last night inBillings.Referring to draft resistence ingeneral, Lynd maintained that thenon-cooperator is concerned withthree problems: extremeness, il¬legality, and effectiveness.Lynd not only encouraged the jmedical students to resist thedraft, but also urged them to con- |vert their protest into positive ac- jtion. He suggested that one way todo this is to join a program whichis concerned with “providing allsides of the war with medical aid.” find the kind of transport wherethe least privileged in our societycannot go and live in proximity tothe jobs that are now moving tothe suburbs.”Pahl supported Hansen on theeffects of federal programs, but heasserted that the suburbs, at leastin the Chicago area, were doing allthey could to relieve the tensionbetween the urban ghettos and the suburbs byordinances.Wade pointed out that the tradi¬tional Italian, Irish, German, andJewish ghettos were different fromthe Negro ghetto in that they weretemporary for the inhabitants. Hesaid that the Negro ghettos areextending block by block and thatthere is little chance for Negroesto move to the suburbs. in the upper level 200 courses. Thisis contrary to the practice of mostschools.• Statistics 200 should be a pre¬requisite for Sociology 202.• Required courses within theDivision should be offered morethan once a year, giving studentsmore flexibility in planning theirschedules.Course EvaluationAccording to Burstein, there isalso a need to study each socialscience program in great detail,obtaining from each professor anevaluation of his course and how itfits into the general program.Each professor could also submita brief summary of the theory,philosophy, and methodology of hiscourse. “We would start with the com¬mon-core courses,” said Burstein,“hopefully getting student repre¬sentation on the faculty commit¬tees which are revising the com¬mon year.”After the Burstein-Harris propos¬al is discussed at the next StudentCouncil meeting, it will be broughtto the Governing Board of the Div¬ision and probably referred to anew Curriculum Committee forstudy and recommendations.“These ideas are probably themost sophisticated students havecome up with,” Levine com¬mented, “though they are verypartial. They are probably themost sophisticated ideas anybodyhas come up with so far.”_ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 Charles Chaplin’s CITY LIGHTSChari ie Chapl in as the tramp in one of hi s seldom shown classics. Mandel Hal I. Tonight 7: I 5 and 9: I 5, $ I 00. Doc Films.INTERVIEW KOPPERS MARCH 1Pu239 + 2n - Pu24' —!— Am241 + n -> Am242 —Cm242decay decayCm242 + 7n - Cm249 ,r Bk249 + n ~Bk2 *> —Cf2*>decay decayCf2* + 3n - Cf253 , r Es253 + n - Es254 Fm234 (100)decay decay“But Dr. Ferraday!The atomic weight of einsteinium is 254! 55He did it .again. If Dr. Ferraday dropped his guard, Georgewould catch it. George used his head. He came to classprepared. He was anxious—impatient.Koppers is after impatient young graduates like George.We're growing so fast we have more job openings thanwe can fill, and we need young graduates to help us fillthem—permanently. Answer this ad if you answer thisdescription: impatient, anxious to get ahead, at home withfresh ideas. We want chemists, chemical engineers, me¬chanical engineers, metallurgists, metallurgical engi¬neers, electrical engineers, civil engineers, businessmajors, liberal arts majors and MBA’s. Afraid you might get into something you won’t like?It’s not likely at Koppers. We do all sorts of things withplastics, wood, metal and chemicals. Koppers suppliesmore than 270 products and services to some 40 indus¬tries. Interview us.Make an appointment at your Placement Office. Andwrite for our booklet, "Koppers and the Impatient Grad¬uate.” It tells what Koppers does and why Koppers needsimpatient young people to help us do it. Write R. G.Dingman, Koppers Company, Inc., Koppers Building,Pittsburgh, Pa. 15219. Koppers has always been an equalopportunity employer.Try your impatience. Interview...CHEMICALS AND COATINGS PLASTICS ARCHITECTURAL ANP CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS ENGINEERED PRODUCTS ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 20, 1968TO: Deans' LetterTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOFebruary 20, 1968 ENTERS TWO-YEAR TRIALCommittee Wins Beadle NodPresidentMr. George W. BeadleFROM:Wayne C. Booth Dean of the CollegeGeorge P. Shultz Dean, Graduate School of BusinessRobert E. Streeter Dean, Division of the HumanitiesCharles D. O’Connell Dean of StudentsPresent Selective Service regulations make it likely that the edu¬cational programs of a large number of students will be interruptedand uncertainty created for many others. These facts and prospectsare a cause of concern for students and their University alike.As you requested, we have reviewed University policies on inter¬rupted studies. We recommend the following be presented as a state¬ment of University policy. It appropriately emphasizes (1) resumptionof studies, (2) financial aid, (3) student educational programs, and(4) counseling services.Resumption of Studies. Students in good standing at the Universitywho are unable to continue their studies — because they are drafted,enlist, or choose conscientious objector status — will be readmitted tothe University as soon as they are able to return.Financial Aid. The University will endeavor to make available toall returning students — those not now receiving aid as well as thosewho are — a combination of grants, loans and student employmentwhich will provide the financial resources they may need to resumetheir studies. It is hoped that government programs, such as the G. I.Bill and the National Defense Education Act loan program, will con¬tinue to be a major source of support.Student Educational Programs. Returning students will be givenevery opportunity possible to have their educational progress reflectedin advanced standing through course or placement examinations — or jtransfer of credit. So far as possible each academic area should developflexibility in course scheduling so that returning students can resumetheir educational programs effectively at varying times of the year.Because of the many academic areas involved, each with its specialconcerns, the implementation of this policy must necessarily rest withthe individual department or School. Students planning to return tothe University are urged to keep their departments or Schools informedof their plans insofar as this is possible.Counseling Services. The University maintaiqs now and will con¬tinue to maintain in the Office of the Registrar an adviser who isavailable to students and student groups .seeking information aboutSelective Service practices, appeal procedures, and Veterans’ benefits.These policies will apply not only to currently registered studentsbut also to students who have formally accepted their admission tothe University but who. after signifying their intention to register,are unable to do so because of enlistment or induction.Grad Schools DealtUnexpected Blow i Continued from Page 1ticipation in Chicago’s decision¬making process. The administra¬tion is concerned that it be ableto follow the Committee’s initialrecommendations as a sign of goodfaith to the student body.At the end of a two-year period,the Council of the University Sen¬ate will review the success of theCommittee and recommend wheth¬er it should be continued, altered,or disbanded.The five faculty members whowere appointed by Beadle to servethe entire trial period of the Com¬mittee are Mark Ashin, associateprofessor of English; Joseph Ceith-amal, professor of biochemistry;Peter Dembowsk, associate profes¬sor of Romance languages; Ken¬neth Darn, professor in the LawSchool; and Harold Richman, as¬sistant professor in the School of |Social Service Administration.Five students were appointed tothe Committee to help determine jthe election procedures. They areGary Benenson, ‘68; Rochelle Wald-;man, ‘68; Edward Hearne, gradu¬ate student in English; David Kin-*dig. student in the Medical School,and Marc Cogan, graduate studentin social thought. tion. Although the election proce-| dures approved by Beadle do notprovide for running as a slate, nei-the do they prohibit it.If SPAC cannot run a slate, Jer¬ry Lipsch, the party’s chairman an¬nounced, individuals will run withSPAC support.Turkington to HearDorm Complaints1 Students will have a good chancethis Thursday to discuss problemsin the dorms or with facilities ingeneral with three administrators.Director of Student Housing Ed¬ward Turkington, Business Mana¬ger of Campus Operations EugeneL. Miller, and Director of Resi¬dence Halls and Commons LylasE. Kay, will be in Woodward Courtfor dinner at 5 p.m.A table will be set aside for theadministrators and students whowish to speak with them. George W. BeadleIDA Board of TrusteesTo Weigh Schools Role?Continued from Page IA quick survey of local draftboards yesterday indicated that theboards have not had time to deter¬mine how the new directive wouldaffect their activity.Illinois Director of the SelectiveService John H. Hammack statedthat he did not anticipate anychange or new difficulty in Selec¬tive Service operations because ofthe increased percentage of draft¬ees who will be college graduates.According to present projections,about two-thirds of the men draftednext year will be college graduates,and about one-third of them will besent to Vietnam.The new directive was issued bythe Selective Service several ,months after Congress had revisedthe draft laws providing for thedrafting of oldest men first andabolishing graduate deferments.It was left for the executive |branch to determine which gradu-1ate students were persuing studies jcritical to the national interest, andwhich occupations were so criticalas to merit continued deferment.The President elected to leave onlydivinity and medical schools un¬touched and to abolish all occupa¬tional deferments, although localdraft boards will continue to makesome exceptions to this rule.Reached at his office, O’Connelltermed the situation “serious” butrefused to attack the decision.‘Necessary and Wise’“Of course this is terrible,” hestated, “but I think it’s very diffi¬cult to say that a chemist is morevaluable than a classicist. I thinkthis decision is necessary and per¬ haps even wise.”O'Connell also revealed that hehad conducted a study of the effectsthe draft would have on future en¬rollment.On the basis of this analysis, O’¬Connell projected a drop in usualmrollment of 600 to 700 male gradu¬ate students. Some of this deficit,be stated, would be made up byaccepting more students.He emphasized, however, thatChicago would not lower its admis¬sions standards but instead wouldadmit more women, veterans, andforeigners.O’Connell’s study was conductedon the assumption that 25 percentof the students in the scienceswould be drafted.The new directive, however,makes clear that science studentswill not have a higher defermentrate and that close to 100 percentof entering male students will bedrafted. These appointed students will sitwith the elected students duringthe Spring Quarter, making a Com¬mittee balance of 13 students andfive faculty. The appointed stu¬dents, however, will not be ableto vote.The elected Committee will servefor one year. At the end of thattime a new Committee will beelected, although the old Commit¬tee members will continue to sitwithout votes on the Committee forone quarter.SPAC, the Student Political Ac¬tion Committee, has announced itsplans to participate in the elec- Voice, the Students for a Demo¬cratic Society (SDS) chapter at theUniversity of Michigan, announcedtoday that it has learned that theBoard of Trustees of the Institutefor Defense Analysis (IDA) willmeet in New York to discusswhether the Institute should contin¬ue under universities’ sponsorship.The announcement comes on the\ heels of a recommendation by the! Committee of the Council that theUniversity of Chicago sever itsties with IDA. If Chicago with¬draws, it will be the first univer¬sity to do so.However, IDA may avoid the em-Michigan To Investigate CIA TiesANN ARBOR, Mich. (CPS) — j igan professors met with six CIAUniversity of Michigan President , agents in 1966 to discuss the possi- jRobben W. Fleming has ordered bility of using university faculty 1an investigation of the university’s members and facilities to train CIA 1involvement with the Central Intel- agents. Although ISR officials told jligence Agency (CIA). The Daily that the information they |Flemming’s action came in the | &ave ^e CIA was “minimal,” thewake of two articles in the campus j institute’s executive committeepaper. The Michigan Daily, on co- j considered the problem significantoperation between the CIA and 1 enough to consider placing restric-Michigan’s Institute for Social Re- *‘ons on contacts between ISR staffsearch (ISR). members and the CIA. barrassment of the University’swithdrawal by ending all univer¬sity sponsorship itself.The Council of the UniversitySenate is expected to make a def¬inite decision on Chicago’s mem¬bership in IDA at its next meetingon March 12.The next regularly scheduledmeeting of the IDA’s Board ofTrustees was March 20 to 21, whichwould have made it impossible toend university sponsorship beforethe University of Chicago with¬draws. The meeting this week is aspecial meeting.SDS is also tailing Grayson Kirk,president of Columbia and memberof the IDA board of trustees, in aneffort to find out the location of theboard’s meeting.Further, a “going-away demon¬stration” is being staged for Presi¬dent Goheen of Princeton by thatuniversity’s chapter of SDS.At the University of Michigan,SDS will make its views known atan open house held by Presidentand IDA Trustee Robert Fleming.Chicago’s SDS members now arediscussing what action they willtake on the board meeting.The Daily also said that a CIAagent approached a memb°r of thestudent judiciary board and askedhim to help them in an investiga¬tion. The student refused, however.Four ISR personnel had had sixcontacts with CIA agents duringthe year, according to The Daily.The paper also said that four Mich-DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT IENSESNEWEST STYilNG IN FRAMES THE CMS PRESENTSTHE ART ENSEMBLEin CONCERTFeaturingRoscoe Mitchell Lester BowieMalachi FavorsIda Noyes Hall 1212 E. 59th St.8:OOpm Feb. 22, 1968APPEARING NIGHTLYOUTSIDE THE BANDERSNATCHELLIOT(oi veh)February 20} 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONTIMOTHY S. KELLEYFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerFrighteningIf the new Selective Service directive issued Fridaydemonstrates nothing else, it shows that you can’t turndung into daffodils. No matter how the mentors in Wash¬ington choose to fiddle with, modify, and revise the Se¬lective Service, it’s still the same old inequitable, un¬democratic, and unfair draft, and like the would-be daf¬fodils, despite the most elaborate transmogrifications, itcontinues to stink.It may well be that the new Selective Service guide¬lines are fairer than the ones which preceded them. Theold system — based as it was on the most blatant kindof class and race discrimination — was intolerable andshould have been abolished long ago. But the fact remains,that as long as there is a draft, it must, virtually by def¬inition, be unfair to someone. Thus the new directive,while correcting past inequities directed at the membersof society least capable of sustaining them, creates newinequities directed against those whom we presumablyexpect to run our country someday.Meanwhile, there is not much left to do but hang on.hope that officials in Washington regain their sanity, andmake the best of a bad situation. The University has doneits best by promising to readmit and aid drafted students,and they should be congratulated for their effort. Butno amount of aid is going to change the basic, frighteningsituation: More young men than ever before are going tobe sent to Vietnam next year, and some of them are notgoing to return.No CrossroadsThe resignation of Charles Hughes as manager ofChicago’s Bookstore unfortunately does not bring thatsuffering institution to anything resembling a crossroadsin its pitiful existence. The Bookstore may even be theworse off for it.Hughes was a manager who wanted to do good thingsfor the Bookstore but who ran into the triple obstacle ofinadequacy of existing facilities, an administration thatis unwilling to put funds for new facilities high on itspriority list, and employees who resent attempts bv astudent-faculty committee to improve the inadequate bookselection. It is well known that Hughes would have likedto see '‘a totally new and much larger store” that wouldmore than meet the demands of a university like Chicago.At a recent meeting of the University’s Alumni Cab¬inet, much concern was expressed over the lack of senseof community on the Quadrangles, and top Universityofficials agree that a new Bookstore in the center of cam¬pus would distribute better the activity which presentlyis restricted to the dormitories on or near its periphery,with the major exceptions of Snell-Hitchcock and theReynolds Club complex. This would in turn stimulateother activity and might, in fact, eliminate some uneasi¬ness over walking out late at night.But the administration is not convinced that the min¬imum of $1 million required for a quality institutionshould be spent before countless other projects have beenfinanced, and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies willgo up on one of the prime central locations for a newBookstore probably before any improvements are madein the old one. Meanwhile, no stop-gap measures are beingtaken either to provide a more adequate selection or atleast partially to justify its anomalistic existence by giv¬ing rebates. 'Fascist' Label Stings:Shows Immature Thinking“Fascist" is a word with a verystrong sting to it. It is becomingquite widespread among liberalstudents these days, and it is usedwith seemingly little regard forits actual meaning. Originallydescribing a political extremewhich most liberals today regardas hideous, “fascist" makes aconvenient insult to call someonewho leans to the right — half-joking. perhaps, but using theword for its emotional impactjust the same.The trouble is, however, thatwhen a liberal is called a “com¬mie” he is incensed, not merelybecause he isn't one, but becausehe feels it unjust to use such anemotional word with so little con¬cern for whether or not it trulyapplies.LIBERALS SEEM to feel thattheir political philosophy expres¬ses not only a greater compassionfor mankind as a whole, but alsoa truer perspective with regard tothe political makeup of the world.Liberals see in the Viet Cong, forexample, not a skilled guerrillaforce deployed by the centralheadquarters of a sinister worldconspiracy, but members of thepeasant population of a countrytorn by war for a quarter-cen¬tury. frustrated by colonialismin its ugliest forms, and indignantat the military intrusion of a self-righteous superpower.This notion of greater toleranceand broader perspective on the part of liberals is seriously dam¬aged by their incautious use ofthe word “fascist". If they wishto avoid the same kind of narrow¬ness which conservatives oftendisplay, liberals can have no dou¬ble standard of name-calling. If“commie" can't mean simplysomeone slightly liberal who dis¬agrees with you, then “fascist”cannot be the universal put-downfor Republicans, Johnson support¬ers, Vietnam hawks, the militaryindustrial complex, the Establish¬ment, or even The Chicago Trib¬une.BUT THE PROBLEM goes fur¬ther than that. It is a question ofperspective on both sides, andliberals as well as conservativesmust be periodically examinedfor political near-sightedness.It’s hard to convince a GoldwaterRepublican that, for crying outloud, the international Commu¬nist monolith directed from Mos¬cow is a thing of the past, thatnot only is there a tremendousand fundamental split betweenMoscow and Peking, but Yugo¬slavia is pursuing its own path,the other Eastern European statesare becoming increasingly inde¬pendent, Cuba and North Koreaare playing the two Communistgiants off against each other, andthousands of years of history in¬sist that the North Vietnamesewould be delighted if we werenot forcing them into the arms oftheir habitual enemies, the Chi¬nese. Very similarly, it’s hard to con¬vince an SDS-style New Leftistthat there’s a meaningful — per¬haps crucial — differencebetween Lyndon Johnson andRichard Nixon. Liberals musthave enough perspective to real¬ize that, though they feel LBJdid a very nice job of fulfillingGoldwater’s campaign promisesfor him, Barry, if elected, mighthave exceeded their wildest night¬mares.IF 1968 produces a peace partyof any substance at all it maypossibly have on its consciencethe election of Nixon or Reaganover Johnson, because of thevotes it may divert from theDemocratic party. This would benothing short of a disaster, andthe time for liberals to recognizethis is now. Voting-age liberalswho stay away from the polls,disgusted with Johnson and thewar, may end up pulling the Rea¬gan lever, or the Nixon lever,just as easily at home as if theywere right-wingers in the votingbooths with visions of nuclearweapons dancing in their heads.This is an election year, and alittle maturity, a little true perspective on the part of liberalswho claim perspective as theirown, would go a long w’ay. In¬stead of crying “fascist” at allthose more moderate than them¬selves, liberals should recognizetheir position on the political hor¬izon and work within givenrealities.Letters to the EditorsRoman DeathThe University’s kangaroocourts are at it again. Last weekone of them forbade a studentto register until autumn 1968. Thegrounds? Possession of danger¬ous mind-twisting drugs. A fewweeks previously, a dean triedto pressure a first-year girl intoratting on some friends whowere reported to his office by aresident assistant, the latter hav¬ing entered these persons’ roomand detected an unmistakablesmell among fumes of incense.I won’t bother naming theseofficious individuals because theyare only acting as part of Chi¬cago’s administrative fabric, agroup that includes the noxious,grinning handful we know sowell, as well as the trustees, theother short-sigted deans, accom¬modating professors, and pettybureaucrats who follow ordersblindly.FROM ITS performance, it isobvious that this fabric is neithermorally nor intellectually cap¬able of running a good university.Three hundred and sixty milliondollars in ten years means lar¬ger enrollment and largerclasses; a larger, more compli¬cated, and therefore more div¬ided physical plant; stronger tieswith Washington, Springfield, andother philistine monied interests;a larger potential university elec¬torate, which will inevitably ag¬gravate the antagonism betweenUniversity power and the unen¬franchised class.Students are greater in num¬ber than the administrative shek¬els, but they. have no officialvoice and must therefore taketheir rights, rather than demandthem — and it’s obvious how the Power reacts to this. (“Sus¬pend them! Expel them! We’llraise tuition and get some morescouts to work Scarsdale. Shak¬er Heights, Birmingham, andHighland Park!”)University employees have nounion. When a Roosevelt studentworking here last year tried toorganize, he was fired. There area lot of other obscure firings go¬ing on. and to appeal themthrough proper channels is quiteuseless.THE ADMINISTRATION hasallowed eight years of Chicagomembership in IDA and appar¬ently is now “considering" leav¬ing the war game only becauseSDS has been yelling about itsince Autumn Quarter. (On Tues¬day, February 13. the Council ofthe Faculty Senate postponedmaking a decision on a motion toadvise the Senate to withdraw’from IDA. The meeting of theCouncil was secret. I do not knowif its action is a good or badsign.)Lemisch, a very popular teach¬er, has been fired. And of coursewe can never forget that Chicagois the mother of the Bomb whichdidn’t have to be dropped.At one of the Provost’s under¬graduate luncheons last spring,his lieutenant Jerry Frese saidthat the University must ulti¬mately “act out of self-interest,and therefore it was justified inremoving Negroes from HydePark in the ’50’s.” But whatself-interest! It might be possi¬ble to work with Woodlawn andKenwood rather than againstthem — if the University powerwere in progressive radicalhands instead of in neo-liberaland neo-conservative hands.EVEN FROM the narrpw stance of educational theory,great riches are being lost dueto the University’s inability tocommunicate with its neighbor¬hood. As things stand now, theuniversity must be a prime tar¬get for any organized black rev¬olution in this area of the SouthSide.The present bureaucrats musteither step down completely, orthey must surrender a propor¬tionate share (at least 90 percent) of their offices to students,progressive teachers, and otheremployees. Otherwise the fabricwill probably be ripped apart intwenty years of less (excludingthe possibility of martial law inthe United States) and nobodywill have a university, thoughthere may be a more liveableSouth Side.It would be a very good thingnot to have big grants from thefederal government and otherlarge corporations. Let Harvardand California die the education¬al Roman death.RICHARD HACK. ’69Letters to the editors must hesigned, although names may hewithheld hy request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to condense without altering meaning. Typed copy must be submitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week ot the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 30Sot Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3 0800, Ext.326S. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail S6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicaqo, III Chartmember ot ITS Student Press Assn , pu.Ikshers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 20. 190Xi! GADFLYGoldsmith Report: Many Roads Lead to RomeBy SARA HESLEPSome members of the Univer¬sity of Chicago community arelikely to conclude that the Gold¬smith Committee's recommendedwithdrawal from the Institute forDefense Analysis is a case of“the right thing for the wrongreason.” Specifically, some cam¬pus radicals presume that theUniversity ought to get out ofIDA because its research failsto promote world peace and notbecause, to quote the report,. .there is no real interactionbetween The University of Chi¬cago and IDA.”Without committing myself tothe radical opinion and knowingthat to defend the report evenon the following terms might dis¬tress the members of this com¬munity whose responsibility itwill be to vote on the report, Iwould like to suggest that twoissues of importance equal to theproblem of war research havebeen raised by it.ONE OF THEM bears directlyon a question debated on thiscampus with no little moral fer¬vor in recent months — what isthe proper role of the University.The report states that the inves¬tigation of IDA ties was precipi¬tated by concern for “the in¬volvement of the University. . .in matters not directly related tothe University’s appropriate role. . . .” The somewhat mechanis¬tic analysis which follow’s dis¬plays, under its surface, concernfor the moral independence ofthe University.I believe the analysis furthersuggests an assumption: in ademocratic society, a plurality ofdistinct groups with distinct aimsis necessary to the protection ofthe special interests of all groups.The special interest of a univer¬sity should be to “broaden the. . .function of research and teach¬ing,” the report declares. TheCommittee members found nosignificant enlargement of theUniversity’s teaching and re¬search capabilities to emergefrom its connection with IDA.Their conclusion follows syllogis- ticaliy: we ought to pull out.THE GOLDSMITH Commit¬tee’s argument is basically one ofthe self-interest of the Universityas a corporate group. Such argu¬ments, where they contribute torefusal to take stands on socialissues, are not in vogue amongcampus radicals. The obviousquestion to ask New Left mem¬bers is “Which side wrould yoube on if the University was con¬sidering support or non-supportfor a ‘Joe, not Gene’?”Less obviously, it should bepointed out that nowhere in thisargument is it implied that in¬dividuals in the University maynot take stands on such issues.To quote the Committee (slightlyout of context), “This recommen¬dation is not intended to retlecton the freedom of individual fac¬ulty members.. .to lend theirabilities to any agency concernedwith national problems. . . .”THE SECOND interesting ele¬ment in the report is virtuallyoverlooked in The Maroon editor¬ial of February 16. Branding thereport “amoral,” the editors failto recognize the uneasiness of theCommittee with tne secrecy sur¬rounding IDA research. The factthat IDA work is classified, theCommittee say, is an imponder¬able in judging the University’saffiliation; they propose “thatthe nature of the work done byIDA is irrelevant.”These two attitudes do not co¬exist calmly in the same sen¬tence (not only mine — the Com¬mittee’s). How does one evalu¬ate what one does not know? Inorder to lend its support to aninstitution, shouldn’t the Univer¬sity know what the group does?Since we can’t know, how canwe with an easy conscience sup¬port that institution?Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave,W^Jdcanhi ami (l/osinehc g/h/oii5700 HARPFR AVFNUE FAirfax 4 2007College of DuPageAssociated StudentspresentHOLLIESfrom EnglandKing James VersionLatest GnusFEB. 23, 1968 8-12 P.M.Admission $3.00DuPage County Fairgrounds, Wheaton THESE ARE unstated ques¬tions behind the ostensible con¬cern to the report with “imple¬mentation” of an IDA relation¬ship. The Committee membersare more careful of the moralbases of University action thanThe Maroon is willing to admit,even if the report is less thanexplicit.Can I be reading too much intothese lines, and into the subse¬quent analysis of how the Uni¬versity is informed (i.e., not in¬formed) of IDA proceedings,when later on the report states,“It is also difficult for us topicture the University playingeither a guiding or a restrainingrole in a situation where the Uni¬versity doesn’t have any realknowledge of what IDA isdoing”?I THINK IT will occur to any¬one who thinks about that state¬ment that it could just as easilybe used to open a recommenda¬tion that the University ask forcloser ties, more mutually in¬formative relations, greatermeans of restraining and guid¬ing IDA and the Pentagonals.The Committee does not desirethat — praise the Lord and passthe Aristotle!A final reflection needs to bemade upon the morality of theGoldsmith Committee's reason¬ ing. The report disavows recom¬mending withdrawal because ofthe “currently unpopular war.”Nonetheless, I hope the Commit¬tee members would agree thatif we had not got this war wewould not have got this particu¬lar controversy. The issues ofthe proper role of the Universityin society and of the necessaryingredients of rational decisionhave been sharpened on the Viet¬nam whetstone.INDEED, this country, as oneof the Committee members hasnoted elsewhere, is undergoing acrisis of conscience; on this cam¬pus the very formation of an IDAinvestigation, regardless of con¬clusions, is an example of it. Wehave been nicked by the Viet¬nam razor.I hope, as surely a good manypeople at Chicago hope, that theCommittee of the Council of theAcademic Senate will approvethe report. I trust in their char¬ity, should they disagree withthis interpretation of it; and Iddlizain'th (jordenJ4 air «2)esiyners1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODIAWN AVE.The Department of MusicThe Contemporary Chamber Players of the University of ChicagopresentsLEXINGTON STRING QUARTETWorks by Webern • Hoffmann • Weinberg • MozartFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1968 MANDEL HALL 8:30 P.M.Admission is without ticket and without chargeLimited SeatingAvailableTickets 4/ ReynoldsClub DeskNow.SAT A IPUY8YJean Anouilhsevmpseiw ms atmSIBSWaar ®3» PMANTIGONECharles Chaplin’s CITY LIGHTSCharlie Chapl in as the tramp in one of his seldom shown classics. Mandel Hall. Tonight 7: I 5 and 9: I 5, $ 1.00. Doc Films. have some faith that those whoare disposed to quibble with theGoldsmith Committee’s reason¬ing will realize that many roadslead to Rome, but that they alldo go there.(Editor’s note: Miss Heslepattended the College throughlast year and currently livesin Hyde Park.)You won t have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow/ if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 5. Doty Ave.646-441 1SAMUEL A. BEU.'BUY SHELL FROM BilL"SINCE ItUPICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins again inunending war againstbail-point skip, clog andsmear. Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic still writesfirst time, every time.And no wonder, bic’s“Dyamite” Ball is thehardest metal made,encased in a solid brassnose cone. Will not skip,clog or smear no matterwhat devilish abuse isdevised for them bysadistic students. Getthe dynamic bic Duo atyour campus store now.WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORP.MILFORD, CONN.BiC Medium Point 19CBiC Fin* Point 2MFebruary 20, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5College NamesMartin KamenWillet ProfessorChemist Martin D. Kamen hasbeen appointed the first Howard L.Willet visiting professor in the Col¬lege for the Spring Quarter of thisyear.Kamen is a professor of chemis¬try at the University of Californiaat San Diego and director of theLaboratorie de Photosynthese nearParis. France.“It is very unusual for an Ameri¬can to reach such a high positionin a large French laboratory,” com¬mented Robert L. Platzman. mas¬ter of the Physical Sciences Colleg¬iate Division.Kamen is one of the nation's fore¬most investigators in the use of iso¬topic tracers for the study of basicbiochemical mechanisms. Workingwith Samuel Ruben at Berkeley in1940, Kamen discovered the radio¬active isotope of carbon, C-14.While at Chicago, Kamen will of¬fer a novel course, “Genesis of aTracer Experiment,” presentingthe history of a single experiment.The course is designed for non¬specialists in hopes of bringing stu¬dents with a minimal science back¬ground to an understanding of asignificant biophysical and bio¬chemical experiment.Kamen received his B.S. andPh.D. from Chicago and has taughtat Brandels University and Wash¬ington University at St. Louis. Heis a member of the National Acad¬emy of Sciences.Laing ContributesTo Divinity SchoolThe Divinity School has been giv¬en $150,000 in memory of the lateChester William Laing by his son.Jonathan Laing, and John Nuveen& Co. line.), the investment bank¬ing and brokerage firm of whichLaing was president for manyyears.This is the first step in a programwhich will reach a minimum of$200,000 in endowment for foreignstudent fellowships.Income from the Laing Fellow¬ship Fund is to be used to financeDivinity School fellowships for for¬eign students through the WorldCouncil of Churches. For sometime, it has had applications fromyoung theologians who wish tostudy at the Divinity School.Frank C. Carr, president of theNuveen Organization, said that theamount of the gift is expected tobe increased by private donationsfrom friends of Laing. who died inFebruary. 1967.SERVICEto your satisfactionOF I LIT) I'.u/fKon al!foreign and sports carsby trained median:*Body uvrk > paintingTO" 1 \c;Free Estimates on /i_L 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 ”. Maroon Calendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an-; nounce events must type information on Cal¬endar forms available at The Maroon Office,i da Noyes 303. Forms must then be sent orbrought to the Office at least two days be¬fore the date of publication.Tuesday, February 20CONFERENCE: (Pathology), “Metabolic Ac¬tivation of Carcinogen Aromatic Amines,"James A. Miller, professor of oncology,University of Wisconsin Medical School.Billings P-117, 3 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), “Obversations ofthe Josephson Plasma Frequency," Ar¬nold J. Dahm, University of Pennsylva¬nia. Research Institutes 480, 4:15 p.m.LECTURE: (Humanities Collegiate Division),"University of Chicago Excavations inGreece, 1952 Onwards," John Hawthorne,associate professor. Breasted Hall, 7:30 ip.m.MEETING: Concerned Science Students. Cobb110, 4 p.m.FOLK AND SQUARE DANCING: AssemblyHall, International House. 1414 E. 59thSt., 8 p.m.WRESTLING: Illinois Institute of Technology,at I IT.CITIZENS BOARD DINNER: Milton Fried¬man, speaker, Hutchinson Commons.DISCUSSION: "Creativity," Harold Haydon,professor and artist. Rickert HouseLounge, 7 p.m. Wednesday, February 21MEETING: (CADRE), New draft regulationsconcerning graduate study and occupa¬tional deferments will be explained. IdaNoyes, 7:30 p.m.SWIMMING: George Williams, at BartlettGym, 3:30 p.m.FILM: (Sights and Sounds of India), "TheSword and the Flute" and "Textiles andOrnamental Arts." Rosenwald 2, 12:30p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Extraction ofSoluble RNA Plymerase from Rat LiverNuclei," Dennis Cunningham, Departmentof Biology. Abbott 101, 4 p.m.Thursday, February 22UNIVERSITY FACULTY MEETING: Boardof Precollegiate Education. HutchinsonCommons, 12 p.m.CONFERENCE: (Pathology), "EnvironmentalCarcinogenesis: Exogenous and Endogen¬ous Factors," Dr. Paul Kotin, directorof National Environmental Health Re¬rearch, Triangle Park, North Carolina.Billings P-117, 3 p.m.,TRACK: Junior Varsity Relays. Field House,4 p.m.LECTURE: (Committee on Social Thought),"The" Play of the Mind: The Theater ofW. B. Yeats," Sandra Cohen Siegel. So¬cial Science 305, 4 p.m. MEETING: (Humanities Collegiate Division).Classics 10, 4:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), "Hard AtomicCollisions," William Lichten, professor ofphysics, Yale University. Eckhart 133,4:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Student Health), "Medical Carefor Civilians in a War Zone," DavidStickney, associate director of IllinoisHospital Association, Quai Nang, Viet¬nam. Billings P-117, 5 p.m.REHEARSAL: UC Concert Band. Lab School,Belfield Hall 244, 5 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn Ave., 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: (New Collegiate Division), "Jung,Fantasy, and the Problem of Distance,"Peter Homans, assistant professor, Divi¬nity School. Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 p.m. iMEETING: (Sigma Xi), "Transfer of Ions jBetween Blood and Bone," Robert Row- |land, director of radiological physics, [Argonne National Laboratory. Eckhart j133, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Undergraduate Math Club),"Origins of Modern Analysis," Ronald R.Coifman, visiting assistant professor ofmathematics. Eckhart 206, 8 p.m.MEETING: Iner-House Council meeting. IdaNoyes Hall, 8 p.m.FILM: (B-J Cinema), "The Louvre," JudsonDining Room, 8:30 p.m., free admission, j Recruiting Visits"The College and the Divisions havecharged the Career Counseling and PlacementOffice with responsibility for providing com¬munication between educational institutions,business concerns, and government agencies,and our students interested in employmentwith these agencies. Listing of these jobopportunities and arrangement of interviewsdo not of course constitute University en¬dorsement of particular employers or posi¬tions. If any student indicates interest inan interview with representatives of theseemployers, we endorse the student's rightto have an interview.'Signed: Dean of the CollegeDeans of the Graduate DivisionsFor a list of summer employment oppor¬tunities, see the Office of Career Counselingand Placement in Room 200 of the ReynoldsClub.MOST COMPLETE PHOT(AND HOBBY STORE OfTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1 342 E Sb HY 3 925-.Stuo-nt D.-CO'J I.Charles Chaplin’s CITY LIGHTSCharlie Chaplin as the tramp in one of his seldom shown classics. Mandel Hall. Tonight 7 15 and 9 IS SI 00 Doc FilmsWant tomakemoneyyourcareer?Talk to the world’s largest bank.There’s one key market that influencesevery business — from agriculture toaerospace.That’s the money market,and if you’re about to receive your MBAdegree, it’s one reason why you shouldlook into the opportunities that couldawait you in a key financial position withthe world’s largest bank.Bank of America has a need for men ofproven academic ability and leadershippotential to train at the managementlevel in our San Francisco or Los AngelesHeadquarters. After your initial training,you may be assigned to one of the majorCalifornia financial markets. You’ll learnthrough project assignments, and beexposed to such specialized financial areas as International Banking, credit activitiesand diversified business services. You’ll gainan intimate knowledge of money and themoney market through direct customerrelations in loan negotiations and businessdevelopment with corporations — in California,across the nation and around the world.To find out more about what a career inmoney has to offer you, write to the CollegeRelations Officer, Bank of America, OneSouth Van Ness, San Francisco 94120 or111 West Seventh, Los Angeles 90014. Andsee our recruitment specialist when he’s here.MARCH 4 AND 5.Bank of AmericaNATIONAL TRUST AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION • MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIONat your placement office soon.A Bank of America recruitment officer will beAn Equal Opportunity Employer6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 20, 1968MAROON SPORTSTrackmen Down Wheaton and Wabash, Lose to Wayne StateBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantCoach Ted Haydon’s track squadtook two of three meets in a majorfour-team meet held Saturday inthe Field House.Bond Medal-winner John Bealand upcoming star Ken Thomasled Maroon scoring throughout thethree meets as Beal took ninefirsts, a second, and a third, andThomas took five firsts, four sec¬onds (all behind Beal), and twothirds.Chicago picked up an easy 75-38victory against Wheaton by winningseven of ten events, taking secondin nine, and ending third in eight.The University swept all threespots in four events.The Maroons pulled out a slim62-51 victory over Wabash as thevisitors dominated the runningevents and pressed the Universitythrough the meet. Taking firsts forChicago were Beal (three), Thom¬as (one), Haydon, Terpstra, andthe relay team.Wayne State dealt Chicago itsonly loss of the afternoon by de¬feating the Maroons by the samemargin by which Chicago over¬came Wabash. Losing by eleven,the team could have won the meetby winning the relay, which theylost by only 2.5 seconds, and takingone additional point.Beal, Thomas, McLess, Terpstra,and Melby took victories in thelosing cause.BasketballThe University basketball squadput up a valiant battle but was un¬able to make any real offensiveheadway and dropped an 89-53 de¬cision Saturday to Tulane, one ofthe South’s major basketballpowers.Facing the Tulane Green Waveon their home court in New Or¬leans, the Maroons were right inthe game throughout the first asthe lead changed seven times inthat brief twenty-minute period.In the last few minutes of the half,Tulane put on great pressure andran up their largest first half mar¬gin, 39-24.Chicago was unable to get mov¬ing in the final half, and the homeaces poured in the buckets to even¬tually stretch beyond grasp. Over¬all, Tulane outshot Chicago by tenpercent from the field and by sixfrom the free throw line and out-rebounded the University 46-30.Top scorer for Chicago wasMarty Campbell with 14. He alsoled in rebounds, seven, and in as¬sists, four. Randy Talan hit elevenpoints, and Gary Day made dou¬ble figures with ten points.WrestlingJim Capser led the wrestlingteam to fifth place in the seven-team Lawrence Invitational Tour¬nament Friday and Saturday bytaking first spot in the 177-lb. div¬ision of the competition.The grapplers were only a pointbehind fourth-place Beloit and werewithin 18 of the tournamentchamps, Carthage.f iF EXAMINATIONSTACHION EYE //EARCONTACT TENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza• 200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Eight of Chicago’s nine competi¬tors took places in the tourney.Besides Capser, Ted Peterson tooksecond in the 167-lb. class, DaveClark finished third in the 115-lb.event, and Tim Ennis finishedthird in the 145-lb. division.GymnasticsThe University gymnastics squadput on one of its strongest perform¬ances of the year against St. CloudState College at Bartlett Saturdaybut still dropped a 108-74 contest. With six men competing, theMaroons scored very high in allevents although Glen Grobbe inthe still rings took Chicago’s onlyindividual victory. Grobbe’s fineperformance led the team to a 127-125.33 victory in the overall ringscompetition.Dave Sackett finished a closesecond in free exercise competition,and Alan Mangurten completedthe Maroon performance with athird in the parallel bars. Fencing, OtherThe fencing team suffered twinlosses to the University of Illinois(Chicago Circle) and the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin at home on Sat¬urday. UICC scored a 17-10 victorywhile Wisconsin overwhelmed theUniversity 21-6.Varsity action this week will in¬volve only the wrestling and track squads. The grapplers face IITaway this afternoon, while thetrack squad sponsors a frosh-sophmeet Thursday.The intramural free-throw con¬test began yesterday at Bartlettand will continue through Wednes¬day.Play will begin Thursday in thebadminton tournament with com¬petition continuing until the follow¬ing Thursday’s playdowns.Charles Chaplin’s CITY LIGHTSCharlie Chaplin as the tramp in one of his seldom shown classics. Mandel Hall. Tonight 7: 15 and 9: 15, $| 00. Doc Films.. Howtointerview130 companiesin half an hour.Talk to the man from General Electric. He repre¬sents 130 separate GE “companies” that deal ineverything from space research to electric tooth¬brushes. We call them product departments. Eachone is autonomous with its own management andbusiness objectives. That’s why a job at GeneralElectric offers the kind of immediate responsibil¬ity you might expect to find only in a small busi¬ness. Right from.the start you get a chance todemonstrate your initiative and individual capa¬bilities. And the more you show us, the faster youwill move ahead. As you do, you’ll find that you don’t necessarily have to spend a lifetime workingon the same job in the same place. We have opera¬tions all over the world. Chances are you’ll get totry your hand at more than one of them. Our inter¬viewer will be on campus soon. If you’re wonderingwhether it’s possible to find challenging work in bigbusiness, please arrange to see him. He speaks for130 “companies.”GENERAL® ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employerBANDERSNATCH PRESENTSLAUREL & HARDY ! 11:00 PMTUES & WEDFebruary 20, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdsRATES: 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 3-0800, Ext. 3266. TWO ROOMS FOR MALE STUDENTS, $155and $180 per quarter. Board Contracts Avail¬able. PL 2-9704.GRAFFITIPOWER IS ODORLESS. TASTELESS, ANDCOLORLESS.HAPPY 4th OF JULY, JOHN MOSCOW!!!IDA rather not think about the WAR.KUTA IS A PYROTECHNIC MANIAC. This is the University of Chicago, Man, Whatkind of liberal bag are YOU coming out of?AMERIKA — show of opportunity.COMING EVENT — SSA — "How Can So¬cial Work Respond to the Powerlessness inthe Black Community?" For the answer tothis and other interesting questions, cometo the Observatory at George WilliamsCamp, Lake Geneva, Wise., April 5-7.PERSONALS BUT I DON'T WANT TO BE PROTECTED!Girls suffice for you and I,But only God can make the sky.FOR SALEDEPENDABLE COLD WEATHER STARTER'56 CHEVY. With Snowtires. Call Gene (684-1138) or Rich (643-4937). FROM A POSTCARD:Sirs:Kudos to Kimmel for his superb cartoon(Fri. 9 Feb.)It would have been even better, however, |without the caption.MAULDIN We will make a giant picture poster of youwhile you wait at $4.95. FINE ART PHOTO¬GRAPHY. 5210 S. HARPER. Ml 3-6996, 1-8P.M.ROOMMATES WANTED | Law student wants female companion—prefer-| ably good at Bridge, board games, plus "thisi and that." Call 363-5607. DON QUIXOTE — No se quien eres, ni quienpuedes ser. J. W. H.Unfair to patriots "ARMS AND THE MAN.'WANTED — FEMALE GRAD STUDENT to i DRUMS STILL FOR SALE—phone numbershare large 6 room apartment, 57th & Dor- I week wrong, should be 624-0505. OnlyChester. 493-3284. ! $125.00. Writers' Workshop PL 2-8377.I hear AMERIKA singing, Blackfriars—'68.4TH FEMALE ROOMMATE, Pref. 4-5 to 7-1-68. but Spring Quarter O.K. Own room. Rent-utils., Max $55/month. Adventurous location at5300 block Greenwood. 493-6147. Keep calling. LOST: 6 I.D. Card Check Signs.—Walter J.BABY-SITTING "More than 200,000 U.S. troops, U.S. aircraft| carriers, huge bombers, poison gases and5 napalm are being used against the heroic] patriots of Vietnam." SECURITY IS A PHONY NAME FOR FAS¬CISM. CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, 7o a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants A Mill Re'orns at fractionot ttie Or gmal Lost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional i0% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare fhe Price! y1480 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800Freedom for harried young mothers! Tradebaby-sitting, mornings for afternoons, onechild. 955-1374 P.M.WANTEDAPARTMENT. Before March 10. 3-6 Rooms,Hyde Park BU 8-7358.To finish MS in peace and quiet, U. of C.Prof will MAINTAIN HOUSE, APT., whileyou're away, now to August. X 4038. BRUCE LEVY - HAVE A HAPPY BIRTH¬DAY!"The reasoning may take this form: A fallsmore appropriately in B than it does in C.It does so because A is more like D whichis of B more than it is like E which isof C. Since A is in B and B is in G(legal concept), then A is in G. But perhapsC is in G also. If so, then B is in a deci¬sively different segment of G, because BI is like H which is in G and has a differentresult from C." — AN INTRODUCTION TOI LEGAL REASONING by Edward H. Levi. WANTED: Courtesans and dancing girls forgiant aristocratic orgy. Apply at once.SAS HEADQUARTERS, 1617 Pierce.Does Skip Landt carry a Student ID card?ASSISTANT TO ENGLISH TEACHER for j George Beadle, why won't you talk to me?Grading Themes, etc. PL 2-8377. Gilbert Lee, why won't you talk to me?RIDERS—Driving to New York upon presen¬tation of rider. Phone Ext. 514, KE 6-4300.Leave message if no answer.MSS. TO TYPE. Have Electric typewriter.Standard page rates—flexible 90 words/min¬ute. 2321 Rickert, BU 8-6610. Even your best friends won't tell you .Charles U. Daly, why won't you talk to me? SKIP — I can't get in the Building at all —I'm neither student nor employee ... M.i Levy.HOME, MOTHER, AND APPLE PIE — youtoo can be part of AMERIKA. Join Blacio-I friars.Advantages of traveling alone at GroupRates. 82 days in London, Paris, Copenhagen,Leningrad, Moscow, Kiev, Odessa, Istanbul,Athens, Rome, Madrid for $1375. No groupactivities there. Call 3545 or DO 3-3548.AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMIT-Ttc WORKSHOP on Prison Life, FridayFeb. 23, 7:30 P.M. 407 S. Dearborn."Well, that's hip," STEVE FORD.The Pansophical Revolution is Here.FOR RENT Get the Security Guards out of IDA!Marco Polo Handles Your Travel. BU 8-5944.Jerry - Call Roger Black.Five room apt. for now and forever if de- | |'m very sensitive,sired. 3 blocks from campus. $125/month. Call493-4773. evenings.ONE BEDROOM SUBLET in modern house,2 blocks from Lake. All electric, kitchen, dish¬washer, air cond., parking, Avail. April 1.$135.00. Call days: FA 4-3400, Ext. 110, Eve¬nings: 374-6236. | Since when did the state of mind of theSUBLET FURN. 3'/2 room apt. S. Shore, serious scholar include a refusal to talk toMarch 15 - Oct. 1, 752-4483 I people?You're just too good to be true .. .can't take my eyes off of you ...Well. J. L„ what's the solution?1 get mainly A out of it. Uh huh, uh huh, sure. I'm afraid I'm gonnalose my life.GRADUATE STUDENTS — Looking for anaffair? LAW SCHOOL LOUNGE — Friday,Feb. 23, 8:30 P.M. Band, Free Kegged Re¬freshments, $1.00 Admission.Doris, won't YOU even talk to me?Find out how the new draft regulations af¬fect you. Come to the CADRE meeting Wed.,Feb. 21, Ida Noyes, 7:30 P.M. or call 665-6895, 664-6967. IF YOUR EYES MEET BEAUTYTHEN SEEK YOU THE ESSENCETHERE IN• • •IF YOUR HEART OVERFLOWSWITH JOY, THEN SEEK THE 1CAUSE AND GIVE THANKSIF YOUR MIND BE IN DOUBTTHEN SEARCH THYSELF • • • •.»••••>••••••• • • • •IF YOUR UNDERSTANDINGFALLS SHORT, THEN ASK THEAID OF GODooWHAT IS A SHUFFLY ?WHO IS SN0DR0G ?Find o, ot the AUT0GRPHING AFTERNOONAt STAVER’S Bookshop and meet the Author and Illustratorof the new book:ll THE PEDANT AND THE SHUFFLY”A fable inspired by 57th StreetAuthor: John Bellairs, of CHICAGO and SHIMER.Illustrator: Marilyn Fitschen, of CHICAGOPublisher: Macmillan (Free Press!)Price: $2.95TIME: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24-2 TO 5a1301 East 57th Street,Chicago(Corner of Kimbark)8 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 20, 1968