The Chicago MaroVOL. 76, NO. 39 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1968 FoundedIn 18928 PAGESThe Maroon — ANNE KASKELSHEER ESCAPISMTaking advantage of the incredibly warm temperatures for thebeginning of March — 55 degrees on Monday — and of the last fewfree moments before the onrush of exams next week, WoodwardCourt residents piled out of their cubbeyholes yesterday, climbingtrees, jostling each other, and enjoying the sun and the warm air.Officials ReiterateDrug Procedures 33 Are CandidatesIn FSACCSL RaceBy CAROLINE HECKStaff Writer“I can’t imagine any policy elim¬inating the use of drugs on cam¬pus,” stated Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell at an open dis¬cussion on drugs yesterday after¬noon at the Reynolds Club.O’Connell reiterated that the Uni¬versity is more concerned withdrug distribution than with use.Speaking of the drug policy in gen¬eral, O’Connell stated that whetherthe Chicago policy is good or badis “not a negotiable item at thispoint.”Approximately 40 people werepresent at the meeting, wherequestions were answered by O’Con¬nell and other deans and Univer¬sity officials.After copies of Student Housingstatement on drugs were distribu¬ted, several students questionedwhether a student suffering froma “bad trip” might go to his resi¬dent head for help. .Policy StatementThe policy statement indicatedand Director of Student HousingEdward Turkington agreed that insuch a case the resident head mustreport the incident to his office butthat “normally, the student willnot be referred to the DisciplinaryCommittee unless he is already onhouse probation from some previ¬ous offense.”Discussing the circumstancesthat result in disciplinary actionLAST MAROONToday's is the last Maroonof the quarter. On Friday,however, The Maroon willpublish a special review ofplanning and design at theUniversity. Normal adver¬tising deadlines apply, andthe editors will accept ab¬breviated notices for a com¬bined Culture Vulture-Cal¬endar. on drugs, Turkington said the firststep is usually taken by the resi¬dent head, who “has the responsi¬bility to find out as much as hecan about the drug situation inthe house.”If the resident head suspects astudent of using drugs, he usuallymakes a point of explaining tohim the University’s policy ondrugs in the dorms.If a resident head has evidenceof a student using drugs, however,he reports it to Turkington, whosubmits a report to Acting Deanof Undergraduate Students MeyerIsenberg. Isenberg then calls inthe student, and reads him the re¬port, which becomes part of thestudent’s confidential file.This file is different from hisacademic file, Isenberg noted, ex¬plaining that “there is nobody whocould look at this file unless hewere authorized to look at it.”Asked about the possibility ofthe file being open to federalagents, Isenberg replied that “noFBI agent will be allowed to lookat it.” Thirty-three candidates, includ¬ing 22 from the College, submittedpetitions Friday for election to thestudent seats on the Faculty-Stu¬dent Advisory Committee on Cam¬pus Student Life.At stake in the contests are threeseats in the College and five in thegraduate divisions and profession¬al schools. Five seats will go tothe faculty.The College candidates all arerunning at large, and each studentin the College has one vote.Of the graduate-level positionsopen, there are one each in theHumanities and Social Sciences Di¬visions and one for the two natur¬al science divisions. There are al¬so two positions open in the pro¬fessional schools although no oneschool may be represented in bothpositions.Since in one division there isonly one official candidate, write-in votes for eligible candidates willbe accepted, according to Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell.All of the other seats are con¬tested, although in no graduate di¬vision is there the same wide-opencontest that marks the Collegerace.Ballots, which will be mailed toall University students next week,can be returned either by mail orin person to Office of the Regis¬trar, Administration 200. Deadlineis Friday, March 15.Following is a list of candidatesfor the student seats on the com¬mittee:CollegePaul Brown, ’69; David C. Clark,71; Carol Cohen, ’69; StephenCope, 70; James Dricker, 70;Martha (Penny) Gpld, ’69; JudyGoldstein, 70; Arthur Hochberg,70; William Hogle, 71; David-Klatfer, ’69; Robert Koss, 70; Al¬ an Lahn, ’69; Alexandra Langs-1dorf, ’69; Seth Masia, 70; PeterMeehan, 70; Colleen Miner, ’69;Leo Moldaver, 71; John Moscow,’69; Mitchell Pines, ’69; PeterRatner, ’69, John Siefert, 71; RuthWeissbourd, 71.HumanitiesIFloria PharesSocial Sciences| James Hall; Leonard Handels-man; Harold Winston. See editorial on Page 4.Physical SciencesBioloigcal SciencesAlfred Levy (Med); Stuart New¬man (Phy Sci).Professional SchoolsDavid Blodgett (Law); HarryBoyte (Divinity); Barry Connell(Business); Lowell Livezey (Divin¬ity); Ghester Rempson (SSA).720 Sign Petition,Pledge ResistanceProgram Takes a Look at ChicagoThe University is taking a newlook at Chicago architectural plan¬ning.The “Bright New City,” a con¬tinuing forum on environmental de¬sign for Chicago, will present aseries of five lectures by interna¬tionally recognized urban planners,each followed by a dinner-seminar,on the four Wednesdays of Apriland on May 1.Robert C. Wood, undersecretaryof Housing and Urban Develop¬ment (HUD), will be the firstspeaker on April 3. His talk willconcern “The Model Cities Pro¬gram.”The lectures will be held from11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the JohnSimpson Auditorium of the Field1 Museum of Natural History. Four of the five dinner seminarswill be held from 6 to 9 p.m. in thestudios of WTTW (Channel 11),5400 North St. Louis Ave. The sem¬inar portion of the evening pro¬grams will be televised live onChannel 11 from 8 to 9 p.m. excepton April 24.The series is sponsored by theUniversity and the Graham Foun¬dation for Advanced Studies in theFine Arts.Other speakers in the series willbe Dan Kiley, landscape architectand designer; Vincent Ponte, ar¬chitect and planning consultant ofMontreal; Albert Bush-Brown,president of the Rhode IslandSchool of Design; and Edmund N.Bacon, executive director of thePhiladelphia Planning Commission. By SLADE LANDERThs Special Vietnam Convoca¬tion Group (SVCG), a College-based organization planning a spe-~i->1 spring convocation ceremony,has collected more than 120 signa-from fourth-year undergrad-first-v""- —anddraft-eligible males on a statementpledging draft resistance.The SVCG is one of seven draftresistance groups which havesprung up among students and fac¬ulty in the College, divisions, andprofessional schools.The groups are generally concen¬trating their efforts in three areas:• Collecting pledges for draft re¬sistance and support of draftresistance;• Obtaining information on thealternatives to military serviceand training draft counselors; and• Obtaining financial support toaid those who will engage in resist¬ance activities.The SVCG has also obtained 131signatures from faculty and otherstudents on a petition supportingdraft resistance.Resume of ActivitiesFollowing is a resume of thegroups’ activities to date:• The Divinity School, in anopen referendum held three weeksago, passed proposals resolving tomake Bond and Rockefellerresisters facing arrest, to aid re¬sisters and their families, and tosupport and encourage draftresistance.• Law Students Against the War(LSAW) is training draft counsel¬ors, doing research into the legalaspects of the draft, and is plan¬ning to sponsor a conference on al¬ternatives to military service nextquarter.• In the Medical School, a chap¬ter of the national Health Profes¬sions Resistance Union (HPRU)has been formed. Twenty-two med¬ical students have pledged not to serve in the armed forces inVietnam.• A chapter of RESIST has beenformed among the faculty mem¬bers, numbering 60 members. Itplans to train draft counselors andprovide support for studentresistance.• Nineteen of the 27 students inthe Committee of Social Thoughthave signed statements advocatingresistance. The students plan tocontinue their “street theater” ac¬tivities next quarter with produc¬tions in the Loop.• In the School for Social Ser¬vice Administration the Studentsfor Social Action Committee(SSAC) will continue its draftcounseling.Lone ReferendumThe Divinity School is the onlydivision of the University that hasyet an open referendum on draftresistance. Although the specificresults of the voting will not be an¬nounced until tomorrow, all threeproposals passed by “overwhelm-i n g majorities,” according tospokesman Harry C. Boyte, with40 percent of the School’s residentstudents voting.Richard FlacksM IS ppmpwfMi >*Winter Quarter Final Exam Schedule(Editor’s note: Following is a list of times and places 1 tStln 20IAutumn Quarter final examinations, released Friday in its final Latin 222form.) I La,in 262Linguistics 268 = Anthro 279Saturday - March 9Monday - March 11Tuesday - March 12 Wednesday - March 13Thursday - March 14Friday - March 15Anatomy 285 = Zool 285 4-6 MondayAnthro 279 = Ling 268 8-10 TuesdayArt 101 (01) = Hum 220 1:30-3:30 MondayArt 101 (02) = Hum 220 1:30-3:30 MondayArt 211 10:30-12:30 ThursdayArt 222 = Hum 226 10:30-12:30 ThursdayArt 230 8-10 FridayArt 236 = Hum 227 10:30-12:30 ThursdayArt 240 10:30-12:30 WednesdayArt 265 4-6 WednesdayBiol 106 (01) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 (02) 8-1C TuesdayBiol 106 ( 03 & 04) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 ( 05) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 ( 06 & 07) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 ( 08 8. 09) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 (10) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 (11, 12, 13, 14) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 (15) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 (16) 8-10 TuesdayBiol 106 (17 8. 18) 8-10 TuesdayBiology 214 10:30-12:30 FridayBiology 216 1:30-3:30 ThursdayBotany 210 4-6 MondayBotany 214 10:30-12:30 ThursdayChemistry 106 8-10 WednesdayChemistry 132 8-10 WednesdayChemistry 221 8-10 ThursdayChemistry 262 4-6 TuesdayChemistry 264 8-10 ThursdayChinese 115 8-10 MondayChinese 202 = Soc Sci 211 1:30-3:30 MondayChinese 243 = History 287 4-6 WednesdayCivilizational Studies 221 10:30-12:30 Thursday*Economics 202 (01) 4-6 WednesdayEconomics 202 (02) 4-6 WednesdayEconomics 211 10:30-12:30 TuesdayEconomics 220 1:30-3:30 ThursdayEconomics 240 10:30-12:30 MondayEnglish 208 (01) 1:30-3:30 TuesdayEnglish 208 (02) 4-6 TuesdayEnglish 208 (03) 4-6 TuesdayEnglish 210 1:30-3:30 TuesdayEnglish 234 10:30-12:30 WednesdayEnglish 240 10:30-12:30 TuesdayEnglish 269 = Humanities 269 1:30-3:30 MondayEnglish 275 = Humanities 268 10:30-12:30 ThursdayEnglish 279 8-10 WednesdayEnglish 295 4-6 MondayFrench 101 (01, 02, 03, 06, 07, 08,11, 12, 13, 14) 8-10 MondayFrench 101 (04 8, 09) 8-10 MondayFrench 104 8-10 MondayFrench 201 8-10 MondayFrench 202 1:30-3:30 FridayFrench 204 10:30-12:30 WednesdayFrench 208 10:30-12:30 WednesdayFrench 216 1:30-3:30 MondayFrench 232 10:30-12:30 WednesdayFrench 240 8-10' WednesdayGeography 201 1:30-3:30 FridayGeography 207 10:30-12:30 WednesdayGeography 253 10:30-12:30 FridayGeography 257 1:30-3:30 TuesdayGeography 275 = Soc Sci 275 8-10 MondayGeography 282 4-6 MondayGeophysical Sciences 132 8-10 WednesdayGeophysical Sciences 228 10:30-12:30 FridayGeophysical Sciences 268 1:30-3:30 MondayGeophysical Sciences 281 10:30-12:30 ThursdayGerman 101 8-10 WednesdayGerman 102 8-10 MondayGerman 105 8-10 MondayGerman 202 9-12 SaturdayGerman 213 8-10 FridayGreek 102 10:30-12:30 FridayGreek 205 8-10 FridayGreek 216 1:30-3:30 FridayGreek 244 10:30-12:30 MondayHistory 206 = Soc Sci 226 1:30-3:30 MondayHistory 212 10:30-12:30 WednesdayHistory 222 10:30-12:30 TuesdayHistory 232 10:30-12:30 ThursdayHistory 238 10:30-12:30 FridayHistory 246 = Soc Sci 246 1:30-3:30 MondayHistory 252 = HPS 218, Phil 218 1:30-3:30 ThursdayHistory 262 8-10 FridayHistory 272 1:30-3:30 MondayHistory 277 4-6 WednesdayHistory 282 = Soc Sci 241 4-6 FridayHistory 287 = Chinese 243 4-6 WednesdayHPR 213 8-10 ThursdayHPR 214 10:30-12:30 WednesdayHPR 216 4-6 WednesdayHPS 218 = Phil 218, Hist 252 1:30-3:30 ThursdayHPS 239 = Phil 239 1:30-3:30 FridayHumanities 104 ( 07) 1:30-3:30 TuesdayHumanities 105 1:30-3:30 vfednesdayHumanities 108 1:30-3:30 WednesdayHumanities 205 8-10 WednesdayHumanities 208 1:30-3:30 WednesdayHumanities 216 10:30-12:30 ThursdayHumanities 220 ( 01) = Art 101 1:30-3:30 MondayHumanities 220 (02) = Art 101 1:30-3:30 MondayHumanities 226 = Art 222 10:30-12:30 ThursdayHumanities 227 = Art 236 10:30-12:30 ThursdayHumanities 235 = Music 287 1:30-3:30 ThursdayHumanities 237 = Music 281 1:30-3:30 ThursdayHumanities 241 1:30-3:30 WednesdayHumanities 252 ~ Phil 205 8-10 FridayHumanities 255 Phil 232 10:30-12:30 ThursdayHumanities 257 = Phil 211 10:30-12:30 FridayHumanities 259 = Id & Met 270 1:30-3:30 FridayHumanities 268 = English 275 10:30-12:30 ThursdayHumanities 269 = English 269 1:30-3:30 MondayHumanities 286 = Id 8. Meth 213 4-6 TuesdayIdeas and Meth. 152 1:30-3:30 TuesdayIdeas and Meth. 213 = Hum 286 4-6 TuesdayIdeas and Meth. 215 10:30-12:30 MondayIdeas and Meth. 251 1:30-3:30 MondayIdeas and Meth. 270 = Hum 259 1:30-3:30 FridayItalian 204 10:30-12:30 TuesdayJapanese 112 8-10 MondayJapanese 202 Soc Sci 216 1:30-3:30 MondayJapanese 212 8-10 Friday Z 14Cl 16Lx 5Lx 6Lx 6Cl 10Cl 10Lx 5Cl 10Lx 6Cl 10Ro 27Ro 2Cl 20B 106S 106E 207C 209E 206SS 107K 107AB 133B 106Bot 205Bot 106 MathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMusic 212Music 222Music 281 = Humanities 237Music 287 = Humanities 235102 (11)102 (21)102 (41)151 (12)151 (21)151 (32)152 (12)152 (21)152 (30)152 (31)152 (32)152 (41)152 (42)152 (51)152 (53)152 (61)152 (71)153 (51)203 (51)204 (31)204 (41)204 (42)205241244251252 (31)252 (41)253 (42)274 (32)281K 107 1 New Collegiate Division 102K 103 : New Collegiate Division 112K 107 New Collegiate Division 212K 107 New collegiate Division 218K 10Cl 16Cl 10Swift 406C 209Ro 2Swift 20)C 209Cl 10BE 10Cl 10Cl 20S 106Wb 103Cl 20Cl 10C 103C 103Cl 20SS 302K 1073 106C 101C 102S 106AB 133C 102C 107S 106Wb 103Ro 28Ro 28Ro 28Ro 28C 209Ro 28Ro 28Ro 27Ro 27Ro 27Wb 102Ro 2Wb 102Ro 2Wb 203Cl 11C 104Cl 16Cl 26 Oriental History 202Oriental History 261 = Soc Sci 221PP 209Philosophy 205 = Hum 252Philosophy 207Philosophy 211 = Hum 257Philosophy 218 = Hist 252, HPS 218Philosophy 232 = Hum 255Philosophy 239 = HPS 239Philosophy 241Philosophy 247Physical Sciences 106, 01, 02, 03, 04Physical Sciences 106, 05, 06, 07 , 08,09, 10Physical Sciences 109Physical Sciences 116Physics 112Physics 122Physics 132Physics 201Physics 212Physics 222Physics 226Physics 236Polish 290Political Science 256Psychology 200Psychology 205Psychology 212Psychology 272Russian 102Russian 152Russian 202Russian 205Russian 275I Slavic 205! South Slavic 202SocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocialSocial SciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciencesSciences 112122, 05122, 13, 14, 16211 = Chin 202216 = Japan 202221 = OH 261226 = Hist 206231 (01)231 (02)241 = Hist 282246 = Hist 246260275 = Geog 275Spanish 101Spanish 202Spanish 207Spanish 216Spanish 221Statistics 200Zoology 285 = Anat 285French Level 101 ExamFrench Level 104 ExamFrench Level 202 ExamSpanish Level 101 Exam 8-1010:30-12:308-101:30-3:308-104-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-64-610:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-108-101:30-3:301:30-3:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-101:30-3:301:30-3:304-61:30-3:304-68-1010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-68-1010:30-12:3010:30-12:301:30-3:3010:30-12:301:30-3:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-1010:30-12:301:30-3:308-1010:30-12:308-101:30-3:301:30-3:3010:30-12:304-68-101:30-3:308-104-74-68-108-104-610:30-12:301:30-3:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-61:30-3:301:30-3:301:30-3:301:30-3:3010:30-12:301:30-3:304-64-64-61:30-3:304-68-108-1010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:301:30-3:301:30-3:304-69-129-129-129-12 MondayWednesdayFridayMondayTuesdayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayMondayWednesdayTuesdayWednesdayWednesdayFridayFridayFridayTuesdayTuesdayThursdayMondayTuesdayThursdayThursdayThursdayThursdayWednesdayWednesdayWednesdayWednesdayFridayTuesdayFridayWednesdayFridayThursdayThursdayFridayTuesdayThursdayMondayMondayWednesdayTuesdayTuesdayMondayFridayWednesdayFridayTuesdayMondayWednesdayMondayThursdayFridayThursdayThursdayMondayMondayFridayWednesdayWednesdayMondayThursdayThursdayThursdayThursdayThursdayMondayMondayFridayMondayFridayFridayFridayMondayWednesdayMondayMondayTuesdayMondayFridayMondayMondayMondaySaturdaySaturdaySaturdaySaturday Cl 26Cl 26Cl 26C 101Cl 16E 202E 203S 208E 206K 107Ry 251S 106E 305K 107E 308C 101S 201Cl 10K 103C 115C 106K 10E 312E 207E 203E 203E 203E 206E 207E 206E 207E 203E 207E 312E 312E 206Lx 6Lx 2Lx 5Lx 2Ro 2C 201C 101Lx 4Or 208SS 302Ro 27E 133C 209Ro 2E 133E 133E 133E 133Ry 251E 202E 202Ry 251E 202C 304S 106K 107Ro 2SS 305Ro 2E 133C 203C 203C 303SS 305F 415C 104LMHRo 28C 209Cl 10Wb 102SS 302Ab 101Ro 2K 103K 107S 106Cl 10C 209S 208C 201C 106Wb 206C 302E 202Z 14S 106S 200S 208S 204S 106C 101 MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OtTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent DiscountsPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!Wb 402C 103 !Wb 102Or 226 1450 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 't Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. Robie HouseGets $1000For Face-LiftThe Committee of ArchitecturalHeritage, a group of students fromthe University of Illinois downstatecampus, presented a check Satur¬day morning for $1000 to HaroldHaydon, associate professor of art,for the Robie House RestorationFund.The fund, established in 1963, isenabling the University to makenecessary basic improvements inthe house, designed in 1908 byFrank Lloyd Wright. It is thearchetype for the “prairie house”design which revolutionized thearchitecture of American homes.The money donated by the Com¬mittee will be used to replace brass1 wall lights which Wright designed| for the building.The Committee of ArchitecturalHeritage was formed specifically toraise funds for the restoration ofRobie House. Its first project wasan exhibit of Wright’s works, whichwas so successful that the Commit¬tee decided to publish a book about! it. The money being given to theUniversity now comes from theproceeds of the book.Refurnishing and decoration ofRobie House is being done by thearchitectural firm of Skidmore,Owings and Merrill.Including the money receivedSaturday the restoration fund now| totals $66,000.College ExtendsVeteran DeadlineChicago has adopted a new poli¬cy for veterans wishing to applyfor admission to its undergraduateCollege.According to Anthony T. G. Pal-lett, director of admissions, veter¬ans applying for admission to theCollege may do so until Septem¬ber 1, a month before classes be¬gin next autumn, if they submithigh school credentials and takeCollege Entrance ExaminationBoard examinations before thattime.Deadline for applications by non¬veterans remains the same—Janu-! ary 15—Pallett added.“We know that many veteranswho are qualified for admission,do not have the opportunity to ap-; ply before our norma 1 deadline.We have simply changed our poli¬cy, therefore, to accommodateveterans and permit them to ap¬ply up to the very last minute,”Pallett said.The new policy follows a Uni¬versity statement issued Mondaywhich assured graduate studentsreenrollment after probable mili¬tary service resulting from the: new Selective Service directive.»: C^JOlorUt *'M 1645 E. 55* STREET W.•2 CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 )£S Phone: FA 4-1651 '4VMarch 5 TheContemporary Music SocietyUniversity of ChicagoCONCERT OF DANCEpresentsJeanne Nuchtern Thurman BarkerPamela Hunt Charles ClarkJoseph JarmanIDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 59th Street8:00 P.M. Adm. $1.00.TliK fQHlCAQO, MAROON March 5, 1908A.V. .fGoulian Supports Compulsory Genetic CounselingGenetic counseling aimed at help¬ing to prevent certain inherited dis¬eases should be made compulsory,a University of Chicago geneticistsaid Sunday night.Dr. Mehran Goulian, who waspart of the Stanford team whichrecently succeeded in manufactur¬ing the material that controlsheredity, before coming to Chicago, made his assertion on the tele¬vision discussion series, “The Uni¬versity of Chicago Round Table.”Dr. Goulian said, “At the mo¬ment we’re in a period of lag be¬tween the available informationand the propagation to the peopleconcerned. I don’t really see theharm in making this compulsory.”Appearing with Dr. Goulian were president Beadle, 1958 Nobel laur¬eate in medicine and physiology,and Richard C. Lewontin, professorof biology.A Painful FactGoulian said that persons withgenetic disorders “are not going towant to know the consequences. Ithink patients, for example, withhemophilia will not want to knowSeven Campus Groups Challenge DraftTurn from Page 1Included in the proposals was aresolution that a student-facultycommittee be established to inves¬tigate continuation of academicwork in prison.LSAW is engaged mainly in legalresearch to aid other groups. “Weshould be an information fund thatother people can draw from” saidCharles Isacas, a first-year lawstudent who is chairman of thegroup.The group plans to aid lawyersdefending draft resisters.However, Isacas was doubtfulthat the draft system could bechanged through the courts.“It is so unlikely that the courtswill challenge the draft at this timethat it seems futile,” he said.“The court is a political instru¬ment and if it doesn’t have the sup¬port of the other institutions itcan’t do much good,” Isacasadded.Ghetto Health ClinicIn the Medical School, HPRUplans to complement its resistancework by establishing a health clin¬ic in a ghetto area for health work¬ers engaged in resistance.If health’ workers serving a vitalneed of an improvished communitywere taken away by the draft tothe war effort it would, HPRUmembers feel, serve to point outthe absurdity of the draft’s effects.IVI To SponsorLynd-Mikva BoutCongressional candidate AbnerMikva will debate Staughton Lynd,historian and spokesman for theradical left, on the topic “Liberalvs. Radical: A View of the Amer¬ican Scene.”The program, sponsored by the4th ward Independent Voters ofIllinois, will be held at St. Paul’sEpiscopal Church, 50th St. andDorchester Ave. Wednesday March13, at 8:30 p.m.Mikva was endorsed last week bythe Democratic organization as acandidate for the 2nd Congression¬al District seat now held by Bar-ratt O’Hara. He served in the Il¬linois Legislature from 1957 to1967. Two years ago, running asan independent, Mikva lost a pri¬mary fight against O’Hara by only3,000 votes.Lynd is an assistant professorof history at Chicago State Collegeand the author of numerous booksand articles on history, govern¬ment, and radicalism. “We feel that the role we wouldplay in being a doctor in the armyis not compatable with our ideal ofwhat it means to be a physician,”said Milt Estes, a fourth-year medstudent and organizer of HPRU atChicago.“The role of a doctor in the armyis to perpetuate the war. You helpthe effort of killing people,” hesaid.“Furthermore, we feel that thereare plenty of people in this coun¬try who need the services of physi¬cians and do not get them,” Estesadded.Faculty RESISTRichard Flacks, assistant profes¬sor of sociology and member of1 Faculty RESIST’s steering com-| mittee, hopes to get faculty mem-i bers involved in the students’ pro¬blem of the draft.“There’s another group of facul-! ty who are not necessarily advo-: eating resistance to the draft butare interested in helping studentswork out their relationship to thedraft,” Flacks said.I “I’m not so much interested inthis group in particular (RESIST),but in a range of activities helping' the student to relate to the morall issues of the draft,” he added.Flacks felt, however, that the is-I sue of the draft must be viewed inI political as well as moral terms,j “I’m convinced that there’s verylittle to be gained trying to workout a personal solution to the prob¬lem of being drafted. But there is] much more to be gained from col¬lective efforts to stop the war,”Flacks said.^ffizabeth (portionM air % eiicjnerS1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900SAMUEl A. BEllBUY SHELL FROM SSLL'SINCE ImPICKIir ft OCUVCftY SERVICE52 & Lak« Park493-5200 SKI ASPEN$175.00Leave Chi. March 16, 4:30Arrive hack in Chi. March 24.Includes all train, bus, deluxequad room priv. bath (no dormson this trip), all tow tickets, out¬door pool, taxes, skiing vail andAspen. 6 Full Breakfasts.Call Dick 764-6764 or 7.62-3765 McCarthy SupportersThe petition circulated amongthe students of the Committee ofSocial Thought advocates politicalaction such as campaigning forMcCarthy in the Wisconsin pri¬mary, as well as resistanceactivities.In one of the two street theaterproductions planned for next quar¬ter, students dressed in businesssuits but made-up as clowns willstage a series of three perform¬ances at one location in the Loop.The first will be comical, the sec¬ond politically satirical, the lastseriously dealing with Vietnam.“There are no facts that you canpresent that the people don’t al¬ready know,” said Mike Doliner, amember of the street theater andthe Committee of Social Thought.“But you can present them in away that is more real to them andin ways that are closer to theirown lives.”SSAC does not plan to alter itsprevious activities in light of thenew draft regulations. However,the efforts of the social work pro¬fession to attract men will be hurtby the draft.The SVCG hopes to co-ordinatethe efforts of these various groupsnext quarter. Most of the groupswill participate in the convocationplanned by the SVCG.Europe'68Why not use WHEELS to guideyou to those "in" and veryspecial out-ol-the-way places?Travel with Oxford-Cambridgeguides. Meet student hosts (whoknow where the fun is) in eachcountry. A new approach tostudent travel. And it swings IInterested or curious? Contact:Student Wheels Abroad, 5SSMadison Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10022.(212)688-5910.AML...^JSeauhj artJ (Cosmetic G^a/t5700 HARPER AVENUE onFAirfex 4-2007 iimiikA YEAR AT TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY1968-1969An accredited program open to qualified American stu¬dents interested in exploring the various aspects of lifein Israel while earning academic credit.Programs For: JUNIOR YEAR -:- FRESHMAN YEARScholarships AvailableFor Further Information Contact:The Secretary for Academic AffairsThe American Friends of the Tel Aviv University, Inc.41 East 42d StreetNew York, N.Y. 10017 MU 7-5651 the incidence of inheritance in theirchildren. It’s a painful fact in manyinstances and it is not somethingpeople like to face.”Goulian said the possibility oftreating genetic disorders by cor¬recting the genetic defect directly“is probably very far off in the fu¬ture.”While all three scientists agreedgenetic counseling should be avail¬able to all, Beadle stressed, “Ithink there is a really seriousdoubt as to how far with our pres¬ent knowledge we would want togo in trying to control” the compo¬sition of society through compuls¬ory compliance to a genetic coun¬selor’s advice.“You can’t have evolution unlessyou have variation,” Beadle said.“You don’t change unless you havea variety.”A Difficult QuestionAsked whether society should for¬bid individuals to reproduce whomight have genetic defects, Bead¬le said, “You’re getting into a real¬ly difficult social question. Makingit even more difficult, what otherkinds of characteristics would you have society regulate? General in¬telligence, for example, may be insome respects more important thanspecific diseases.“The University of Chicago RoundTable” is produced for public tele¬vision by WTTW in cooperationwith the University. It appears Sun¬days at 5:30 p.m. on Channel 11.Student FoundIn Lake MichiganThe body of John Gustafson Jr.,’70, was found Sunday in LakeMichigan off 57th St.Gustafson, 19, a resident of 5400Greenwood, was first noticed miss¬ing from band practices this week.The blues band of which he wasa member gave its concert asscheduled in Ida Noyes Hall onSaturday, but frequently inter¬rupted the proceedings with pleasfor information as to the where¬abouts of the then still missingGustafson.Further information about thecause of the sophomore’s deathwas unavailable.This is the free bookletthat tells you everythingyou want to know aboutthe benefits of teachingin the dynamicNew York City School SystemNew York is “Where It’s Happening.” In the schools,vigorous progress is the theme. Experimental educationaltechniques — standards and policies that influence thewhole nation begin here. New York City teachers haveexciting new benefit programs. Their starting salaries arefrom $6,200 to $8,450, increasing in September 1968 toa range of $6,750 to $9,350. Maximum salary effectiveunder the new contract will be $13,900. Experiencedteachers may earn up to $1,250 more as substitutes and$3,350 more as regulars.Working and living in New York City offer outstandingprofessional development opportunities, unmatched cul¬tural activities and a stimulating variety of entertainment.So get with it! Join a team of bright, imaginative, activelyinvolved educators; work with children of intriguing,diverse backgrounds.Our free booklet can give you all the details on what theNew York City School System can offer you. Clip thecoupon below and send it off today.Bureau of Recruitment, Room 612, Dept. C67(s,i \ * New York City Board of EducationyLl 110 Livingston St.. Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201(212) 596-8060Gentlemen: I'm interested in more details on teaching in the NewYork City School System. Please send me your free booklet“Corridors of Challenge.”NameAddressCity State Zip CodeAn Equal Opportunity EmployerMarch 5, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONJOHN MOSCOWThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerRecommendationsThe most obvious peculiarity in the list of candi¬dates for the Faculty-Student Committee on CampusStudent Life is the disproportionate interest in theCommittee by students in the College. Of the 32 nameson the list, 22 are undergraduates, of which three willbe elected; ten are graduate students, of which five willbe elected — and one divisional candidate will go un¬opposed.One conclusion this supports, we think, is that theCommittee’s proportion of grad students to undergradsis entirely too high. While the proportion may indeedreflect the numbers of students enrolled at Chicago,it is unlikely that it reflects either the relative degreesof interest the two components of the student body orthe areas of concern of the Committee. Most FSCCSLdeliberations will deal with the College and, conse¬quently, the Committee will draw most of its enthus¬iasm from undergrads.But the preponderance of graduate students on acommittee that will concern itself primarily with un¬dergraduate affairs is not its only drawback. We findit particularly sad that an advisory committee includingamong its members five representatives of the facultyshould be the strongest means by which students caninfluence restrictions on student life that are non-academic in nature and thus presumably out of thejurisdiction of the University.We do not argue that this particular committeeshould be devoid of faculty members, since obviouslyit will deal with matters other than social rules —matters in which the faculty representatives’ advicewould indeed be appreciated. But we are disappointedthat the Chicago faculty has not recognized the rightof students, when they choose to live communally inhousing the University makes available, to decide forthemselves what social rules are necessary for theirproper environment. “Parietal hours” should be abol¬ished even if this means frustrating some parents.Further, we are disappointed that Chicago has notrecognized the even more basic principle that the Uni¬versity has no right to interfere with the student’s non-academic affairs so long as they are not subversive ofthe University. In other words, it is not within theprovince of the University to mete out academic pen¬alties such as probation or suspension for non-academicactivities like smoking pot. These should be handled bycivil authorities even if this means inviting incidentslike that which took place at Stony Brook several weeksago.But this newspaper has made its position clear onthese matters several times in the past, and our othercomplaints about the FSCCSL elections — particularlytheir absurd timing, unrepresentative methods, andsusceptibility to fraud — have been echoed by severalstudent leaders.Frankly, we have been beating around the bushbecause we have no endorsements to make. The in¬opportune timing of the election has made it impossiblefor us to interview the candidates and come up with alist of recommendations, much as we would have like to.We hope, however, that members of the Chicagostudent body themselves investigate the candidates’qualifications — willingness to share the dirty work ofpressuring people to accept their opinions as well aspossession of intelligent opinions about the improve¬ment of student life here.( l.v ) i Q . i I » ): . ' t > < ' • .*» »4 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 5, 1968 Unseen Viet Danger:Domestic Military CoupOne of the greatest casualties ofthe Vietnam War may turn out tobe civilian control of the militaryin the United States. Already tenu¬ous, the links tying the military inplace could well be severed by theeventual American withdrawalfrom Southeast Asia as were thoselinks that had kept the French Ar¬my loyal during the whole of theThird Republic, but which grewtoo weak to bear the strain of de¬feats in the Fourth.It is certainly too easy to imag¬ine an American withdrawal fromVietnam in the near future, possi¬bly after the overrunning of KheSahn by Viet Cong and North Viet¬namese regulars. If that happensbecause the military — meaningthe Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), to¬gether with the career officers inall positions of influence in thearmy — were denied the use ofatomic weapons, a “stab-in-the-back” theory similar to that inWeimar Germany will almost cer¬tainly ensue, with all of its impli¬cations.IF, ON THE other hand, themilitary is not restrained in its useof weapons, then a vast majorityof the country will have had theirwishes overridden to save the JCSfrom the consequences of their ownmistakes. For after all, it is theJCS which has stated that KheSahn is defensible, and it is theywho have led the political leadersof this country to the notion thatwe can do what no other nationhas been able to do at reasonablecost: defeat a guerilla war. If the JCS achieve their goalsover the objections of Americancivilians, then it will be all themore hard to control them thenext time. Even today, engaged aswe are in a major Asian land war,the JCS is riding high and mightyover the civilians in this country.The military men seem to haveforgotten that they are supposedto be the servants of civilians —with all the subservience that im¬plies. It should be generally rec¬ognized that any soldier, in uni¬form, is the servant, and subordi¬nate to, any civilian quo civilian.As citizens of the same state theirstatus is equal, but just as thePresident has more prestige ofposition than does a civilian, soought a soldier have less. The JCSshould be servants of policy-mak¬ers, not policy-makers in their ownright.This is not the case. There isevidence that the military on sev¬eral occasions have attempted suc¬cessfully to override their civilianboss, the Secretary of Defense.Worse yet, there is a vast amountof information relating to misuseof security classification to hidemistakes made by military men.All this lends credence to the be¬lief in the JCS as an autonomousunit, capable of “taking care ofits own,” and both willing andcapable of flaunting civilianauthority.Going far beyond the notion ofthe JCS as a body dangerous tothe political health of America isthe idea articulated best by Dwight Eisenhower, himself a good exam¬ple of it. This is the military-indus¬trial complex, which some radi¬cals have confused with the Es¬tablishment. The complex is simplyan interlocking directorate of mil¬itary men in industrial positions,working for the military and pres¬suring Congress through “legiti¬mate” channels when overt mili¬tary pressure is ineffective.OBVIOUS manifestations of thecomplex can be found in the num¬ber of military academy graduatesin companies employed by the De¬partment of Defense. If they arebeing hired for their “managementpotential,” as one recent adver¬tisement put it, there should beno especially heavy concentrationof these graduates in any industry.Unfortunately, it is the defenseoriented industries which are top-heavy with recent army brass.These men could easily form thecore of a group dedicated to thesubversion of the old liberal idealof America. For, as mentionedabove, when we pull out of Viet¬nam there will be grave politicalrepercussions throughout the coun¬try. More important yet, when wepull out the army will alreadyhave bases of operation near allthe largest cities in the country,ready to quell mass violence.What liberals today must fearand protect against is an army ofarrogant men, embittered by civil¬ian policies, and in a position tostage a coup d’etat. Almost all ofthe elements are ready, waitingfor the spark.Letters to the EditorsHypocrisyYour editorial on the draft(The Maroon, February 20)wasn’t “frightening” but it was“disturbing,” as I think it in¬volves an attitude widespread oncollege campuses, particularlyprestigious and expensive col¬leges. I am a student at Roose¬velt University, but this is notintended as a sour grapes offer¬ing.The simple fact is that thedraft cannot be made “fair” and“equal” in its application unlessevery male within a certain agerange is drafted. However, if youaccept the morality of the draft,the elimination of graduate stu¬dent deferments is certainly agreat improvement in terms ofequality. In reality, the wholedraft set-up is indefensible — ifyou believe that a form of slav¬ery” is incompatible with a freesociety.What really disturbs me is thatline about “new inequities di¬rected against those who we pre¬sumably expect to run the coun¬try some day.” College studentswho are honest with themselveshad better realize that becausethey happen to have been bornwith a certain above-averagemental potential they don’t de¬serve special privileges.WE ARE particularly adept atseeing hypocrisy in the actionsof others (particularly public anduniversity officials) but never inour own thoughts and actions. Forall your radicalism (or whateveryou call it) you assume that you are somehow entitled to run thecountry in the future. You mayreplace the Nicholas Katzenbachssomeday, but your superiority at¬titude insures that you aren’tlikely to be much of an improve¬ment. With that kind of attitudeyou will make whatever kind ofsacrifice of convictions is neces¬sary to get into positions of es¬tablished power and prestige.Deferments for graduate andundergraduate students shouldhave been eliminated long ago.(The only excuse I can think offor undergraduate deferments isthat they give people some timeto think about the war and thedraft.) Had all academic defer¬ments been eliminated in 1965,enough pressure might have re¬sulted to force the government tonegotiate.For most of us, intellectual andmoral opposition to the war hasto be combined with a threat toour essential self-interest beforewe will take serious action. Noneof the choices to be made by in¬dividuals facing the draft areeasy. Nobody should be con¬demned for making a particularchoice. But whatever we do, let’sbe honest with ourselves.CHUCK LITWEILERRoosevelt UniversityNightly FilmsWe wish to clear up the misun¬derstanding about the procedurefor film showing on campus.The concept of one night/onefilm is hardly “archaic” — it was instituted a few years ago at theinsistence of the film groups, asprotection against mercenarycompetition. The policy guaran¬tees the rights of existence to suchsmall groups as Nihon Bunka Kai,Pierce Tower Cinema, B-J Cine¬ma, and others. After recentlengthy discussion, all the filmgroups on campus approved andsupported this procedure.This policy in no way restrictsthe number of films beingshown in a competitive situation.In fact, because of the one night/one film procedure, Chicago isprovided with more films than anyother university in America.SAM BERNSTEINChairmanDoc FilmsMITCHELL PINESPresidentInterhouse CouncilLetters to the editors must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year,profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pud-lishers of Collegiate Press Service.• Y Ct > V. *.'i ■ '< * \MAROON SPORTSDribblers Crush Illinois College, End Big SeasonBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantChicago’s basketball squad com¬pleted its best season since 1960-61with a crushing 79-40 decision overIllinois College Saturday at theField House.The Maroons finished the seasonwith an overall record of fourteenwins and only five defeats, whichequals the mark set by the 1962-63team and falls short only of the19 win mark set by the NCAA Re¬gional Tournament champions of1961. Chicago dropped out of the2 five defeats by a total of eightpoints; one loss was to the South¬ern basketball power, Tulane.Illinois, now with a record often wins and twelve losses, wasundefeated in league play and waschampion of the Illinois Inter-col¬legiate Athletic Conference.Coach Joe Stampf’s Maroonssnared this final glory on thestrength of a fantastic first-half at¬tack. With Illinois leading 11-10halfway through the first half, theUniversity five buckled down andwent on to score 21 straight pointsChicago Soph WinsPutnam AwardDennis A. Hejhal, ’70, wasnamed a Putnam Fellow in thisyear’s 28th annual William LowellPutnam Mathematical Competition.Only the top five students amongthe 1592 who entered the competi¬tion were named Fellows. Entriescame from 286 colleges anduniversities.The competition is sponsored bythe Mathematical Association ofAmerica.Hejhal is a June 1966 graduate ofLane Technical High School in Chi¬cago. While there, he was the Illi-nios state winner in the annualMathematics Association of Ameri¬ca high school competition. He alsowas a first place winner in themathematics division of the 1966International Science Fair, held inDallas, Texas.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 5. Doty Ave.646-4411 in the final eleven minutes of the second in a field of ten teams inhalf for a 31-11 half lead.The visiting Blue Boys were, infact, held scorless until 17:39 of thefinal half, at which time Illinoishad fallen 23 points back, 35-13.The completely balanced Maroonfive kept the ball popping throughthe hoop from then on, and withfive minutes left and the scorestanding at 70-30 Coach Stampftook pity on the hapless visitorsand gave the Chicago bench achance at the action.Top scorer for the contest wasChicago’s Marty Campbell, whose18 in this contest gives him a totalof 348 this year and 931 in fourseasons at Chicago. A probableLittle-All-America selection, Mar¬ty is now ranked third on the list)f all time Maroon scorers — heis the top single-season scorersince present Maroon coach Stampfplayed for the squad in 1941.Three other University dribblersalso scored in double figures inthis high-scoring romp. RandyTalan notched 15 points, whileDennis Waldon hit for 14 includingeight for nine from the free throwline. Fred Dietz scored twelvepoints, one higher than the onlyIllinois man in double figures. BigGary Day dominated the boardsand picked off ten rebounds;Campbell and Waldon grabbed nineeach.TrackChicago’s track squad finished the 18th annual Chicago and Mid¬west Conference meet held Fridayat the Field House. A strong Carle-ton team dominated the tourneywith 74% points with Chicago sec¬ond at 44%. Last year, the Univer¬sity also finished second behindCarle ton.The only Chicago victory camein the mile relay but the teamplaced in all but two events; com¬menting on this, track coach TedHaydon said, “We were very hap¬py to score as well as we didacross the board.” Running in thevictorious relay were Dave Rosen-bush, John McLess, Jim Haydon,and Ted Terpstra.John Beal, top trackman for thepast several seasons, had a slightoff day and failed to win. He wasthe top point gainer for the Ma¬roons, however, as he took secondin the long jump and third in thehigh jump.SwimmingThe University finmen swam tothird place in the Chicago Inter¬collegiate Swimming and DivingChampionship Saturday as fivevarsity and three meet recordswent into the record books.Chicago took first in five of 15events and finished just back ofGeorge Williams College and theUniversity of Illinois-Circle cam¬pus, the host team. In what CoachBill Moyle called “one of the bestEVENING BOOKSTORECo-op is open9 a.m. - 10 p.m.• used texts• general reading• other good thingsCome undergroundReynolds ClubONE MORE DAYTRYOUTS for Actors! Singers! Dancers! Musicians!for Blackfriars musical adaptation ofa musicalof the absurdAMERIKAKAFKAby franzCome to tryouts: wed., March 6From 7:30 pm. - 9:30 pm. ida noyes haEVERYONE WELCOME if you can’tcome call 288-2134 performances we’ve ever had,” theMaroon swimmers smashed marksstanding for as long as 21 seasons.Steve Larrick, the squad’s topperformer, had one of the bestdays of his career as he set threerecords himself and joined the re¬lay team for another. He took firstplace and set varsity, meet, pool,and University records in the 50,100, and 200-yard freestyle racesand, along with Mike Koch-weser,Carl Johnson, and Mark Tindall,broke the Chicago record for the400-yard freestyle relay.Chuck Calef grabbed the othertwo Maroon victories by taking thetop spots in both the 100 and 200-yard breast stroke events. Calefalso swam in the third-place med¬ ley relay team andwas fourth inthe highly-contested individualmedley.The track squad will next seeaction tomorrow in a three-wayhome meet against Valparaiso andthe University of Wisconsin-Mil-waukee. Competition will begin at6 p.m. in the Field House.IntramuralsIntramural entries are due thisweek (Thursday) for competitionin the IM socim and volleyballtournaments. This year, competi¬tion in the socim (soccer intra¬murals) tournament will includeboth College and divisional teams.Other upcoming spring IMsports are squash, horseshoes, andbowling.2. Do the girls getthe message?I've always hada predilectionfor polysyllabiccommunication. Indubitably.The effect ismonumentallyhypnotic.3. Really? 4. Gosh.Fancy phraseologyproduces a salubriousresult, especiallyduring the vernalequinox. As a modus operandi inestablishing a continuousprogram of rewardingsocial contacts, I findverbiage highly efficacious.5. Funny, all I do is tell agirl I’ve lined up one ofthose great jobs Equitableis offering—you know,challenge, opportunity,important work, good pay—and I get all the dates Ican handle.Like, man, it reallygrooves ’em, huh?For details about careers at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: James L. Morice, Manager, College Employment.The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F ©Equitable 1968March 5, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONfCalendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toThe Maroon two days before the day beforepublication.Tuesday, March 5LECTURE: (International Business Club),"International Tax Accounting," SidneyDavidson, professor of accounting. Grad¬uate School of Business. Business East107, 3:45. p.m.COLLOQUIM: (James Franck Institute),"Raman Spectra of Simple MolecularCrystals," George Leroi, professor ofchemistry, Michigan State University.Research Institutes 480, 4:15 p.m.MEETING: (Revitalization), Skip Landt'soffice, 7 p.m.DANCING: (Folk and Square), AssemblyHall International House, 1414 E. 59thSt., 8 p.m.Wednesday, March 6FILM: (India Civilization Department),Songs of Maharashtra, Rosenwald 2,12:30-1:20 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: Divinity School, SwiftCommon Room, 3 p.m.LECTURE: "The Density Factor in SocialBehavior," Professor Paul Leyhausen,Max Planck Institute Fur Verhalters—Physiologic. Social Sciences 122, 3 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry Department),"The Syntheses of DNA and Histonesduring the Life Cycle of Hela S-3 Cells,"Blackfriars TryoutsBlackfriars, a group which nor¬mally produces musical comedies,will hold more tryouts for their“Amerika” Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in Ida Noyes Hall.Kafka’s novel was adopted byJonathan Ward, ’69, and ShellyBuck, a graduate student in Eng¬lish language and literature, andthe music was written by BarrySalins, ’68., foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313C if. EXAMINATIONSfFSHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza*200 East 53rd StrootHYde Park 3-8372Student Membership$12.50Special offer for University ofChicago students and facultyavailable through March 31stThe Museum of Modern Art invitesall students and faculty to becomemembers at the reduced annual rateof $12.50 instead of $20.00.Privileges include 4 free Museumpublications: 25-50% discoun's onMuseum books, reproductions andslides: reduced subscription rates orart magazines: Members' Calendars;unlimited free admissions.Department of MembershipThe Museum of Modern Art11 West 53 StreetNew York, N Y. 10019Student Membership is $12.50.Add $2.50 if you wish an extra annualadmission pass for husband or wifeApplication deadline: March 31I enclose my check for $made payable to The Museum ofModern Art. Thaddeus Borum, Columbia University.Abbott 101, 4 p.m.VARSITY TRACK: Valparaiso Universityand University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.Field House, 6 p.m.TRAINING SESSION: University of ChicagoFaculty Resist (draft counseling). Fa¬culty only. Hillel Foundation, 5715 Wood-lawn, 8 p.m.DANCING: (Country), Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia. Ida Noyes,Dance Room, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Oriental Institute), "An Arche¬ological View of Early India," WalterA. Fairservis, director, Thomas BurkeMemorial, Washington State Museum,Seattle, Washington. Breasted Hall, 8:30p.m.Thursday, March 7LECTURE: (School of Medicine), "NuclearProteins of Cancer Cells," Dr. HarrisBusch, Pharmacology Department, Bay¬lor University. Billings P-117, 3 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: Biological SciencesDivision, Billings P-117, 4:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), "Long-RangeForces Revisited," Gerald Felnberg,Columbia University. Eckart Eckart 133,4:30 p.m.CONCERT BAND REHEARSAL: Lab School,Belfield Hall 244, 5 p.m.LECTURE: (New Collegiate Division),"What Can One Say Beyond Symbolsand Beyond," Henry Rago, visitingprofessor of New Collegiate Division.Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 p.m.DANCING: (Israeli Folk), Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn Av„ 7:30 p.m.MEETING: (CADRE), Joan Baez and David Harris speaking on Resistance. Admis¬sion one dollar. Mandel Hail, 8 p.m.Recruiting VisitsEducationMarch 7 — New York City Board of Ed¬ucation, New York, New York. Openingsexist in all areas. Interested only in qual¬ified candidates who are eligible for teach¬er certification.March 7 — Georgetown College, George¬town, Kentucky. Will Interview PhD.sor A.B.D.'s in English literature, CallExt. 3282 for appointments.March 8 — Lake Forest School District no.67, Lake Forest, Illinois. Elementary: K-6positions. Junior high school: science,English, history, mathematics positions.Interested only in qualified candidateswho are eligible for teacher certification.March 8 — Gross School, Brookfield, Illinois.Elementary taching openings. Interestedonly in qualified candidates who areeligible for teacher certification.Business, Industry, GovernmentMarch 7 — E.R. Squibb & Sons, New York,New Brunswick, Brooklyn. Biologicalscience, chemistry (analytical, organic),mathematics, and statistics at all degreelevels.March 8 — Time, Inc., Chicago, Ittinois.Supervisory training program for womeninterested in the business aspects of pub¬lishing.March 8 — United States Treasury Depart¬ment, Office of International Affairs,Washington, D.C. M.A, and Ph.D. candi¬dates in economics with training in in¬ternational, financial, and monetary fields.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES Trustee Cone Donates LibraryFairfax M. Cone has donated hiscomprehensive collection of morethan 1,200 books on advertising,public relations, business psychol¬ogy, and related fields to the Uni¬versity, President Beadle announ¬ced last week.Cone, chairman of Chicago’sBoard of Trustees, is a director ofFoote, Cone & Belding, the adver¬tising agency.Beadle also announced thatCone’s fellow directors have endow¬ed a $40,000 fund to care for thebooks and to add to the collection.Arthur W. Schultz, senior vicepresident, director and manager ofthe Chicago office of Foote, Cone &Belding, said that about 300 rare books would be added to the collec¬tion before it is transferred to theUniversity.A few of these rarities in theCone collection, said Schultz, are“History of Advertising,” by HenrySampson, London, 1875; “One Hun¬dred Years of American Com¬merce,” edited by Chauncey M. Depew, 1895; “London Tradesmen’sCards of the 18th Century,” 1925;“Dictionnaire de Chiffres et de Let-tres Ornes,” N..M Tilliard, Paris,1767; “History of Signboards,” Lar¬wood & Hotten, London, 1875; and“Picture Posters,” Charles Hiatt,New York & London.Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.Cram Specialat Hutch Gallery7:00 - 11:30 P.M.Blackbread - Jam - Coffee25<Mon. thru Fri. The University of ChicagoRockefeller Memorial Chapel 59th Street and Woodlawn StreetSunday afternoon, March 10, at 3:30Rockefeller Chapel Choir Richard Viksfrom,with members of the Director of Chapel MusicChicago Symphony Orchestra Edward Mondello, OrganistAPPAREBIT REPENTINA DIES Pout HindemithChorus and Brass OrchestraMASS Igor StravinskyChorus and double wind quintetTHE PEACEABLE KINGDOM .. Randall ThompsonA cappellaCANZON DU0DECIMI TONI Giovanni GabrieliOrgan and Brass OrchestraTickets:Reserved $4.50; General Admission $3.50Available at: v c■ Fac/staff $3.00Ticket Central, 212 N. Michigan Avenue, and ail Ward StoretKendall College. 2408 Orrinqton Avenue, Evanitoh -M,Cooley's Candles, 5211 S. Harper AvenueWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetUnivers tv of Chicago Bookstore. 5802 S. Ellis Avenue Students $2 50Representatives of theNEW YORK CITYBOARD OF EDUCATIONwill be on campusThursday March 7, 1968This is your opportunity to learn first-hand about the rewards of a teaching ca¬reer in the New York City schools.You are cordially invited to meet with the representatives who will be on handto answer questions.*Examinations for most teaching licenses are being held in Chicago during thisvisit.In addition, a special license examination for regular teacher of mathematics(JHS) will be conducted. This test will combine parts of the National TeachersExamination and our own Board of Examiners’ test.All successful candidates are guaranteed full-time positions. Salaries for be¬ginning teachers in September, 1968 will range from $6750-$9350.Please visit the Teacher Placement Office for further details.*Examination Fee $3.00New York City Board of EducationBureau of Recruitment U.C.110 Livingston StreetBrooklyn, New York 11201jNSA Asks Students To Appeal Draft Decisions, Plans GuideWASHINGTON (CPS) - The Na¬tional Student Association hasurged all students to use all ap¬peal procedures available withinthe Selective Service System ifthey are reclassified I-A.Most first-year graduate studentsand graduating seniors will be re¬classified I-A this summer under arecent order eliminating studentdeferments for all graduate stu¬dents, except those already beyondtheir first year of study and thosein medical fields.NSA President Ed Schwartz saida student should appeal “whetherhe plans ultimately to serve or toresist.” A reclassification draftregistrant is allowed a personalappearance before his local boardand an appeal to a state board.If there are one or more dissentingvotes on the state board he mayappeal to the Presidential level. Schwartz said the idea was pri¬marily intended as an “education¬al campaign.” Thus, he especiallyurged students to make personalappearances before their localboards “to convey to those whosit on them our growing frustra¬tion with the current dangerousdirections which foreign and do¬mestic policies have taken.”If students follow Schwartz’s ad¬vice, they may also throw a mon¬key wrench into the Selective Serv¬ice System. Although state appealboards can deal with a group ofappellants at once, local boardswould face long hours of hearingpersonal appeals from dozens ofstudents.Appeal GuideSchwartz said NSA would soonbe making available to all collegecampuses a one-page description of appeal procedures. NSA is alsoworking with several Washingtonlawyers to publish a newsletter onlegal aspects of the draft and hasput together a speakers program,including especially students whohave refused induction to showthat draft resisters “are young men of considerable conviction andenormous courage.”Schwartz said NSA was counsel¬ing the use of appeal procedures,because he doubts draft reforms,such as those advocated by Sen¬ator Edward Kennedy and severaleducation associations, are forth¬coming. NSA has filed a suit against Se¬lective Service Director Lewis Her-shey asking for an injunction stop¬ping local boards from enforcinghis order last fall to reclassify anddraft anti-draft demonstrators. Or¬al arguments on the case will beheard March 7.Teddy Kennedy Urges Draft ChangesWASHINGTON (CPS) - Sen.Edward Kennedy (D.—Mass.) hasintroduced an 18-part bill in theSenate that provides for drasticchanges in the Selective ServiceSystem, most of them aimed atreducing the powers of local draftboards and ending inequities.Two of the bill’s major provi¬sions are that draftees should bechosen by random selection andthat the youngest eligible menshould be taken first.It also provides for the estab¬ lishment of several hundred areaoffices to take over the functionspresently carried out by local draftboards. The Senator proposed thatlocal draft boards become appealboards for men inducted by one ofthe area offices. The area-officeplan was originally proposed bythe draft commission set up byPresident Johnson last spring.In his speech introducing the billin the Senate, Kennedy criti¬cized several of the draft lawamendments passed by Congress last June. He suggested that Con¬gress enacted some of the amend¬ments simply to reduce the rightsof draftees.Although Kennedy’s bill has vir¬tually no chance of passage, itcould conceivably generate debateon the draft on the Senate, andthereby lead to some kind of con¬gressional action on the draft. Ken¬nedy himself lacks sufficient influ¬ence in the Senate to get the billpassed, however.mmsm»Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat.For non-UnlversIty 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. 10 to 3 daily.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0600, Ext. 3266.FOR SALEBATIKS. S5-S25. Our walls got full. 493-0856,Ashley, 5340 Woodlawn. • -*■ TWO TRAIN TICKETS to New York for$27.00 apiece. Call 684 4480.'62 VW $500.00. '66 Engine, Always Depend¬able. Call 667-791-1.OWN A CLASSIC (sic) TYPEWRITER)The Maroon now has only one 30-year-oldROYAL TYPEWRITER for sale. It is inworking condition but needs cleaning verybadly. Only $25.00. Contact the MaroonBusiness Office, Ext. 3266, for Details orcome to Ida Noyes, Room 304.TYPING SERVICESEXPERIENCED REASONABLE RATES.Will furnish paper. Call 568-3056 fater 7P.M.TYPIST with Electric typewriter. Standardpages rates. MSS preferred. 2321 Rickert,BU 8-6610.LOSTDESK, $15.00, OFFICE CHAIR, $5.00,SMITH-CORONA PORTABLE TYPEWRIT¬ER, $35.00, SKI RACK FOR VW, $15.00.Call 752-3339 or 752-6346.AMAZING GRACE: CHEAP THEOLOGY!Student Bookstore — Reynolds Club Cata¬comb. St Joseph's COLLEGE CLASS RING. CallBill, BU 8-1100 (Ext. 212).RENTKNIGHT KG895 120 W solid state amp.1968 Model — like new. DUAL 1015 changerwith cartridge. Both for $480.00. Call 256-4785 or 521-0460.Be a stud. Ride a HONDA. $90. 324-1172. 6 ROOMS, 2 baths. Deluxe, 2nd Floor, E.of Jeffery, S. of 71st. Near I.C. ReliableParty only. Adults or High School Children.$190 /month. SO 8-7396.YOGA6 only. ANTIQUE RACOON COATS. From$25.00. Weiner Furs. 2037 E. 75th Street. YOGI SRI NERODE teaches, besides Hattra,Mantra, and other Yogas, breath orientedmeditations, as taught by Buddha to hisson Rahula and by Sri Krishna to Arjunain Bhagavad Gita. This practice eases anx¬iety, nervousness, tension and depression.Hyde Park. DO 3-0155. PERSONALSREFLECT UPON THE BLINDMANAS HE REFLECTS UPON YOURSIGHTTHEN REFLECT UPONTHE SOURCE OF VISION AT LAST, WE HAVE FOUND A MATURE,RESPONSIBLE TYPIST TO DO THE CLAS¬SIFIED ADS — SURE HOPE EVERYONEIS HAPPY NOW!JOAN BAEZ and DAVID HARRIS speakingon Resistance, Thursday, March 7, MandelHall, 8 p.m. $1.00.Ho hum, looks like we've wud our weithrough another Quarter.CALIFORNIA Vacation plans fell thru. Needsunlamp (w. stand). Call DO 3-4392.CRAM SPECIAL — 7:30 to Midnite. STUDYAT HUTCH. BLACK BREAD, JAM, ANDCOFFEE FOR A QUARTER. SECOND CUPFOR A NICKEL.See Rabbi Goren at the Wall.HILLEL. March 13th.THIRD CUP FOR NICKEL TOO.Movement — Sound Dance Concert. IdaNoyes. 8 p.m. Tonight. $1.00. JARMANCOMPANY.M. W. MEET ME AT 9:30 in HUTCH.P.R.Teaching YOUR thing? Ours, too. Findout about our one-to-one approach to Masterof Arts in Teaching Degree, Elementaryor Secondary. Lots of Scholarships. WriteMAT, OBERLIN COLLEGE, Oberlin, Ohio44074.CHUCK O'CONNEL EATS BLACK BREAD!AT THE BANDERSNATCH.WHY NOT EAT YOURS AT HUTCH COM¬MONS? BLACK BREAD, JAM, AND COF-IFEE FOR A QUARTER. STUDYINGTHROWN IN FOR FREE.PURIM NOISEMAKER CONTEST AT HIL- |LEL. March 13th.RISISTEZ^ RESISTEZ TOUJOURS!NOT BY BREAD ALONE.HUTCH COMMONS. 7:30 to MIDNITE.RIDERS WANTED — TO West Palm Beach,Florida, over Spring Vacation. Instrumentrated commercial pilot will fly well-equip¬ped BEECH BONANZA. Has r two seatsstill available. Share Expenses. Contact:Norton Richards at 324-8787.PURIMWednesday Evening, March 13th, Megillahreading, skits, hamantashen, party (Con-servative-Refrom, 7:30 p.m. and Orchodox,6:30 p.m.)HILLEL HOUSE 5715 WOODLAWNCast your bread upon the waters. HUTCH.STUDY POWER — BLACK BREAD.SKI VAIL AND ASPEN.All transportation, breakfasts, tows, room,pool. March 16-24. $175.00. DICK—764-6264or 262-3765.Writer's Workshop. PL 2-8377.ELEVENTH CUP FOR A NICKEL TOO.Russian taught by highly experienced nativeteacher. Rapid method. Trial lesson atno charge. Call CE 6-1423, from 9 a.m. to5 p.m.NOT THE SAME NICKEL.Not Sushan — JERUSALEM!ISRAEL, GREECE, AND EUROPE: 51days including 8 days cruising from Veniceto Yugoslavia to Greece and 2 weeks inIsrael. All hotels and transportation. 19meals and air fare to London not included.Students and young teachers only. $1217 orspecial N.S.A. 51 day Europe/lsrael Econ¬omy Trip. $795.00. Call Dick 764-6264 or262-3765.CRAM SPECIAL: CRAMBERRY SAUCE ON !YOUR BLACK BREAD AT HUTCH. 7:30p.m. to Midnite.Got any dragons you need killed? Bringthem to the Chicago Science Fiction So¬ciety.DRAW YOUR OWN CONCLUSIONSFOR SUBLEASEIVi ROOMS, Private and quiet, furnished,reasonably priced, available immediately.684-3721. Large 3’/j ROOM APT. From June to endof Sept, or available immediately. Exc.condition. Vi block from Lake. Choice S.Shore location. $108/month. Call 374-0151after 6 p.m.ROOMMATE WANTEDWant GIRL to sublet apt. at 54th and Dor¬chester this summer w. one other girl.Own Room. $62.50/month. Leave name 8<phone number with Maroon, Room 304 orext. 3266. FEMALE ROOMMATE — Grad. Preferred.$50/month, AVi rooms. 363-9112. After 6 p.m.FEMALE ROOMMATE — Spring Quarter,$36/month. Call 288-7475.3 ROOM APT. TO SHARE, near campus,Furnished. Inexpensive. $45.00. HY 3-3714.MALE STUDENT; Share 7 room apt. w. 2grad, students; Own Bedroom, sun porch;S. Shore, 2 blocks f. I.C., stores; $54/month, April 1 or sooner. Dave or John,721-1497, evenings. ROOMMATE NEEDED NOW. Rent $45. 3blocks from Campus. Call evenings, 667-2982.WANTEDTravel Bug seeks other insecta for trip inVW thru W. Va. 8. Kentucky from N.Y.C.,D.C., etc — week of 3/25 — Joel, Ml 3-3603.wmmfrom our University ShopDOUBLE-BREASTED BLAZERAND ODD TROUSERSTb;. ost versatile of Odd Jackets istailored of lightweight polyester andworsted in a distinctive model that fea¬tures side vents and waist suppression.The new colorings are deep royal blueor a bright gold. Brass buttons, #70Odd Trousers include polyester and worstedblend in a colorful navy-brick red-yellowcheck, #20; and solid light, medium orcharcoal grey, olive, tan or oxford blue, #23.50OBSERVING OUR 1S0TH ANNIVERSARYEven's alloys Furnishings, Hats hoes74 E. MADISON ST., NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • ATLANTABAN FRANCISCO • LOS ANGELES2 Vi ROOM APT. $115.00/month. PlaisanceHotel, DO 3-4300. Apt. 407.THE CHICAGO MAROONV»-' y> •-} -MM* > > hv -*r*T' March 5, 1968-■ .* • •CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from * J10 Used *X12Rug, To a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants ft Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYSERVICEto your satisfactionQUALITY WORKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanic.Body work ir paintingTOWINGFree Estimates on ALL Work326-2550ESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours: Daily 8-7Sat. 9-510% Student Discounton Repair Order Parts.Convenient to all majorexpressways. Lake Shore’Drive. 1C, and “El”.BiC Medium Point 19*BiC Pina Point 25*Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Ouowrites first time,every time!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst ball-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic's “Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamic |bic Duo at your |campus store now. IWATEAMAN-BIC PEN CORP §MILFORD. CONN I ST. PATRICK’S EVESAT. MAR. 16, 8:30 PM, OPERA HOUSECLANCY BROS. &TOMMY MAKEMTICKETS: $5.50, 5.00, 4.00, 3.00MAIL orders to Opera House, 20 N. Wacker Dr.,Chicagol Tickets at Box Office or Ticket Cen¬tral, 212 N. Michigan & all Ward’s, Field's &Crawford stores. 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.The Laing Prize honors and celebrates valuable contributions tolearning. The Board of University Publications and the Press hope thatit will encourage further worthy contributions from theacademic community.The University of Chicago Press AnnouncesTHE BOOKS ELIGIBLE FOR THE LAING PRIZE1968The Idea of the Humanities and OtherEssays Critical and HistoricalRonald CraneThe Place of the Hidden Moon:Erotic Mysticism in the Vaisnava-SahajiyaCult of BengalEdward C. Dimock, Jr.Group Theory and Its Physical ApplicationsL. M. FalicovEducation and Social Change in GhanaPhilip Foster The Chinese Knight-ErrantJames J. Y. LiuTeaching to Read: Historically ConsideredMitford M. MathewsMusic, the Arts, and IdeasLeonard MeyerQuests Surd and Absurd:Essays in American LiteratureJames E. Miller, Jr.Letters from MesopotamiaA. Leo OppenheimReality and the Heroic Pattern: Last Playsof Ibsen, Shakespeare, and SophoclesDavid GreneInterpreting LiteratureKnox C. HillSlavery in the Americas:A Comparative Study of Cuba and VirginiaHerbert S. KleinTwins and Twin RelationsHelen L. KochDreams and Deeds:Achievement Motivation in NigeriaRobert A. LeVine The Modernity of Tradition:Political Development in IndiaLloyd I. Rudolph andSusanne H. RudolphHarper's University: The BeginningsRichard J. StorrThe Limits of Symbolism:Studies of Five Modem French PoetsBernard WeinbergVisions of CultureKarl J. WeintraubThe GORDON J. LAING PRIZE is an annual award of $1,000presented by the Board of University Publications. Any author who wasa member of the University of Chicago faculty on the date his book waspublished by the University of Chicago Press is eligible.The following books have been awarded the Laing Prize:1963 History of Literary Criticism in the Italian RenaissanceBernard Weinberg1964 The Rise of the West: A History of the Human CommunityWilliam H. McNeill1965 America's Failure in China, 1941-50Tang Tsou1966 Ancient Mesopotamia: Portrait of a Dead CivilizationA. Leo Oppenheim1967 Asia in the Making of Europe, Volume I, Books 1 and 2Donald F. LachEmblems usedare miscellaneous imprints andtitle-page ornaments of theUniversity of Chicago Press. The Laing Prize was named in honor of Gordon J. Laing, who cameto the University in 1899 and served as chairman of the LatinDepartment, dean of the Humanities, and as general editor of the Pressfor almost thirty years. It is presented to the author of the bookwhose work adds the greatest distinction to the Press list.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 5750 Ellis Ave. Chicago, Ill. 606378 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 5, 1968