Library0i W 61 Archives Unlv. of Chgo*Chicago, Ill, 60657Chicago, III. 60657The Chicago Ms Profii 0l<3-U. S. POSTAGEJ^aidVOL. 76, NO. 45 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1968REVERSAL OF POLICY FoundedIn 18926 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSChicago Severs Ties with DraftStudents sit in a nearby empty Quantrell Auditorium Tuesdayafter the now hospital-ridden Professor Hans J. Morgenthau'scourse in international politics was cancelled again. The classhas met only once this quarter.Slow Response PostponesSG Petition Filing DateIn the face of small student re¬sponse and delayed publicity, theElection and Rules Committee ofStudent Government (SG) haspostponed the filing deadline andthe elections for the SG assemblyand the National Student Associa¬tion (NSA) delegation.The filing deadline is 5 p.m. to¬day. The election will be held nextThursday and Friday, April 25 and26.Jerry Lipsch, ’68, SG vice-presi¬ dent, said he does not believe thepostponement will bring out manymore candidates. “I would say fil¬ing will be light, conceivably solight that there will be fewer can¬didates than seats,” said Lipsch.There is only one slate formallynow sponsoring candidates for SG.The Student Political Action Com¬mittee (SPAC) will run candidatesin a number of constituencies inthe College and the graduate di-Turn to Page 3 By MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorThe University has decided tosever its ties with the SelectiveService System.“We are getting out of the busi¬ness of communicating with draftboards,” Dean of Students CharlesO’Connell stated yesterday. “Weacted in good faith in the past, butin my view we were wrong.”Chicago’s abrupt about-facecomes in response to student pres¬sure that has been mounting sinceThe Maroon revealed two weeksago that the University helps localdraft boards determine if a stu¬dent’s deferment has expired.Under new University policy,O’Connell stated, Chicago will haveno dealings at all with draftboards. Students who wish to proveto draft boards that they are reg¬istered will submit their own state¬ment to that effect to the Regis¬trar, who will merely certify thatthe statement is accurate and thenreturn it to the student for mailing.At Student’s RequestChicago will notify draft boardsof the expiration of a student’s de¬ferment only if the student specifi¬cally asks it to do so. Thus Chicagowill no longer automatically notifydraft boards of a student’s avail¬ability for military service uponhis graduation, as it has done inthe past. Moreover, the Universitywill not communicate with draftboards if a student takes fewerthan three courses in a quarter orif he leaves school beforegraduation.Under its previous draft policy,Chicago made student’s sign aform authorizing the University to| notify the local draft board of his graduation as part of the proced¬ure by which they received certi¬fication of their student statusThe University then took the res¬ponsibility of certifying for the localdraft board that the student wasregistered and informing theboard when the student graduated.Sit-In PossibilityO’Connell said he moved tochange this policy after it hadbeen brought to his attention byThe Maroon. He subsequently dis¬cussed possible alternatives withEd Birnbaum, chairman of theStudent Government (SG) Under¬graduate Academic Affairs Com¬mittee, and then consulted withthe University’s legal counsel Wal¬ter V. Leen about the legal rami¬fications of a change in Universitypolicy.SG spokesmen had warned ofthe possibility of a sit-in if nochange in Chicago policy wasforthcoming.According to O’Connell, Leenstated that the University was un¬der no legal obligation to notifydraft boards of a student’s status.Chicago received a memorandumfrom the state Selective Servicedirector requesting such informa¬tion some time ago, but the memo¬randum has no legal force.Changes ResistedPreviously, the University hasresisted making the changesO’Connell revealed yesterday onthe grounds that Chicago’s refusalto comply with the terms of thememorandum might jeopardize allstudent deferments. This view hasbeen expressed particularly force¬fully by the registar, Mrs. MaxineSullivan, who made the initial de- CHARLES O'CONNELL'We Were Wrong'j cision to comply with the memo¬randum.O’Connell conceded yesterdaythat the new procedure mightcause some initial complication forstudents. But he insisted that itwas University policy not to havedirect dealings with the SelectiveService System and that it was im¬possible to reconcile past proced¬ure with this policy. Moreover, heasserted, it was still possible forany student who needs to provehis status to get Chicago to certifya statement to this effect.‘Dishonest’ StudentsO’Connell also discounted the ar¬gument that by its new policy theUniversity was encouraging dis¬honesty among its students. “Somepeople are going to be dishonest nomatter what we do,” he stated,“and it’s not the University’s busi-Turn to Page 3Students Organize To Aid RFK in Indiana RaceBy MARC POKEMPNEREditorial AssistantSpecial to The MaroonGARY — Sen. Robert F. Ken¬nedy (D, N.Y.) proposed sweepingsolutions to the problems ofunemployment, urban blight, andthe shortage of public facilities ina speech he delivered here Tues¬day night to an audience estimatedto number 4700.“We can match our great un¬fulfilled needs — for housing andschools, roads and recreational fa¬cilities, public facilities and pub¬lic services — with the hundredsof thousands of men and women,without jobs or in menial jobs,whose fury and frustration hasracked our cities these past fouryears”, he told the crowd at theGary Memorial Auditorium.The Senator was introduced tothe gathering, about two-thirds ofwhich were primary or secondaryschool students, by Gary MayorRichard Hatoher.Few college students were pres¬ent; there were a scattering, per¬ haps a dozen from the University.Kennedy Students FormingMeanwhile, an organization ofUniversity of Chicago Students forKennedy for President has beenestablished at Chicago and is seek¬ing to encourage students to go toIndiana to campaign for Kennedyin the presidential primary thereon May 7.John Beal, ’68, president of thenewly-formed group, said in Chi¬cago yesterday that the on-campuseffort is just beginning to get or¬ganized. Tables will be set up thisweekend in the dormitories andother common areas to take thenames of students interested inworking for Kennedy in Indianaand to distribute information aboutwhat kind of work there is to bedone, he said.Beal said that the aim of hisgroup was as much to give stu¬dents the opportunity to partici¬pate in the campaign as to makea substantial contribution to theprimary effort.They expect considerably fewer students than worked for SenatorMcCarthy in Wisconsin, both be¬cause of the nature of the studentbody here and Kennedy’s tendencyto rely more heavily on other thancanvassing tactics, he said.Indiana’s population is moreevenly distributed than Wisconsin’sand thus is more susceptible tomass media than door to door ap¬peals for support, according toBeal.Rallies FavoredAfter a Kennedy strategy meet¬ing in Indianapolis April 12, it wasreported that the senator wouldprobably continue makingspeeches to large gatherings.Students for Kennedy in Chicagois working in cooperation with theIllinois Kennedy for Presidentgroup, whose director is RichardC. Wade, professor of Americanhistory here and, in Beal’s words,“a Kennedy insider.Beal said the response to thegroup has been “more than Iexpected.” The Maroon—MARC POKEMPNERCANDIDATE: Kennedy speaking before Gary Democrats Tuesday.LOOKS FORWARD TO RETURN ri i- ? l IWilson Comments on University Ties to GovernmentBy LAURA HOROWITZSpecial to the MaroonWASHINGTON-John T. Wil¬son, newly named dean of facul¬ties in President-designate Ed¬ward H. Levi’s administration, isvery enthusiastic about his re¬turn to Chicago, according to hisstatements in a recent interviewhere. He feels it is “the best,most exciting university in thecountry’’ and that Levi, who wasprovost during Wilson’s previoustenure on campus, will be an ex¬citing president.Wilson, who was a special as¬sistant to President George W.Beadle from 1961 to mid-1963, isnow deputy director of the Na¬tional Science Foundation. Hewill return to the Chicago admin¬istration in October, when Levibecomes Presidznt.While in Washington, Wilsonhas kept intimately informedabout developments at Chicagoand reads The Maroon regularly.He says he particularly enjoysthe personals and finds them hisfavorite source of entertainmentafter The New Yorker.“Let me make clear at the out¬set,” he began the interview,“the war had nothing to do withmy decision to leave the NSF.There’s nothing wrong in theNSF. I would have gone to Chi¬cago under the terms of thisoffer regardless.”Expects Many DutiesWhen asked about his specificduties at the University, Wilsonsaid he had had “only limiteddiscussions with Mr. Levi so far.There’s enough work for a lot ofpeople,” he said, adding that hedoesn’t expect his role to be com¬pletely defined until Levi’s entirestaff is assembled.Wilson does expect, however, towork on the University’s academ¬ic budget, and to help in the ef¬fort to attract high-quality facul¬ty members to Chicago. He doesnot expect he can avoid his spec¬ialty of government-university re¬lations, although he pointed outthat there are other people atChicago, such as Charles Daly,former White House aide andUniversity vice-president, who al¬so have great expertise and ex¬perience in dealing with Wash¬POPE PAULand 125 other life-like,life size wax figuresin 40 beautiful scenesfimjal Sou&unMax iHusntm(§15 3mmt1419 No. Wells Phone 337-7786 IGroup rates with guided toursOpen daily noon to midnight ington officials.Wilson also expects to resumehis seminar in contemporary uni¬versity-government relationships.He expressed interest in the workof Concerned Science Students(CSS), a new university organi¬zation from which he had re¬ceived a letter in his Washingtonoffice. He was enthusiastic aboutthe seminar planned by CSS forthis week on the role of the sci¬entists in society.Supports IDA WithdrawalWilson has kept informed aboutthe controversy over Chicago’srelationship to the Institute forDefense Analyses (IDA) , anddescribed himself as “generallysympathetic with the findings ofthe Goldsmith Committee.” Headded, however, “I think the stu¬dents asked interesting questionsabout the Goldsmith Report,too.” A faculty committee,chaired by Julian R. Goldsmith,associate dean of the physicalsciences division, recommendedwithdrawal from IDA.In general, Wilson said, his“biases tend toward keeping uni¬versities away from classified re¬search.” Universities as institu¬tions, he feels, should generallynot lend themselves to govern¬ment agencies and have labora¬tories for secret work. Facultymembers, however, “should befree” to work on secret projectsor to take leaves and get exper¬ience. Their involvement “is upto them,” Wilson feels.Wilson thinks intelligence workis “clearly out of bounds in thesense of the aims and purposesof universities,” but that militaryresearch might be appropriatewhen national survival is atstake. “The questions get tighter and stickier with less than a de¬clared war and a national emer¬gency,” he commented.According to Wilson, govern¬ment and universities could havemutually advantageous relation¬ships in certain kinds of activi¬ties. Among these are carryingout public service programs andaccepting support from an agen¬cy like the NSF, which has beengiven the responsibility of main¬taining the health and welfare ofscience.Seeks More Government SupportAsked about the future of pri¬vate universities like Chicago,Wilson sees no cutback in theirfunctions. He is interested in ad¬ditional financial support forthese institutions, and particular¬ly in the question of how to getpublic funds into privately con¬trolled universities without er¬oding their private control.He is interested in further ex¬ploration of two kinds of statesupport plans for higher educa¬tion. In the first, as practiced inPennsylvania, state funds aregiven to colleges and univer¬sities at an institutional level. Inthe second, as in the case of NewYork, state funds are contributedto private education via studentaid grants.On the federal level, Wilson isinterested in supplements tohighly competitive researchgrants so that institutional pro¬grams could be developed. OneKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago IS, III.MU 4-6856THE LONELY GENERATION ANDTHE SEARCH FOR TRUTHby CARLO PIETZNERDirector Camphill Movement, USA(Sheltered Villages for the Mentally Retarded)Loneliness and alienation are here seen in a new dimension,leading to a western understanding of Reincarnation and a WesternApproach to Meditation.(Reprint of a Lecture)Copies sent at no chargeRUDOLF STEINER INFORMATION CENTER211 W. Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016FINAL WEEKENDAPRIL 19,20.21"Last Stage Menagerie'a triumph..." Wallis, Hyde Park Herald"Troupe and Menagerie' praised..." 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He sees urban universi¬ties as a class of institutions ori¬ented to the problems of cities asone group perhaps meriting spe¬cial support.Looking back over his travelsaround the country, Wilson com¬mented that he found it “as¬tounding” that of the many whospend time at Chicago, “they al¬ways say they miss it.” Appar¬ently Wilson too had this feeling,and unlike some others who haveleft the University, he isreturning.Mrs. Horowitz, a graduate ofthe College, was editor of TheMaroon in 1962-63, She is nowa researcher and writer for theNational Assn, of State Uni¬versities and Land Grant Col¬leges in Washington.BE PRACTICALBUY UTILITY CLOTHESComplete Selection ofSweatshirts, rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equipment,wash pants, sport shirts,pajamas, hiking shoes,sweat pants, etc., etc., etc.,THE UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1364 E. 63rd.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - I JOHN T. 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Schwinnquality throughout.ART’SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST.1710 E. 87th ST. 3fi3.752d 1636 E- 55th ST. 363-7524SA 1-5883 1710 E. 87th ST. SA 1-5883F O T AA Celebration of Our Art2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 19, 1968Parties Encounter Difficulty Scheduling Full SlateContinued from Page 1visions. According to Lipsch, how¬ever, “SPAC’s slate won’t be fullbecause it’s difficult to find peoplewho will run on a slate.”Lipsch and all but one of SG’sexecutive committee are SPACmembers. The party that con¬trolled SG prior to SPAC, has notformed a slate and apparentlydoes not intend to.Other candidates for SG echoedLipsch’s comment on the difficulty of forming slates. Peter Ratner,’69, said, “There don’t seem to beenough people who would affiliatethemselves” to form a slate.Incumbent Bill Phillips, 70said, “I’ve been trying to seek outprospective assemblymen with anindependent state of mind thathad an interest in running, but I’mnot running a slate of candidates.I don’t like to run on a partyslate myself.”Reform PartySPAC is not running a slate for the NSA delegation, but one groupcalling themselves the NSA Re¬form Party is.Jonathan Still, ’68, co-organizerof the party, outlined the party’splatform: “A detailed programhas not been worked out, but themain thing is the desire to try todo something to bring NSA tocloser contact with students. Thedelegates go to ths Congress in thesummer and make policies thatseldom get back to the students.“It’s true that the delegationChicago's Policy Unique Among UniversitiesContinued from Page 1ness to go around enforcinghonesty.”O’Connell indicated that Chica¬go’s policy would have ramifica¬tions that reach beyond theimmediate issue involved. “TheUniversity has decided that it isIowa U. IgnoresStudent Power BidIowa City, Iowa (CPS) — Theadministration at the University ofIowa has apparently decided to ig¬nore a new student association con¬stitution that calls for studentcontrol over matters that affecttheir “non-academic lives.”The constitution, already passedby the student senate and ratifiedby a campus referendum, saysthat the senate should have the fin¬al say in non-academic matters af¬fecting students.Although the administration hasnot yet officially vetoed the consti¬tution. members of the administra¬tion have made clear in meetingswith student leaders that they feelthe university president should re¬tain ultimate control over ail as¬pects of the university.At present, Iowa does have stu¬dents on many of its committee,but the final authority in mattersaffecting students’ non-academic af¬fairs remain in the hands of theadministration. According to BillNewbrough, editor of The DailyIowan, thzre is not likely to be astrong movement among studentsto put the new constitution into ef¬fect, because the regulations gov¬erning students are relativelyliberal. not its business to work for stu¬dent deferments, and we’re not go¬ing to,” he stated. Thus, Chicagowill not request deferments forsome of its teaching assistants, asMIT has recently announced it willI do.Chicago’s policy apparently! makes it virtually unique amongj major institutions of its kind.O’Connell stated that he had con-l tacted eight to ten major univer¬sities before making his decisionand that none of them permittedstudents to receive certification oftheir status for draft purposeswithout allowing their school to in¬form local boards when their de¬ferment expired.Some universities, such as Har¬vard, do not even ask the student’spermission to release suchinformation.O’Connell said that a final state¬ment of the new policy will not bemade until sometime next week after he has discussed the problemwith the Faculty-Student AdvisoryCommittee on Campus StudentLife. He said that no decision hadyet been made on whether to noti¬fy the Selective Service of thepolicy change in a finalcommunication with them.Two Ky. Draft ResistersGet Maximum SentenceLOUISVILLE, Ky. (CPS) - Twoformer University of Kentuckystudents have each been given themaximum penalty of five years inprison and a $10,000 fine for refus¬ing to be inducted into the armedI services.U. S. District Judge James Gor¬don ordered the maximum penaltyfor Donald B. Pratt, 23, who hasbeen a leader in anti-war activitiesin the state, and Joseph T. Mulloy,23, a former anti-poverty workerfor the Southern Conference Edu¬cation Fund (SCEF). here has not been in close contactbefore. I think we’ll be able to getsome more coordinated effortfrom a slate than from indivi¬duals.”According to Still, “Most of thepeople running are not now in SG.Contact would depend upon thetype of people in SG. This pastyear, what NSA has done has beentotally independent of SG.“This past year, the leaders ofSG have been anti-NSA people be¬cause of the past CIA subsidiza-, tion of NSA. Presumably therewill be quite extensive contactnext year with the assembly.”IThe NSA Reform party is runninga slate of nine candidates. TheUniversity will send five delegatesand five alternates to the Con¬gress, elected at large throughoutthe University. JEFF BLUMLame DuckGIRLSf,Be aBunnyatLakeGenevaWhen you set aside yourbooks, don a pair of ears!Top earnings, fun andglamor are yours at thefabulous $10,000,000Playboy resort at LakeGeneva, Wisconsin. Findout how you can becomea Bunny at Lake Geneva.Make an appointmentat either of the followinglocations:ser.cae ,Y|Bunny MotherThe Playboy Club-HotelLake Geneva, WisconsinPhone: 414-248-8811Bunny MotherThe Playboy Club of Chicago116 East Walton StreetChicago, IllinoisPhone: 312—WH 4-3010 Why A GantShirt?Because a Gant shirt is more than some¬thing to hang a tie on. 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MmiM IStudent Black Power Pressure Leads To ReformsBy WALTER GRANTCollege Press ServiceATLANTA (CPS) - The blackpower movement, if successful,will be responsible for a completeoverhaul in the basic goals anddirections of the nation’s blackcolleges and universities.Student black power advocatesalready are applying unprece¬dented pressure on their adminis¬trations, and in many cases areachieving significant reforms. Thispressure can be expected to i n-crease tenfold within the nextyear, and many black administra¬tions, most of which are basicallyconservative, may find they willeither have to meet the students’demands or completely lose con¬trol of their schools.This trend has become evidentwithin recent weeks as studentdemonstrations have spread onblack campuses across the coun¬try, particularly in the South. Stu¬dents on several campuses haveactually taken over the adminis¬tration buildings, forcing the ad¬ministrators out.Many of the black studentdemonstrations to date have in¬volved issues dear to the heartsof college students everywhere,black or white. Black studentshave demanded more responsibili¬ty in the decisions which affecttheir education, due process in dis¬ciplinary matters, better food andhousing, an end to restrictivesocial regulations and compulsoryROTC, and the like.Center of PowerThe black college campuses, infact, have become the center notonly of the black power move¬ment, but of the student powermovement as well. Black studentswho are demanding more controlover their education have com¬pletely outclassed their whitecounterparts, in terms of bothplanned tactics and actions.But black students who are i n-volved in the traditional issuesconcerning students positive influ¬ence on our college. But I cannotgo along with those who talk aboutseparatism and create the allusionthat being black has some specialpowers. I cannot go along withthose who see violence as a toolunder certain circumstances.”Dr. Pitts thinks the militantblack power advocates “are frus¬trated, confused, and possiblyneurotic misfits.” He adds, “Ifrankly think Negro college cam-CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganHilarious Comedy of younglove.In the style of “Tom Jones”Boys are willing pypilsGirls are good teachers.fisJme is int/Hdlk.-SoiB Manhood!EBCMThe Mrtsn Asm* tar people m 1CSun Times 3***Students Rate $1.50 with I.D. CardGood every day but SaturdayWeekdays open 6, p.m. $at,a* Sun. 1:30. puses are being used by forceswho are not interested in thegrowth and development of Ne¬groes. They have another axe togrind, and they are trying to getyoung people and students to helpthem. They’re not interested ineducation.”‘Maximum Strength’Dr. Sam Nabrit, director of theSouthern Fellowship Fund here,and a former president of T e x a sSouthern University, says hethinks the black power movementalready has reached its maximumstrength on some black campuseswhere recent disturbances haveoccurred. “We will see it on prac¬tically every Negro campus, butit will run its course, and blackpower won’t take over our Negroinstitutions,” he said.Although these officials are pre¬dicting no changes in the long-range goals of black institutions,they do admit that black powermay have some temporary effectson their colleges. For one# thing, piany black in¬stitutions, "which in recent yearshave been trying to recruit morewhite students to their campuses,may find it difficult to interestwhite students in attending blackcolleges. The same may be true ofwhite faculty members, who com¬prise more than half of the facul¬ty at some black schools.Some white students and facultymembers “probably will be fright¬ened away by all this,” Dr. Hen¬derson said. “But we have notabandoned our goal of student in¬tegration. If white students wantto come to Clark College, we arenot going to close the door onthem as long as I’m sitting hfere.”No Place for WhitesMany of the black power mili- jtants, on the other hand, say therewill be no place for white studentsor faculty members after theyhave achieved certain reforms inblack colleges.In reaction to this attitude, thepresidents of the five colleges that compose the Atlanta Universitycomplex issued a joint statementlast year which put the adminis¬trators on record “as standing bytheir historical traditions and com¬mitment to the values and effica¬cy of the pursuit of education in aclimate free from racism, paro¬chialism, or ethic bias.” The state- THE MAROONment also said the colleges would“continue to employ teachers andstaff on the basis of individualqualifications and not on the basisof race, creed, or nationality. Students who meet academic stan-dards are welcome regardless oftheir ethnic qualifications.”Turn to Page 5DEADLINEFor the FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS ART CONTEST is extended to 3:00 P.M., April 26. Bring entries toMary Collins, Student Activities Office, Ida Noyes Hall, 2nd Floor.THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY • Music DirectorParitta-Fantasy for Cello & 16 PlayersJoel Krosnick • celloThe Soldier’s Tale • • StravinskyAdapted & translated by Karl ShapiroStaged by James O’Reillywith James Clouser Dance Group ShapeyFRIDAY • APRIL 19MANDEL HALL • 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY • APRIL 20Adm: $2.50; students, $1. All seats reserved.Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 University Ave.n that wiIdmixed-media, all-element,total environment calledDANCL 00 YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANOS IN AMERICARip out this ad now and bring it toCheetah this weekend for aSPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGOSTUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.SO IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL 212 VORTH MICHIGANgroup sales: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50-2000WIDE OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 8 P.M. Hickory is proud to have played an important and timely partin Donovan's success.We are also very proud thet we have again captured the original"Real Donovan" sound on "DONOVAN-LIKE IT IS"—withno extra electronic sounds to interfere with his straightforward, honest and magnificent style. There is but one "RealDonovan," and we feel that his beauty and his wisdom arereflected on the Hickory LP 143, "DONOVAN-LIKE IT ISRead the letters on the liner notes, you will get a feeling ofwhat Donovan means to both young and old alike.This LP is the finest accumulation of Donovan’s material todate Most of all. it is "DONOVAN-LIKE IT IS (Was AndEvermore Shall Bel." Donovan has something to say to theworld ... so. world . . . listen!Othor Donovan HICKORY LP t CATCH THC WIND DONOVANDONOVAN FAIRY TALCTHC RCAL DONOVANjj~z icAory«4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 19, 1968New Sfudent Group on Racism Proposes PetitionThe Ad Hoc Committee for aResponsible University, a group ofstudents and faculty concernedabout racism in American society,met yesterday to formulate proposals for changes in Universitypolicies that they say are basicallyracist. A petition, voted by the Commit¬tee Thursday, attacks present pol¬icy in four areas: housing, enroll-The petition contends that theUniversity has a social responsi¬bility to the community and itmust utilize its resources towardsthe solution of the problems of theBlack Power in College FutureContinud from Page 4dents have chagred. “We have acommitment to Negro students,and we must contribute to thestruggle young Negroes are hav¬ing in their search for identity,”Dr. Pitts says. “But this does notmean we have to make dramaticchanges in what we are doing.I’ve been working for power formy people all my life, but I’m notan Afro-American, I’m an Ameri¬can. The physical effort to iden¬tify as a Negro is not necessaryto me. You can look at me andtell I’m a Negro.”It’s GrowingDespite what black administra¬tions think about the long-range ef¬fects of black power on their col¬leges, there is little doubt thatblack power as a national move¬ment is growing.Many observers say the futureof the movement, and in essencethe future of black colleges, de¬pends on events more than any¬thing else.The latest, and undoubtedly themost dramatic, incident contribut-_ ^^ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313VIETNAM FILMSatHILLEL HOUSEEYE WITNESS: NORTHVIETNAM - James CameronA B.B.C. Film about thepeople of North Vietnam.alsoTHE SURVIVORS by Dr.Henry Mayer for The Com¬mittee of Responsibility:Civilians in Saigon, refugeecamps, and hospitals.THE WITNESSLife of Franz Jagerstaetter,German conscientious ob¬jector martyred by the Nazis.APRIL 217:30 and 9:30 PM.57/5 S. WoodlawnAdmission: Students $ 1.00Others $1.50 ing to the growth of black militan¬cy was the assassination of Dr.Martin Luther King. Many blackstudents have said the assassina¬tion proves non-violence simplydoes not work.Black administrators cannot con¬trol these types of events, and ifthey continue, the administratorsmay find they can no longer con¬trol their students. If this happens,black power will have a muchmore significant impact on blackcolleges than the administratorsare predicting. ghetto rather than in an attemptto push it away...The central demands are that:•There be no more' demolitionin Woodlawn until the present res¬idents, including students, are le¬gally relocated in adequate low-cost apartment housing built bythe University;•There be an end to secret re¬development planning and in¬stead, that the communtiy par¬ticipate in planning;•The University aggresively re-PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 cruit black students, especiallyfrom the Chicago area, and form apre-freshman summer institute tocompensate for the poor education?iven young black people;•Courses on Afro-American his¬tory, culture, and society be insti-uted, and that presently requiredcourses in the social sciences andhumanities incorporate material on black history and culture; and•The University facilities beopen to the community, and thatprograms be developed to this endwith the help of the residents ofHyde Park and Woodlawn. As afirst step, there should be no I Dcheck at Ida Noyes and BartlettGymnasium.The group planned to begin cir¬culating the petition today.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYI300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9III-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED-FREE TECHNICAL ADVICESales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’sTape Recorders-Phonos-AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges-Tubes-BatteriesI07o discount to students with ID cardsJUUUUUUUUUUUULPJU^ a a Q OJULOJUUUtfFor The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAiLY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAs Low As $6.95 per Day - All I968 Models(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH An epic drama of adventure and exploration!v. Nfc.MGM rMHvti STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION2001: a space odysseywmxrKEIR DUllEA GARY LOCKWOOD STANLEY KUBRICK ... ARTHUR C CLARKE STANLEY KUBRICKSUPER PANAVISION ... METROCOLORRoberto Rosselini’s IL GENERALE DELLA ROVERERossel ini examines the nature of truth and reality in a masterpiece of Italian cinema with Vittorio de Sica,7:15 and 9:30 in Cobb. 75C. Tonight. Doc Films.FOTA 1968 GRAND OPENINGTOWER MUSIC forCarillon and Brass Quintetmusic of Giovanni Gabrielli, Johann Sebastian Bach,Paul Hindemith, Easley BlackwoodSunday April 21 Daniel Robins - Carilloneur3.30 . p.m.Rockefeller Memorial ChapelIn case of inclement weather, this programwill be played on Sunday, April 28 at 3:30 p.m.F OA Celebration T Aof Our ArfApril 19, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor ..., Michael SeidmanNews Editor John Moscow jPhotographic Editor David Travis IEditorial Assistants: Caroline Heck, Barbara Hurst, Timothy S. Kelley, Jerry Lapi-dus, Mary Sue Leighton, John Recht, Judie Resell, Paula Szewczyk, John SiefertWeekend and Literary Associates Todd Capp, T. C. Fox, Mary Sue Leighton, JefPervson Holden Schnitzer IV, Jessica Siegel, Michael SorkinStaff: Ed Birnbaum, Carolyn Daffron, Wendy Glockner, John Hannigan, RichardKimmel, Slade Lander, Alfie Marcus, Bruce Norton, Bill Nowlin, Joe Schirmer,Rema Shore, Rob Skeist, Harvey Wasserman Literary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergEditor Emeritus David A. SatterWise RemovalChicago’s dramatic reversal of its Selective Servicepolicy yesterday comes as a welcome surprise. Bysevering its last real link with the draft, the Universityhas finally become neutral in this area where individualchoice must reign. And by acting for the benefit of itsstudents instead of the United States government, ithas finally begun to fulfill its self-proclaimed role insociety.This is not the millennium. But it most emphatical¬ly is a step in the right direction. Dean O’Connell de¬serves congratulations for beginning the long and dif¬ficult journey. 'And where are we supposed to shoot them if they haven't done anything?'Mr. WilsonTo what extent John T. Wilson, when he succeedsProvost Levi next year in the new post of vice-presi¬dent and dean of faculties, can accomplish the goals hepresents in today’s Maroon interview, will make forinteresting observation.In these days of increasing dependence on the gov¬ernment by educational institutions, it is imperativethat whatever financial assistance is accepted be with¬out unwanted strings. Universities are clearly becom¬ing increasingly entwined in the government-industri¬al-educational complex in that, because of their depen¬dence on government funds, they are doing more ofits research and teaching in line with the desires ofthe complex.Chicago, with the establishment of the IndependenceFund, for example, has made it clear that it is resistingthe trend. Mr. Wilson’s program of accepting federalmoney so long as few strings are attached could beworkable, but some of his statements — particularly onclassified research — need clarification.Nevertheless, we congratulate him on his appoint¬ment with the hope in mind that both he and Chicagowork against the possibility of federal fingers in edu¬cation here.Bowl VictoryAt one University dorm we know the residentsspent that last week denouncing the forthcoming ap¬pearance of a Chicago team on TV’s College Bowl.Their complaints were very well founded: academicfootball is a degrading way to raise scholarship funds.But Sunday afternoon those same students packed thedorm’s television room to loudly cheer the Chicagofoursome and boo the virgins from Immaculata.Maybe we ought to send the University cheer¬leaders along next time. ... Student Government (SG) issponsoring a meeting in the Rey¬nolds Club this afternoon to dis¬cuss the University’s disciplinarysystem. The meeting was calledto protest an action in which astudent, Thomas T. McCroskey,71, was forced to move fromThompson House across the Mid¬way to Burton-Judson.The sponsors of the meetingstate, in a leaflet passed aroundcampus advertising the meeting,that McCroskey’s case proves theinjustice inherent in the Univer¬sity’s disciplinary system. Univer¬sity officials, both in the adminis¬tration and on low levels in thehousing system disagree with theSG analysis, however.The story that the administra¬tion offers is that McCroskey re¬peatedly broke rules of thehousing system, including somefederal and state laws, and in¬convenienced his roommate to anintolerable extent. While someadministrators privately agreewith some of the SG charges,they add that there are otherfacts which change the situation.ACCORDING TO administra¬tive sources, McCroskey was inthe habit of having his girlfriendsleep over for the night. Hechased his roommate out whenthe girl was present. MichaelWiggan, resident head of Thomp¬son, said that he warned McCros¬key twice aboqt violations of thehours rules and asked him tokeep his girlfriend out of thedorm during non-visiting hours.The assistant resident head, Rich- JQHN MOSCOWDorm the PlaceOpen Door Policy?ard Murray, ’69, also spoke toMcCroskey about the matter.In the first few weeks of thewinter quarter, however, Murrayfound McCroskey’s roommateasleep in the lounge at 4 a.m.,because McCroskey’s girlfriendwas over for the night. Murrayknocked at the door of the roomwhere McCroskey and his girlwere sleeping, and, receiving noanswer, entered. He did not wakethem up, but simply dropped thematter.LATER IN THE morning Wig¬gan, who had not been informedby Murray of what was goingon, saw the roommate in thelounge and went into the roomwithout knocking. When Wigganfound the lovers in bed he or¬dered the girl to leave and re¬ported the incident to Director ofStudent Housing, Edward Turk-ington, who put the two on asocial probation. That meant thatneither could entertain visitors intheir rooms.One of the SG charges againstTurkington was that he had actedcapriciously in punishing McCros¬key. According to the roommate,however, the offense was rathermore serious. He said that Mc¬Croskey, together with anothermale student and the girl hadbeen smoking pot in the room.The roommate first made hischarge when he was speaking toTurkington, who then referredhim to the Disciplinary Commit¬tee. There he said that three peo¬ple in the room at the time hadbeen using drugs, and that other people in the dormitory were alsousing them. As a result of thistestimony, where many nameswere given, several other studentswere called in for questioning. Atleast one of these, according toreliable sources, was suspendedfor a quarter.WHEN MCCROSKEY w a scalled before the DisciplinaryCommittee he denied having usedany drugs. Since there was noone who would testify to the contrary, the Committee found itselfin a position where it had to ac¬quit McCroskey, despite a fairlysubstantial feeling on the part ofCommittee members that hemight not be telling the truth.McCroskey, in addition to beingon social probation for the firstincident, is now also on discipli¬nary probation. He has also beenmoved into Vincent house in B-J,both to remove him from Thomp¬son House and to put him in asingle room where his peccadilloswill bother fewer people.Mr. Moscow is the NewsEditor of The Maroon.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, andof Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800 Ext3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of chargeSubscriptions by mail $6 per year. Nonprofit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., putUshers of Collegiate Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 19, 1968April 19, 1968 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwoAND NOW, INDIANA!After an incredible three weeks full of turbulence and Natural Signs, the candi¬dates enter the rippled waters of the Hoosier State in order to engage in a GreatBattle of Personalities, Hot versus Cool, Mind over Matter,Or: Clean Gene Meets the Machine. By Robert Factor.IN THE PAST THREE weeks the politi¬cal campaign passed through severalrapids and went all the way over two wa¬terfalls. McCarthy won in Wisconsin. Ken¬nedy entered the race. Johnson withdrew.Martin Luther King was assassinated.Riots broke out across the country. Anopen housing bill was passed. And thehope of peace in Vietnam has begun tospread.The spotlight, as a result, has been takenfrom the political stage. The President has,it seems (at least from the general feelingof many people if not on this campus) re¬ceived a fair amount of popular sympathyand support for his conduct since his with¬drawal, though it appears he is now talk¬ing out of both sides of his mouth. Andcombined with this turning away from pol¬itics, a more general desensitization tocurrent events has occurred during thepast week as a result of the “overload” ofevents at the beginning of the month.Therefore, in this time of reflection, it .* might be good to look again at what hap¬pened in Wisconsin.In an article in the last issue of WEEK¬END, I described the working of the stu¬dent canvassing operation in Wisconsin. Al¬though the structure and functioning ofthat operation may have appeared some¬what idealistic, the fact of the matter wasthat it worked. Due to the withdrawal ofthe President, it is difficult to interpretthe significance of Senator McCarthy’s plu¬rality; however, over 80 percent of the vot¬ers of the state did cast ballots on elec¬tion day, and this is, to an extent, attribut¬able to the massive voter canvassing.McCarthy’s strategy was formulated byRichard Goodwin, 36, Jerry Eller, 42, long¬time administrative assistant to McCarthy,and by the candidate himself. Planningwas very “inspirational” and flexible:while operating from an overall generalplan, the definite activities were rarelyset more than one to two days in advance.A small professional advance staff, augr mented by several hard working students,handled the actual arrangements. Thingsforeign to most students — arranging forchartered buses, planes, hotel rooms andwork space, typewriters, telephones, andtelegraph facilities for the press — werelearned quickly and handled almost en¬tirely by students near the end.The press relations were, near the elec¬tion, handled almost exclusively by stu¬dents. While a few members of the reg¬istered press corps (which numbered over200 near the end) became frustrated bythe sight of so many young people, moststated they had never seen a press opera¬tion run with such smoothness, courtesyand efficiency. What they lacked in tacticsand expertise they soon acquired, and theywere real people.Goodwin was McCarthy’s chief speech-writqr and researcher. He has served in asimilar capacity for John Kennedy and hehas since left to work for Robert Kennedy.This will probably be McCarthy’s last ma¬jor defection. The research staff consisted, in large part, of recent graduates of col¬leges and graduate schools, many of whomwere working politically for McCarthy andat the same time making a personal con¬frontation with the draft. They were cer¬tainly not the most experienced speechwrit-ers a candidate could have, but they pro¬vided precisely what McCarthy needed:people to come up with ideas that Mc¬Carthy could work through himself andpresent to his audiences.McCarthy rarely read any speech; rath¬er he spoke from bare notes and fromhis mind. The transcripts of his speechesoften do not read well, but the experienceof hearing a speech gives one a feelingthat real communication is taking place.Anyone who saw McCarthy’s half-hour paidpolitical announcement over national tele¬vision the evening before the WisconsinPrimary knows this. Stepping before livecameras, surrounded by a small audience,and with a hastily raised $75,000 and hisown future at stake, McCarthy spoke with-.... Continued on Page ThreejU ' * r >' a » * * cu>, . A,CULTURE VULTURETHIS SUNDAY, weather permitting, thecarillon of Rockefeller Chapel will ringin the opening of the Festival of the Arts,circa 1968, at the University. At 3:30 thelawns of the Chapel and neighboringWoodward Court will be covered with mu¬sic lovers and FOTAphiles listening tomusic of Gabrielli, Bach, Hindemith andBlackwood arranged for Carrilon andBrass, and hailing the official grand open¬ing of FOTA '68. But even though theopening is on Sunday, art will go on be¬fore, not waiting for formality.The night before, the Festival of theArts will be sponsoring with Doc Films,an appearance on campus of the famousmovie director, John Ford. (See Movies).Nor will the Beaux Arts Masquerade Ball,which is the Official Closing Event, bethe last event of FOTA '68. After the lightshow is packed up, the people get out oftheir costumes, the decorations are takendown and Mahogony Hall Blues Bandpacks up for home, the Festival will stillgo on. The Florence James Adams PoetryReading Contest will not have its finalsfor a week from that day. The PerrinLowrey Memorial Prize in Writing willcontinue to accept entries until May 15.And Paul D’Andrea’s original play, TheyReached for his Gun, will not be per¬formed by University Theater until theweekend of May 17. (D’Andrea’s play isbeing produced already at Hull House un¬der the name of These French).It just goes to prove that you can’t stopand don’t have to start art on this campus.But the purpose of the Festival of the Artsis not to start art on this campus. Thepurpose of FOTA is what this year’stheme is named, The Celebration of ourArt. And so our art will be celebratedall during the FOTA weeks from April20 through May 4 with seminars in CobbStudent Faculty Lounge in the afternoonsat 3:30, with concerts, contests, happen¬ings and harping and all sorts of artistic(though unalliterative) events. Let us notforget that there will be free chalk andlemonade given out in Hutchinson Courton Monday 22 for campus artists andaspiring artists to draw flowers on thecampus walks. Let us not forget that thispractice will be carried on for all ofFOTA providing the administration doesnot get turned off by any undesirablegraffitti that could result from this en¬terprise. Let us not forget any of theFOTA events and let us check the Bulle¬tin boards and the calendar below, andthose being distributed, for FOTA thingsthat are happening and will happen andlet us celebrate our art.MoviesJohn Ford, one of the great Americandirectors and the subject of Doc FilmsTuesday night series this quarter, will beon campus this weekend. He will speak inQuantrell Auditorium Saturday night ac¬companied by one of his own favorite filmsThe Long Voyage Home. All this happensat 7:15 and is obviously the film eventhere of the quarter. The event is being co¬sponsored by FOTA and Doc Films.Meanwhile movies will be shown as usu¬al on campus. Friday night Roberto Ros¬sellini’s General Della Rovere is in Cobbat 7:15 and 9:15 (Doc Films). Rossellini isone of the few masters of the cinema, and,to paraphrase Susan Sontag, the only onealmost totally unseen in this country. Thisfilm is a study about modern sainthood,takes place during the Italian resistence,and stars Rossellini’s fellow neorealist di¬rector Vittoria De Sica.Burton-Judson is showing Alain Resnais’Hiroshima Mon Amour at 7:45, 9:30 and 11in the Judson dining room. Resnais reap¬pears Sunday night in B-J, this time at7:30 and absolutely FREE with Night andFog, his famous short about the concentra¬tion camps.Monday the Blue Gargoyle brings fur¬ther experimentals from the Aardvark.Tuesday at Cobb, Doc Films brings twomore by Ford: The Quiet Man at 7:15 andWings of Eagles at 9:15. Wednesday at the same place Doc brings Ron Rice’s extra-long experimental The Flower Thief alongwith several experimentals by NormanMcLaren, the Canadian cartoonist. On thesame program and in Cinemascope is OttoPreminger’s River of No Return whichboasts Marilyn Monroe among otherattributes.Off campus and downtown Stanley Ku¬brick’s long and large 2001: A Space Odys¬sey is occuring at the Cinestage. Andacross the street from each other are twofilms by Jack Smight, No Way To Treat ALady (with Rod Steiger) and The SecretWar of Harry Frigg (with Paul Newman).Our harried Maroon film critic (now in¬volved in a driectorial effort of his own)ANY FILM that calls itself 2001: A SpaceOdyssey and begins with “The Dawn ofMan’’ has got to be long. This one notonly is, but feels that way as well. TheStanley Kubrick super-opus which openedlast week at the Cinestage runs for 160minutes, not counting the intermission.It took four years to produce, almost allof that under a fantastic veil of secrecy.There were constant tales of locked studiodoors, boats with private editing roomsto bring the film from England to NewYork, even a private railroad car so thatnobody would touch or see the film enroute from New York to Hollywood. Noone had any idea what the film wasabout, or even what it would look like.Until a few weeks ago, there was a fairlygood question as to whether 2001 reallydid exist.It was definitely a film which had theearmarks of disaster about it. Kubrick isa director who is at his best achievinga delicate balance between the comic andthe serious and at showing this balance’seffect on the American mind. It is notaccidental that his best work is Lolita.When he turned to spectacle, taking overSpartacus from Anthony Mann when thatdirector fought with the film’s star KirkDouglas, the result was disaster. When heturned to vicious satire, the infamous Dr.Strangelove, the result was electric butsomehow disappointing. What one remem¬bers most about that film are the spotswhere the comic becomes real, whenStrangelove styistically and thematicallyapproaches Lolita.2001, with its myriad effects and pseudotheological theme, seemed the furthestthing from what Kubrick is best at. Ku¬brick deliberately begins the film with thekind of mixture for which he is famous.The earth rises above the moon in thedarkness of space (all of this in whatwe are assured is perfect perspective).On the stereophonic soundtrack whichsurrounds the audience we hear nothingless than the opening strands of AlsoSprach Zarathustra! “Camp!” exclaimedsomebody near me. No, I thought, Ku¬brick!—grinning broadly and thinking wewould be all right.Unfortunately Kubrick was not reallycapable of keeping this sort of mockingdistance from his effects. God knows that assures us that Smight is one of the fewyoung competent directors in Holloywood.TheaterThe Last Stage, one of the oldest com¬munity theater groups in the city, willclose a four-weekend run of William’sThe Glass Menagerie this weekend.This version is directed by Sid Passinand features several University studentsand faculty members. Performances beginat 8:30 Friday and Saturday evenings andat 7:30 Sunday. Tickets are $2.50 for allperformances; student tickets at $1.50 areavailable for Friday and Saturday. Reser¬vations may be made by calling BU8-1717.Go to see Four Modern One-Acts tonight(or Saturday and Sunday nights) at 8:30:he tries. When, after two reels (twentyminutes) of film, Kubrick finally does in¬troduce a human being, it is a space sci¬entist-bureaucrat asleep in a space shipwhile the screen in front of him shows afilm — in correct cinemascope ratio.Meanwhile the stewardess is shown tip¬toeing down the corridor, held to the floorby “Gravity Grip Shoes” with little Pan-Am wings. When, one reel and not muchdialogue later, they arrived at the spacestation, we discover Bell Telephone, HiltonHotels, and an Earthlight Room run byHoward Johnson (a lovely touch that —since everybody knows that Howard John¬sons are roadside places and that airport— and surely spaceport — restaurants aremuch more expensive if not any better.)But hard as he tries, it becomes obviousthat Kubrick really is in love with hissets, really is amazed that he can makeeverything seem so plausible and real,and that even when he is joking it is thesame cleverness that permits all thosespecial effects to happen in the first place.And unless one is especially intrigued bygimmick after gimmick, everything tendsto become tedium. At least until the in¬termission. Because after the intermission,that is, after about an hour and a halfof movie, Kubrick introduces two newelements: conflict (or as some people liketo call it, plot) and theme (or, again, asothers have it, meaning). It’s what wewere waiting for all along.When Kubrick finally does get his plotgoing, it goes along rather well. The con¬flict becomes one of the standard filmplots: a single, one, not especially heroicman against the elements; the elementsin this case consisting of, among otherthings, a rather emotional computer bythe name of HAL. Kubrick is at his ab¬solute best when Bowman (the man,played by Keir Dullea) attempts to dis¬connect HAL. The computer, which isequipped with a voice, tries to dissuadehim. Seeing this is impossible, and re¬alizing his cells are one by one becom¬ing nonfunctional, he begins quite ration¬ally to talk about losing his mind.But the scene doesn’t last long and Ku¬brick is soon into an epilogue where hetries to tie all those effects we werewatching for the first hour and a halfinto one neat little (or big) package. He Chekhov’s The Bear, directed by JoelCope, with Don Swanton and Annette Fern.Brecht’s The Exception and the Rule, di¬rected by Annette Fern with Ray Stoodard,the Undeniable Miscellany man. Pinter’schilling Dumbwaiter, directed by RogerDodds (whom you will recall as the choco¬late cream soldier) with Gerry Fisher andTom Busch. And last, The Peacemaker,written and directed by Chicago studentGareth Mann Sitz. Tickets are $1.50; stu¬dents, $1 available at the Reynold’s clubdesk. Sponsored by University Theater andFOTA.Other productions by U-T this quarterwill include The Importance of BeingContinued on Page Threedoes it through a very fancy, and at timesvery stunning, neo-theological twist. Dul¬lea lives in the world of post-scientific manand on his death bed we see him (andhe quite literally sees himself) in thesame position in which we saw prehistor¬ic man: It’s all done so neatly, too. Allthose sounds we heard earlier, all thatlittle stuff about “the dawn of man” com¬mencing when one neanderthal used abone to banish another, that strange ob¬lique slab at the beginning, all that lackof sex. Kubrick brings it all together inthe last half-hour. Rather like Anouil’sBeckett, the very neatness of the workbecomes one of its faults.Technically 2001 is quite an achieve¬ment. Not merely for those special effectsIn the context of Cinerama, they wereprobably the easiest stuff to film. Ciner¬ama’s natural distortion does not badlyaffect the spaceships, but people look verystrange unless you sit in the dead centerof the theater.Kubrick has done marvels with hissound. While it still at times seems verycontrived, he has managed to play hisscenes so that his actors for the most partremain in the same relative position onthe screen. Thus one does not hear anactor’s voice at first coming from theright part of the theatre and then im¬mediately from the left when he is notsupposed to have moved at all. His musicis also contrapuntal enough to the imagesso that where the sound comes from doesnot matter. In his final climatic expan¬sion scene Kubrick achieves what mustbe the only truly well-realized mixed-media coordination this participant hasever attended.But for all this, the film (like some ofits parts) keeps receding from the mind.What it lacks is real solid substance. Onewould like to blame its ultimate failureon Arthur C. Clarke and his screenplay.Clarke seems quite competent on thingslike the shape of computers and the pos¬sibility of survival in a vacuum, but whenit comes to theqlogy or dialogue, Clarkehas a decidedly second-rate mind. Butthen again, as Clarke keeps pointing out,it was Kubrick who sought him out inthe first place.THEATER2001: A Vacuous Odyssey2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE April 19, 1968WISCONSINContinued from Page 1out prepared text for a half hour abouthimself: his own background — personal,academic, and political — his conceptionof the Office of the President, and how hewould fit there.One can know McCarthy, and one getsto know him through that sort of commu¬nication. He comes across as a sensitive,real person and as such, his style differsfrom most other politicians.A study in contrasts took place the Sun¬day before the Wisconsin election whenRichard Nixon held a “reception” in theSheraton-Schroeder Hotel, McCarthy’s Wis¬consin headquarters. Invited by advertise¬ments in the daily newspapers billing “AnOpportunity to Meet the Nixon Family —Free Admission,” several thousand Wiscon¬sin Republicans queued up for three hoursin the hotel ballroom, much as familieswait to visit department store Santa’s atChristmas, to shake hands with Nixon, hiswife and two daughters, and David Eisen¬hower. From a distance, it appeared thecandidate was the only one wearing make¬up. This then, was old time politics in ac¬tion: none of the people who were presentactually met or communicated with theircandidate, or discovered anything abouthim, and it all seemed ludicrous.The key word of McCarthy’s process issensitivity, which is evidenced by muchmore than his frequent use of poetry inspeeches and his own skill as a poet. Hisconception of the President is that of aman who is sensitive to the feelings of thepeople of the country and helps them towork through their feelings and to helpthem to achieve their desires.“This country does not so much needleadership,” he says, “because the poten¬tial for leadership in a free country mustexist in every man and woman. He mustbe prepared to be a kind of channel forthese desires and those aspirations, per¬haps give some direction to the movementof the country largely by the way of set¬ting people free.”As the Wisconsin election neared, mixedfeelings began to arise in members of thestudent staff. They were pleased by theresults of their work, but began to realizethat following Wisconsin, their candidatecould no longer be a personification of is¬sues, but would need to compete againstother candidates on a personal basis. Theybecame fearful of working against the po¬litical organizations of Robert Kennedy andPresident Johnson, and were also worriedthat a possible professionalization of theMcCarthy campaign would mean that theywould be replaced.When Lyndon Johnson withdrew, workersat first could not believe what had hap¬pened. Second, they felt a strange sense ofpower, that they had played a final role incausing the President’s action, and were FOTA: Festival of the Arts 1968Saturday, April 20LECTURE - FILM - DEMON¬STRATION 7:15 p.m. Quan-trell Auditorium: In conjunc¬tion with Documentary Films,John Ford will talk on cine¬ma with a showing of hismovie Long Voyage Homebased on a play by EugeneO'Neil.THEATER: 8:30 p.m., ReynoldsClub Thatter. Chakov, TheBear; Brocht, The Exceptionand the Rule; Pinter, TheDumb Waiter; Sitz, The Peace-Makers.Sunday, April 21CONCERT: 3:30 p.m., RockefellerChapel. Carillon and Brassrecital with works by Bach,Gabrielli, Blackwood and Hin¬demith. Daniel Robins, caril-loneurMonday, April 22OPENING: Faculty Art Exhibit,Cobb Gallery.HAPPENING: 10 p.m., Hutchin¬son Court. Flower drawing onthe walks, free chalk andlemonade.OPENING: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. FOTA SEMINARS.Topics to be advertised sep¬arately and announced dailythrough the Festival Weeks.Refreshments.Tuesday, April 23SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.CONCERT: 9:40 p.m. Secretplace. Details cannot be dis¬closed—watch out. Wednesday, April 24SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.LECTURE: (FOTA and EnglishDeportment ShakespearesImaginative Language, TBJSpencst. Ida Nnyes Library,4:00.Thursday, April 25SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.CONCERT: 8 p.m., INH CloisterClub. Joseph Jarman andCompany. Contemporary Jazz.Admission 50 cents.Friday, April 26SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.SEMINAR: 7:30, Cobb S-F Lounge.Artist, Teacher, Dealer withVirginio Ferrari, Harold Hay-don, and Marjorie Dell.Sunday, April 28WORKSHOP: 3 p.m., Ida NoyesLibrary and 8 p.m., BreastedHall. Poetry workshop andreadings with George Star-buck and other Mid-Westpoets. Paul Carrell in evening.Monday, April 29SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.READING: 7 p.m., Ida NoyesLibrary. Indigenous ChicagoPoets.READING: 7 p.m., Ida NoyesLibrary. Daryl Hine, poet-in-residence. Tuesday, April 30SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.Wednesday, May 1HAPPENING: Around the mainquadrangle flagpole aroundnoon or whenever.SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.CONCERT: 8:30 p.m., ReynoldsClub S. Lounge. Folk musicby Angela Lee, Joe Gordon,and Joel Weber. Refreshments.Thursday, May 2SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m., Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.READING: 8 p.m., Ida NoyesEast Lounge. Dennis Schmitzreadinghis poetry.CONCERT: 8 p.m., Ida NoyesLibrary. Todd Capp and Com-panyU)Friday, May 3WORKSHOP: 12 noon, HutchinsonCourt. U-High Jazz Group.SEMINAR: 3:30 p.m. Cobb S-FLounge. Refreshments.CONTEST: 3 p.m. Bond Chapel.Preliminaries for the FlorenceJames Adams Poetry Read¬ing Contest. Finals May 10,same time and place.BALL: 8:30 p.m. - 1 a.m., IdaNoyes Hall. Beaux Arts Mas¬querade Ball. Mahogany HallBlues Band. Light Show.THEATER: 8:30 p.m., MandelHall. Blackfriars present amusical version of Kafka'sAmerika. Will run all week¬end.The Strolling Players perform alternoon in Hutchinson Court and on the steps of Rockefeller Chapel.(Fractured medieval drama.) . .Deadline for the art contests is April 26. The deadline for the Perrin Lowrey Memorial Prize in Writingis May 15.FOTA will co-sponsor Paul D'Andrea's play produced here May 17, 18, and 19.somewhat awed by that feeling. Finally,they became exuberant at the new possi¬bilities which were now open.But Senator McCarthy, in a fine displayof his coolness under pressure, immediate¬ly issued a well-thought out statement ex¬pressing his empathy with the difficulty in-herant in the President’s action, and hishope that the public could now make ameaningful judgement among the remain¬ing candidates. He also commented thatthis action really did not change his planssignificantly. While some strength mayhave been removed from the war issue asfar as President Johnson is concerned(though as of this writing, the war haschanged little and is still an issue in thecountry; with the probable entry of HubertHumphrey into the race, the war will onceagain be a central issue among candi¬dates), it sharpened the contest betweenKennedy and McCarthy.And this contest then becomes one overnot only issues but over style, over notonly content but process. Robert Kennedyis very much the show-business, old style,distant politician, employing conventionaltactics of campaign organization. He seesthe Presidency simply as the seat of pow¬er.The fears of McCarthy’s student workersthat they may be replaced were notfounded. In many respects, they are nowprofessionals in the sense of being able toget the work done, though certainly not soin the sense of being professional politicalworkers, where the means becomes theend. McCarthy’s supporters are put off bythe arrogance and opportunism of Kennedyand his money-run campaign. They seeKennedy as yet another old style politi¬cian who has sold himself in order to getpowerIn the terrible period following the mur¬der of Dr. King, while Kennedy chartereda plane for Mrs. King’s roundtrip betweenAtlanta and Memphis, Mrs. McCarthy wasat the King home in Atlanta answering thetelephone. The significant difference nowbetween Kennedy and McCarthy is one ofpersonal style.As of now, it appears that both McCarthyand Kennedy will be in the race all the wayto the convention. In Indiana, Kennedy hasalready begun campaigning, and McCar¬thy will begin inearnest on Monday.Indiana Governor Branigan, original¬ly entered in the primary as a stand-in forPresident Johnson, and now a favoriteson, will probably win a plurality of thevotes. If the fever pitch of enthusiasm atKennedy rallies is any indication of thereal sentiment of the voters, Kennedy willcome in second. In 1960, John Kennedyfailed to win in Indiana, possibly the mostracist state in the North, but the religiousissue, also significant then, will be weakernow, and in any case, will be workingagainst both Kennedy and McCarthy.The feeling in the McCarthy camp is thatKennedy is spending fantastic amounts ofmoney, it, together with what some Hoos- iers may think of as the raucous supportfor Bobby, may also backfire and alienatea large group of people by May 7. Whileof course optimistic, McCarthy people donot feel that loss in the Indiana primarywould put an end to McCarthy’s chancesfor nomination.Still McCarthy must rely on popular sup¬port. He is looking ahead to the May 14primaries in Oregon and South Dahota,and he is also counting on acquiring popu¬lar support by August through exposure tothe national public. McCarthy’s challengeto debate Kennedy is the first recent effortto this end. McCarthy’s off-the-cuff TVstyle has proven very attractive. He is acool personality in a cool medium. Ken¬nedy seems to be better at loud and emo¬tional speeches; he will do best by barn¬storming by jet across the country. Mc¬Carthy has hired Madison avenue’s crea¬tive TV agency Carl Aly. His mass popularappeal will come through television. If hecan combine this appeal moving downthrough the people with the grass rootsupport he has moving up from them, hejust may be able to convince the Demo¬crats that he is the winner, and failing thathe can certainly have a great deal tosay in deciding who the Democratic nom¬inee will be.If McCarthy fails to get the nominationin August and it goes to Humphrey, bar¬ring a radical change in Humphrey, noth¬ing will have been changed from lastNovember. If Kennedy gets the nomina¬ tion, McCarthy’s workers will most likelysupport him (especially against an op¬ponent such as Nixon) by virtue of hispresent stand on the various issues, butthey will be giving up the virtues of Mc¬Carthy’s own process, and as such, willhave lost quite a lot.VultureContinued from Page 2Earnest; Camino Real; and They Reachedfor His Gun (by Paul D’Andrea). TheRenaissance Players will sometime pre¬sent Old Wives’ Tale, directed by AnnetteFern.MUSICRalph Shapey will conduct the Con¬temporary Chamber Players in two con¬certs, Friday and Saturday night, at 8:30P.M. at Mandel Hall. The program willinclude two works, probably never beforeheard at the University.One is a world premiere performance ofShapey’s own Partita Fantasie for Celloand 16 Players. Commissioned by theKoussevitsky Foundation, the work wascompleted last Spring for performance bythe CCP. It is a companion piece toShapey’s Partita for Violin which wascommissioned by the University as partof its 75th anniversary celebration.The Cello Partita is in four movements.The cello plays against the other instru¬ments, who are divided into four separatefunctional groups. The cello part isdesigned for a virtuoso performer, whomust play counter to the 16 otherinstruments.Joel Krosnick, Professor of Music atAmherst, will join the CCP to give thework its premiere performance.Histoire Du Soldat, written by Stravin¬sky in Switzerland during Warld War Iwill be heard after entermission. Themusic is accompanied by a satiric, bittertext describing the wanderings of Every-• man, searching for his lost soul. The poetKarl Shapiro, who is poet currently at theUniversity of Illinois Circle Campus, wascommissioned by the University to pre¬pare a new translation for the CCP pro¬duction. James O’Reilly will narrate, andhis own voice will be heard simultaneouslyon recordings of the parts of the threecharacters.The three character roles, the Devil, thePrincess, and the Soldier, will be dancedby Norman Walker, Donna Baldwin, andJames Clouser, of Julliard, who also didthe choreography. This is the earliest ofStravinsky’s works to use popular danceforms—satirically.Tickets for this unusual and lively con¬cert may be reserved at the music officein Lexington Hall. Admission is $2.50;$1.00 for students.April 19, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3Tire SpecialforVW Owners5.60 x 15 OO6.85 x 15 *00 + taxper tireWhitewalls $1.50 additionalHyde Park Car Wash1330 E. 53rd St. MI3-1715RASHOMON directed by KUROSAWASaturday, April 20, Soc Sci 122, 7:30, 754RENAISSANCEPLAYERStryoutsPeele’s Old Wive’s Taledirected by Annette FernSaturday April 20Cobb 10110:00 am to 5:00 pmCopies of the play available on reserveat the Modern Language Reading Room. GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food10% Student DiscountDaily 3:30 - 10:00CLOSED WEDNESDAYHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPER10% student discount on table service5% student discount on take-out serviceHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersPlay tex* invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent... it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45 % more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero! m _ rSWftU,-, I' playSx |tampons■ (■of.F O T AA Celebration of Our ArtWEEKEND MAGAZINE April 19, 1968• > • ■ - ■Letters to the Editors of The MaroonOn Racism . . .Marcus K. Felson, in his letterto The Maroon April 16, arguesthat whites should not contributebail for “Negro oppressors” arrest¬ed in the recent riots. But the morethan two thousand black people as¬signed bail as high as $5000 forcurfew violation, disorderly con¬duct, or looting, are not oppres¬sors at all, bpt victims of a judi¬cial system supposedly designed toprotect their rights.No Chicago student would have tostay in Cook County Jail for asmuch as a single day without bail.To deny a black person who has nomoney his liberty while awaitingtrial is thus a clear injustice. Oftenit means the loss of a job or theabsence of the head of a familyfor an extended period — eventhough the person arrested has notbeen proven guilty of anything. Thisin itself justifies the contributionof bail for those arrested.BUT THE arrests raise more sub¬stantive issues than just that ofequality in the judicial procedures.Those who loot stores are in mostcases only taking back what thewhite storeowners have stolen fromthem through overcharging, creditmanipulation, and misrepresenta¬tion. White society cannot exploitthe black community, repress its ef¬forts to overcome that exploitation,and still expect to set the rulesfor the black liberation struggle.The riots are not only the nat¬ural outgrowth of the failure of themovement for “Negro rights” butare also seemingly the only politi¬ cal effective response to white op¬pression. Whites who suggest, asFelson does, that it is the rioterswho are oppressing black people,are denying the institutional rac¬ism of the United States, and fail¬ing to come to terms with the op¬pressor in themselves.DAVID KLAFTER, ’69*JOE LUBENOWDepartment of Philosophy• •I believe Marcus K. Felson(The Maroon, April 16) missedthe point of the collection of bailmoney for black people arrestedduring the strife-tom weekendfollowing Dr. King’s assassina¬tion.This bail constitutes no rewardfor criminality unless one as¬sumes guilt before the trial. Noone deserves to be detained un¬necessarily unless proven guiltyby due process of law. Oneneedn’t have a so-called bleedingheart for the poor to apreciatethis elementary point of justice.In view of the unusually high bailset for these people, it seems rea¬sonable that people with a socialconscience would want to com¬pensate for this abuse ofauthority.If the judicial operations oflast summer are of any predic¬tive value, we can expect that anumber of black people willbe incarcerated for periods ofweeks and months and will losetheir jobs for lack of bail funds.Thus the poverty and bitternes Of the ghettos will be exacerbatedby the courts’ strategy.I sympathize with Mr. Felson’sdesire to do justice, but I feelthat his wrath is somewhat mid-directed. The preservation andimprovement of society would bebetter served if my Congressmanwere in jail, rather than some ofthe black people who now idlethere.• •Mr. Felson’s letter to The Ma¬roon (April 16) gives me realconfidence in our judicial sys¬tem. We have progressed to thepoint where a University of Chi¬cago student believes that the ac¬cused is guilty because he isaccused.What ever happened to the partof our system that says a manis innocent until proven guilty ina court of law? It is a pity thatMr. Felson’s time at the Univer¬sity has been such a wastedeffort.(MRS.) JO-ANNE NAPLES. .. . And The MaroonTo the writer of the April 9editorial about our sick society:you will not have to wait for thefuture to see just how sick, howmorally and culturally bankrupt,this society is. Just read the arti¬cle by your managing editor onthe same page. That article is ofsome value, however, for it pre¬sents, almost as an aside, a fun¬damental problem in Americanrace relations.The goal of Negro socio-politi¬cal action, the ideal towardswhich so many of both races wereworking, used to be color-blind¬ ness: that is, the making of fun¬damental distinctions, not be¬tween races, but only betweenindividuals. But this is no longerthe case; today this goal is con¬sidered old-fashioned, meaning¬less, or at best impossible.Now, some Negroes propose,and liberals like Mr. Black ac¬cept, that several southern statesbe taken over by Negroes (dis¬posing, somehow, of the whitesliving there) and be separatedfrom the rest of the country asa “black nation.” This proposal,the reverse of which would bebeyond the wildest hopes of themost militant white racist, is re¬ported calmly, as news neitherparticularly significant or unusu¬al.Perhaps we should realize thatthe liberals who “concede eventhe most militant arguments ofthe most militant blacks” are atleast as responsible for lootingand burning, and for increasedwhite racism, as are the whiteracists themselves. Racism canbe fought only by those who arenot racists; but when there isracism on both sides, when theworst irrationality of the worstblack racists is granted credenceby those whites supposedly mostconcerned with Negro welfare,what chance do any ^ane policiesof race relations have, whetherproposed by blacks or whites?In such a case, there can beno intellectual battle, since bothsides share the same premisesand differ only in regard to par¬ticulars; the battles will be pure¬ ly physical, with armies, machineguns, gasoline bombs, burningbooks, and no winners.PAUL PFERDNER, 71Hospital StrikeWe invite all those individualswho believe that we volunteersacted wrongly during the re¬cent strike at Chicago State Hos¬pital to a discussion this Satur¬day, April 20, at 11:30 a.m., inNew Dorms.We do not feel that we were“misguided” or “duped” or“short-sighted” and wish to ex¬plain our position more clearly tothose interested. We hasten tostate our basic disagreementwith Miss Phyllis Kelly (The Ma¬roon, April 16): we do not be¬lieve “the state would soon havebeen forced to capitluate.”Moreover, we would sincerely ap¬preciate hearing or reading MissKelly’s or anyone else’s opinionsregarding “the real needs of bothgroups” at the hospital sincewe have been pondering them forseveral years.All individuals interested in thearea of mental illness in generalare, of course, invited to accom¬pany VISA members to the hos¬pital Saturday at 12:30 p.m.JOSEPH J. SHAY, ’69SUSAN PHILLIPS, ’69Letters to the editor 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 desperate hoursand how to survive them.The desperate hours come around midnight when you’vegot more to do than time to do it.The hours when you have to stay alert or face the musicthe next day.Those are NoDoz’ finest hours. It’s got the strongeststimulant you can take without a pre¬scription. And it’s not habit forming.NoDoza\ If you don’t stay up with thecompetition, you won’t keep up with thecompetition. Cohn & SterntTnum Sc (ttatupuaARNOLD PALMER KNIT SHIRTSLonger days, sunnier days ... in knit shirts by Robert Brucecarrying the Arnold Palmer "mbrella insignia. Citrus, Teen, red,spice, light blue, old goH navy, white in sizes small, medium,lprge, extra largeIllustrated: Placket model — Dacron/cotton $6; lysle $7. Crewmodel — Dacron/cotton $5; lysle $6.• oolKlwvtH>owMnOT><7niTT>(7T)<roOl'ot7T>i7wv«7W(7vvloi7'Oi7V)iJT!j\Hyde Park Shopping Center Open Daily til 655th & Lake Park Thursday A Friday til 9April 19, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7 7wmmmmmMaroon Bulletin of Current EventsCALENDER items should be typed onforms available in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyonce.GENERAL NOTICES should be submittedin typewritten form two days beforepublication. They may appear a maximumof twice on request.RECRUITING VISITS are scheduled bythe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, with repre¬sentatives of recruiting firms at thatlocation.NEWS BRIEFS are composed by TheMaroon Staff.CALENDAR OF EVENTSFriday, April 19FILMS: (Blue Gargoyle), “The case of theMakkinese Battle Horn" with Peter Sellers,and "Captain's Paradise." The Blue Gar¬goyle, 8:00 p.m., 60 cents.LECTURE: (Middle Eastern Center), Fourthlecture in a series on "Arab Marriage,"Professor Emrys Peters, University ofManchester, England. Cobb 102, 4 p.m.THEATER: (The Last Stage), "The GlassMenagerie" by Tennessee Williams, directedby Sid Passin. Harper Theatre, 8:30 p.m.,tickets $2.50, student tickets $1.50.FILM: (Doc Films), "Generale Della Rovere"directed by Roberto Rossellini. Cobb Hall,7:15 and 9:30 p.m., 75 cents.LECTURE: (Students for Social Action Com¬mittee), "Anti-War Organizing in theArmy," Howard Petrick, recently dischargedfrom the Army for anti-war organizing.Lounge, School of Social Service Admin¬istration, 12 noon.CONCERT: (Contemporary Chamber Play¬ers), Shapey's "Partita-Fantasie for Celloand 16 Players," Joel Krosnick, cello, andStravinsky's "Histoire du Soldat." MandelHall, 8:30 p.m., tickets $2.50, students $1.00.LECTURE: (Hillel Foundation), "The Ameri¬can Jewish Response to Hitler 1933-39: AStjjdy in Inaction," Fred A. Lazin, graduatestudent in political science. Hillel House,8:30 p.m.PLAYS: (University Theater), Four ModernOne-Acts: Chekov's "The Bear," Brecht's"The Exception and the Rule," Pinter's"The Dumbwaiter," and Sitz's "The Peace¬makers." Reynolds' Club Theatre, 8:30 p.m.LECTURE: (The Committee on SocialThought), "The Meaning of the Scientificand Technological Revolution," Hans Jonas,Department of Philosophy, New School forSocial Research and Visiting Professor inthe Committee on Social Thought. Social |Science 122, 8-10 p.m.MEETING: (Faculty-Student Advisory Com¬mittee on Campus Student Life), Discussingstudent housing with Edward Turkington,diector of student housing. AdministrationBuilding, second floor conference room,noon-2 p.m.LECTURE: (Far Eastern Language andArea Center), "Feminine Sensibility inJapanese Literature," Donald Keene, De¬partment of East Asian Languages andCultures, Columbia University. BreastedHall, Oriental Institute, 4 p.m.RADIO PROGRAM: (Conversations at Chica¬go), "The Making of a Negro Ghetto,"Allen Spear, assistant professor of history,University of Minnesota; Harold Barron, re¬search director of the Chicago UrbanLeague; Kenneth Northcott, moderator.WFMT, 10:30 p.m.Saturday, April 20FILM: (Vincent House Films), "HiroshimaMon Amour." B-J dining room, 7:45, 9:30,and 11:00 p.m., 75 cents.SQUARE DANCING: (Folk Dancing Society)Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-11:30 p.m.PLAYS: (University Theater) See Friday'slistings.DISCUSSION: (VISA), "Controversy aboutVolunteers in Recent Strike at ChicagoState Hospital." New Dorms, 11:30 a.m.MEETING: (VISA) Continues visits to Chi¬ cago State Hospital. Bus leaves New Dorms,12:30 p.m.CONCERT: (Contemporary Chamber Play¬ers), See Friday's listings.THEATER: (The Last Stage), See Friday'slistings.FILMS: (The Blue Gargoyle), See Friday'slistings.CANVASSING: (Students for McCarthy),Work in Indiana. Bus leaves New Dorms,8 a.m. Call Mike Fowler, FA 4-9500.DANCE CONCERT: (University of ChicagoModern Dance Group) Ray Cook, questartist and the University of Chicago DanceGroup. Lutheran School of Theology Audi¬torium, 8:30 p.m., admission $1.50, 75cents for students.Sunday, April 21THEATER: (The Last Stage), See Friday'slisting. At. 7:30 p.m.PERCUSSION CONCERT: (Musical Society),Works by. Hovaness, Hodkinson, Makenzie,Olive, Rebhan, etc. Mandel Hall, 4 p.m.,admission free.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "TheBody," The Reverend Bernard O. Brown,assistant to the dean of Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel,11 am- .VIETNAM FILMS: (Hillel House), TheSurvivors," "The Witness." Hillel House,7:30 and 9:30 p.m.SUNDAY NIGHT AT CHAPEL HOUSE:(Lutheran Church at Chicago), "The Rel¬evance of the Just War Theory Today,"Rev. Philip Dripps, Methodist CampusMinister. Chapel House, supper 5:30, dis¬cussion 6:30.PLAYS: (University Theater), See Fridayslistings.MEETINGS: (Committee of Returned Volun¬teers), First Unitarian Church, 57th St. andWoodward Ave., 3 p.m.FOLK DANCING: (Folk Dance Society),Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-11:30p.m., 25 cents.FILM: (Burton-Judson Cinema) "Night andFog," "Black Widow Spider," and "TheEye of the Beholder." B-J dining room,7:30 p.m., free.DANCE CONCERT (University of ChicagoModern Dance Group), See Saturday'slistings. At 3:30 p.m.Monday, April 22LECTURE: (School of Social Service Admin¬istration), "Can Casework Work?" HelenHarris Perlman, professor, the School ofSocial Service Administration. School ofSocial Service Administration, 7:30 p.m.CONFERENCE: (Concerned English Students& Faculty), "The War, the Draft, and theEnglish Student," David Bevington, GwinJ. Kolb. Disciples Church, 12:30 p.m.EXHIBIT: (Hillel House), Sculpture by Gun¬ther Aron. Hillel House, through May 25. theory, practical criticism, literary his¬tory, or the history of ideas. Open to allfully registered students. Entries must bein Wieboldt 205 by April 30.ACADEMY OF AMERICAN* POETS PRIZE:Prize of $100 to an undergraduate for bestunpublished poem or group of poems sub¬mitted. Poems must be submitted inWieboldt 205 by April 30.JOHN BILLINGS FISKE PRIZES INPOETRY: Prizes of *125, $75, and $50 forpoem or cycle of several related poems.Entries must be in Wieboldt 205 by April30.DEADLINE for freshman applications to theNew Collegiate Division is May 1.THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH providesa formal opportunity for University ofChicago student to read at their best andfor their peers in the Florence JamesAdams Poetry Reading Competition. Thisyear prizes of $125, $100, $75, and $50 willbe awarded. The preliminary readings willlbe held in Bond Chapel at 3 p.m. on May 3. The final competition will then be inBond Chapel at 3 p.m. on May 10. Thereadings are part of the Festival of theArts, and are open to the public. A panelof distinguished judges will make thedecisions. Those students wishing to com¬pete should pick up a description ofregulations at the Department of English,Wieboldt 205, by April 19, and then regis¬ter with Mr. Paul D'Andrea.NEW OLD FASHIONED BAROQUE COM¬PASS PLAYERS will hold free all-dayworkshops in techniques of comedy andimprovisational theater on Saturday andSunday, from 1 to 6 p.m. at the HarperTheater Coffee House, 5238 South HarperAvenue. Members of the Players willlead theater exercises from a number ofsources from Stanislavsky to Spolin, ex¬ploring techniques of dance and mime,acting, to light and music cues, improvis¬ing in the style of famous playwrights,and consideration of many kinds of com¬munication, both verbal and non-verbal. The workshops are open to anyone whocares to attend; people may arrive at anytime and stay for as long as they wish.RECRUITING VISITSTeaching(For appointments, call Ext. 3279.)APRIL 19: Chicago Board of Education,Chicago, Illinois. All levels and areasInterested only in qualified candidateswho are eligible for teacher certificatesNEWS BRIEFSMIRCEA ELIADE, the Sewell L. Averydistinguished service professor and professorof history of religions in the DivinitySchool, has been awarded the ChristianCulture Award Gold Medal for 1968. Theaward Is given by the University ofWindsor, Ontario, Canada, to an "outstanding lay-exponent of Christian ideals."GENERAL NOTICESexcellent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant2012 E. 71 st ST. DAVID BLAIR MCLAUGHLIN PRIZES FORTHE WRITING OF PROSE: Annual prizesfor critical essay on some subject relatingto the humanities or the social sciences.First prize $100. Second prize $75, thirdprize $50. Competition restricted to firstand second year students in the Collegeand those who entered the College beforehigh school graduation. Essays, between1,500 and 3,000 words, must be deliveredto Weibolt 205 by April 30, 1968.R. S. CRANE AWARD: Award of $50 foressay on a specific problem in literary Next WeekIn Weekend:A Special IssueOn the DraftFOTA Presents SPRING SONGThurman Barker, Charles Clark, Joseph Jarmanin concert Thursday April 25Ida Noyes Hall 8:00 p.m. 50<tFoodDrinkP^ople311 E. 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400 JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-81 90, DO 3-9I86 1340 E. 53 rd Worried about Humphrey? The cities? Vietnam?If so . . . CANVASS FOR ROBERT KENNEDYThis weekend in Gary, Indiana.Bus leaves Ida Noyes Hall at 9 a.m. onSaturday; returns 5 p.m.for information call 643-8474SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE I 926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200ARCHITECTURALLIBRARIANWe need a librarian who cancatalog and find again all theliterature we use for archi¬tectural design. This personmust have a BA or equivalentand be interested in the re¬search and cataloging of ourliterature involving hospitals,city planning, materials andstructureBERTRAND GOLDBERGASSOCIATESMarina City222-111 1Mr. Edward Center MONDAY LECTURES8 P.M. LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMApr. 22 Adolph GrunbaumCan an Infinite Number of OperationsBe Performed in a Finite Time?Apr. 29 Edgar Z. FriedenbergSocial Class Factors in Generational ConflictMay 6 Herbert FeiglMind and Its Place in NatureMay 13 Benson GinsburgGenes and Behavior-A New Look at an Old ProblemSERIES TICKET $10. U. of C. students and faculty mayrequest complimentary tickets at Center for ContinuingEducation, Room 121, or at Central Information Desk,Adm. Bldg.For Information, call Extension 3137. Why just dream about it.4 bi-monthlydigest ofarticles andartwork fromUndergroundnewspapersacrossthe country$3 PM Vf AltTurn On To The CompleteUnderground PressIpaeigTOunaDigest•OX 31t VILLA SI STATIONN. Y. C. 10014STATE. .ZIP.□ I enclo$e S3 extend subscription by one issue. □ Please bill me &03RCUT OUT AND SEND* THE .GH4CAGO MAROON April '1&, -196& . ,'.***, 4 V L* \ !rt f rt i^nnn ltni* L V OMAROON SPORTStrack Team Plays Well, Loses MeetBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantThe University track team ranwell against far superior opposi¬tion Saturday but still dropped a109-36 meet-to Valparaiso.Maroon trackmen took first intwo events, second in six, andthird in eight as Valparaiso domin¬ated the winning column. Overall,Chicago won only two events, thehigh-jump and mile relay.Big Scott Ferry came throughwith a fine six-foot leap to takethe high jump competition, whileJohn Beal jumped well enough forthird spot. The mile relay squadof Ted Terpstra, Jim Haydon,Dave Rosenbush, and Dick Wrightnotched their best time this yearwith a 3:29.1 mile and took thetop spot in that event.Other second-place finishersincluded Terpstra in the 440-yd.hurdles, Beal in the long jump,Haydon in the javelin, KenThomas in the 120-yd. triple jump,and Rich Jockman in the discus.Finishing third were Pat Murrayin the mile, Rosenbush in the440-yd. dash, Maydon in the shotput, Bob Kiesling in pole vault,Sean Peppard in the 880-yd. run,Beal in the triple jump, and TomWaschke in the discus.Coach Ted Haydon was unsur¬prised with the meet. He commen¬ted that “Valparaiso had a verygood dual meet team with plentyof class and depth.” Despite thelarge margin of defeat, he felt themeet was valuable to the team;We had,” he said, “seven oreight personal bests, so the meetwas very good for us from thedevelopmental stand point.”Members of the track team willjoin the University Track Club forthe Ohio Relays at Columbustomorrow.VolleyballThe Chicago Theological Semi¬nary (CTS) Angels won the divi-'lj5 PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1480 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 II^Kizabeth CyorJon,—bJair ^bedipners1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 cast 53rd StreetHyde Park 3-8372 sional and All-University Volley¬ball Championship in the recently-completed intramural tournament.The Angels defeated the otherCTS team, the Saints, for thechampionship while HendersonSouth overcame Henderson Northin the College house division. PsiUpsilon won the fraternity crownby taking Phi Gamma Delta.Runners-up in the house divi¬sion, the largest of the tourney,were Chamberlin in the third andTuffs North in the fourth spots.GolfChicagos’ young golf teamplayed well in their seasonopenerlast week as part of the NorthCentral Tournament. The teamcompeted along with 28 teamsfrom six states and finished in themiddle of the pack.The team’s number-five man,Pete Mundy, turned in theMaroon’s best score with a fine 82. Jim Peterson finished two strokesback at 84, with Mark Carpenter,Paul Chambers, and Mike Nemer-off following with scores of 86, 89,and 88.Coach Walter Hass, Chicagoathletic director, felt that “ourboys did extremely well consider¬ing the amount of time they havefor practice and playing.” Hepointed out that the Maroon teamdrew an afternoon time and had tooppose both the wind and rain.In Other ActionIn weekend action the baseballsquad will travel to Knox Collegein Galesburg, Illinois, for adoubleheader; the tennis teamfaces Wisconsin State teams fromSteven’s Point and Whitewater atthe latter’s courts; and the trackteam travels to the Ohio Relays.Intramural softball will beginnext week. WAS KEATS THE BOB DYLANOF HIS DAY?Who was the greatest of the English Romantic Poets—Byron, Shelley or Keats? This question has given rise tomany lively campus discussions and not a few stabbings.Let us today try to find an answer.First, Keats (or The Louisville Slugger, as he is com¬monly called.) Keats’ talent bloomed early. While still aschoolboy at St. Swithin’s he wrote his epic lines:If I am good 1 get an apple,So 1 don’t ivhistle in the chapel.From this distinguished beginning he went on to writeanother 40 million poems, an achievement all the more re¬markable when you consider that he was only five feettall! I mention this fact only to show that physical prob¬lems never keep the true artist from creating. Byron, forexample, was lame. Shelley suffered from prickly heat allwinter long. Nonetheless, these three titans of literaturenever stopped writing poetry for one day.Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devilwith the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dippingNell Gwynne’s pigtails in an inkwell. (This later becameknown as Guy Fawkes Day.) He left England to fight inthe Greek war of independence. He fought bravely andwell, but women were never far from his mind, as evi¬denced by these immortal lines:How splendid it is to fight for the Greek,But I don’t enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek tocheek.While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley stayed in Eng¬land, where he became razor sharpener to the Duke ofGloucester. Shelley was happy in his work, as we knowfrom his classic poem, Hail to thee, blithe strop, but nomatter how he tried he was never able to get a proper edgeon the Duke’s razor, and he was soon banished toCoventry. (This later became known as The IndustrialRevolution.)One wonders how Shelley’s life—and the course of Eng¬lish poetry-would have differed if Personna Super Stain¬less Steel Blades had been invented 200 years earlier. ForPersonna is a blade that needs no stropping, honing orwhetting. It’s sharp when you get it, and sharp it staysthrough shave after luxury shave. Here truly is a bladefit for a Duke or a freshman. Moreover, this Personna,this jewel of the blade-maker’s art, this boon to the cheekand bounty to the dewlap, comes to you both in double¬edge style and Injector style. Get some now during “BeKind to Your Kisser Week.”But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Greece and Shelleyin England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try togrow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric:Although I am only five feet high,Some day I will look in an elephant’s eye.But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron,touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. Thistoo failed. Then Byron, ever the ladies man, took up withLucrezia Borgia, Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley.Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed home with his wifeMary and wrote his famous poem:I love to stay home with the missus and write,And hug her and kiss her and give her a bite.TxmnW.k'Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten thatshe went into another room and wrote Frankenstein.Upon reading the manuscript, Shelley and Byron got soscared they immediately booked passage home to Eng¬land. Keats tried to go too, but he was so small that theclerk at the steamship office couldn’t see him over the topof the counter. So Keats remained in Rome and died ofshortness.Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together com¬posed this immortal epitaph:Good old Keats, he might have been short,But he was a great American and a heck of a good sport.* * * ©1W8, Max ShulmanTruth, not poetry, is the concern of Personna, and wetell you truly that you'll not find a better shaving com¬bination than Personna and Burma-Shave, regular ormenthol.F O T AA Celebration of Our ArtApril 19, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per line re¬peat. Count 35 characters and spacesper 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.No Ads will be taken over the phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO 3P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266. APARTMENTS TO SHARE1 or 2 'FEMALE ROOMMATES FOR SUM¬MER and/or next year to share 6 room apt.Own bedroom(s). Kimbark & 54th. 363-7682.FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: 6/17—$45/mo. 25-643-1407. blocks from Campus. Call afterWORK Exciting Fun ClothesTHEMOUSE TRAP1453 f. Hyde Pk. Blvd0p«« 7 Days 363-9215FULL TIME POSITION!!!An interest in interior design and publicspeaking can be enlarged by holding aposition as a TOUR GUIDE at The Mer¬chandise Mart.Position will open first of June for younglady between 21 and 27, size 10 to 12, withand added interest in serving the public.Call Dorothy Valentine, 527-4141 during 9:30and 12 noon.LOST ONE GIRL WANTED to share apt. with 3girls at 1400 E. 57th. Call 324-7637.2nd year LAW STUDENT wishes to sharemodern 2 bedroom apartment in South Shore,near Lake, and I.C. With another male stu¬dent for summer. Call 721-7774, evenings.LARGE 4 rm. furnished apt. Own bedroom.51st and Harper. $65/mo. Avail: 6/1 to 9/25and/or 9/25 to 6/69. Call Richard at 493-5750.LOST (no questions asked): Brown LeatherBag and KEYS. REWARD especially forKEYS. Call Monica, MO 4-7100, Ext 313,9 a.m. to 4 p.m. SUBLETLARGE, ELEGANT APT., lakeview, subletJune 1 to August 1, possibly throughAugust. Call 667-8414. CANVASS FOR KENNEDY in Gary on Sat¬urday, April 20, 1968. Buses leave IDANoyes at 9 A.M.; return 5 P.M. Informationat 643-8474. . *POOR PEOPLE'S CAMPAIGNCampus support committee for SCL'S POORPEOPLE'S CAMPAIGN, started by MartinLuther King, is being formed. Help DESPER¬ATELY needed. Call Janet Berstein at 363-7682.SECULARBefore the FOTA, please GOD, just oneAPOCALYPSE.RELIGIOUSBefore the APOCALYPSE, please God, lustone more FOTA.FOTAFOTA comes but once a year—now it's here.PERSONALSTake down the placards, here come theclassified ads.LOST—ZENITH HEA*'NG AID Behind f,h,e SUMMER SUBLET: 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.Ear Type. Reward. Call DO 3-4300, Est. 67. S120/mor>th Grnwd nr. 52nd: 752-7669.HORSEBACK RIDING SCHOOL sublet fully furnished 6 rm. apt.Porch. Tree. 1 blk. from campus. June 10-Sept. 15. Reasonable. 684-3839. IT WORK! IT WORK! Except th t you c n'tpell few elect word bee u e the nd thekey ren't working.What is Sebastian Moon? "What a strange house—all those cats, allthose, uh, people, and NO toilet paper,toothpaste, or soap!"If 1 was reading the newscasts for WHPK-FM, 1 wouldn't want to talk about it either.Much less listen.Sara's Hook-coming soon.Free Co-op Services—Babysitting, jobs, rides.Peter Sellers comes to the Blue Gargoyle."YOU HAVE TO WEEP FOR THISCOUNTRY."—Kenneth ClarkA woman can never be too thin, too rich,or too happy.FOREIGN CAR HOSPITAL is here toservice your little car or sell you one. Callfor Appointment. Ml 3-3113.SOME FINE DAY you'll come to Waterville,Maine. The Silent Woman Restaurant.THREE CHEERS! Vaolois is open again!Radio days return to the BANDER. PaulKaplan broadcasting Friday 10-10:30.VIETNAM FILMS AT HILLEL. Sunday.From Hershey's: "Quick energy in everybar." Right, Peter?All the unstable particles decay, directlyor in steps, into two or more of the 7stable ones.Are you sure she didn't say "THE HARD?"SCHOOL owned and operated by Hyde Parkgroup for superior instruction. For begin¬ners and advanced. Jumping and Dressage.Also, Horses Boarded. Telephone 268-6835or 643-9866. SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM Hyde Park Apt.for Sublet, June 15 to Oct. 1. Call 288-2561.ESCAPE CHICAGOFor vacation or ever. Marco Polo Travel.288-5944. SUMMER SUBLET, large, 1 bedroom apt.,lakeview, furnished, store and laundry inbuilding. Call 684-7884.KITTENS AND CATSKITTENS: Black, white, male, female, 8week old super kittens—Call 643-4892.CATS: Female, Prolific and Personable, jFun to be with. Call 324-5751, 8 to 9 P.M. j 3 ROOM ENGLISH BASEMENT. Sublet tilSept. $81.50 . 67th and Paxton. Exc. trans¬portation via campus bus. 324-6259 anytime.ROOMS FOR RENTSUMMER ROOMS: Singles and Doubles.$150. From June 15—Sept., 15, $25 Depositimmediately. Prime location. Call Mark at643-4352 between 5:45-6:45 P.M. From the COLLEGE HANDBOOK:"In addition to the prescribed courses ineach cirriculum, Loyola students are re¬quired to devote considerable time to thestudy of broad cultural subjects in order toachieve the aims of Catholic education. Be¬sides electives, philosophy is prescribed forall undergraduates during all tour years.Religion courses are obligatory for Catholics,but optional for non-Catholics. The Air ForceReserve Officers Training Corps operates aunit on the Loyola campus."Make-believe dance contest Sunday nightas make-believe ballroom moves to theBANDERSNATCH with the Ersnatch Band,8 to 10 P.M.REWARD$35 REWARD for your APT. 5 or moreRooms, near Campus. Begin occup. June.Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 1122. Leave message.GERBILSProud grandparent desires suitable matesand homes for baby gerbils. DO 3-7682.LOVE LOOKING FOR A ROOM WITH SEXj appeal? We now have private, inexpensive,| furnished rooms and suites with home-stylecooking, recreational facilities,’ and manyother services—in our own friendly building| at 5555 Woodlawn (N. E. corner of 56th andWoodlawn).I Share the best of both apartment and dormlife: independence without humdrumresponsibilities. Rooms are available nowfor spring, summer, and/or next year.Stop by or call 363-3111 or 288-4660. MANDALA is a symbol.THE SCREW IS LOOSE AGAIN—Mahogany Hall Band. Saturday at 9 P.M.Pierce Tower. Men 75c. Women 25c.On what scale?"But the worst of all, young lady, is thatcertain people, for example, in a Latin thattney suppose is Spanisn say: "Both mykidneys are of the same kidney ..."IROSHIMA, MON AMOUR, uncut! un-ensored! 75c. 7:45, 9:30, and 11 P.M. jud-Dn dining room, BJ, Saturday, April 20th. CONCERT GEORGE: "Niggers was all right then,you could always get you a nigger to helpyou catch a nigger."LILLIAN: "That's right. They had theirways, we had ours, and everything wentalong the way God intended."On is not where you turn me.APARTMENTS TO RENTBEAUTIFULear South Shore Apt. for 3 people; 3Irms, 2 bathrooms, dining room, kitchen,jge living room, off-the-street parking, fullrnishings avail. Rent $55 per person, avail.id-June. Call 324-8762 around 6 P.M.OUTH SHORE. Furn. l'/j rooms and sleep-ig porch. Modern. Available May 1. Du-lex Bldg. $100. Phone for Appt. 679-3453.rivate Parking.>00 S. CRANDON AVENUE. Deluxe Highise, one-bedroom apartments from $120.arquet floor. See Mrs. Haley, Office ofuilding. Security Guard. MU 4-7964. MUSICAL SOCIETY PERCUSSION CON¬CERT. Sunday, April 21, Mandel Hall. 4 P.M.FREE. Look at the FOTA Calendar—now look again.WANTEDA little black in those grey Editorials. FLASH!—The Great KERNER COP-OUT hastaken place. Wonder what the phone billfrom Washington to Chicago to Springieldwill total this month . . .Exotic Abysinnian Kittens, male and female,reasonably priced. Call 684-7838.Male student, exp. w. kids, desires ROOMw/KITCHEN PRIV. in exch. for babysittingand/or garden or other work. Pref. May 1stoccupancy. 288-2221.MATURE FEMALE STUDENT for 19 hr.wk. Child care and light housework in ex¬change for room and board. Start in Fall'68. 538-0708. After a little I am taken in and put to bed.Sleep, soft smiling, draws me unto her:and those receive me, who quietly treat me,as one familiar and well-beloved in thathome: but will not, oh, will not, not now, notever; but vill not ever tell me who I am.'7 SPACIOUS ROOMS AND SUNROOOM.!00 blk. Greenwood, $110/month. Availableay or June. 752-3324, evenings. To finish MS in peace and quiet, U. of C.Prof. WILL MAINTAIN HOUSE, Apt., whileyou're away, now to August, Ext. 4038.TEACHERS WANTEDSOUTHWEST, ENTIRE WEST, AND ALASKASALARIES $5600. UP—FREE REGISTRA¬TIONSOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY1303 Central Ave., NE Albuquerque, NewMexico 871062 ROOM APT. 53rd and Kenwood. Large Mccr. _A..OA ^ ~ i 7~room,, 0,00 k„ch,net,o 1 bathroom. A..,,. | MAtPAtGNERS^r ^oo^, ,n to-SOUTH SHORE: Furn. 2’/2 rooms w. wood-burning fireplace. 25 ft. living room, bed¬room. Available May 1. Modern. $135.00.Phone 679-3453 for Appt. Duplex Building.Also 16 ft. Sun deck. Private Parking.May 1. 955-5955 or 493-9843.|4 ROOM APT. Lease begins June 1. $120/ MEN'S BIKE 8. LADY'S BIKE, Ext. 4743.month on Campus, Call 752-8282 at 6 P.M. Judy.FOR SALEBELL STEREO CTGE. TAPE RECORDERAND GARRARD STEREO CHGR. $75. ES5-9532.EVERYTHING IN HOUSE ... can hold ondeposit til June—752-6227.KNIGHT KN 255 Solid state stereo. AM/FMTuner. KNIGHT KG 895 120 watts solid stateamp. DUAL changer. All three in like newcondition for $230. Call after 7 p.m. at256-4785. MOTHER of PRE-SCHOOLER, pref. studentwife, wanted to take care of my 3 yr. old.3 days/week. Call 324-0439.STUDENT TO BABYSIT in return for largeroom with fireplace in Kenwood. SomeKitchen Priv. Some daytime hours pref. Call373-0454.$51.01 REWARD for helping us find a large6 room (or larger) apt. in Hyde Park.324-7431.1 V.W. LUGGAGE RACK for $15;DESK, 40 x 18, 6 Drawers, $15;SMITH-CORONA PORTABLE $40.752-3339, evenings.NIKKORMAT FTn with 1.2 lens. Perfectcondition—5 months old. $200. 324-5751, even¬ings, 7 to 8 P.M. RIDE WANTED to California, pref. thisweek, wil share expenses 8. driving. CallNate at 373-3608.Need APT. for 3-4, can occupy immediately,call 643-4892.NEED APT. OR ROOM for MAY ONLY.FOR 2 PEOPLE. Call Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3266.1966 TR4A IRS. Excellent garage kept.$1,900. Many Extras. 721-9558.HOUSE. Located in South Shore. 8 minutesfrom campus. Spacious. Gracious. 8 rooms.Lot 40 x 125, with garage. Gas Heat. Lowtaxes. $22,000. MU 4-1821.1964 VW SEDAN. 41,000 miles. CORRECTPHONE NO: 643-3429. WANT TO SUBLET for Summer—2 or 3bedroom Apt. in Hyde Park. Call Jean Ext3753.REWARD for rights to well located 2 or 3bedroom Apt. for summer sublet and leasein Fall. 324-9210.Do creative students exist as at U.C.?Prove it—enter your work in FOTA'S ArtContest (leave with Mary Collins at StudentActivities Office, INH) and maybe win $25.ORGYCLIMBING 8, CAMPING GEAR. Call 752-8282.1961 NORTON. 600 cc, beautiful custom. DON'T TELL YOUR FRIENDS, but come$475. BU 6-6610. NO. 3204. Lonn. to PSI U, TONIGHT!!!! This month's WE CAN DO WITHOUT ITAWARD: To Whoever Writes and "Delivers"the news (sic) on WHPK-FM. Whew!A proper measure of democracy should beput into effect by the army—OK . . . whosaid that? Mao or LBJ?I want to buy a used JEEP. Call 684-7838.MUSIC CRITICS WHO CONTACTED THEMAROON PRIOR TO WEDNESDAY'S MEET¬ING: Bumbling managing editor has lostsome of your names. Please call back. Weneed you!Happy Hook, Morie! MSLKiss off, Take a break—at the Blue Gar¬goyle. Flicks only 50c; Food even cheaper.HUTCH COMMONS—in the only area onCampus where you can play pool, studyAND smoke, and eat great food!Kill time til THE FOX comes to the HydePark, watch Captn Video at the Bander. "Whale dreck is reject material that ac¬cumulates in the process of cutting up awhale and cooking it down. A horrible fishymess you can smell for miles. No one hasfound any use for it."DON QUIXOTE—Please return and give thisUniversity a psychedelic enema.D. K.-7709. Pigeons in the grass, alas. Rich.Chicago Science Fiction Society will meetTuesday, April 23, at 7:30 p.m. in Ida NoyesSun Parlor.EXPERT TYPING SERVICE—Reasonablerates—prompt, accurate, no bullshit. CallHarry, BU 8-4500.End University Complicity with the SelectiveService System.I got MINE at the MOUSETRAP, where didyou get YOURS?!!Eat only at AAMED'S. Juse West of theMedici.Find out what's happening on both sides,read the TRIB and subscribe to tfie UNDER¬GROUND DIGEST, (see ad in this' paper).SCORPIO. WOPA. 10 P.M. to 12 A.M.This is the forest primeval.From the COLLEGE HANDBOOK: "In ad¬dition to the prescribed courses in generaleducation, University of Chicago students arerequired to devote considerable time to thestudy of broad cultural subjects in order toachieve the aims of a liberal education. Be¬sides electives, drugs are prescribed for allundergraduates during all four years. Coursesin athiesm are obligatory for all Jews butoptional for Gentiles. The Communist partyoperates a cell on the Chicago campus."Wednesday, April 24th—A DEMONSTRATIONagainst Chemical and Biological Warfareresearch for Vietnam at Illinois Institute ofTechnology at 5:00 P.M. The l.l.T. ResearchInstitute is the top Pentagon contractor.NIHON BUNKA KAI presentsRASHOMON directed by KUROSAWASaturday, April 20, Soc Sci 122. 7:30, 75c.Campaign for KENNEDY IN INDIANA.Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129.St. Ignacious of Loyola was a junkie.Kill Capt'n Video.Why aren't the General Ed Sciences Coursesat the same level of difficulty as the Hu¬manities, Social Science, etc.?Is it because VIS VIVA has passed out ofuse, to be replaced by kinetic energy."Before the wife places at thebedside a bowl of crushed ice or a handfulof cracked ice wrapped in a wet towel."Say what!!!? MANDALA is a HappeningThat's hardly revelant to the fact that youhit me.Hey, have you seen the new sculpture atthe Civic Center? Sure—the Marc Cha¬gall . . .I get to them al’ sooner or later.Ask not for whom the bells toll—they tollfor you. Sunday, April 21, Rockefeller Chap¬el. FOTA Grand Opening. Carillon and BrassRecital.The Maroon Business Office is a semi-secretsociety.DANCE CONCERTwith Ray Cook and the U. of C. Dance Group,Sat., April 20, 8:30, Sun., April 21, 3:30Lutheran School of Theology Auditorium1100 E. 55thTickets $1.50 ( 75c for students) available atIda Noyes Hall 201 (Ext. 3574).CO-OP CONSIGNMENTS held over 1 yearsubject to V7 price cut, over 2 years, be¬come the property of the CO-OP.Baby, let me light my fire.Burn, baby, burn.For all you young Blacks and Whites whostill think that Blues, Folk, and so-calledpsychedelic music are what's happening now—don't miss JOSEPH JARMAN'S SOULJAZZ EXPERIENCE Here IN Ida Noyes,Thursday, April 25. Only 50c!Stuff it—at Stouffers.Writer's Workshop. PL 2-8377.Vietnam Films (new schedule): EYEWIT¬NESS: NORTH VIETNAM; THE SUR¬VIVORS; THE WITNESS. April 21st. 7:30and 9:30 P.M.HILLEL HOUSE 5715 S. WOODLAWNKATE—Are you going to make a chief cookof your bottle-washer.Don't let riots, apathy, or urban renewalkeep you away from some of the bestgraphics—Black or White—that have everbeen seen in Hyde Park . . . THE LAKE¬SIDE GALLERY. East 55th Street. East ofCornell.IF YOU WERE CALLED BEFORE theDISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE, you wouldhave no right to cross-examine witnesses, norights against self-incrimination, etc. Prose¬cutor is committeeman. No due process.COME TO MEETING TO DO SOMETHINGABOUT THIS. FRIDAY, April 19, 4 P.MREYNOLDS CLUB.Let's be cool about this world cause itcertainly is a bummer.Do we have to go through this again?STOKLEY NEXTHave a nice Trip, Grandma and Auntie.I'm operating on a frequency of 98.7.Ric?? Siddhartha????THE AMERICAN JEWISH RESPONSE TOHITLER 1933-1939: A STUDY IN INACTIONFred A. Lazin, graduate student in PoliticalScience. Hillel House, 8:30 P.M.COMEDY! ESCAPE! Friday and Saturdayat the BLUE GARGOYLE 8 P.M. 57th Uni¬versity.KILL, KILL, KILL FOR PEACE.See! The Heavenly Hosts of Loyola Univer¬sity strike down the godless intellectuals ofthe University of Chicago with the sword ofrighteousness! This Sunday at 5 on Channel5.What ever happened to Cubby, Karen, andgood ole Jimmy Dodd?Can't stop eating them ... s? s .f ,Alain Resnais' HIROSHIMA, MON AMOUR,4/20; 75c; 7:45, 9:30, and 11 p.m.; JudsonDining Room, BJ. And Resnais' NIGHT ANDFOG, 4/21, FREE: 7:30, Judson DiningRoom.Chicago Science Fiction Society will meetnext Tuesday in Ida Noyes Sun Parlor at7:30 p.m.Got a bright idea for yourself or yourhome? Share it with Dorsey. We'll pay you$5 if she uses it in her column. AddressDorsey Connors, The Sun Times, 401 N.Wabash 60611. -:More ESCAPES coming ... if you haveadditions or corrections, please send them inby next Wednesday. Room 304. INHDo you REALLY know anyone who's hip orcool?"Smoking marajuana is more fun than drink¬ing beer."ED—Remember when Christine thought thatthe perineum was the area around theHeart?—The StarThe Midwest Council of Sports Car Clubs islooking for corner workers, tech inspectors,timers, and scorers. Call Hyde Park AutoService, 734-6393.AND, FOR THE 30 POINT BONUS QUES¬TION: What Knowledge is really worth hav¬ing?r-"*Ko,A N'wsM0'r m ’ “n“First we knock off the Catholics see. Im-maculata and then Loyola of Los Angeles.But then It's civil war with Brandeis.Mary—can you walk yet?There is a strong propensity among somescholars to call the Festival of the Arts FA,for short.Right, Otis?. •> *- *'*.«** ,« j We want our building back!10 TH$ vmAGQ MMOOy. vtil % l ’ 1 I . ' < Uvi M « ■ 0 A • . • S April 19, im,More Classified AdsThe police are starting to arrest everyspade they see.MANDALA is a new coffee shop in the base¬ment of Cobb. Tea, coffee, pastries, love.Open 9 to 5 daily and evenings for DocFilms. Happen at MANDALA. One.Is Schnitzer REALLY a Yipple?!Professional Photographer seeks female mod¬els—to age 40. No experience needed. $10an hour to start. 378-2294, 11 A.M. to 4 P.M.THERE ARE 3 COLORS IN AMERICA TO¬DAY— BLACK, WHITE, AND REDNECK.An overwhelming maiorlty of Chicago's po¬liceman are in the last category, which isso distinct from the others that it warrants aseparate phylum.Barbara L.Is it worth it?Father to Son—"Well, let's roll up your dip¬loma and hang it In the bathroom."I am a bachelor of arts.We're killing off the North Vietnamese sowe can win this year's International PingPong and Badminton Tournaments.Overheard in conversation near CCE aboutUS: "Methinks they doth protest too much."SUNDAY, APRIL 21, at HILLELL HOUSE5715 S. Wood lawnTHE SURVIVORS by Dr. Henry Mayer forthe Committee of Responsibility: Civilians inSaigon, refugee camps, and hospitals.THE WITNESS. The life of Franz Jager-staetter, German conscientious objectormartyred by the Nazis.Admission: Students $1.00, Others $1.50.After that performance, gentlemen and lady,the best thing you could do is go off and getstoned.What this society needs is a huge pro-phalyactic.STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS¥¥¥»¥THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th St.10% Student DiscountDISCOUNTART MATERIALS• Office Supplies• School Supplies• Picture FramesDUNCAN’Si305 E. 53rd HY 3-411 I'JichcA. ''pited S6rct*/tJCi cUlcn«iR E 5 1 AUR AN T1321 East 57th STHYDE PARK THEATRE53rd and LAKE PARKNO-7-9071STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 19thWINNER of ^6 ACADEMY AWARDSBEST ACTOR-Rod SteigerSIDNEY POITIER ROD STEIGERmTHE NORMAN JEWISON • • .WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION v (Amm , gf?.HEAT ,fQFTVT - -MIGHT” - a - *COLOR bJ DtLuit Reused ihfu UNITED-ARTISTS J. Levy. If you looked in the drawer in themorning, then why did you ask me about theshirts?'I had a dream . . .From the COLLEGE HANDBOOK:The Maroon is always read from the backto the front.SEXUAL FREEDOM LEAGUE, INC.For information, write BOX 1276BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA 94701A used car is "like a dead mackerel in themoon life ... it both shines and stinks."Jeff Schnitzer has to shave and bathe BE¬FORE he delivers the Maroon.Levi, do you really want 70 students sittingin your office?Send the MAROON to your enemies.The Lou Who?Remember the MRemember the EPut them togetherRemember ME.Bleach out tough stains.Somebody's been sleeping In MY bed.HOMEMADE CLOTHES—at the MOUSE¬TRAP (plus some really super earrings—In¬expensive and long . . . ).Peter Ratner is a narc. Communique issued by Chicago Police Dept:"GO TO JAIL, GO DIRECTLY TO JAIL,DO NOT PASS GO. DO NOT GET A FAIRTRIAL."Didn't know your houka had another name,did you Moscow?NUDISCOVER. Meet interesting people nearyou who enjoy social nudism. Send $1.00 toAlan Tuck Associates. P.O. Box 1532. Dept.BB. Union, New Jersey 07083.Love has a fresh strawberry taste.Finally, additional fashion news from EYEmagazine: "Drag queens here will give upthe Rita Hayworth show-girl styles they'veadopted in the past and will plunge into thesixties with a swing (swish?) to miniskirts.At this distance, it hits me as being a hairyproposition."GRAFFITIIt Is Illegal To Deface This Wall.—BLACK POWERm dome U DLid *'M 1645 E. 55th STREET jfc2 CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 ££2 Phone: FA 4-1651 Wdfc********#*xmm/Coffee HousePersian Delicacies our Speciality SSA Students Join ProtestThe Students for Social ActionCommittee of the school of SoicalService Administration has plan¬ned a week of activities beginningMonday, April 22 during the Inter¬national Days of Protest againstthe War, Racial Oppression, andthe Draft.The week will culminate with a“talk-out” (the social work ver¬sion of a teach-in) on Friday after¬noon and an all-city anti-warmarch on Saturday.Highlights of the week’s eventsinclude the showing of DavidSchoenbrun’s film on North Viet¬ nam and talks by VivianRothstein, a former JOIN organi¬zer who has visited NorthVietnam; Dink McCarter, a Viet¬nam veteran; and John Brown,human relations director of themetropolitan YWCA and chairmanof Women Mobilized for Change.Although the ten-day programis sponsored primarily by nationalStudents for a Democratic Society(SDS), the SDS chapter here hasnot yet scheduled any events.It opposes and April 26 studentstrike called by 900 student acti¬vists and the Student MobilizationCommittee.1440 East 57th StreetTONIGHT AT 8:304 MODERN ONE-ACTSFri-Sat-Sun, April 19-20-21Reynolds’ Club TheatreCHEKOV.. THE BEARDirected by Joel CopeBRECHUHE EXCEPTION AND THE RALEDirected by Dennis HannonPINTER..THE DUMB WAITERDirected by Roger DoddsSITZ..THE PEACE MAKERSWritten and directed by Gareth Mann SitzFirst University Theatre Presentation of the Term!Tickets available Reynolds’ Club Desk: $1.50, students $1.00We hove thenew Volvo 144.(VOLVO)WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR.JNC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1*3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too! Fly to Europe with NSA.*246 Round Trip.NewYork-London June 8London—New York.. August 12Deluxe service aboard charter flight by Capitol Inter¬national Airways DC-8-61 JET.A choice of other June departure dates available onrequest. Apply, with name of college to:U. S. National Student Association,Flights Office, 265 Madison Avenue,New York, N. Y. 10016.Open only to students at NSA member schools.sure we’i a used bookstore!adding over 100 titles a day.part-time jobs, apts., loans, babysitting,rides 8c riders: just added services,so maybe you can’t read, still we mightbe able to help out.every day and night over 200 studentssee it that way.co-op reynolds club 9-10st& St onesInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600April 19, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11SPECIALPEACE OF MIND”OFFER*Wills • stocks certificates • income tax records • passports • mortgages •birth certificates • real estate deeds • insurance policies • coin and stampcollections • bonds • medical reports • jewelry • automobile titles •contracts • trust agreementsMany of these would be difficult or impossible to replace if they werestolen, lost or burned.All of your valuable papers and property need the protection and securityof a University National Bank safe deposit box. This is the best way to enjoy“peace of mind” with bank safety.It’s easy to rent a safe deposit box in our vault. The cost is as low as$5.00 per year. Just ask any of our officers. They'll be happy to help you.*And to make it even easier, we have a special offer for new safe depositcustomers. We’ll give you your first six months rental free. So you can findout for yourself the “peace of mind” you can enjoy knowing your valuablesare receiving proper bank protection.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANKCB 1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and servicemember: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve System'MJi '!'(12 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 19, 1968 ■ F • H,• -iJW4i*0< m\