haluThe Chicago MarooVOL. 76, NO. 36 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1968 JkclflMtfyS, 2 SECTIONSAdd to OppositionOpposition to the draft amongboth students and faculty has in¬creased following last week'schange in deferment regulations.Many fourth-year students in theCollege and graduate students planto resist the draft, a random sur¬vey by The Maroon indicated thisweek. Many are uncertain whatform their resistance will take,but almost none of those inter¬viewed intend to go into the Army.Support for resisters is increas¬ing among Chicago faculty as wrell.Dean of the College Wayne C.Booth told The Maroon: “If I were of draft age, I wouldfind it impossible to serve in theArmy in Vietnam. I haven’t thoughtthrough what form my conscienti-!ous objection would take, and I cer¬tainly do not feel qualified to ad¬vise anyone else.“In World War II, I was not aCO, but the present situation isforcing me to think through all ofmy categories afresh.”Booth has become the second ma¬jor university official to take astand against the war and thedraft. FT Spencer Parsons, dean of Rockefeller Chapel, noted that hehad urged young men to resist thedraft in a sermon January 20.Parsons Receives SupportSince then. Parsons said, “a num¬ber of students have talked with meabout what they were going to do,” DRAFT DISCUSSION: CADRE members debate future plans in Idaand many seemed interested in re-1 Noyes Hall,sistance.GOP Revival Marks2nd District RacesBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorThe Reupblican Party in theFifth Ward, once strong but morerecently moribund, is in theprocess of rejuvenation.The old guard, represented byFifth Ward Committeeman JohnL. (Bunny) East, is being chal¬lenged on »several fronts byyounger men. many of them asso¬ciated with Cook County BoardPresident Richard Ogilvie.Among the challenges are the at¬tempt of Stanley Stewart to defeatBunny East for ward committee¬man in the June 11 primary, andthe probable nomination of Thom¬as Ireland for Congress in the Sec¬ond Congressional District, whichincludes Hyde Park and the FifthWard.Stewart, a 1964 graduate of the Several faculty members have al¬so told him of their support. Par¬sons said. “I must have beenstopped on the street at least 50times since the sermon by facultymembers who said they were gladthe basic immorality of the warhad been delimited,” he said.Aside from some “crank lettersfrom the city” after The ChicagoTribune reported his sermon. Par¬sons said, he has received only oneexpression of opposition to his po¬sition, from a faculty member. CADRE Predicts MassiveStudent Draft ResistanceNews AnalysisCollege and a doctoral candidatein European history here, is aformer president of the UniversityYoung Republicans. He is drawingmuch of his campaign strengthfrom that group in the election. Ac¬cording to Stewart, he is runningto give the F’ifth Ward Republicans“a committeeman who has notsold out.”East ‘Sold Out’The tenor of the campaign to de¬pose East is that he has “sold out”to the Democrats, specifically Mar¬shall Korshak, Democratic FifthWard Committeeman. Some YoungRepublicans feel that East, whoowns a coal company doing con¬siderable business with the city,has profited financially from hisassociation with Korshak and is too“honest” to run a strong campaignagainst those who pay him. As aresult, it is being charged by num¬erous Young Republicans, East issimply a creature of the Democrat¬ic machine in the ward.Another charge leveled by Stew¬art against East is that he is ig¬norant of the wishes of the Repub¬licans in the ward. Stewart hassaid that East allowed the wardorganization to disappear, so thattoday there are only ten precinct jcaptains for the 64 precincts in the !ward. Stewart has also charged1East with being inaccessible to thevoters. “He promises to call back,but the call never comes,” Stew¬art says. “Selective Service is no longerthe institution that it used to be,”Kerry Berland of the ChicagoAmerican Friends Service Com¬mittee told a meeting Wednesday,called by Chicago Area Draft Re¬sisters on the recent change indraft deferments for graduate stu¬dents. students who began the secondyear of study toward a doctorateby October 1967 will receive II-Sunder present regulations.With current manpower de¬mands, most college graduates willbe drafted if found fit, Berlandsaid.“A lot of college students will Since the new regulations wereRobert Me Adams, director of theOriental Institute, also said, “If I „ _ _were faced with the decision, I now be forced to make up their f™°^ucedlast Fl*lday’ Berlandwouldn t go. but then these are in¬dividual decisions, and certainlyterrible ones.”Many Students Won’t GoAmong students interviewed bythe Maroon was Thomas Gushurst,‘68, who summed up the views ofmany students when he called “soincredibly complicated that its hardto talk about,” adding, however,that “if they send me an inductionnotice. I’ll leave the country.”Some students still hoped to avoidthe decision, but others have madedefinite plans. Barry Sherman, afirst-year graduate student in po¬litical science, said “I’ve found that‘inner peace’ because I’ve decidedTurn to page 3 minds,” Berland commented.“They will no longer be able topostpone their decisions about thedraft.”Berland said he expects a massexodus to Canada in the near fu¬ture, and a flood of applications todivinity schools. Divinity studentsremain draft-exempt in class IV-D.If college students meekly ac¬cept induction, Berland predicted,the new policy will continue. “Andthey probably will,” he said.Few DefermentsBerland emphasized that few col¬lege men will now be able to holdcontinuous deferments between theages of 18 and 26. Except for med¬ical students, only those graduate told The Maroon, the number ofphone calls received by CADREand the AFSC draft counselling of¬fices has “doubled or tripled.”“All of a sudden, guys realizethey can’t postpone their deci¬sions,” he noted.College students, worried aboutlosing their II-S deferments, areinterested in Canada, conscientiousobjector status, and resistance, inabout that order of frequency.“Black guys from the ghetto areprobably interested in the father¬hood (III-A) deferment, and fairlyoften in resistance,” Berland noted.‘Not Activists’He noted that many of the menTurn to page 3Privacy Is Theme of Law ConferenceA large group of distinguishedlawyers, educators and govern¬ment men will descend upon thecampus today for the Law School’stwo-day “Conference on Privacy:Policy and the Law.”About 250 people will attend theConference, among them PierreSalinger, former Press Secretaryfor Presidents Kennedy and John¬son, and Mitchell Rogovin, assist¬ant U.S. attorney-general for theTax Division.Stewart has submitted his peti¬tions to the Board of Elections, butis not optimistic about his chancesof appearing on the ballot. “Mypetitions are good, but my chancesTom Ireland The speeches and panel sessionsof the Conference will deal withsuch subjects as the constitutionaltradition of privacy, the computeras a threat to privacy, and theparticular problems of privacy inthe White House. The conferenceTurn to page 2 is held as Congress is debating the establishment of a nationaldata bank.Following is the conferenceschedule:ProgramFriday, February 23Afternoon Session. 2:00 p.m. The Law SchoolAuditorium.Harry Kalven, Jr., professor of law presidingThe Zone of PrivacyEdward Shils, professor. Committee on SocialThought; fellow, ings College, CambridgeUniversity.The Constitutional Right to be PrivateLouis Henkin, Hamilton Fish professor ofInternational law and diplomacy, ColumbiaUniversity.A Legal Map for PrivacyMarc A. Franklin, professor of law, Stan¬ford University.Evening Session. 8:30 p.m., Law SchoolAuditorium.Gerhard Casper, associate professor of law,presiding.Computer Technology:Potential Threat to Personal PrivacyArthur R. Miller, profesosr of law. Univer¬sity of Michigan.Privacy and Social Control:The Dilemma of a Data-Based CivilizationAllan F. Westin, professor of public lawand government, Columbia University. Saturday, February 24Afternoon Session. 2 p.m.. Law SchoolAuditorium.Stanley A. Kaplan, professor of law, pre¬siding.Privacy and the Welfare RecipientRobert J. Levy, profesor of law. Universityof Minnesota.Personal Privacy and the Public PurseMitchell Rogovin, asistant attorney generalof the United States, Tax Division.Privacy and Government EmploymentBennett Boskey of Volpe, Boskey and Lyons,Washington.Privacy and the CensusPhilip M. Hauser, professor of sociology anddirector, Population Research and Train¬ing Center.Dinner Session. 5:30 p.m. Center forContinuing Education.Walter J. Blum, profesor of law, presiding.Privacy and the White HousePierre Salinger, formerly press secretary toPresident John F. Kenedy and to PresidentLyndon B. Johnson.Evening Session. 1:30 p.m.. Law SchoolAuditoriumA Panel Discussion:A Policy for PrivacyBruno Bettelheim, professor of psychologyand psychiatry.Walter J. Blum, professor of law, presiding.Gerhard Casper, associate professor of law.Harry Kalven, Jr., professor of law.Alan F. Westin, professor of public lawand Government, Columbia University.Deferment Change Causes Students ConsternationWayne Booth Continued from Page 1that if they chase me out, I’ll leavethe country.He added, “The irony is that we— the classes of ‘67 and ‘68 — willbe forced to leave the country orgo to prison while those a scantyear ahead and not forced into thedecision will become the futurepresidents of the American Politi¬cal Science Association and will de¬bate whether to amnesty us some¬ day in the pages of the New Yorki Review of Books.’’Other students were lessdefinite. John Conover, a first yeargraduate student in economics,| said, “If I get an induction notice,| there’s a strong chance that I won’tgo, but I won’t make a definite de-! cision until I’m actually called be-I cause there are so many intang¬ibles.”Slade Lander, a fourth year stu¬ dent in the College, listed four al¬ternatives: the Army, alternativeservice, Canada, or jail. “I will notgo into the Army” Lander said,“but will choose one of the other al¬ternatives, all of which are ratherbrutal.”A few students were not sostrongly opposed to the draft andthe war. Donald Seekins, a first-year graduate student in politicalscience, said “I’m not so thorough¬ly convinced about the war in Viet¬ nam that I’d be willing to break thelaw. Probably what I will do isgo into the Army and if I wereforced to do things blatantly im¬moral, then I would resist.”Discussing the effect of the newregulations on University enroll¬ment, Anthony T. G. Pallett, dir¬ector of admissions, noted that, inaddition to an expected 25 percentdrop in graduate enrollment nextyear, undergraduate enrollmentmay also be affected.Korshak, East Deny Commissioner Race RumorsContinued from Page 1are only even that I’ll appear,” hesaid. Stewart implies that MarshallKorshak would attempt to keephim off the ballot, to protect Eastfrom the campaign.Korshak UninvolvedKorshak has denied this, sayingthat he is in no position to affecteither the decisions of the electioncommissioners or the results ofthe primary, if indeed Stewartdoes get on the ballot. He has saidthat no Democrats would be al¬lowed, legally, to vote in the Re¬publican primary.Bunny East denied rumors thathe might quit without a fight andattacked his opponents as peoplefrom outside the district who donot know the feelings of the localorganization. In reference to theCongressional race. East said, “I’llwait to see which candidates enterthe race” before making a decisionon whom to support.The meeting of ward committee¬men to interview candidates forthe Republican congressional nom¬ination is scheduled for Satuday,February 25. but East denied know¬ing about it. “You'll have to talkto William F. Scanned about that,”he said. “He’s the new boss ofeverybody down here — everybodybut me. They can't run Fifth Wardaffairs with me there,” he contin¬ued.Scanned New LeaderScanned, state committeemanfor the Second Congressional Dis¬trict and a close friend of RichardOgilvie, was put in as committee¬man to enliven the GOP in the dis¬trict. He denied East’s implica¬tions that he wasn’t invited to theSaturday meeting. “Mr. Easthasn’t read his mail,” he said.“The problem with Mr. East isthat he spends too little time in¬vestigating Republican voters,”Scanned continued.Scanned is backing both Stewart and Ireland, having requested thatthe latter make the race. “I expectStewart to win hands down” Scan¬ned said, “and Ireland should haveno trouble winning the nominationand election.” Questioned aboutthat statement. Scanned said,‘We’ve been able to elect Repub¬licans in the past in the SecondDistrict and with the mistakes thatthe present administration hasbeen making we should win in thefad.”Young Republicans WorkThe manpower for both cam¬paigns — Stewart’s and Ireland’sI — consists of interested Republi¬cans. especially those in the FifthWard and University of ChicagoYoung Republican Clubs. In theward committeeman race Stewart’ssupport is expected to be sufficientto win in those clubs alone. He alsoclaims a great deal of outside sup¬port.Stewart expects that some 2000votes will be cast in the primary.He further expects that he has 500 hard-core supporters, comparedwith fifty or so for East. He toowas counting heavily on the YoungRepublicans for support, the moreso since the present University YRleadership was in the club when hewas president.Ireland, a graduate of MiamiUniversity of Ohio, is now an as¬sistant professor of economics atLoyola University and is presidentof the Fifth Ward Young Repub¬licans.Close to OgilvieNeither Stewart nor Ireland isexpected to suffer from their closerelationships with Ogilvie. Accord¬ing to a survey released by Scan-nell’s office, the registered Repub¬licans in the district favoredOgilvie for governor, with 61 per¬cent of the pod for him. and nomore than 7 percent for any othercandidate for the GOP gubernator¬ial nomination. East is opposingOgilvie for Governor, but Scannedand Stewart separately discountedhis opposition. Ireland, while also favoring Ogil¬vie, does not expect any supportfrom him. The other potential can¬didates for Congress are also Ogil¬vie supporters, according to Ire¬land, and this would put him in adifficult position. Scanned is help¬ing Ireland, however, and is one ofOgilvie’s close advisors.The area contested, the Fifthward, runs along Lake Michigan,over to 65th, north along CottageGrove to 53rd, along that street toBlackstone, to 51st, and across tothe Lake. It also includes JacksonPark. The Second Congressionaldistrict includes the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th wards, togetherwith parts of Thornton and Calu¬met townships.DiscountART MATERIALS• PICTURE FRAMING• OFFICE & SCHOOLSUPPLIES• FILINGDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111SKIING atm.fUdl . . 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If when sheremoved the ring it rame apart, theSultan knew she had been unfaithful!The harem ring is just one selectionfrom the Sticks and Stones collectionof exciting jewelry from Africa, LatinAmerica and Asia. Lome select yourown special treasure.Puzzle Kin"s $4.99slicfc aA slopesIntelnational Arts anil Crafts CenterJewelry Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court .»2U^S. Harper 324-7600< onvnlcnt l.oi.fi to X p.m. daily. Noon t» * |.,.n. Sunday JBe PracticalBuy Utility ClothesSPECIAL SALEall sweaters - NOW $8.88formerly to $14.98Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9 30- 1 OO BANDERSNATCHBANDERSNACKSoval onion rings-25<mind boggling 69-er-69<with any steak dinner SOUP only 5< extra2 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 22, 1968University Promises Drafted Students ReadmissionThree student leaders yesterdayreceived a reply to a letter theywrote to President Beadle request¬ing a clarification of Chicago’sreadmission policy for students re¬sisting the draft.In a statement released Monday,the University had promised to re¬admit all students who are drafted,enlist, or chose conscientious ob¬jector status. The statement made no mention, however, of studentswho leave the country or serve ajail sentence in order to avoidservice.The three students, Student Gov¬ernment President Jeffrey Blum,’69, Vice-President Jerry Lipsch,’68, and Tobey Klass, ’68, askedBeadle to extend the University’spromise to draft resisters.Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬ nell, replying to the letter whichis printed in today’s Maroon, im¬plies that while the University doesnot endorse civil disobedience, itwill treat draft resisters as con¬scientious objectors even if theSelective Service does not.“The relationship of the Univer¬sity to its students is not deter¬mined by the limitations of partic¬ ular categories as set by SelectiveService,” O’Connell writes.“The statement by the Univer¬sity, he continues, “ was intention¬ally broad so as to be as helpful asthe University can be.”Blum replied to the reply, sayingthe University was purposelyvague so that a policy would not bemade. He asserted, “For the Uni¬versity to be vague now givesthem the opportunity, with poli¬tical pressures ten or five yearsfrom now, to admit resisters.“They instintively support thesystem.” Charles O'ConnellDOR/VI DRUGSAdministration Split Over Drug PolicyA split has developed in the Uni¬versity administration between thehousing staff and the Office of theDean of Students over policy onstudent drug use. At the beginning of the year, ameeting held for the housing str.ffat which they discussed their rolesas advisors and disciplinariansresulted in an understanding that , students who came to their resi¬dent heads having a “bad trip”and asking to be taken to BillingsHospital would not be referred tothe Disciplinary Committee.Deferments Now Hard to Obtain The housing staff then informedthe dormitory residents that thiswas the University policy.Continued from Page 1interested in resistance had alwaysbeen “interested in social ques¬tions, but were not activists.” Evensome former Goldwater supporters,he said have expressed interest inresistance.Members of SDS seldom go intodraft resistance, he noted. “The re¬sisters have greater faith in theeffectiveness of individual acts.Most SDS people seek fundament¬al changes in the structure,through political means.” he re¬marked.Last year’s draft regulationmade temporary provisions fordeferment of graduate studentsthrough this academic year.They also provided for defer¬ment of graduate students whowere in the second or subsequentyear of continuous study in doctor¬al or combined master’s-doctoralprograms as of October, 1967. Thisgroup of students may still be de¬ferred for up to five years as grad¬uate students, at the discretion oflocal draft boards, Berland said.In the fall of 1968, these samestudents will be entering the thirdor subsequent year of continuousgraduate study and will be eligiblefor II-S.Third YearBerland described the majorproblem connected with imigrationto Canada as the difficulty of ob¬taining information from American groups. “Most people in the peacemovement in the U.S. are willingto help people get to Canada, butare not happy about it,” he said.“Undergraduates who are order¬ed to report for induction while inschool full-time are entitled to havetheir induction order cancelled byissuance of a I-S (C) defermentuntil the end of the academic year(probably defined as twelvemonths from the beginning of thecourse of study). Graduate stu¬dents who have received a II-S af-1 ter June 30, 1967 are not eligible: for I-S (C), which can be receivedonly once.”Anyone who requests and re¬ceives II-S after June 30. 1967 auto¬matically foregoes the right to III-A deferment, which is otherwisemandatory when a man proves heis a father, Berland noted. However, Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell Wednesday cal¬led this a misinterpretation. Ac¬cording to O’Connell, “a studentcannot go to a resident head andsay “may I tell you something inconfidence” and expect that confi¬dence to be held inviolable. Stu¬dents cannot use the resident headsas confessors.”O’Connell has told Edward Turk-ington, director of student housing,and Marilyn McCormick, assistantdean for undergraduate women,that he wants the situationclarified.Students suffering from bad tripswho go directly to Billings, how¬ever, are assured their cases willbe handled in confidence sinceStudent Health is not under thejurisdiction of the Dean of StudentsOffice.ST. MARGRET’S CHURCHThe Episcopal Church of South Shore2555 E. Seventy-third St. BA 1-5505SUNDAY SERVICES8:00 a.m. Holy Communion9:00 a.m. Family Eucharist and Church School11:00 a.m. Choral EucharistASH WEDNESDAY SERVICES9:30 a.m. Imposition of Ashes andHoly Communion6:15 p.m. Imposition of Ashes and HolyCommunion followed by dinner FOTA IS UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorSSRVINfl HYD* PARK FOR QVIR 10 YKARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 2-9186 1840 f. JM... La protection financifcre que vou*donnez a votre famille aujourd’huldevra lui 6tre procure d’une autrefagon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetflche a votre place.En tant que repr£sentant local de la BunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4 6800 - FR 2-2390Office -Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYGREAT NEWS!The most prized taperecorder UHER 4000PFPORT LNOW at a$100 savings to you."OWN THE BEST”The University ofChicago BookstorePhoto Dept.5802 S. Ellis Avenue- CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award WinnerCannes Grand Prize WinnerSTUDENT RATE$1.50 with I.D. CardGood every day but Saturday2nd YEARAnouk Aimee-American“For Anyone Who Has everbeen in love"Sun-Times Four StarsIn Color"A MAN tA WOMAN”Mon. to Fri. starts 6:30 pm.Sat. & Sun starts 2 pm. Alfred Hitchcock’s SPELLBOUNDGregory Peck as the neurotic? psychotic? murderer? Ingrid Bergman as the doctor who tries to help him out. 6:30. $1. And at 8:00, THETROUBLE WITH HARRY. And at 9:30, THE BIRDS. A Doc Films Hitchcock Special. Kent 107.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER. MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY. NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.February 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3Brings Back Chicago's Good Old DaysThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger Black Literary Editor David L. AikenExecutive Editor .. ..Michael Seidman Associate Editors... David^GumperjNews Editor John Moscow Daniel HertzbergPhotographic Editor David Travis Editor Emeritus David A. SatterTen YearsTen years ago this week, city planners released theircomprehensive plan for renewing Hyde Park and Ken¬wood. It was not the first plan issued for Hyde Park re¬newal—plans to redevelop the 55th St. area had beencompleted about three years earlier—but this anniver¬sary is as good as any to reflect on the neighborhoodsituation around the University.In many ways, the Hyde Park plan was pioneering.It was the first urban renewal project to take advantageof a newly-passed federal program which granted moneyto cities for projects undertaken by universities andhospitals as part of co-ordinated urban renewal plans.It was a giant step forward towards doing things on asmall scale—most of the previous urban renewal projectshad required massive demolition. But Hyde Park’s plancleared only the area that is now occupied by the Uni¬versity apartments, town houses, and the Co-op shoppingcenter, plus assorted smaller sites scattered throughoutthe area.Participation of residents, through the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference, was also the small be¬ginning of a trend toward the goal of local determinationof the future of urban neighborhoods. And needless tosay, the University’s role in renewing the neighborhoodaround it served as a precedent for many other urban,land-locked universities.Whether the Hyde Park experience can serve as amodel for others in all aspects is, however, questiona¬ble.While it has so far succeeded in retaining manystable, middle-class families in most sections of theneighborhood, many lower-income families were forcedto flee to other parts of the city. While a fairly stableracial balance has been attained for the neighborhood asa whole, housing patterns still resemble a checkerboard:black blocks close to white blocks, but not as many sta¬ble grey blocks as would be desired under real integra¬tion.Provision for up to 20 percent of the units in the new47th St. project for lower-income families should be help¬ful in moving the neighborhood toward fuller hetero¬geneity.But while the future of Hyde Park as a stable, integ¬rated, organized community seems reasonably sure, theproblems of Woodlawn, the University’s neighbor to thesouth, must not be forgotten.It is clear that the University cannot solve Wood-lawn’s problems; Woodlawn’s own residents know whatthey want. When they need assistance—money, technicaladvice, or more services—they will let the proper peopleknow. It is encouraging to note that many people in theUniversity seem to have realized this.For example, the Department of Education has en¬tered into a joint effort with The Woodlawn Organiza¬tion and the city school system to explore ways to im¬prove Woodlawn schools. Nobody is providing ready¬made blueprints, which is in some contrast to the originalplans for Hyde Park redevelopment.If the University continues to make its help availableto Woodlawn, on Woodlawn’s terms, then the next tenyears in that neighborhood may see as much progresstoward stability and self-determination as the past tenyears have seen in Hyde Park. JOHN SIEFERTAdmissions Office Staff:6 Members Not EnoughAs the faculty readers againbegin pouring over the applica¬tions for the Class of 1972, theyshould be aware of the facts oflife — the facts of student life atthe University of Chicago.Two criteria — intelligence andthen high school performance —have traditionally determinedwho is admitted to the Collegeand who is not. In recent yearsanother criterion has been addedto the list — maturity — and nowis the time for that criterion to begiven increasing weight.The Admissions Office has al¬ways used the personal interviewas a way to weed out the “littleboys” and “little girls” — thebright kids who look good on pa¬per but can’t handle themselveson their own. A student’s age isno certain proof of an applicant’smaturity. But it should indicateto the faculty readers that theyshould be on their guard.THEY SHOULD be aware thatthe incidence of drug use is high¬est among the freshman class.They should be aware thatfreshmen are more likely to becaught for drug use than upper¬classmen. It doesn’t make muchsense to admit a freshman classthat’s going to wind up in jail.They should be aware that thedropout rate is 35 percent.No one wants the University to intrude into the private lives ofits students, and the Universityfinds “in loco parentis” extreme¬ly distasteful as well. It realizesthat much of student behaviorcannot be controlled. So it seemslogical that if the University isgoing to mind its business, itselect freshmen that can mindtheirs.The University’s proper con¬cern — its academic environ¬ment — is affected by the matur¬ity or lack of it shown in thefreshman class. Immature stu¬dents perform poorly in the class¬room. Either they are quiet andcontribute little to the group, orthey are so wrapped up in theirown views that they refuse tolisten to anybody else.THESE ARE NOT the kind ofapplicants students want to inviteto join their ranks.If Chicago were to give in¬creased weight to maturity, itwould not be the first leading in¬stitution to take the step. Harv¬ard now places maturity at thetop of its priority list. Other in¬stitutions are encouraging highschool students who graduateearly to take a year off to traveland work, and Chicago should dothe same.The Admissions Office knowshow important maturity is in Chi¬cago’s climate of comparatively unadulturated freedom. Butthey’ve been able to do little toincrease the pool of qualified ap¬plicants.To pick more mature studentsrequires an admissions staff withtime for interviews in depth. Butwhile some comparable institu¬tions have twenty or more mem¬bers of their admissions staff,this year Chicago had SIX. Onlysix to give personal attention toover 2100 applicants- This isabout half the size af the admis¬sions staff last year. In addition,these six staffers — including thedirector of admissions himself —had to travel around the countryrecruiting students.It seems that the College Ad¬missions Office should rate morethan six staff members — if fornot other reason than to show stu¬dents that the administration con¬siders the College important.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 23, 1968February 23,1968 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwoRadio’s SecondSOMEWHERE OUT IN RADIO-LAND lives(?) a mysterious race of people. When¬ever any radio station broadcasts any¬thing unique or interesting, they turn to an¬other station. If the station “tones down”its progamming in the direction of middle-of-the-road music, they turn it back on andlisten enraptured to the commercials, thengo out and buy frantically. They appear toconsitute the vast majority of the popula¬tion, but are not evenly distributed. Infact, it would appear, at times, that mostof them live in Chicago. This race alsospends a lot of time riding on airplanes,going to shopping centers, waiting in lob¬bies, and doing many other things. Every¬where their theme song is played. (Theyare said to have many theme songs, butthey all sound the same.)But not all people are of this race; thereis that infinitesimal fraction of otherswho are perhaps reading this article. Theyalso read books and/or resist the draftand/or engage in sexual intercourse and/or do many other things that those whoare of the mysterious race do not need todo because they have their backroundmusic. The Others, too, would like to listento radio. Sometimes some of them listen toclassical music, when they are in greatmetropolitan centers or elsewhere whereclassical music can be heard. They wouldlike to hear jazz and folk music, too, andnews of importance, and discussion andcommentary and The Goon Show and TheFiresign Theater.Radio ratings are funny things, andoften appear to be ignored by the adver¬tisers who supposedly worship them. Forexample, WVON is the most listened-tostation in Chicago on Saturday nights. Yetthere aren’t a dozen commercials duringits three prime hours. Agains, WFMT andWEFM have similar programming andnearly identical ad rates and power. How¬ever, WFMT does well on the surveys(roughly tied with WFMF for the leadamong FM stations), while WEFM doesn’tshow up at all. So we can blame the rat¬ings sometimes, but other characteristicsof radio programming must be attributedto that mysterious race, which appears toinclude all advertising men and most radioprogram directors.But even in Chicago someone has beentaking notice of the Others, at least indi¬rectly. Discovering that it was losing ads,WLS decided to capitalize on its plight byeliminating much of the rest of its non¬music programming to produce what couldalmost be called a rock station. If themysterious ones really do love ads andother superfluous talk, jingles, and such,the ratings which put WLS well ahead ofWCFL don’t show it. But then, perhapsthe strongest of their mysterious traits isinertia, and they were used to listening toWLS for years. Anyhow, most of themusic is still bad.But to get anything approaching a com¬prehensive view of what is being done forthe Others we must leave this midwesternmetropolis and see what is going on on thecoast. Either coast. Radio is peculiarly lo¬calized, so, with some high-powered ex¬ceptions, a station reflects the character¬istics of the local populace. On one hand, afairly large number of listeners is re¬quired if a station is to make a profit. Onthe other, even a profitable station maychange format if its owner believes thereis more money to be made elsewher. Wit¬ness the late WYNR, once a black/white ChildhoodChuck Metalitz examines the resurgence of popular radioRandy PrimmRon Britain of Chicago's WCFL.R&B/Jazz operation, and which is nowWNUS. Hear what’s of importance in theworld. If nothing is important at the mo¬ment, hear thirty minutes of what will bemade important. People here listen.In search of an interesting local popu¬lace, then, let us go to San Francisco.(On the way, we might note that Salt LakeCity has two rock stations, and they bothseem to be a good bit better than the twoin Chicago. We might also note that theMormon metropolis has one 50,000-wattstation whose great power forces WJJDoff the air at night. This, KSL, is the onlystation known to mankind on which peoplefrom the entire western half of the contin¬ent discuss by telephone their various ill¬nesses and recent deaths among the audi¬ence. For added interest, they occasion¬ally comment on the weather. Profits aremade.)Arriving in San Francisco, we discover a city of dial-switchers. One hundred per¬cent of a random sample of San Francis¬cans set their AM car radio pushbuttonsto the five rock/R&B stations in thearea, and switch from one to anotherwhenever something other than the de¬sired sort of music is heard. KYA andKFRC are combatting this by running any¬where from three to twenty songs ina row, but there is another threat theycannot counter without losing a large partof their audience. That threat is FM,which in San Francisco includes two more-or-less rock stations. One of these, KGO-FM, is simply a result of the F.C.C.’s pol¬icy of requiring AM/FM combinations inbig cities to program separately during theContinued on Page ThreeMr. Metalitz, the station manager ofWMCB and its imminent FM child,WHPK, is a fourth year student in thecollege.(Elizabeth CjortltJ4air ^bedianeiair <sIJe&iyner51620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900 INTERNATIONAL houseGIFT SHOP, 1414 E. 59th StreetGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLD'Tobacco s-Candies- StationeryNewspapers-Magazine s-CosmeticsOpen Monday-Friday 10:15 AM-5:45 P!»lSaturday and Sunday Noon-5 45 PMAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUF'KEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s. 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Authors in¬clude Bruce Jay Friedman, AllenGinsberg, Arthur Kopit, PhilipRoth, Terry Southern, and others.Produced by GEORGE FOSTERand BOB BOOKER.$5.95, now at your bookstoreBERNARD GEIS ASSOCIATESCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING You probably always thought birds were cute feathery little things, didn’t you? What Hitchcock calls his “most terrifying motion picture.”At 9:30 in Kent I07. But come early for SPELLBOUND at 6:30 THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY at 8:00. $l gets you in anytime. All uncut,not like on TV. A Doc Films Hitchcock Special.“THE INTELLECTUAL'S HELLZAPOPPIN”— New YOfKer20th Centuryfro treseisPETER COOK-DUDLEY MOOREm ELEANOR BRON64 il STANLEY DONtN'SbedazzledRAOUEL WELCH as LustA WALT CM At ACHE THIATRETU ESQUIREO A ft MI A I ' MICHIGANWEEKEND MAGAZINE February 23, 1968FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes - BatteriesIOA(, discount to students with ID cards1 PIZZA lPLATTER •i -—. 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California 94305.FOTA Resurrected from Ashespus, many would have it that there needbe no rationale to justify its existence. IDov DublinIN RECENT WEEKS there has been aconsiderable amount of excited indignationabout the apparent demise of the annualspring Festival of the Arts. FOTA was atradition that, almost imperceptibly, haddied. Lamentations were many and frommost quarters, but in others there werethose who thought that things had gone asthey should have. Contrary to what hasnow become popular opinion, there will bea FOTA this year. And since this is so Ithink it is right that the University com¬munity be acquainted both with the reas¬ons why and why almost not.Since FOTA is a tradition on this cam-LAS WEEKEND, UNIVERSITY THEA¬TER made a valiant attempt at Euripides’The Trojan Women. The play would sever-lv test the talents of any company, and itexceeded the capacity of this cast. With¬out brilliant and subtle acting the play de¬generated into dull talk in one constantemotional tone. The difficulties of LorryYoung, a guest professional actress, typi-The University Theater PresentsTHE TROJAN WOMENDirected by James O'ReillyCHARACTERS IPoseidon James O'ReillyAthena Annette FernHecuba Lorry YoungTalthybius Joel CopeCassandra Linda SpaetAndromache Joan MankinAstyanax Evan ReiffelMenelaus Leonard Kraft IHelen Eugenie Ross ,CHORUSRachel Chakrin, Diane Strain, Mary Davis,Sarah Warwick, Becca Harber, Anne Wissman,Joan Katz, Katherine Wheeler, Barbara Rot-tenberg, Martha Wolf.fied the problems of the evening. She wasconvincingly grief-stricken as Hecuba, buther continual emoting was not sufficientlydifferentiated and became boring.Linda Spaet as Cassandra faced anotherproblem. Her interpretation was unevenand inconsistent as she tried to portray themany sides to Cassandra’s madness. Al¬though he delivered several speechesCULTUREVULTURETAKE HEART EVERYBODY!!! FOTA,thought dead (and buried with full rites bya Maroon editorial) has miraculously re¬vived! Dov Dublin gives the details of theResurrection above.TheaterBEFORE WE GET CARRIED AWAY:BE SURE TO SEE THE ST. PAUL PLAY¬ERS PRODUCTION OF SHAW’S ARMSAND THE MAN, IF NOT THIS WEEK¬END, ONE OF THE SEVEN SUCCEED¬ING WEEKENDS.The Vulture got to see it last Saturdaynight, and we don’t hesitate to call it thebest and funniest “amateur” productionwe have seen here or anywhere else. St.Paul’s Church, Friday and Saturday at8:30 —$2.25, students $1.75. Sunday nightat 7:30 — $2 and, get this, students75 cents!!!University Theater will present Jean An¬ouilh’s version of “Antigone” in ReynoldsClub Theater tonight, tomorrow, and Sun¬day at 8:30 p.m.The production is directed by Reece Pet¬erson and will be the final U-T event ofthe quarter.Anouilh’s Antigone is essentially an ad¬aptation of Sophocles’ Antigone, the sec¬ond play of his famous Oedipus trilogy.This version, presented in present-day lan¬guage and modern dress, was originallywritten by the French author of “Becket”during the German occupation of France,partially as an anti-Nazi play. do not trust the notion that what was goodfor our predecessors is necessarily goodfor us. I would maintain that the traditionof a Festival of the Arts is not reasonenough for its continuance. It is trite tosay but nevertheless true that at this uni¬versity, times are wont to change and withthem the needs of the university commun¬ity. The Festival of the Arts has beengreatly deteriorating over the last fewyears as the result of lack of thoughtfulrationale in planning it. Indeed, I believethis is becoming the fate of the LiberalArts Conference, although it is yet tooyoung to judge in terms of trends. Atquite well, her changes of mood were soabrupt as to leave the audience confused.Instead of portraying one tormented girlin the throes of a subtle madness, sheseemed to step in and out of several differ¬ent characters. Eugenie Ross as Helenplayed her scenes as low comedy, con¬fusing the tone of the drama. She gave atongue-in-cheek, Mae West style perform¬ance and reduced her own stature as wellas that of Menelaus (Leonard Kraft).Joan Mankin as Andromache took fulladvantage of the dramatic potential of herscenes and provided the finest momentsof the evening in her farewell to her youngson. Her portrayal was consistent and in¬teresting, while her vitality provided aneeded contrast to the weepiness ofHecuba. The chorus, under the directionof Annette Fern, was handled wellThe cast tried hard to capitalize on theinherently moving situations and the finelanguage of the play, but there were toomany long stretches from one successfulscene to the next. The nature of the playdemanded more than the actors had togive, and the result was disappointing. Onecould question whether University Theatermight not satisfy casts and audiencesmore by producing plays of less monu¬mental difficulty.The U-T production will feature a veryexperienced cast; playing the major rolesof Antigone and Creon will be NigulGuner, who was very active in U-T lastyear, and Jerry Troyer, a University staffmember who portrayed Hastings in theU-T version of “Richard III.” Other Uni¬versity Theater veterans include Mike Mil-gram, Kathy Wheeler, Caroline Heck, Je-ry Lapidus, and Ray Stoddard. Completingthe cast will be newcomers Steve Aronson,Charles Fusano, Tim Lovain, Trudy Carl¬son, and David Rosenthal.Tickets are $2, students $1.50, and areavailable at the Reynolds Club desk.MusicThe Chicago Contemporary String Quar¬tet (alias the Lexington String Quartet)will have a concert tonight in Mandel withworks by Webern, Hoffman, Weinberg, andMozart. Violinists: Elliot Golub and Dan¬iel Rouslin. Violist: Anne Mischakoff. Cel¬list: Roger Malitz.FilmsDoc Films is going out this quarter withthree films of the master, Alfred Hitch¬cock. At 6:30 there is Spellbound, made inthe forties and starring Cary Grant andIngrid Bergman. It is the story of a manand his psychiatrist, Bergman being theshrink. Next there is Hitchcock’s marvel¬lous macabre comedy The Trouble WithHarry followed by The Birds. WEEK¬END’S critic claims this last one isn’tfrightening; his idea is that the film ispurely philosophical.Nih Bunka Kai, that venerable Japanesefilm group, is showing Kurosawa’s earlyand too infrequently seen Stray Dog onceonly in Breasted Hall. It stars of course,Mifune, but not (we are told) in a titlerole. least the LAC has maintained some senseof purpose by announcing themes eachyear. There has been no unifying themefor the Festival since 1958, when FOTAwas subtitled Adventure in American Art.Work on the Festival of the Arts this yearhas only recently been begun. Informallya theme is developing from the conver¬sation of those who are initiating and work¬ing on it. It is similar to what I believewas the underlying theme of the firstFOTA. This year FOTA will be a celebra¬tion of our Art, a dramatization of thefact of the art we live with on this campus.It is a worthy nicety to celebrate attimes our own humanity. During this win¬ter quarter there was a theatrical produc¬tion every weekend. Next quarter promisesto be nearly as active in this respect. Newfilms are being shown nearly every eve¬ning by Doc Films, the Japanese FilmSociety, International House, Pierce Cine¬ma, Burton Judson Cinema, not to men¬tion the local theaters. Concerts of everykind abound thanks to the activity ofgroups from the Collegium Musicum tothe Folklore Society. Exhibits of art areon frequent display at Midway Studios,Lexington Galleries and at the galleriesof the Renaissance Society in Goodspeed.Although FOTA may bring some artiststo visit the campus during this year’sevents, the main emphasis will be on theRadioContinued from Page Onebetter part of the broadcast day, 55 min¬utes of music and 5 minutes of news, hour¬ly, and that’s all. No announcing. No com¬mercials. Completely automated, and cost¬ing perhaps $100 weekly. A pleasantyet ultimately boring sound, KGO-FM hasyet to show up on the surveys.The other FM threat is from a differentbag. KMPX was once a foreign-languagestation, with a few obscure hours to fill.Filled they were with acid-rock, folk mus¬ic, and the improvised beginnings of un¬derground radio. One year later, KMPXhas gone completely underground. In gen¬eral, the ratings have been quite good, es¬pecially for an FM station. Between 7 p.m.and midnight, more women ages 18-24 lis¬ten to KMPX than to any other station inthe San Francisco region. KMPX has doneso well that it now has a separate controlroom used exclusively to produce commer¬cials, which are primarily for varioushigh-profit pseudo-hip stores such as onefinds on Wells Street.Just what KMPX plays is difficult todescribe. Rather than try, I will suggestthat you tune to WUCB (or WHPK-Fm)any weekend, and imagine the same sortof music with more talk, with commer¬cials, with the pun-laden Firesign Theater,and with fewer engineering mistakes.KMPX is also unique, to my knowledge, asthe only station with female engineers.But San Francisco is not the home ofultimate radio. The top-rated station isKSFO’ definitely middle-of-the-road, andKJAZ is far inferior to the few Easternjazz stations. So it is to the other coast thatwe proceed.A “graveyard” to a radio man is a placethat is so alive with stations that it is dif¬ficult for some of them to be heardthrough the others. Thus, New York is agraveyard and has some of the finest sta¬tions in the country. When WOR-FM hiredthe notorius Bill Drake as program direc¬tor and finked out on the underground tobecome “the station that memories aremade of,” the vacuum was filled byWNEW-FM.Another New York station, WBAI, mustbe described ^as the ultimate of humanoidbroadcasting. Part of the Pacifica chain art to be found on campus. No plans areyet definite for FOTA weeks which arefrom April 21 through May 4. Some pro¬posals are worth mentioning. Campus art¬ists will be invited to demonstrate or dis¬play their art in special FOTA art exhibits.This will give those artists who have notenough works nor enough strength to haveone-man exhibits to participate in a com¬munal exhibit. There will be poetry read¬ings by campus poets, concerts by caiv-pus musicians, displays by campus artists.There will be an art contest with prizes ina variety of categories and in photography.The Strolling Players should again de¬scend on campus to present their ren¬ditions of fractured Medieval Drama. TheBeaux Artes Masquerade Ball will be re¬vived to take place at the end of the Fes¬tival, an opportunity for everyone to in¬vent and create costumes for an allcampus dance. No plans are definite yetand the Student — Faculty Committee ofthe Festival of the Arts is open to allsuggestions and is soliciting members andworkers. Students, faculty and other mem¬bers of the University community are in¬vited to participate in any capacity.Mr. Dublin, a third-year student inthe college, is chairman of the student-faculty committee of the Festival ofthe Arts. (The FOTA office is on thethird floor of Ida Noyes Hall.)of listener-supported stations (others areKPFA-Berkeley and KPFK-Los Angeles,(KRAB-Seattle is a similar operation),WBAI has two functions. First, it mustraise enough money from program guidesubscriptions to stay on the air; urgentappeals for more subscribers are thereforebroadcast at frequent intervals. Second,it must satisfy its staff, of which most isvolunteer and the remainder underpaid,and which works at the station mainly forthe fun of it. Thus, the programmingranges as far as do the interests of thestaff. “In the Beginning,” perhaps theworld's only grumpy morning program, isfor people who would rather sleep. “RadioUnnameable” is for insomniacs and othernight people. In between, programs aresometimes political, sometimes intellec¬tual, sometimes musical, often not ontime. As long as WBAI exists, New Yorkhas an independent radio voice, dominatedby neither advertisers nor an “education¬al” institution. During subscription ap¬peals the station threatens to go bankruptbut it has just arranged to move to largerquarters.Outside of New York and San Francisco,notable stations seem to occur in relativeisolation; no other city seems to supportmore than one. In Boston, certainly, thestation is WBZ. 50,000 watts brings soundsforeign to most midwestern ears as farwest as Chicago. Try 1030 on your AMradio late some night.While you’re at it, try 1180. and hear anexample of the wild things that can hap¬pen even on straight stations after mid¬night. During these hours, no ratings aremade, and few people are listening any¬how, particularly in places like Rochester.New York. So WHAM has given Bill Ardiscarte blanche for hours that couldn’t besold anyway. Ardis plays jazz, mostlygood, and talks. One may join the “ArdisAgainst The Night Club” and thus acquirethe right “to grumble a lot about the gen¬eral sad state of affairs.”Before giving up hope altogether, onecan look in more detail at the Chicagoradio scene. The post-midnight sanity isquite evident. Only in this period doesWSDM play any jazz, and, indeed, it hascompetition from WOPA and WXRT. Mov¬ing to more electrified music, the sceneis less nearly suitable but more promis¬ing. WOPA, WSDM. WBBM-FM, and WLS-FM are all experimenting with somethingapproaching or at least termed “under¬ground.” Special effects are excessive andtaste limited in most cases, but at leastsomeone is trying.NEXT WEEK: Pop Music by Todd CappTHEATERTrojan Women Not So HotDEBORAH BELLEFebruary 23, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856SERVICEto your satisfaction.OVALITY WOHKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanic.Body uvrk & paintingTO'VINC,Free Estimates on ALL Work326-2550.ESLY 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”._ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! newforeign car hospitalSales7326 ExchangeJL!L_AUSIin HUUr J324-3313SKATP FOR FUN AND HEALTHLAKE MEADOWS ICE SKATINGRINK and SKATING SCHOOLPUBLIC SESSIONS DAILYClosed MondaysSPFCIAL GROUP RATESPrivate and Class Lessons Available33rd Street and Ellis Ave.PHONE VI 2-7345Ziebartadds valueto your car.... up to $200 extra valueat trade-in time! Ziebarttotal rustproofing inner-coats as well as undercoatsyour new car. So complete,it's [ uaranteed for 5 yearsor jO.OOO miles. Army,Navy, U.S. Post Officechoose Ziebart, world'slargest auto*truck rust-propfer. Win the war on rust:phone us today!ZIEBARTSuperior Auto Service, Inc.3 538 S. South Chicago Ave.Phone 375-9300 Alfred Hitchcock's THE TROUBLE WITH HARRYShirley MacLaine’s debut in Hitchcock’s macabre comedy. Everybody seems to have killed poor Harry. 8:00 in Kent I07, tonight. Comeearly for SPELLBOUND at 6:30, stay for THE BIRDS at 9:30, $l for all three. A Doc Films Hitchcock Special.Any way you want itYOGURT with choice oftopping s) 40America's favorite... by a landslide.Start your own party. You get the Budweiser®... we’vegot the buttons. We’ve selected 12 assorted “Beer Party” buttonsto send you. Mail $1 and the coupon below. Offer void in stateswhere prohibited by law.KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC • ST LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA . HOUSTON /Mail this coupon to: Buttons, Dept. N3P. O. Box 58 St. Louis, Mo. 63166Enclosed is S Please send me sets of “Beer Party” Campaign Buttons.NAMEADDRESSCITY (PLEASE PRINT)STATE ZIP_(ZIP CODE MUST BE INCLUDED)4 WEEKEND MAGAZINE February 23, 1968Letters to the Editors of The MaroonReadmit ResistersDear President Beadle:We are extremely concernedabout the newly established Uni¬versity policy on the resumptionof studies of students whose schol¬arly careers are interrupted bythe draft. The policy stated in thedeans’ letter of February 20 pro¬vides for readmission of studentswho are drafted, enlist, or be¬come conscientious objectors.That policy does not mention stu¬dents who refuse to serve in theArmed Forces at all and who re¬fuse to be subject to the draft atall: for conscientious objectorstatus, classification I-O, is sub¬ject to the same draft as the I-Astatus.Will the University guaranteethat students who resist the draft,either by going to jail, leavingthe country, or going under¬ground in the United States, “willbe readmitted to the Universityas soon as they are able toreturn”?IF THE'University will notmake such a guarantee, we canonly conclude that the Universityactively supports the draft andSTATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS++++*THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-751 I1540 E. 55th St.10% Student Discount the war and a certain kind of dis¬sent which does not fundamental¬ly challenge the legitimacy ofthe system by which this countryimpresses young men into mili¬tary service.We hope that you will provideus with your reply very soon, asstudents should have the maxi¬mum information about this is¬sue long before they have to makethe fundamental decision ofwhether or not to go into theArmed Forces.We have simultaneously sentthis letter to The Maroon so thatthe issue is raised openly beforethe entire community; we hopethat your response is similarlyopen.Sincerely,JEFFREY BLUM, ’69JERRY LIPSCH, ’68ELLEN TOBEY KLASS, ’69Dean O’Connell Replies:The University is well aware ofthe burdens of conscience andthe disruption of careers placednot only on our students but uponall young people. Nevertheless,* FROM PEKING AND HANOI *|MAO TSE TUNG'S "Quotations”* and "On Peoples War," both *[^ famous little red books $1.00 *.iHO CHI MINH S ‘ Prison Diary" 75* PEKING REVIEW, *52 weeks, air 4.00* VIETNAM COURIER, 26 weeks 5.00 *}VIETNAM (Illustr.), 12 months 5.00* send payment with order to |* CHINA BOOKS & PERIODICALS *jU.S. Gov't Licensed Importer+t A Distributor ^1,'' i?‘l ?4th St. San Francisco 94110rIn Californio, JEl■ .nld t>% sales tax on books)* FREE CATALOGUE ON REQUEST *|*****.*..*.* "CM”I|GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food "10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPER10% student discount on table service5% student discount on take-out serviceHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersPlease rush methe questionnairefor CUPID COMPUTERU. of C.’s computer dating serviceName ..AddressCUPID COMPUTERBOX 67,CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS 61820 the University does not endorsecivil disobedience.The policy statement an¬nounced by Mr. Beadle on Feb¬ruary 20 spoke of the choice madeby students and not of the charac¬terization placed upon that choiceeither by the University or byanyone else. The relationship ofthe University to its students isnot determined by the limitationsof particular categories as set bySelective Service. The statementby the University was inten¬tionally broad so as to be as help¬ful as the University can be.I hope that it can be acceptedin this spirit.CHARLES D. O’CONNELLDean of Students Kimmel KartoonEver since Mr. Kimmel beganhis career as The Maroon’s car¬toonist, I have examined eachone with interest. However, lastFriday’s cartoon was disgustingand nauseating.The cartoon depicted a whitechap standing over a hunkeringNegro (shades of Stokely Car¬michael?), who is taking candyfrom a box with the inscription“To Blackie with love from Whit-ey.” The caption reads “Thanks.I prefer to eat alone.”What are we to conclude fromthis? I can suggest two answers.The first is that the cartoonist isso naieve as to believe that thewhites on this campus shower their Negro “friends” with love,and that the “ungrateful” Ne¬groes are unwilling to accept it.This “love” is the same patron¬izing kind one would show to adog, rather than an attitude ofrespect and liking for a fellowhuman being. This love servesonly to expiate the guilt of thewhites. The candy is seasonedwith lethal doses of cyanide.DEREK LINTON, 71Letters to the editors mustbe signed, although names maybe withheld by request. TheMaroon reserves the right tocondense without alteringmeaning. Typed copy must besubmitted by 11 a.m. of theday before publication.STRAY DOG directed by KUROSAWAwith Toshiro Mifune as detective in modern-day Tokyo; Sat., February 24, 8:00 P.M., Breasted Hall, OrientalInstitute, 754.THE NEW SCHOOL COLLE6Eis a senior college. It offers the third and fourth years of the undergraduatecurriculum, leading to the B.A. degree. We accept liberal arts studentswho have completed the equivalent of the freshman and sophomore yearselsewhere. We offer two programs—Humanities and Social Science. Halfthe work in each program is done in DIVISIONAL COURSES which spanthe traditional departmental boundaries in order to study the basic con¬cepts. methods and principles of the larger discipline. In addition to theDivisional Sequence of courses each student works in a specialized areaand engages in a tutorial leading to independent study. The program cul¬minates in an Inter-Divisional-Senior Seminar, which examines the rela¬tionships between the disciplines of Social Science, the Humanities and theNatural Sciences.The juniors in the Social Sciences takethree Divisional (year long) courses.In the first course thje emphasis is ona systematic analysis of a large (mac¬ro) social order — in this case theAmerican culture. Readings include:Paul Goodman, Drawing the Line;Luckman and Berger, Social Mobilityand Personal Identity; C. WrightMills, selections; Parsons, The LinkBetween Character and Society; Car¬michael, What We Want; de Tocque-ville. Democracy in America; San¬tayana, Character and Opinion in theUnited States; selections from Freudand Skinner; economic analysis byKnight. Samuelson and Marx: andpolitical analysis in the terms ofHume, Aristotle and Dewey. The sec¬ond course is in micro-analysis, i.e.,an examination of subcultures seenin relation to the larger community.We read Glazer and Moynihan, Be¬yond the Melting Pot; Malinowski,Kroeber, T. S. Eliot (Notes Towardthe Definition of Culture), Weber(The Protestant Ethic), Erik Erikson.Malcolm X, and more readings andfield work on such subcultures as thehippies, the poor and the black na¬tionalists. The third course is con¬cerned with comparative analysis—specifically a comparison of US-USSR, largely in terms of the social,political and economic dimensions inthe process of industrialization whichhave taken place, east and west. Thereadings include case study materialas well as complex conceptual anal¬yses: Henderson, Ashton, Bendix,Nef, Moore, Schumpter, and more.All Divisional Classes for all studentsare small. The major concern of theclassroom is to analyze the readings.Teaching is by discussion —a syste¬matic approach to each text. The juniors in the Humanities also take three year longcourses. Working with materials from all of the arts andphilosophy these courses engage the student in variousmodes of critical and interpretive analysis in order tomaximize the possibilities for significant discoveries inconfronting the vast range of works created by man’sintellect and imagination.Here, as an example, are excerpts from last year’s com¬prehensive examination. “The following texts all concernthemselves to a greater or lesser extent with the questionof human history, and the correlative question, the possi¬bilities for progress. Choose three of the following textsand compare and contrast their treatment of these ques¬tions. Communist Manifesto; Reason and Experience(Dewey); Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Kuhn):Genesis; Antigone; Caesar and Cleopatra; The Sound andthe Fury.". . .“2. One factor which would seem to distin¬guish indisputably the modern temperament from the pastis the drastically shifting conception of the heroic—notonly in terms of what the heroic indeed is, but also in termsof what possibilities for heroism still exist. Discuss thisquotation drawing evidence from Job; Phadrc: The Strang¬er; Hippolytus; Marat/Sade; The Balcony; Billiards atHalf Past Nine.".. .“3. Using one of the following films.8V2, Wild Strawberries, Last Year at Marienhad, TheKnack, Ulysses, discuss in what sense the material (i.e..cinematic technique) affects the value judgments you makeof character, incident, and theme.”. . .“4. How do partic¬ular words or images control aesthetic responses in thefollowing poems: Leda and the Swan, The Lovesong ofJ. Alfred Prufrock, A Coney Island of the Mind.". . .“5.Compare the role of coincidence in King Lear and TomJones, indicating to what extent the nature of that role isdetermined by the tragic structure of the one and the comicstructure of the other.”. . .“6. In reading both philosophyand arguments, language has been one of the most recur¬rent topics: Aristotle on diction in the Poetics, Plato on theliVing word. Augustine on the Word that was in the be¬ginning, Unamuno on the birth of language in relation tothe tragic sense, Wordsworth and Coleridge on the rela¬tion of language to the minds of men, Freud on verbalslips, and Heidegger, Carnap, Wittgenstein and Chomskyon philosophic issues bound up with language. Using atleast four of the above, write a brief essay on languageby indicating some key insight of each of the four anddiscussing the scope of the problem (or values) languagepresents us with.”We’re located in Greenwich Village — coffeehouses, but no football. We don’t even have agym, but only a city full of concerts and cul¬ture. And we don’t operate dormitories. Wedon’t count credits or grade points. You earnthe degree when you pass all of the compre¬hensive examinations and have made a success¬ful oral defense of your independent research.Our faculty is committed to teaching, our stu¬dents are committed to learning. It costs $1700per year. If you’re interested write or phone theDirector of Admissions, Mr. Ralph Herrod atORegon 5-2700, 66 West^2th Street, New YorkCity. Fall 1968 applications are still beingaccepted. Admissions OfficeTHE NEW SCHOOLCOLLEGENew School for Social Research66 West 12th StreetNew York. N.Y. 10011Please send me the Bulletin and application for theNew School College.I am now attending(College or University)NameAddress^City State ZipFebruary 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5Calendar of Events of InterestPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at The Maroon Of¬fice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sentor brought to the Office at least two daysbefore date of publication.Friday, February 23THEATRE: (University Theatre), "Anti¬gone," by Jean Anouilh, directed byReece Peterson. Reynolds Club Theatre,8:30 p.m.STEP PARTY: Featuring Dandelion WineBlues Band, to benefit STEP TutoringProject, Cloister Club, 9 p.m.LECTURE: (Hillel Foundation), "Philosophi¬cal Foundations of a Religious WorldView," Professor Eliezer Berkovits, HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 p.m.WORKSHOP: (American Friends ServiceCommittee), "On Prison Life," Blue Gar¬goyle, Disciple Church, 57th and Univer¬sity, 7:30 p.m.VARSITY WRESTLING: Lake Forest Invi¬tational Tournament, Lake Forest.CONFERENCE: (Law School), "Conferenceon Privacy—Policy and the Law." Firstsession: "The Zone of Privacy," Ed¬ward Shils, Department of Sociology;"The Constitutional Right to be Private,"Louis Henkin, International Law, Colum¬bia University; "A Legal Map for Priv¬acy," Marc A. Franklin, Law School,Stanford University. Law Quadrangle, 2p.m.SEMINAR: (Biophysics Department), "Cur¬rent Status of the Unit Membrane Con¬cept," Dr. J. David Robertson, AnatomyDepartment, Duke University, ResearchInstitutes 480, 4 p.m.CANCER CONFERENCE: (School of Medi¬cine), Dr. John F. Mullan, "Tumors ofthe C.N.S.," Billings P-117, 5 pm.FILMS: (Doc Films), Hitchcock Triple Fea¬ture, "Spelbound," "The Trouble withHarry," and "The Birds," Kent 107,6:30, 8:00, 9:30 p.m.CONCERT: (Chicago Contemporary PlayersString Quartet), works by Webern, Hoff¬man, Weinberg, and Mozart. Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m.CONFERENCE: (Law School), "Conferenceon Privacy—Policy and the Law." Se¬cond session: "Computer Technology-Potential Threat to Personal Privacy,"and "Privacy and Social Control: TheDilemma of a Data-based Civilization,"Arthur R. Miller, professor of law. Uni¬versity of Michigan. Law Quadrangle,8:30 p.m.MEETING: (SG), Planning Reform of Phy.Sci. Reynolds Club South, 3:30 .pm.Saturday, February 24THEATRE: (University Theatre), "Anti¬gone." See Friday Listings.TEACHING SYMPOSIUM: (School of Medi¬cine), Normal and Malignant CellGrowth, "Normal Cell Kinetics," by Dr.Michael Fry, Argonne National Labora¬tory, Billings P-117, 9 a.m.; afternoonsession, 1:30 p.m.FENCING: Ohio State and Iowa, BoucherHall, time to be announced.GYMNASTICS: Wheaton, George Williams,and Central Michigan, Bartlett Gym, 2p.m.CONFERENCE: (Law School), "Conferenceon Privacy—Policy and the Law," Thirdsession: "Privacy and the Welfare Re¬cipient," Robert J. Levy, professor oflaw, University of Minnesota; "Privacyand Government Employment," BennetBoskey of Volpe, Boskey and Lyons, Washington D.C.; Privacy and the Cen¬sus," Philip M. Hauser, professor ofsociology. Law Quadrangle, 2 p.m. "Pri¬vacy and the White House." Pierre Salin¬ger, Dining Room, Center for ContinuingEducation, 5:30 pm.BASKETBALL: Denison, Field House, 8 p.m.SQUARE DANCING: Dance Room, Ida NoyesHall, 7:30 to 11 p.m.FILM: (Nihon Bunka Kai), "Stray Dog,"directed by Akira Kurosawa, BreastedHall, Oriental Institute, 6 p.m.CONFERENCE: (Law School), "Conferenceon Privacy—Policy and the Law," Fourthsession, Panel Discussion: "A Policy forPrivacy," with Bruno Bettelheim, pro¬fessor of psychology; Stella M. Rowley,professor of education; Walter J. Blurrf,professor of law; Harry Kalven, Jr.,professor of law. Law School Quadrangle,8:30 p.m.CHESS TOURNAMENT: (U.C. Chess Club),"2nd Annual University of Chicago In¬tramurals Tournament." Cloister Club,Ida Noyes Hall, 10 a.m. Registration9:30 to 10 a.m.CHANGE-RINGING: Mitchell Tower, 12 p.m.Sunday, February 25RADIO: "From the Midway," WFMF, 7a.m., WAIT, 10 a.m.TELEVISION: "The University of Chicago iRound Table," WTTW, Channel 11, 5:30 |p.m.TEACHING SYMPOSIUM: (School of Medi jcine), Normal and Malignant CellGrowth, "Proliferation of Cencer Cells," |Dr. Austin M. Brues, Argonne National jLaboratory, Billings P-117, 8:30 p.m.THEATRE: (University Theatre), "Anti¬gone." See Friday Listings.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: "IsThis Not the Christ?" by Reverend Wall- |ace W. Robbins, Pastor, First UnitarianChurch, Worcester, Massachusetts, Rock¬efeller Memorial Chapel, 1 1a.m.FILM: "THo Eqyptologists," Oriental Insti- itute, 2:30 p.m.MEETING: (SDS), "Labor Committtee Meet¬ing." Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 p.m.CHESS TOURNAMENT: (U.C. Chess Club),"U.C. Speed Championship." Ida NoyesSun Parlor, 3 p.m.SUNDAY NIGHT AT CHAPEL HOUSE:(Lutheran Church at U.C.), "Wishing,Wanting, and Expecting," Rev. PhilipAnderson, counselor and campus pastor.Chapel House: supper, 5:30; discussion,6:30 p.m.'.cct|mg: (U.C. Faculty Resist, "Means of Supporting Students Involved in DraftResistance." Faculty Members only. HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn, 8 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Cloister Club, Ida NoyesHall, 7:30-11 p.m.; teaching, 7:30 p.m.Monday, February 26SEMINAR: "Immiscibility in Inorganic GlassForming Systems," Richard J. Charles,Metallurgy and Ceramics Laboratory,G.E. Company. Tea in Jones 208, 3:15p.m.; Seninar in Kent 103, 4 p.m.SEMINAR: (Economics Department), "TheAllocation of Goods and Time over Time,"Gary S. Becker, Columbia University.Business East 106, 8 p.m.MEETING (SDS), "Chapter Meeting." IdaNoyes Hall, 7:30 p.m.COLLOQUIM: (MESA), "Estimation of La¬tent Ability Using A Response Patternof Graded Scores," Dr. Fumiko Same-jima, University of North Carolina. JuddHall, Room 110, 3:30-5 p.m.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200.Teaching(Call Ext. 3279 for appointments)February 26—Tacoma Community College,Tacoma, Washington. Representative willinterview candidates with M.A.'s in allsocial science areas, mathematics, Englishand speech, natural sciences, art, musicand drama.February 26—Wisconsin State University,Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Information on posi¬tions not available at this writing. Forinformation and appointments call Exl.3282 a week before recruiting date.February 27—Union Springs Central SchoolDistrict, Union Springs, New York. Noinformation on positions is available atthis writing. Call Ext. 3279 a week beforerecruiting for information and appoint¬ments.February 28—Greenwich Public Schools,Greenwich, Connecticut. Information onpositions is not available at this writing.Call Ext. 3279 a week before recruitingdate for information and aooointments.February 29—Elmonte School District, El-Monte, California. Vacancies in kinder-reading, junior high teachers in mathe-garten, all grades—elementary; remed al,matics, science, social studies, Spanish,industrial Arts, and homemaking. CallExt. 3279 for appointments. February 29—Clark County School District,Las Vegas, Nevada. Information on posi¬tions is not available at this writing.February 29—Green River Community Coll¬ege, Auburn, Washington. M.A.'s in busi¬ness, humanities, mathematics, social sci¬ence, and counseling.March 1—Evanston Township High School,Evanston, Illinois. Counselors, businesseducaion, English, German, French/Spanish, library, mathematics, science,social studies, and special education.M.A. with experience desired in somesubject areas. Must meet state certifica¬tion requirements.Business, Industry, GovernmentFebruary 23—Swift Research and Develop¬ment Center, Oak Brook, Illinois (Chicagosuburb). Information concerning positionsnot as yet received. Based on Center'sinterests last year vacancies will bebe for B.S. and Ph.D organic chemistsand for M.S. statisticians.February 26—Marshall Field and Company,Chicago, Illinois. Development programleading to supervisory, buying, and man¬agement responsibilities.February 28—National Center for HealthStatistics, Washington, D.C. Mathemati¬cians and statisticians at all degreelevels. Graduates in social sciences whohave completed at least three semesterhours in Mathematics and six in sta¬tistics. Courses which are at least 50percent statistical method count towardmeeting statistics requirement.February 28—United States Census Bureau,Washington, D.C. Economists, program¬mers, sociologists, social science anal¬ysts, mathematics, and statisticians.February 28—Environmental Science ServicesAdministration, Washington, D.C.; Bould¬er, Colorado; and nationwide. Informa¬tion concerning positions not as yet re¬ceived. Based on recruiting interests lastyear, vacancies will be for mathemati¬cians, physicists, meteorologists, geolo¬ gists, and geophysicits at all deqreelevels.February 29—United States Bureau of theBudget, Washington, D.C. Advanced de¬gree candidates in economics, law, po¬litical science, international relationsand business.March 1—Illinois Tool Works, Chicago, De¬troit, Alexandria, Pine Bluff, Los’ An¬geles. General business trainees, person¬nel, market research, production, salesand programming.March 1—United States Atomic Energy Com¬mission, Washington, D.C. SecretariatTraining Program for M.A. candidates ineconomics, political science, and interna¬tional relations.. m ... mmmmm mFINANCIAL AIDThe Office of College Aidhas announced that applica-| tions for financial aid forI the year 1968-69 will be I| available beginning March 11; deadline for all upper- S.| class applications is April 1. IfStudents presently holdingI scholarships who wish || them to be renewed and 1students who wish to applyfor financial aid for the first' time should pick up theirapplications in the CollegeAid Office in the Adminis¬tration Building.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 charge j For The Convenience And Needs \\ Of The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLYAs Low As $6.95 per Day - All 1968 Models(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715WHAT IS A SHUFFLY ?WHO IS SN0DR0G ?...« *. AUTOGRAPHING AFTERNOONAt STAVER’S Bookshop and meet the Author and Illustratorof the new book: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: $2.95ftTIME: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24 -2 TO 5STMER, D(0)©K1301 East 57th Street,Chicago(Corner of Kimbark)6 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 23 1968MAROON SPORTSGrapplers Defeated; Dribblers Go for ThirteenthThe University wrestling teamsuffered a 20-13 loss Tuesday toIIT in the only varsity action thisweek.Although the grapplers put onone of their strongest showings ofthe season, they were not quite ableto overcome the tough and experi¬enced Teck-hawks. Chicago drop¬ped a total of six out of ninematches, but all but one of thosewere on tightly contested decisions. Two of the University’s three vic¬tories came on pins.Dave Clark opened the meet ona high note by taking a decisionover his 123-lb. class opponent, butthe match soon turned in favor ofthe home Tech-hawks. IIT sweptfive in a row until Ted Petersenpulled off a slick pin in the 167-lb.class. But George Lane lost a closedecision to his rival in the 177-lb.event, and Jim Capser’s pin in theheavyweight class proved anticli- mactic.This was the squad’s last dualouting of the year. This afternoon,the team travels to Lake Forestfor the two-day Lake Forest Invi¬tational Tournament. Chicago is aco-favorite with Lawrence andWabash in this eight-team compe¬tition.BasketballThe basketball squad’s hopes forthat elusive thirteenth victory ride on the line tomorrow night as theteam battles Dennision, one of thetop small college teams in theMidwest.The game begins at 8 p.m at theField House.Three other University sportssquads will also be in action thisweekend. The track team will par¬ticipate in the Illinois Track Clu!Relays this evening and will sponsor a University of Chicago Traci Club open meet tomorrow at noon.The fencing squad faces IowaState and Ohio State Universities atBoucher Hall at 10 a.m., while thegymnastics team opposes GeorgeWilliams, Wheaton, and CentralMichigan at 2 p.m. at Bartlett gym.The swim team will rest up inpreparation for the Chicago Area'Intercollegiate Championships tobe held March 2 at the Universityof Illinois Chicago Circle campus.Maroon 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 3-0800, Ext. 3266. ] Times are becoming increasingly difficult forcapitalism. Its doom is becoming more andmore obvious. But the capitalists will nevergive up control of their own free will. It isI only through tenacious class battles that the| working class and the rest of the workingpeople will achieve Victory.DOWN MULTIVERSITY AVENUE TO THEUNIFORMITY OF CHICAGOIt's simple. It's too simple.I didnt' know then it was eloquent.RADICAL EDUCATION PARTY tonight atChapel House. S'arts at 8:30. Ideologicallyunchained.RESIST! Make them ask for your I.D. card.WANTEDNEED 3rd ROOMMATE FOR ELEGANT, 6Room Victorian Apartment, N. North, $51/month. 944-5377 after 5:00 P.M.SOMEONE TO EDIT ‘'Quotations from theWorks of Chairman Wayne C. Booth." Con¬tact Roger Black, Weekend Magazine, Ext.3265.ASSISTANT TO ENGLISH TEACHER — tograde themes, etc. Phone PL 2-8377.To finish MS in peace and quiet, U. of C.Prof. WILL MAINTAIN HOUSE, APT., whileyou're away, now to August, Ext. 4038.APARTMENT WANTED, Before March 10,3-6 Rooms, Hyde Park, BU 8-7358.NON-DORM STUDENTS! — Single room inPierce Tower will be available for SpringQuarter. FA 4 9500, Ext. 1708. The Blue WHO?The Blue GARGOYLE.La Strada tonight and Saturday, 9 P.M. "Whats' a dirty picture?" R. said. "I oncegot a bunch of nudes past the Jersey customsonly because their pubic hair was blue. With¬out hair, no problem. But if they'd beenblack, an 'Art' expert would have been called,as only he could tell if this black was 'Dirt'or ‘Art.' ""You don't understand. Your blue hairaltered the context. It's unreal."Bodice! ?!Take a security guard to lunch today.Then what?LA COLOMBEthe Movement's only monthly$5 a year. Alum Creek Press,2024 N. Fremont, Chicago, Illinois 60614Will O'Connell's Committee be the organ ofstudent power on this Campus?A good party in an Imperialist Society??? | Roseann's Charm School; BU 8-9899Seeds of the future unveiled at Chapel House.Friday, 8:30 and thereafter.BARBAROSSA: Bride arrives from Blooming¬ton tonight. Drop in on the chaos anytime.Love from 1605."There was no problem about the panties;she made a little pile of them near one ofthe bed posts."Working girl wants to SHARE APARTMENTwith FEMALE STUDENTS. Call Carol, 398-0317, Area Code 219.1 week (6-9 days): $17.50Ski RentalsSKIS. POLES & BOOTSFREE Delivery and Pick-upfor 5 or more sets.&YANSTON SKI SHOP328-8958 or 328-8834 Security is a phony name for facism!Mauldin called up to say that the note fromhim giving "Kudos" to Kimmel for his car¬toon wasn't from him. He didn't object to theidea of plugging another cartoonist, he said,but the style of the plug.What make you think that was Mauldin whocalled?All right, gang! Let's warm up the old pipesand give out with our new U. of C. yell:"MmmmmmOOOOoooo-oooooo—oooooooooo—o-oo!Bully-bull-bull.... Money-green-green...Apples! Shoe Polish! Apples! Shoe Polish!DNA! JFK! Evilay!GRASS!!!!(Hey)"Magnificent Obsession — Bandersnatch 69-er. GRADUATE STUDENTS—Looking for an af¬fair? Law School Lounge—TONIGHT, Friday,February 23, 8:30 P.M. Band, Free KeggedRefreshments. $1.00 Admission.3 College Newspapers Get the Maroon.FOR SALEHI-FI COMPONENTS: Garrard Turntable,AR-2A Speaker, Trans & Amp, At least$150.00. Call evenings — 324-3905.DRUMS DRUMS DRUMS DRUMS DRUMS!!!COMPLETE SET OF DRUMS$125.00Call Vare at 624 0505.1962 PLYMOUHT. 4 Door Sedan. ReasonableOffer. Call 375-5616 after 6 P.M.SITUATION WANTEDTYPIST AVAILABLE. Electric typewriter.Standard page rates—flexible. MSS preferred.90 words/minute. 2321 Rickert, BU 8-6610.FEMALE with B.A. and typing/office skillsseeks employment for $3.50-$4./hour. Call324-5751.APARTMENTS FOR RENTTWO ROOMS FOR MALE STUDENTS. $155.008. $180 per quarter. Board Contracts Avail¬able. PL 2-9704. ’SUBLET FURN. 3’/2 ROOM APT. SouthShore. March 15 - Oct. 1. 752-4483.FIVE ROOM APT. for now and forever ifdesired 3 blocks from Campus. $125./month.Call 493-4773, evenings.ATTRACTIVE ROOM in E. Hyde Park forFEMALE STUDENT. Kitchen facilities. Phone643-4401.3'/j LARGE ROOMS. Newly dec. Partly turn,with porch. Suitable for two men. $120 and$145. MU 4-8222. Dandelions!Tonight, 9 p.m. Benefit of STEP.Cloister Club, Ida Noyes.PHAROAH PRESENTS: A Mahogany HallHouse Band Blues Thing. Saturday 9-1. B.J.Cafeteria. An apple a day keeps the pistols away."The psychedelic elbow is rolling up hissleeves!"THANK YOU MARK!!!! ML 8. JL.NATIONAL STUDENT PROTESTand ACTIONAGAINST THE DRAFT OF GRAD STU¬DENTS AND TEACHERS! Individuals andorganizations, Contact Ron Paransky, 138 W.15th Street, New York City 10011. 212-989-2521.Liberating party tonight at Chapel House.Sweet music on political channels, 8:30 P.M.Get out of your bag-follow me from tree to tree.Tiger Woman at the B.S.John Moscow just called. He was in the bath¬room and someone called him and he thoughtit was us.ONE-'/j ROOM FURN. APT. in South Shore.Close to Campus Bus, $77.50/month. Call Judydays and weekends. MU 4-5600, Ext. 230, or324-1009 , 5 to 8 p.m.FOUR ROOM APARTMENT TO SUBLET.$105.00/month. 1519 E. 54th Street. Phone324-2352 before March 1.PERSONALS"One flew east, one flew west,One flew over the cuckoo's nest.""It's dangerous, you dig, like I have to getthis RX . . . | know a croaker might write.Come on."The cats outnumber the people in this crazyhouse. NOWIS THE BUTTERFLYONE NEVER CATCHES Open Party: Tonight, 9 P.M. Cloister Club.Benefit of STEP. SRH—O lost 8. by Jocasta grieved!N'ayez pas les cuers contre nous endurcies!(Still, I been Tom Thumbed. . . .) JSH4"KNOCK YOURSELF OUT.""I beg your pardon. . . ."Mary—please call—my face doesn't look likean avocado, much less smell like one . .. yet.TRIP TRIP TRIP TRIP TRIP TRIP TRIPEAll the advantages of traveling alone, but atlow group rates: 82 days in LONDON, PARIS,COPENHAGEN, LENINGRAD, MO SCO S,K I E V , ODESSA, ISTANBUL, ATHENS,ROME, MADRID, FOR $1375 No group ac¬tivities there! Call 2545 or DO 3-3548.Support the home front: send your parentsan allowance (?). With viga'—"Oh, Oh, OhHappy Days are here again,The skies above are clear again.Let us sing a song of cheer again.Happy Days are here again!"Harmless Hang-up—Friday Night Dinners at the Bandersnatch.— j MISS HOWARD now accepting applicants forTOUR THE FLORIDA EVERGLADES. BOATTRIP over Spring Interim. March 16-23. CallHickory at X 2381 or 324-1499.B.H. ZAP! You're an orangutang! M. SUPPORT THE HYDE PARK UNDER¬GROUND—send your parents some grass.BARBARA HURST—Don't you know the dif¬ference between a sorcerer and a co-ed?Would you LIKE to know the difference?Security Sucks! . . . Linus.It's crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy insnide.Skip, how 'bout reconsidering your securitydecision so's I can get back into Ida Noyes?—L. M.c/.fso c/friqela jCee-SaiDRINK AT THE BAROQUE—For Hyde Park's Most Famous Whisky Sours.STUDENTS—win the security guards overto your side. Be their friends. Let thembe loyal to you,_ not to the pricks in theAdministration Building.ARABS MAKE THE BEST SECURITYGUARDS."... I was sure he had deserted me. I wasalone and without money. When I realizedthis, I again became aware of the presenceof life, of their distressing and sweet com¬pany in the hems of my shirt and trousers.Stilitano and I had never ceased to be nunsof Upper Thebaid who never washed theirfeet and . . ."B.H.—Contact Women's Wear Daily at once!!OPPRESSED WOMEN!Learn the TRUE MEANING of WOMAN¬HOOD! The SDS MOTHERS will show youthe light!Shit—I thought it was knight in shiningarmour time.Friendly Debate tonight at Kate's:WHAT PRICE CHICKEN SOUP and TLC?(Bring Ammunition)."Every night here is a Party!Have you ever been up at 1 A.M.?I've never seen less than ten people!"...SLF.PJMJVAMSL (auf fransosich)PAM M—What's the zip code?Hang loose—but don't lose your grip.Tiger Woman of B.S. fame.Bob R. is mellow people.It is time . . .Reflect once again on the fact that John Ken¬nedy was murdered and no one seems toknow who did it.BQS—eat it up; it's the only food.Snuggle up to a Security Guard. Make himYour Friend.KEN SHERMAN—WELCOME TO CHICAGO!Read MY BLACK FISTS by Lawrence O.Hight. Lecture: PROF. ELIEZER BERKOVITS (HE¬BREW THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE), "Philo¬sophical Foundations of a Religious WorldView." HILLEL HOUSE, 5715 Woodlawn, Fri¬day, February 23 at 8:30 P.M.I Wish That You Would Impeach Mr. L.B.J.because:1—1 do not respect him.2—He has made me teach my childrento doubt everything ("Why did God let uselect a man who kills when the Command¬ments say 'Thou Shalt not kill?'")3—1 also teach them to riot an disobey(Please, my Child, get convicted of a fel¬ony); so that Mr. President cannot draftthem into dying for a "cause" which dis¬turbs even the greatest Sophists of our day.4—He is a hypocrite and an ugly self-seeker.5—He is the Alcibiades of the 20th Century(Alas, poor Pericles, I knew him well).6—He knows not where it is.7—I do not believe him., 8—He pacifies himselfdaily by sucking onhis great society.9—The Big Stick he carries is coated withvaseline.10—To define him as a M— F— isthe same as to say "WAVERLY was writtenby one who was Scotch."11—He takes black and white babies fromtheir mothers and sends them to kill theyellow babies.12—My brother is 20 years old.13—Who killed Cock-Robin?BLUE GARGOYLE CINEMA PRESENTS"LA STRADA." Friday and Saturday, 9 P.M.50c.Watch the students get screwed in the Stu¬dent Village!13 Reasons Why.STRAY DOG directed by KUROSAWA —with TOSHIRO MIFUNE as detective in.modern-day Tokyo. Sat., Feb. 24, 8:00,Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute.75c.We will make a giant picture poster of youwhile you wait at $4.95. FINE ART PHOTO¬GRAPHY. 5210 S. Harper. Ml 3-6996. 1-8 P.M.WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377).Pause, slow down, reconsider your decisionon the new campus.IDEAS? WE PAY YOUSEND US YOUR IDEA ON ANY SUBJECTTHE WILDER THE BETTER IT COULD MAKEYOU RICH WE ARE IDEA BROKERS WITHCONTACTS IN BUSINESS. SCIENCE ANOINDUSTRYSEND YOU A 1OF YOUR IDEA IF ITS GOOD, WE PAY YOUBIG MONEY COMPANIES LIKE FORD -MIDWEST RESEARCH - I E DUPONT NEEDTHOUSANDS OF IDEAS A MONTH DOTHEY NEED YOURS7 SEND YOUR IDEA TOIOCO D8.RO**237 *»NSASOTY MO #>411?Screw the Security Guards in Ida NoyesHall!Sounds like more fun than taking them outto lunch . . .SKI VAIL AND ASPEN. All transportation,breakfasts, tows, room, pool. March 16-24.$175.00. Dick at 764-6264 or 262-3765.AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMIT¬TEE WORKSHOP on Prison Life, Friday,Feb. 23, 7:30 P.M. at THE BLUE GAR¬GOYLE, 57th 8. University.WHO knew? He'd give you such a knockon the head when he robbed you, youwouldn't remember anything anyway.The Maroon is a better paper than the Harv¬ard Crimson.QUESTIONA. Adrian Albert, where are you going Fri¬day?BABYSITTER WANTEDBABYSITTER for TU, W, FRI; 12:00 - 5:30P.M. 2 girls, Age 2Vj and 1. $1.50 per hour.667-8414.DANDELION WINETonight 9 pm.. Cloister Club Benefit STEP.February 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONV >uATTRACTIONNow you can earn even more on your savings at University National Bank.Effective March 31,1968, University National will pay interest at the rateof 4%, compounded quarterly on all regular savings accounts.This means a big added plus for all of our current savings depositors—as well as higher earnings for all new depositors who open savingsaccounts with us.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?If you would like to open a new savings account, just ask any of ourofficers. They’ll be happy to help you.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL RANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615 1TELEPHONE MU 41200strength and service oDQD member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association Federal Reserve SystemTHE CHICAGO MAROON February 23, 1968