The Chicago Maroon FoundedIn 1892U'O ra’ DrWVOL. 76, NO. 39 29CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1968 8 PAGESWILL SUCCEED LEVI UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO^ArchivesWilson Named Faculties DeanJohn T. Wilson, former assistantto President Beadle and now dep¬uty director of the National ScienceFoundation, will be the number-twoman in the Chicago administrationnext year.Wilson will take the new title ofvice-president and dean of facul¬ties in October and will assumethe duties of Provost Levi, who be¬comes president October 1.Wilson served from 1961 until1963 as special assistant to Beadleand was a professor of psychology.While at the University, Wilsonserved as director of the extensionprogram, which was overhauled un¬der his guidance. Extension coursesfor which regular degree creditwas offered from the Loop to theThe tenth-week election for theStudent-Faculty AdministrationCommittee on Campus StudentLife (SFACCSL) elections resultedin a small turnout and an unfor-seen and as yet unresolved tie inthe College.The total vote in the College was973, 36.6 percent of enrollment, andthe total vote in the graduate div- Quadrangles, and the home studyprogram which was formerly of¬fered was eliminated.Wilson in 1952 came to the Na¬tional Science Foundation (NSF) inWashington a governmental agen¬cy established to advance basicscience and science education. Hewas made assistant director forbiological and medical sciences forNSF in 1955.Wilson left in 1961 for Chicago,returning in 1963 to become deputydirector of the foundation.Expert on Education AidBecause of his long experiencein both private universities andgovernment agencies, Wilson isconsidered an authority on federalaid to higher education.See Editorial on Page 4.MMMMMNINMINMMNMMIIMMMMmmRMMMHRbiological-physical sciences divi¬sion constituency with 92 votes.Gloria Phares, ’68, who will be en¬tering the humanities division inthe autumn, won in the Humanitiesdivision with 51 votes. James Hallwon in the Social Sciences Division In a speech in 1963, he urged ed¬ucators to seek broader federal aidprograms including the humanitiesand arts as well as science andcalled for a federal scholarshipprogram aimed at high schoolgraduates who should be going tocollege. Later legislation incorpor¬ated both these suggestions.Wilson, born in 1914 in Punxsu-tawney, Pa., received a B.A. inpyschology from George Washing¬ton University in 1941. He took hismaster’s degree in psychology atthe State University of Iowa, IowaCity in 1942. He received his doc¬toral degree, also in psychology,from Stanford in 1948.The appointment of John T. Wil¬son as vice-president and dean ofthemselves, but both are eager toserve on the Committee. Accordingto Weissbourd, “Both Dave and Iwould like to share or alternatethe vote, but a decision on this can¬not be made by us.”Dean O’Connell will not allow theelected Committee to resolve thetie on the grounds that the oldtemporary Committee is responsi faculties was received with muchsupport by the deans and facultyhere. Most students surveyed, how¬ever, were unfamiliar with Wilson.“I am pleased,” commentedWayne Booth, Dean of the College.“Mr. Wilson understands the needsand aspirations for our Universityand has been an interested studentof the growth and development ofthe College.”He said he looked forward toworking with Wilson in "furtherdeveloping the academic programfor undergraduates on thiscampus.”Associate Dean of the Division ofthe Physical Sciences Julian R.Goldsmith, who worked closely withWilson on the National ScienceFoundation Board, said he was“fully aware of the outstanding jobWilson has done in Washington. . .in his position as Deputy Directorof the National Science Foundation,John Wilson earned the respect ofscientists and university adminis¬trators across the nation.”Eugene McCarthy John T. WilsonStudents PromoteVote for McCarthyMILWAUKEE—1 ‘Hello. I’m help¬ing Senator McCarthy win the April2nd presidential primary.”That’s how each of 70 Chicago-area students introduced them¬selves to the voters of Milwaukee,Wisconsin last weekend.When people were at all recep¬tive, the students tried to structurebrief conversations around simplequestions: “How do people aroundhere feel about the war? How doyou like the way Johnson has beenrunning things? Here’s a leafletexplaining where McCarthy standson the issues. Have you consideredbacking him?”Usually the people who werecanvassed, many of them lower-middle-class Poles, responded re¬luctantly and suspiciously. Manyopened their doors only about sixinches and dully accepted the leaf¬lets.TIE IN COLLEGE UNRESOLVEDSFACCSL Election Response Poorisions was 919, 15.6 percent ofenrollment. The University totalvote was 1,892, 22.1 percent of en¬rollment. 43 votes were invali¬dated.Mitchell Pines, ’69, and John Sie-fert, ’71, won seats in the Collegewith 143 and 78 votes respectively.Ruth Weissbourd, ’71, and DaveKlafter, ’69, tied for third with 68votes apiece.Stuart Newman, ’69, won in the with 110 votes.In the professional schools con¬stituency, Barry Connell, a studentin the Graduate School of Business,and Harry Boyte, a student in theDivinity School, won with 153 and118 votes respectively.Share the Vote?Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell, SFACCSL chairman, has en¬couraged Weissbourd and Klafterto try and resolve the tie between ble for questions pertaining to theelection itself.Neither the winners nor the los¬ers expressed approval of themethod of election. Pines said,“There were of course many un¬fortunate circumstances concern¬ing the elections. And so one of theCommittee’s major duties will beto prevent such circumstancesfrom occurring in future elec¬tions.”McCarthy Supporters Rally for Crucial PrimaryThe MaroonSenator Eugene McCarthy with supporters and reporters at MeigsField Wednesday. See story on Page 4. By TIMOTHY S. KELLEYEditorial AssistantMilwaukee — The presidentialcampaign of Sen. Eugene J. Mc¬Carthy (D, Minn.) given increasedmomentum by his impressiveshowing in New Hampshire, is nowfocused on the April 2 Wisconsinprimary, and is involving manyUniversity of Chicago students inlarge numbers as campaignvolunteers.Wisconsin, considered at the out¬set of the campaign as potentiallymore receptive to a peace candi¬date than hawkish New Hampshire,is all the more enticing because ofthe probability of a large numberof Republican cross-over votes inprotest against Johnson.Where New Hampshire was apleasant surprise to McCarthybackers, Wisconsin is thought to becrucial to the Presidential hopesnot only of McCarthy himself, butof the whole movement to deny theDemocratic nomination to Presi¬dent Johnson. A spokesman for the pro-McCar-thy Students for a Political Alterna¬tive, said there was a shortage ofstudent volunteers in Wisconsin lastweekend: Nineteen hundred wererequested, he said, but only 600went. However, many more are ex¬pected this weekend to help theMcCarthy organization fulfill itsannounced goal of “reaching ev¬ery voter in Wisconsin” by canvas¬sing.Transportation arrange¬ments have been made for stu¬dents leaving here to campaignover the weekend. Buses leavefrom 56th and Ellis at 6:30 p.m. to¬night, and at 8:00 a.m. tomorrowmorning, and the round trip busfare is $4.00 There is also the pos¬sibility of free rides in privatecars.The McCarthy headquarters inMilwaukee is located in the Wis¬consin Hotel, at 720 North 3rdStreet. For further informationhere, and to sign up for transpor¬ tation to Milwaukee, studentsshould contact Students for a Po¬litical Alternative, located in thebasement of Chapel House, at 5810Woodlawn, a spokesman said.Fund Drive HereFor University of Chicago stu¬dents who cannot go to Wisconsinto campaign, there are other op¬portunities to aid McCarthy’s cam¬paign, a spokesman said. A majorfund-raising drive has been initi¬ated in the University of Chicagohospitals, by an organization calledMedical Professions for McCarthy.According to chairman BurtonRose, the group now has two pres¬sing needs: contributions for Mc¬Carthy’s campaign in Wisconsinfrom students throughout the uni¬versity, and student volunteers tohelp them reach everyone in theUniversity of Chicago hospitals forcontributions.Rose described the organization’sgoal as finding “a candidate whowill end the war and redirectTurn to Page 4The Chicago MaroonFounded In 1191Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor ....Michael SeidmanNews Editor John MoscowPhotographic Editor David Travis Literary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergEditor Emeritus David A. SatterOn, WisconsinSenator Eugene McCarthy has come a long waysince the cold gloomy days of November when he firstannounced his candidacy.The increasingly optimistic mood of McCarthy’scampaign in New Hampshire and the final results ofthe primary there —in his first electoral confrontationwith Johnson, he captured 42 percent of the Democraticvote and attracted enough Republican support to puthim within 230 votes of the President’s total for bothparties—indicated widespread disaffection with John¬son’s leadership and increasing opposition to his con¬duct of the war.As the April 2 Wisconsin primary approaches, amassive statewide campaign focusing on Milwaukee isunderway and quickly gaining momentum. In the lasttwo weeks, thousands of students have gone to Mil¬waukee to volunteer their services toward the nomin¬ation of the first major political figure who offeredthe nation an alternative to the President’s course inVietnam. As a result of great publicity throughout thestate, McCarthy may well get from 55 to 60 percentof the vote. Much, however, depends on what can beachieved in Wisconsin this weekend.Although Robert Kenedy’s abrupt entrance into thecampaign almost two weeks ago, has caused and willcause some serious division among the liberal anti-Johnson forces, it has also increased the prospects fora much stronger anti-Johnson bloc. This is no time forpetty sectarianism. McCarthy is offering the Americanpeople a meaningful political choice and should bestrongly supported in Wisconsin this weekend by every¬one who has any stake in the American political sys¬tem.FSACCSL SnafuThe bungled election procedures for the Faculty-Student Advisory Committee on Campus Student Lifehave born their fruit, and it is as bitter as could be ex¬pected. The original appointed committee succeeded alltoo well in its purpose of achieving minority represen¬tation, and few are satisfied with the candidates elected.Perhaps the committee should have examined theeffect on the committee of underrepresenting the ma¬jority of the students. Maybe it was the responsibilityany case, someone should have had an opportunity toof the Dean of Students, or maybe the President. Inexamine the preliminary report before it was finallyapproved.For when the report was finally issued, with itshorrendous election procedure, almost everyone in theCollege knowledgeable about politics protested the for¬mat of the elections, but were told that it was too lateto change anything. There was never any chance towarn Dean O’Connell that his procedure was quite poor,and would lead to distorted results.There should be some procedure for correctingsuch amatuerish mistakes as the committee’s before,rather than after, the damage is done. Faculty Senate Vote Final:Tie with IDA to Be BrokenThe Council of the UniversitySenate voted March 12 to committhe University to withdraw fromthe Institute for Defense Analysis(IDA).It was five months ago that Pres¬ident Beadle appointed Julian R.Goldsmith, chairman of the Geo¬physical Science Department, tochair a committee to probe theUniversity’s ties with IDA.The Goldsmith Committee re¬port, which was endorsed by theCommittee of the Council on Feb¬ruary 6, recommended withdrawal.IDA had been sponsored bytwelve universities before Chicagowithdrew. The Princeton faculty al¬so voted this month to withdraw.Meanwhile, a Columbia facultycommittee is studying secret re¬search policies there, which couldlead to a severing of its ties withIDA.It has been rumored that IDAmay end sponsorship by universi¬ties in order to avoid future embar¬ rassment. IDA spokesmen, howev¬er, deny this.SDS Pushed WithdrawalStudents for a Democratic Soci¬ety (SDS) at Chicago has pressedthe University to get out of IDAsince the appointment of the Gold¬smith Committee and accumulateda large file of data about IDAwhich it turned over to that Com¬mittee.It is expected however that Chi¬cago’s withdrawal will have littleaffect on the University. The GoM-smith report noted that “the Uni¬versity neither gains from nor con¬tributes in any real sense to IDA.”Norman Christeller, vice presi¬dent and general manager of theinstitute, said after the annualmeeting of the board of trustees inWashington last month that thewithdrawal of member schoolswould “seriously undermine thepurposes” for which IDA was setup.The Institute for Defense Analy¬ sis was established in 1955 by MITat the request of Defense officials,who wanted an organization thatwould encourage top scientists inthe universities to evaluate U. S.weapons systems.Wisconsin Faculty VotesTo Allow RecruitersMADISON, Wis. (CPS)-By anoverwhelming voice vote the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin faculty hasdecided to continue to allow re¬cruiters—military and otherwise-on the campus.Wisconsin was rocked by a ma¬jor demonstration against DowChemical Company recruiters lastfall. Police were called in to dealwith the demonstrators.A student-faculty committee setup after the demonstration recom¬mended that the university dropall recruiting. Eight members ofthe committee—three faculty andfive students—voted in favor ofending all recruiting.PRESIDENT TAKES POWERLaw Prof. Kurland Knocks CongressProfessor of Law Philip B. Kurland, speaking at Duke UniversityLaw School during the interim, at¬tacked the Congress for having“abdicated to the Presidency itsresponsibility for the initiation oflegislation and domestic and for¬eign policy.”Kurland, editor of the SupremeCourt Review and an authority onConstitutional law, cited as exam¬ples of Congress’ inability or re¬fusal to check the President’s pow¬er to make decisions concerningthe Vietnam war, school desegrega¬tion, and methods of curbinginflation.Kurland told his audience thatthe federal government as outlinedin the Constitution was all butdead:“Congress has forfeited its au¬thority even over the legislativeprocess that was once its primaryfunction. The initiation of legisla¬tion has been surrendered by theCongress to the executive. In fact,almost all that it retains is a vetopower, a power to refuse to enactthat which the President demandsof it.”Meltzer Blasts RulingOn Labor ElectionsWASHINGTON — The NationalLabor Relations Board’s rulings onunion elections come close to vio¬lating freedom of speech, Professorof Law Bernard D. Meltzer told agw m, m$w|DEGREECANDIDATESI The Registrar's Office hasI announced that undergrad¬uates who expect to re-II ceive a degree this June ||1 must file a degree applica- 1tion by April 5. Applica- 1I tions can be filed in theRegistrar's Office, Adminis- §tration 103.Lower Flint House will ||| sponsor the Ninth Annual 1§ Smyrd Ball tomorrow inIda Noyes from 8 to 1a.m. The ball will featuremusic by the Meat Market,f free food, and a march onthe President's house.Women are admitted free;admission for men is $1. Senate subcommittee Wednesdaymorning.He said the situation illustratedthe need for more effective Con¬gressional supervision of the NLRBand explained the board operatedunder unclear guidelines establish¬ed by Congress and in an atmo¬sphere in which changes in theboard’s personnel or the executive branch caused sweeping variationsin the NLRB’s policies.In his statement submitted to theSenate Subcommittee on Separa¬tion of Powers, Meltzer, an experton labor law, charged that, forexample, “the board’s purpose ofcurbing inflammatory racial elec¬tion oratory is appealing and time¬ly.Kyros Pushes LSD Law;Psychiatrists Blast ItProposed legislation forbiddingthe possession of LSD would domore harm than good, two Univer¬sity of Chicago psychiatrists saidon last Sunday’s “Round Table.”Dr. Daniel X. Freedman, profes¬sor and chairman of the Depart¬ment of Psychiatry, and Dr. Jer¬ome Jaffe, assistant professor ofpsychiatry, claimed no one hasproved conclusively that LSD caus¬es such physical harm as geneticdamage or cancer. However, theysaid, LSD poses psychological dan¬gers for 10 per cent of its users.They appeared with Rep. PeterN. Kyros (D-Maine), co-sponsor ofa pending Congressional bill whichforbids possession and sale of LSDand similar drugs. The weekly tel¬evision program is broadcast at5:30 p.m. Sundays over WTTW(channel 11). Comparing the Kyrosbill with the marijuana laws of1937, Jaffe said that his experiencewith marijuana and with opiatesindicated that “levying severe pen¬alties on the user tends to makethe user identify not with societyat large but with an antisocial sub-culture that supplies the drug.“There is an intense loyalty builtup between the drug user and theillicit supplier that we really wantto discourage, that we really wantto penalize. Therefore it becomesincreasingly difficult to get to thesources.”Kyros replied that “the thrust(of the proposed law) actually isnot toward some man or womanthat’s 17, 18, or 19 years old andhappens to have in his hand apiece of LSD. The thrust is towardthe pusher. Going toward the userwill assist the enforcement officersin picking up the trafficker and seller whom you want to pick up.”The bill provides for fines to$10,000 and jail sentences of fiveyears for traffickers, pushers, andmanufacturers of LSD, ampheta¬mines, and barbiturates, drugs thatare not covered in previous legis¬lation. Possession of these drugswould be a misdemeanor.In defending against Dr. Jaffe’scharge that the bill would createa subculture, Kyros said judgeswould use discretion in attemptingto get to the “source of the prob¬lem.”Credibility ProblemSupporting Jaffe, Freedman saidthat “if you’re going to live in asociety that manufactures and dis¬tributes drugs for the welfare ofman, you’re going to run into un¬anticipated problems. No suchproblem has been proven for LSD.“Most scientists feel that we havegone to press too soon, and we’reafraid that we’ll alienate the cred¬ibility of views when we would liketo discourage on a proven groundHe noted that “if your wife hap¬pens to have been given a barbit¬urate or an amphetamine for diet¬ing and she says: ‘Honey, youknow, you look tired. You’d bettertake a pill,’ both of you, are by thel°w, criminals.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 tneHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mall $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., puo-* /2 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 29, 1968 # F fThe Maroon — DAVID TRAVISANOTHER FIRESpring returns to Chicago, but the atmosphere just south of theMidway remains the same. The Mid-Lawn Furnished Apartments,6024 S. Woodlawn Ave., required the care of Chicago firemen tonurse its incendiary disease at 9 a.m. yesterday. Smoke could beseen from the Quadrangles as the fire of the year was broughtunder control. The vacant building is owned by the ChicagoHousing Authority and is slated for demolition. The fire, the latestin a series, was again attributed to "vandalism."Leftist College Profs Unite;Discuss Role In University PROTEST DEMOCRATSGroup Plans 'Anti-ConventionBy DAVID AIKENLiterary EditorRadical faculty members stole aleaf from the student political leftand organized themselves at a con¬ference here last weekend, forminga permanent group with nationalheadquarters at 1307 E. 60th St.and local "cells” on campusesaround the country.Most of the 350 registrants from150 campuses who gathered at theCenter for Continuing Educationwere faculty or graduate students,with a smattering of undergradu¬ates.According to Richard Flacks, oneof the founders of Students for aMuseum of ScienceAdds Bomb ExhibitThe Chicago Museum of Scienceand Industry, still under attackfrom anti-war groups for a recent¬ly-opened exhibition of VietnamWar weapons, is now preparing anew Air Force exhibit includingthe cockpit of a B-52 bomber.The new exhibit will allow visit¬ors to sit in the bomber cockpitand "participate in simulated mis¬sions through wide-screen movies.”It will also include aircraft mod¬els, dioramas, movies, and otherrelated materials.Museum officials insisted thatthe cockpit exhibit will show nocombat scenes, but instead willshow scenes from training flightsover the United States.On March 15, the Museumopened the first controversial ex¬hibit, an Army set-up featuring“shoot-it-y ourself” machinegunsand simulated tank rides. Targetsfor the "simulated destruction”strongly resembled buildings andhuts in a Vietnamese village.Within three days, groups of pro¬testors began blocking visitors tothe exhibit. After later picketingand other protest, the museumtemporarily closed the Armysection. Democratic Society and now as¬sistant professor of sociology atChicago, the conference arose froma feeling that "radical faculty hadnot seriously talked with each oth¬er about (their role in the univer¬sity), and that they had been in¬volved mostly in specific issue-or¬iented demonstrations, and did notdiscuss their long-range effective¬ness.”Although some participants ques¬tioned whether the true place for aradical is as a teacher in a univer¬sity rather than in the larger soci¬ety, it was generally agreed thatthe most important question is howto shape the university’s role in thelarger society for the ends of so¬cial change.In the local campus cells of thenew organization, Flacks said,members will "develop programsfor university reform and initiatecriticism of their own activities asteachers and scholars.” It will alsoprovide defense support for radi¬cals who are denied appointmentsor tenure because of their politicsand for student activists who comeunder attack from administra¬tions, Flacks said.The new organization plans sev¬eral conferences and discussionmeetings in the coming months.Physics Chair CreatedEstablishment of the Edward L.Ryerson distinguished service pro¬fessorship has been announced byPresident Beadle.John A. Simpson, professor inthe Department of Physics and inthe Enrico Fermi Institute, wasnamed to become the first hloderof the newly-established professor¬ship.The new professorship was es¬tablished by the Board of Trusteesthrough a gift to the University byNora Butler Ryerson. A distin¬guished service professorship is thehighest honor the University canbestow upon a faculty member. LINDENHURST, Ill—A meetingof 250 leaders of the anti-war andanti-racism movement, called tomake plans for action at theDemocratic national convention inAugust, instead drew up plans forpolitical action and organizingthroughout the summer.The conference, called by theNational Mobilization Committeeto End the War in Vietnam, de¬bated over whether to devote theirefforts to general organiz¬ing throughout the summer or toconcentrate on demonstrations atthe Democratic convention. Theyended in a compromise.There will definitely be somekind of counter-convention in Chi¬cago, but specific tactics and def¬inite plans will not be drawn upuntil June, when these leaders willmeet again.But the conference did namethree of its top leaders to carryout a summer long program ofpolitical organizing aimed a tstrenthening opposition to theVietnam and protesting inadequateprograms to meet domestic pover¬ty and racism. The program willfeature efforts to expand draft re¬sistance, elect anti-war delegatesto the Democratic convention, andorganize white working class com¬munities.The three planners of the pro¬gram are Rennie Davis, a veteranof community organizing with Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society;Dave Dellinger, editor of Libera¬tion Magazine and leader of theOctober 21 march on the Penta¬gon; and Vernon Grizzard, organ¬izer of draft resistance in Chicago.Black Liberation ProgramDuring the first half of the two-day conference in this secludedcamp just outside Chicago, blackdelegates met separately fromwhite. When the two groups joinedagain on Sunday, the confer¬ence approved a black liberationprogram which included suchplanks as:Dropping the anti-poverty pro¬gram in favor of “reparations anddamage payments for 400 years offree slave labor.”• Outlawing racial discrimina¬tion by labor unions.• Community boards to reviewactions by police.WHPK is on the air.After long delays and repeatedsetbacks, the student-run FM radiostation serving greater Hyde Parkstarted regular broadcasting earlythis week.HPK’s program schedule is stilltentative, according to ChuckMetalitz, ’68, and the station isopen to suggestion from students.“The first schedule is just a guessas to what we think people wantto hear,” Metalitz stated.As presently slated, HPK fea¬tures a daily newscast at 7 p.m.followed immediately by a seriesof special reports including “Stu¬dent Government Reports,” “Aider-man Depres Reports,” "Adminis¬tration Reports,” and “ResearchReport.”HPK is also planning “HYPSounds,” a number of programswhich Metalitz says will be in thevein. "HYP Sounds” a.m. will becarried between 4:30 p.m. and7 p.m. weekdays, from 7:10 p.m.to 2:30 a.m. Saturdays, and from6 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. Sundays.HPK’s classical music program¬ming includes broadcasts of the • Opposition to stockpiling riotweapons by the police.• Freeing black power leader H.Rap Brown and black poet LeRoiJones and restoring ousted Rep.Adam Clayton Powell to his posi¬tion in Congress.The conference also committeditself to support any efforts madeby the Mississippi Freedom Demo¬cratic Party at the convention."Our program to work againstracism will include development ofstrategies for white communitiesduring the black rebellions thisThe third annual Liberal ArtsConference (LAC) will open nextweek with a speech by WayneBooth, Dean of the College, on"Who killed Liberal Education?”at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the newCobb Auditorium.Following in the three-day seriesof discussions about the nature ofcollege will be an assortment ofseminars, lectures, and entertain¬ments put together by the student-run LAC committee.In addition to Chicago facultymembers, professors from cam¬puses across the country have ac¬cepted invitations to participate.William Arrowsmith, universityprofessor of arts and letters at theUniversity of Texas, starts offThursday morning with commentson the trend “Toward a New Uni¬versity.”On Saturday, Edgar Friedenberg,professor of sociology and educa¬tion at the State University of NewYork at Buffalo, will discuss “TheBeseiged Sanctuary of the Univer¬sity” with a student panel including SG Presid;nt Jeffrey Blum,’69; Jay Lemke, a graduate stu¬dent in physics; Christine Shields,’68; and Melvin Wald, 68.LAC sponsors had hoped to fin¬ish the weekend with a generalknowledge contest between therecently named College Bowl teamand four members of the Collegefaculty. But no one could be foundto match wits with the undergrad¬uate “whiz-kids,” and the idea wasdropped.The College team, consisting ofContemporary Chamber Players,modern music, obscure works ofearly composers, and better knowntraditional works.HPK plans to release a moredefinite program guide in aboutten days. summer,” Davis said. These wouldinclude legal and medical assis¬tance for riot victims.According to its leader, CarlosRussell, the black delegation setup four regional operations to car¬ry out its program, "but we pur¬posely left the structure vague be¬cause we wanted to give blackleadership at the local level achance to respond to our call forregional meetings.”The conference here was at¬tended by individuals with a widerange of political and tactical per¬spectives, including old left groups.Larry Silver, ’69, captain; PeteDouglass, ’70; Debby McPherson,’69; and John Moscow, ’69, will beon national TV April 14.Tuesday the Maroon will print afour-page LAC supplement, includ¬ing a complete schedule of events,a critical analysis of the past yearof general education at Chicago,and a panel discussion on LAC-related topics.On Thursday, Revitalization andLAC are sponsoring Second Cityand the Mahogany Hall Band in aconcert in Mandel Hall. Tickets at50 cents go on sale this evening atthe Student Activities Office, theBookstore, and in the dormitoriesduring dinner hours. .A Joseph Harman-Roscoe Mitch¬ell concert will be held Fridaynight.The conference will also featuremovies by Doc Films, including aSaturday showing of an originalproduction by Steve Manus. TheScrew Ball, with music by JeffCarp and the Mahogany Hall Band,will follow in the Cloister Club.Confab on PeaceMeets Here TodayThe Student Forum on Interna¬tional Order and World Peace willhold a conference in Ida NoyesHall today, tomorrow and Sundayon "The Role of Students in Inter¬national Affairs Curriculum Devel¬opment.”The Student Forum is holdingthe conference “to acquaint asmany students as possible with cur¬rent problems of internationalorder.”It will include discussions on"Students and Curriculum Re¬form,” "Teaching War Preven¬tion,” and a showing of the film“The War Game.” The firstsession starts at 6:00 p.m., CarolChave, ’69, a spokesman, said.The Maroon — NICK JANKOWSKIDAFFODILS AND PRETZELSMiss Susan Teshima of the Service Civil International volunteerswill no longer be able to sell her wares in the Quadrangles despitea twelve-dollar cart license from the city. Campus police caught upwith the young lady and terminated her activities. The springfever of it all notwithstanding, the yellow daffodils will no longerdot the campus.March 29, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3Campus Radio WUCB Goes FMLiberal Arts Conference:Entertaining, EnlighteningStudent Vote Splits Between CandidatesWith the surprising success ofSen. Eugene McCarthy (D, Minn.)in the New Hampshire Democrat¬ic primary and the attendant entryof Sen. Robert Kennedy, (D, N.Y.)into the race, students here andelsewhere in the country have beenthrown into some confusion overwhom to support.Many feel that McCarthy, by de¬claring early against Johnson andthe war, has earned their support,yet that Kennedy has a much bet¬ter chance of winning the Demo¬cratic nomination. Many of thosewho have remained in the McCar¬thy camp have expressed resent¬ment and some bitterness overKennedy’s decision to run.“Kennedy is a damn fool for say-1 ing things so late,” commented JoFeldman, 70. “This is not the kindof thing that you can make a snapdecision on,” she said.Gail Parry, ’69, referred to theNew York Senator’s re-assess¬ment” of his candidacy as “prettyratty.”Kennedy is a WinnerSome students, however, will sup¬port Kennedy because they thinkhe can win the nomination.Isaac Hoch, 70, said that “Ken¬nedy has more vote-pulling powerand a better chance than McCar¬thy to win the nomination.” DianaBoldt, 70, said, “People vote forpeople they know. The Kennedyname has a much better chancethan McCarthy of winning.”Describing Kennedy’s decision as “very political,” Bob Eskridge, 70,remarked that “I think it’s a verygood thing, though. Kennedy offersa larger threat to Johnson.” Rich¬ard Krasnow, ’68, said that “Ken¬nedy will do better than Mc¬Carthy.”McCarthy People Won’t SwitchRobert Factor, ’67, who hasworked for McCarthy in Wisconsin,said he thought most of the Minne¬sotan’s young supporters would notswitch to Kennedy. He added, how¬ever, that most of them wouldchange over to Kennedy if McCar¬thy dropped out.But while most McCarthy sup¬porters fell Kennedy has damagedif not ruined McCarthy’s chances,at least one, Steve Aronson, 71,thinks the decision has helped Mc¬ Carthy since “it points up theamount of dissent.”Throughout the country, accord¬ing to a College Press survey, manystudents believe that Senator Ken¬nedy is an “opportunist” for enter¬ing the Presidential race after theprimary in New Hampshire.The Harvard Crimson shifted itssupport from McCarthy to Kennedywhen he announced. Other Easterncollege papers, such as The YaleDaily News and The Daily Pennsyl¬vanian, still endorse McCarthy.Midwestern papers are also split.The Wisconsin Daily Cardinal cameout for Kennedy, but the UWM Postfavors McCarthy. The MichiganDaily, indicating the general un¬certainty on the campaign, pub¬lished contradictory editorials. Senator Robert F. KennedyMcCarthy Fans Hustle to Beat Robert KennedySenator Eugene J. McCarthy Continued from Page 1America’s energies,” he added that“Gene McCarthy was there whenwe needed him.”Response OverwhelmingRose called the response to theoriginal appeal for contributions“overwhelming,” citing the factthat $1,400 was collected duringthe first three days, not only fromdoctors, but from people at all lev¬els and in all capacities in the hos¬pitals. “It’s been a beautiful feel¬ing,” he said.Students have been asked to takecontributions for McCarthy to Bil¬lings Hospital, North Basementroom 25. Those willing to help can¬vass the hospital staff should pageRose, fund-raising director SaulWasserman, or treasurers NicholasVick or Joel Murray, in BillingsHospital, he said.Many experts predict that the Senator’s strongest showing amongthe primaries will be in Wisconsin.He is supported there by Sen. Rob¬ert F. Kennedy (D, N. Y.) who op¬poses him in other states.McCarthy Faces RFKThe Indiana primary election, tobe held May 7th, will attract greatinterest because it is the first statein which McCarthy will be opposedby Kennedy. Due to the reputedlyconservative nature of Indiana vot¬ers, both senators may encounterdifficulty with their stands forpeace in Vietnam. The same couldbe said of the Nebraska primaryon May 14th, in which both areentered.Kennedy’s announcement that heintends to enter the California pri¬mary June 4, dividing the anti-Johnson vote between himself andMcCarthy, who was already on theballot, virtually secured the state’sADMINISTRATION COMPROMISESHoward Students Seize Ad. BuildingWashington (CPS) — Studentsat Howard University, who had oc¬cupied the school’s administrationbuilding for five days, vacated thebuilding Saturday after reaching acompromise settlement with theBoard of Trustees. Classes resum-Gwinn Campaign HeadRobert P. Gwinn, president andgeneral manager of Sunbeam Cor¬poration, has been named nationalchairman of a three-year alumnicampaign for the Graduate Schoolof Business.Gwinn, a 1929 graduate of theBusiness School and a Trustee ofthe University, will head the driveto raise $1,000,000 from alumni ofthe School over the next threeCandidate Forms ReadyCandidacy forms for the upcom¬ing Student Government (SG) elec¬tions will be available in the SGOffice early next week.Also male College seniors orfirst-year graduate males who didnot receive the SG draft question¬naire may pick one up in the Stu¬dent Activities Office before Tues¬day.Law Students and DraftLaw Students Against the Warand Student Government will pre¬sent a program on alternatives tothe draft tomorrow at 1 p.m. inHutchinson Court with discussioncentering on Canada as a draftalternative. Speakers will includeHeather Dean of the Toronto Anti-Draft Union and Bob Ross of theUniversity. ed on a regular basis Wednesday.The settlement, which came aft¬er a series of meetings betweenrepresentatives of the Board andstudent leaders last Friday night,involved three concessions to thestudents.The Board agreed, first, to fore¬go any disciplinary action againstthe faculty members and studentsinvolved in the take-over of thebuilding; second, to reconstituteits faculty and student affairs com¬mittee, and discuss some of theadditional student demands, suchas that for the establishment of aBlack Awareness Institute at How¬ard; and third, to ensure that the39 students who were to appear be¬fore an administration-appointeddisciplinary committee for disrupt¬ing a university ceremony wouldappear before a student judicialboard instead.It was the third issue that led tothe take-over of the building lastTuesday. The 39 students, whowere involved in the disruption ofCharter Day Ceremony at theschool March 1, received noticefrom the administration that theywere to appear for disciplinaryhearings. Students assumed thatthe 39 would be expelled, andtherefore student leaders, includ¬ing Student Assembly PresidentEwart Brown, planned the infiltra¬tion of the administration building.Several hundred of them enteredthe building early last Tuesday aft¬ernoon. Members of the ad¬ministration, instead of taking stepsto remove the students, left thebuilding. Students bedded down in the halls, and in a few offices thatremained open.The following day, administra¬tion officials gave the protest aboost by announcing that classeswould be called off “indefinitely.”That freed students to join theprotest, and the number of stu¬dents inside and around the admin¬istration building grew. It hasbeen estimated that as many as3,000 of Howard’s 8,200 studentstook an active part in the protest.Columbia Halts ClassesProtest Vitenam WarNEW YORK (CPS)—Students atColumbia University held a mora¬torium on classes two weeks agoas a way of expressing their oppo¬sition to the Vietnam war and thedraft.As part of the day of protest,speeches and discussions on issuesconnected with the war were held.Some of the students put on an artexhibition, while others held a poe¬try reading. About 2,000 heardDwight MacDonald, well-knownwriter and an active supporter ofThe Resistance, give his views onthe war.In the evening Alan Ginsberggave a reading of his poetry atthe school.The moratorium grew out of ameeting held by the senior classshortly after the new draft regula¬tions were announced. Several ofthe seniors felt that university stu¬dents generally should have someway of expressing their oppositionto the war, and so a coalition ofseniors and activist groups on cam¬pus called for the moratorium. large bloc of convention delegatesfor President Johnson.In addition to canvassing Mil¬waukee neighborhoods for McCar¬thy on weekends, student volun¬teers last week performed variousfunctions in the campaign head¬quarters iq the Wisconsin Hotel,the press offices and researchsuites in the Sheraton-SchroederHotel. Several also got up at 5a.m. to distribute McCarthy litera¬ ture to workers arriving at factor¬ies in the Milwaukee area.Accommodations varied fromcots in such places as church base¬ments to the homes of many Mil¬waukee residents, who are sympa¬thetic to McCarthy particularly inthe University of Wisconsin at Mil¬waukee area. Students who havesleeping bags have been urged totake them along when they go upfor the weekend to campaign.McCarthy Hails Students EffortsMore than 600 college and highschool students celebrated Sen.Eugene McCarthy’s (D, Minn.)52nd birthday Wednesday upon hisdeparture from Meigs Airfield toWisconsin. McCarthy toured Chi¬cago to solicit financial help in hisWisconsin primary.At a press conference, McCarthyhailed the efforts of Illinois stu¬dents in the Wisconsin primary andsaid political leaders are becomingmore aware of the expanding stu¬dent influence in politics.Commenting on the Californiaprimary where both he and Sen.Robert Kennedy (D, N.Y.) are onthe ballot, McCarthy said he in¬tends to remain on the ballot. Healso said that the presidential can¬didate will not be decided on thebasis of delegate votes as he wasin the 1960 Democratic Convention.“It will be a question of who isidentified with the issues most im¬portant to this country and whois most acceptable to the nation,”he stated.Asked about the resignations ofhis press secretary, SeymourHersh, a University of Chicagograduate, and his assistant presssecretary, Mary Lou Oates, Mc¬Carthy discounted reports of idea-logical splits in the organization.McCarthy, reflecting on the pos¬sibility of President Johnson with-Last Convocation 322ndChicago awarded two honoraryand 256 academic degrees at its322nd Convocation ending the Win¬ter Quarter.The Convocation address, en¬titled “The Relevant University,”was delivered by Stuart M. Tave,master of the Humanities Collegi¬ate Division, associate dean of theCollege, and professor of English.John T. Dunlop, professor of eco¬nomics at Harvard, was presentedan honorary Doctor of Laws(LL.D.) degree. Blaze Koneski,professor in the Faculty of Philos¬ophy at the University of Skopje,Yugoslavia, was presented an hon¬orary Doctor of Humane Letters(L.H.D.) degree.f- : i S ( t V drawing as a presidential candi¬date, said, “As a result of what Idid in New Hampshire I think therewere seven presidential candidateswho dropped out, including MrRomney and Mr. Rockefeller. Ithink if we do well in Wisconsinwe might lose at least two more.”Rosin WinsDanforth GrantMark B. Rosin, ’68, is among 123students across the nation whohave been awarded DanforthGraduate Fellowships for 1968.More than 2000 competed thisyear for the fellowships, whichprovide tuition and living expensesfor four years of graduate studyleading to the Ph.D. degree.Rosin, who is majoring in Eng¬lish here, expects to do his grad¬uate study at either Yale or theUniversity of Toronto.Rev. Charles Gilkey, 85,Former Chapel DeanThe Reverend Charles W. Gil¬key, 85, former dean of Rockefell¬er Memorial Chapel, died March24 at the home of his daughter,Miss Mary Jane Gilkey.Gilkey, the first dean of theChapel, served from 1928 until hisretirement in 1947. He receivedhis A.B. (1903) and his A.M.( (1904)from Harvard and his B.D. (1908)from Union Theological Seminary.He was also professor of preach¬ing at the Divinity School and min¬ister of the Hyde Park BaptistChurch.A Chicago memorial service willbe held at Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 1156-80 East 59th Street,at 4 p.m. Wednesday, April 10.Also, a previously-scheduled con¬cert, “Passion According to SaintMatthew,” by Johann SebastianBach, will be held in memory ofMr. Gilkey. The concert, by theRockefeller Chapel choir andmembers of the Chicagosymphony Orchestra, will takeplace at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, April 7,in Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 29, 1968 i i: •• i : i