What Will You Do About the Draft?oMaroo See Weekendin this issueUniv* dt Chga* LibraryPertodlcal Rqcord Ncn - Profit Org.VOL. 76, NO. 47 Harper H-CJUCAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1968Chs o.,XU. 00fe?7 ... . 20 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSMURDER RESPONSE W7YV 1WAT 1 luL< 8 Chicago, II, ■Permit No. 1University Strengthens SecurityLawrence E. SteinbergMADRIGALSAmid the array of concerts, plays, art shows, strolling serenades,and happenings that FOTA '68 is sponsoring this week and next,was a madrigal-fest Tuesday. FOTA comes to a slightly anticlimac-tical end a week from today — FOTA will continue on into thequarter — with the fantastic Beaux Arts Masquerade Ball.Morgenthau Drops Class;Will Be Back Next YearBy BARBARA HURSTEditorial AssistantHans J. Morgenthau, Michelsqnprofessor of political science andhistory, will teach at Chicago nextyear, according to Norton S. Gins-burg, associate dean of the Divi¬sion of Social Sciences. Morgen¬thau has accepted a joint appoint¬ment to teach both at Chicago andCity College of New York.Morgenthau’s course in Interna¬tional Politics this quarter hasbeen cancelled due to circum¬stances which have kept him inand out of the hospital for overtwo weeks.Morgenthau had been in Indiaduring the first two weeks of thequarter but it was mainly becauseof Morgenthau’s illness, said Chairman of the Political ScienceDepartment Grant McConnell, that“it was apparent that the classhad to be cancelled ’’Morgenthau will be teaching theInternational Politics course thissummer. In the fqll he will go toCCNY and will return to Chicagoto teach Winter and Spring Quar¬ters of 1969. “From our stand¬point,” said Ginsburg, “he will goto CCNY as a visiting professor.”Morgenthau will be 65 next yearand normally would retire fromthe University. However, theBoard of Trustees has voted to al¬low him to continue teaching be¬yond retirement age.“Chicago’s intention is to extendhis appointment,” explained Gins-Turn to Page 9 Protective measures for pedes¬trians and increased security forall Hyde Park residents are theUniversity’s immediate responsefollowing the Monday night shot¬gun murder of Roy D. Gutmann,’68.While administrators have ex¬pressed sorrow both officially andunofficially — including a publicstatement released late Tuesdayafternoon — their predominantfeeling has been that such a crimemust not be permitted again.•A new bus route was startedwhich will carry persons with Uni¬versity identification along Wood-lawn Ave. between 49th and 60thSts. In addition, service has beenexpanded on the previously exist¬ing “C” route, so that it is nowrunning every fifteen minutes be¬tween 6 p.m. and midnight. Thenew bus is running between 6 p.m.and 12:15 a.m.•Emergency lighting has beenset up along some streets in HydePark, including Woodlawn Ave. be¬tween 57th and 58th Sts., and along58th St. between Woodlawn andUniversity Aves. This is in addi¬tion to new lighting which the Uni¬versity has been putting up allover campus since April 1 and isauxiliary to the new mercury-va¬por lighting that the city of Chi¬cago has been putting up.•There will be an expansion ofthe University’s police force. Itwas planned before the murderand had been started some weeksago. At the moment, however, noofficials were willing to say howmuch the force would be increased.‘Safest Place’Captain Michael J. Delany, chiefof Campus Security, said that theaim was “to make the Quadran¬gles the safest place in the worldto walk on, day or night.” He in¬dicated that this would be donewithout regard to the expense.Delany also indicated that there would be a rearrangement of thepresent patrol system to increasethe number of officers walkingaround Hyde Park. He said thatcooperation with the city police hasbeen quite good so far, and thathe expects a number of men tobe assigned to the Hyde Park areain the near future.But according to police sources,the additional men presently inHyde Park are from the tacticalpatrol force of the department andare not permanent.The reaction came after Gut¬mann, 21, was shot by an unknownassailant near the corner of Kim-bark Ave. and 56th St., opposite1306 E. 56th St. Official reportsabout the murder indicate that hewas shot around 9:30 p.m. at closerange, but his body was not dis¬covered until 9:50 by Schyler Hous¬er, a third-year graduate studentin history, who was walking by onhis way to visit a friend.Lying against Fence“I saw him lying there againstthe fence,” Houser said. “Helooked asleep, half-lying againstthe fence and half against hisbookbag. I shook him, and askedif he were all right.” While Houserwent across the street to summonpolice, he said, other peoplepassed the scene but none of themturned in an alarm.“I know I wasn’t the first personto walk past him,” Houser said.When the police arrived, accord¬ing to Houser, people camestreaming out of their houses tosay that they had heard a gunshotaround 9:05 p.m., or half an hourearlier than police estimated Gut¬mann was shot. None of the resi¬dents had previously reported thegunshot to the police.A young woman who identifiedherself as a student at Chicagotold police that she had seen aman running by with a gun onKimbark right after the shooting. ROY D. GUTMANNSad and Senseless DeathShe was quoted in the daily news¬papers as saying that she did notwant to cooperate further with thepolice, as they represented the“Establishment” and because shedisapproved of their behavior dur¬ing the riots last week.Really a Student?Usually informed sources toldThe Maroon that the “student”was not registered this quarter.A check with the Registrar’s Of¬fice and the files in the office ofthe Dean of Undergraduate stu¬dents showed that there is no stu¬dent with the name the womangave the police, and there hasbeen no student in the College withthat name in recent years.Monday night after the shooting,Dean of Students Charles D.O’Connell, together with Vice-Pres¬ident for Planning and Develop¬ment Charles Daly and others,went over to Billings Hospital. O’¬Connell broke the news to the vic¬tim’s father and to Herman Sin-aiko and other members of thefaculty and administration.Late Tuesday afternoon Daly ex-Turn to Page 9Plurality of Seniors to Resist Draft—SG PollAbout 60 percent of graduatingseniors and first-year graduatestudents at Chicago will refuse toparticipate in the war in Vietnam,according to a Student Governmentpoll to be released today.The poll shows that 46.1 percentof the seniors and 44.8 percent ofthe graduate students replying tothe poll will refuse to be inductedinto the armed services.Only 11.8 percent of the seniorsand 15.5 percent of the graduatestudents answering said they wouldserve immediately. Of them, 28.9percent of the seniors and 32.4 per¬cent of the graduate studentswould refuse to go to Vietnam if ordered by the Army.Student Government (SG) dis¬tributed a questionnaire to allfourth-year students intending tograduate in June and all first-yeargraduate students at the end ofFebruary. One hundred and three,or 30 percent, of the seniors re¬sponded to the poll along with 336or 27 percent of the graduate stu¬dents.Overwhelming DissentThe poll showed that 93.1 per¬cent of the seniors and 94 percentof the graduate students dis¬approve of the war in Vietnam.Forty-two percent of the seniorsand 39 percent of the graduate stu¬ dents want the war ended imme¬diately, “followed by totalwithdrawal.”SG President Jeffrey Blum, ’69,termed the results “surprising.”He said that, while the poll wastaken before Johnson’s currentpeace offensive, student oppositionto the war is as strong now aswhen the poll was taken.A poll taken last winter by TheHarvard Crimson indicated that25 percent of Harvard undergrad¬uates would refuse to be drafted.The SG poll §howed that 26.5 per¬cent of the graduates would leavethe country rather than be drafted. Eleven and eight-tenths percent ofthe seniors and 11.3 percent of thegraduates would refuse the draftand await imprisonment.A smaller number of studentswould stay in the United States andavoid the draft (7.8 percent of theseniors, 10.6 percent of the grad¬uate students).The rest would serve after ex¬hausting all means to be deferred(36.3 percent of the seniors; 35.2percent of the first-year graduatestudents).Many CO’sThe poll also showed that 26.1percent of the seniors and 16.1 per-statement on a five-point scale. cent of the graduate students an¬swering have either applied or in¬tend to apply for conscientiousobjector status.The poll showed that 52.6 per¬cent of the seniors and 41.7 per¬cent of the graduate students an¬swering expect to be inducted nextyear. Seventy-two and two-tenthspercent of the seniors said theywould enter graduate school nextyear if they were not drafted.Of those who would accept in¬duction, 54.3 percent of the seniorsand 42.4 percent of the grad stu¬dents would enter the armed ser¬vices with “disgust,” the strongestTurn to Page 11Universities in Crisis: Columbia Building SeizedBy ROBERT HARDMANSpecial to The MaroonNEW YORK—Columbia Univer¬sity has been rocked by three daysof demonstrations by new leftistand black students.Acting Dean of the CollegeHenry S. Coleman was trapped bythe demonstrators in his office fornearly 24 hours Tuesday night andWednesday. About twenty demon¬strators seized the office of Colum¬bia President Grayson Kirk,Wednesday afternoon though therewas no “rampant destruction” aswas reported.By late yesterday the demon¬strators held three Columbiabuildings: Hamilton Hall, the maincollege classroom building whichcontains the deans’ offices; Avery,the arts and architecture build¬ing; and Fayerweather, a class¬room building. After Tuesdaynight, only black demonstrators oc¬cupied Hamilton.Demonstrators had pickets infront of all the other ColumbiaUniversity buildings, though mostclasses elsewhere were reported tohave proceeded normally.Columbia Close.The University administration,after hearing rumors of possibleviolence, closed all Columbiabuildings except dormitories at5:30 Wednesday afternoon.The demonstration was begunTuesday at noon to ask for anopen discipilinary hearing for par¬ticipants in a sit-in in Low Library,the administration building, aweek earlier.After the demonstrators snow¬balled, the demands were enlargedto include:• A halt in the gymnasium con¬struction.• Discontinuation of ties withthe Institute for Defense Analyses(IDA)• A declaration of amnesty forthe demonstrators.The establishment of a fac¬ulty-student-administration com¬mittee to hear the original demon¬strators.• A repeal of President Kirk’sban against indoor demonstra¬tions.A faculty meeting WednesdayTAKSAM-Y&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANT afternoon produced a resolutionasking a halt in the gym construc¬tion, supporting the student’s rightto protest nonviolently, calling fora peaceful settlement of the tur¬moil, and also suggesting a fac¬ulty-student-administration com¬mittee, to hear the demonstrators.Kirk Goes to TrusteesWednesday night President Kirkagreed to present to the trusteesj the faculty recommendation to! cease the construction of the gym.Mark Rudd, chairman of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Societythere, which sponsored the Tues¬day demonstration, made the sug¬gestion that the demonstration bemoved to the site of the controver¬sial gym now under constructionin the public Morningside Park,after they were blocked from en¬tering McMillin Auditorium by se¬curity guards and a group calledStudents for a Free Campus.In the park, fences were torndown, the police were called, andone demonstrator was arrested.The students returned to thecampus and Hamilton Hall, Ruddsaid, “We’ve got to take ahostage.”It was then that Coleman washeld captive in his office.By Tuesday night the demonstra¬tors had fallen into two maingroups: white students centeringaround SDS; and black studentscentering around the Student Afro-American Society. The groups set¬tled down for the night with food,blankets, and music.Whites, Blacks SplitA 3 a.m Wednesday, SDS, atthe suggestion of the black stu¬dents, took a vote and decided toleave Hamilton. They then marched —*in the driving rain —on Low Library. For the first timethe police were called in, and uponthe arrival of the police the de¬monstrators dispersed.Inside Hamilton SAS, now joinedby several black militants fromHarlem, announced that it wouldnot allow classes to be held thereWednesday.After Kirk’s announcement clos¬ing Columbia buildings Wednesdayat 5:30 p.m., several architecturestudents in Avery Hall refused toleave and thus established a“third front” (after Hamilton andLow Library).On Thursday Fayerweather Hallwas taken by SDS Rudd, sayingthat the demonstration had nowbegun a student effort instead ofsimply an SDS effort, announcedhis resignation as SDS chairman.He remained, however, the leaderof the white demonstrators.Boston Univ. StudentsTake Over Ad BuildingThe administration of BostonUniversity acceded Wednesdaynight to the demands of 300 demon¬strators staging a sit-in at the BUadministration building.The demands agreed to are:• Renaming of the BU school ofthe theology after Dr. Martin Luth¬er King, who was a 1955 graduateof the school;• Filling the Dr. King chair for so¬cial ethics with a Negro professor;• Forming an Afro-AmericanAffairs Coordination Center liaisonin three areas: intellectual, social,and financial;• Offering more jobs for Negroes;• Hiring Negro counselors and em¬ployment advisors;• Establishing a summer orienta-Consider the alternative...THEDRAFT?A report against conscrip¬tion, prepared for thePeace Education Division,American Friends ServiceCommittee.S3.50; paper S1.25at bookstores everywhereHILL & WANG141 Fifth AvenueNew York, N.Y. 10010IF YOU ARE 2! OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESCLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Talc* Out1318 EAST 43rd ST. MU 4-1042 your school schedule.DAY. NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. tion program for incoming Negrofreshmen;•Offering Negro history courses;•Emphasizing the Afro-Americanimpact on civilization in othercourses; dation, which passed the student-faculty administration body unan¬imously Wednesday night, nowgoes to the dean of students whois expected to approve it in thenext few days.•Hiring more Negro faculty;•Elevating the status of Negrofaculty members;•Offering a fellowship in memoryof Dr. King; - 0 , '• Admitting 100 Negroes on schol¬arship and 100 without above the| normal amount of Negroes now ac¬cepted (400 students are Negro out| of more than 20,000 in the univer-I sity);I • Creating an Afro-American his-j tory section in the library;j • Providing funds, along with Har¬vard, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, Boston College, North-! eastern, and Wellesley to form acommunity college in Roxbury (ablack community outside Boston).Student Power DriveAt Northwestern U.Northwestern’s Council on Un¬dergraduate Life has recom¬mended giving undergraduatehouses autonomy to form theirown social rules. The recommen- The autonomy proposal is simi¬lar to the one passed by Chicagolast year. It abolishes women’shours except for women in the firstquarter of their freshman year andallows individual houses to deter¬mine their own visiting hours with¬in broad guidelines established by| the university.Under the new plan, houses willbe allowed to establish their ownrules provided that visitation hoursdo not exceed from noon to mid¬night on Sunday through Thursdayand from noon to 2 a.m. on Fri¬day and Saturday. Previously,( Northwestern had had no visita-I tion hours at all on weekdays.The plan also limits houses tomaking rules which are within na-I tional state and city law and which“respect the rights of the com¬munity.”The plan supercedes a longstanding Northwestern regulationj forbidding alcoholic beverages ini the dormitories.SEE AMERIKA FIRSTU of C Blackfriars Presentsa Musical Adaptation ofFRANZ KAFKA’SAMERIKAMandel Hall Thur., Fri., Sat.May 2, 3, 4, 8:30 pmTickets: $2.50, $2.00 with $.50 student discountspecial group rates availableMandel Hall Box Office opens April 15for information call M! 3-0800We hove thenew Volvo 144.WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR..INC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too!THE CHICAGO MAROON April 26, 1968iv:'-Vk By TIMOTHY S. KELLEYEditorial AssistantWhile President Johnson ap¬peared in Chicago briefly Wednes¬day night to address a $100-a-plateDemocratic fund-raising dinner inthe Conrad Hilton hotel, about 100demonstrators gathered peaceablyacross Michigan Ave. from the ho¬tel, marching, carrying signs, andchanting' anti-war slogans in the39-degree weather. They left be¬fore the President arrived.Johnson, who was scheduled tospeak at 6:30 p.m. arrived abouttwo hours later. He eluded acrowd which was waiting insidethe hotel at the Michigan Ave en¬trance, by slipping in on the Wa¬bash Ave. side.The President’s brief addresswas a spirited call for “theachievement of an America whichis unified.” He criticized thosewho, he said, placed the interestsof a single party or minorityabove those of national unity.Some of the Democratic contrib¬utors who attended the dinner atein rooms from which they couldsee Johnson only on a closed-cir¬cuit television hookup, and thusnever saw him in person.A mammoth security force, com¬posed of policemen drawn fromalmost every unit in the city forceas well as Secret Service agents,surround the hotel as the presidentarrived.The speech was Johnson’s firstmajor political appearance sincehe announced March 31 that hedid not intend to seek re-electionError Arouses Dublin IreM. Dov Dublin is an independentcandidate for the National StudentAssociation (NSA), not a memberof the NSA Reform Party, as TheMaroon erroneously stated Tues¬day.excellent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant2012 E. 71st ST.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 By JUDIE RESELLEditorial AssistantPresident Rolf A. Weil of Roose¬velt University vetoed the unani¬mous recommendation of theschool’s History Department to ap¬point political activist StaughtonLynd to a full-time position in thedepartment starting next Septem¬ber.In response to Weil’s action,members of the Roosevelt facultycirculated petitions demandingthat Weil reverse his decision,commenting that they “are con¬vinced that political judgementsentered into the decision.”The faculty is meeting today at1 pm. to evaluate the success ofthis petition campaign and decideon further action.this year., Though Johnson did not openlyendorse V i c e-President HubertHumphry for the Democratic nom¬ination, he alluded to him with awarmth that was lacking when hementioned “two Senators” alreadyin contention. A few of those pres¬ent wore buttons expressing theirpreference for still another politi¬cal figure. They said “Daley forPresident.”Johnson, who was accompaniedbe his wife, flew back to Wash¬ington later in the evening, afterspending only about two hours inChicago. Chairman of the History Depart¬ment Jack J. Roth said, “Thelast time that this happenedno one has come to help. ThisSCM Predicts20 Thousand InAnti-war MarchDemonstrations against the warin Vietnam sponsored by the Stu¬dent Mobilization Committee willbe held in cities across the nationtomorrow. An expected 20,000 peo¬ple will participate in the Chicagomarch, according to Clark Kissin¬ger, co-ordinator of the April Pa¬rade Committee of the ChicagoPeace Council.The march will begin with a ral¬ly in Grant Park at 12:30 p.m.Principle speakers will be BlaseBonpane, a guerilla priest recent¬ly expelled from Guatemala; Pro¬fessor St. Clair Drake, author of“Black Metropolis,” and MargaretTerry, a local welfare rights or¬ganizer.Following the rally will be amarch up State Street terminatingat the Civic Center Plaza wherefurther speeches will be heard.The April 27 march is a jointStudents for a Democratic Socie¬ty (SDS) and Student National Mo¬bilization (SMC) effort to initiateprograms for the summer. The ac¬tivities for the days of April 20-30, Ten Days of Resistance, arepart of a surfacing program, to in- must not happen here.”President Weil told the Roose¬velt student newspaper, TheTorch, that his action was basedupon “ad hominem” reasons, notpolitical ones. He claimed that theadministration has informationabout Lynd that makes him unac¬ceptable for the post, but that hedoesn’t want to reveal it publicly.Roosevelt’s chapter of the Amer¬ican Association of University Pro¬fessors met Monday and appointeda committee to determine if thequestion of academic freedom isinvolved in the Lynd case.A mass student meeting Wednes¬day selected four students-at-largeas a steering committee. The com¬mittee held a closed meeting yes¬terday to organize student re¬sponse. rnent,” said Ellen Karnofsky, lec¬turer in history at Roosevelt. “Thefaculty was hardly unanimous;this issue could crack the facultywide open.”ELECTIONSf SG, NSA, and CHOICE '68 J|f elections will continue to- ||;>•: day at Woodward, B-J, and §Pierce from 7:30-9 a.m. i:Sv . ."v.::and 5-7:30 p.m.; in Law|§ and Social Science from 9- f§11 a.m.; in the Mandel cor- 1’ ridor from 11:30-5 p.m.; in J|! the Bookstore and Cobb jgfrom 1:30-5; in Snell-Hitch- .* cock from 3:30-6:00 p.m.; IfH and in Ida Noyes from f§Turn to Page 4Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.MARCH FOR PEACEJoin Chicago’s Biggest Anti-War ProtestTOMORROW, SATURDAY APRIL 27.Rally at Grant Park Bandshell 12:30March to Civic Center 2:00Look for the U. of C. bannerand join your colleagues!U.C. Faculty Resist “The administration seems ada- 7:30-10 p.m.RETURNED VOLUNTEERS!Meet at theGrant Park BandshellFor InforCall 276-4845or 363-7717Peace Corps, Etc.MARCHAgainst the WARSaturday, April 27AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9?II-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED-FREE TECHNICAL ADVICESales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’sTape Recorders-Phonos-AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges-Tubes-Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsCohn & SternSmutt Sc (HampttaShopTHE IMPECCABLE GANT SHIRTGant gives traditional shirts an exciting new dimension viabold bright colors and lively stripings. The trim, taperedHugger body is tailored with singular Gant precision. Solidcolor batiste oxfords & broadcloths $7.50, in durable pressat $9. Stripes in oxford or broadcloth $8, in durable pressat $9.50. Neck sizes !3'/2 to 17.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKSTAUGHTON LYNDDenied Roosevelt PostJohnson Evades CrowdOf Anti-War ProtestorsApril 26, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 34 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 26, 1968By PAULA SZEWCZYKEditorial AssistantNew Left demonstration plans forthe Chicago Democratic Conventionin August have been tabled untilearly summer according to RennieDavis, co-ordinator of the conven¬tion demonstration.Major antiwar groups, communi¬ty groups, and others will meetlate June to reassess the situationcreated by President Johnson’s de¬cision not to run for re-election andthe McCarthy and Kennedy cam¬paigns. Many other New Leftgroups are also reorganizing theirplans in the light of the advent ofa new type of student activist onthe college campus.The new movement is re¬presented by the liberal-radical stu¬dent who will burn his draft card,participate in demonstrations butwill also work for either McCarthyor Kennedy. This new wave of lib¬eralism will affect the future ofthe New Left and its philosophy. ized the need for the radical move¬ment to co-operate with the newliberal surge. Davis commented,“There is now a second wave ofliberalism on campus stumulatedby McCarthy, by the war, and byKennedy. Rather than seeing it a6a retreat of the (radical) move¬ment it seems to me that it is op¬ening a second front which willtake time to develop.This leads me to the position offeeling of being very excited on thewhole of the development of the(McCarthy-Kennedy) campaignsDavis continued. “It is very im¬portant that the New Left workwith them.” News AnalysisTurning AwayThe New Left’s iacx of leader¬ship and the ambivalence of itsidealistic philoisophy have turnedaway many from its ranks Theappearance of Eugene McCarthy en¬abled many students dissatisfiedwith the radical movement to anew coalition of political strengthbased on creating links with boththe general public and the estab¬lishment, while allowing the stu¬dents to remain free of establish¬ment control.According to Lens, the New Left is in the process of structuringits goals and philosophy in orderto “create a broad front rangingfrom liberalism to radicalism.”“We must,” Lens stressed,“make it clear to those young peo¬ple who are currently working forMcCarthy and Kennedy that whilewe feel they are not oriented onthe total task of remolding soci¬ety, they have broken enough withthe establishment for us to main¬tain links with them.”Tremendous VictoryThe combined efforts of the NewLeft and the Students for McCar¬thy have achieved a tremendous victory of unseating the President.The new liberal trend is notwholly entrenched within the es¬tablishment nor is it controlled bythe New Left. Rather, it is a prag¬matic movement utilizing anymeans of political force to achievea goal. The flexibility of the move¬ment allows a variety of both lib¬eral and radical tactics to be used.It is possible that this new trendwill grow stronger as dissatisfac¬tion within the radical movementcontinues on campus. A major re¬vision within the structure of theNew Left will be needed in orderfor the radical movement to at¬tract a larger contingency.Need To CooperateTwo New Left leaders, RennieDavis and Sid Lens, have emphas-Largest CoalitionSeen for March Miles and miles of just a few words and holding hands.Summer is following good \ ibrations... feeling happy...talkingabout things that matter and things that don't... running aroundwith friends...usingTWA’s 50 50 ( dub card to discover new placesall over the IS for only half fare...Meeting people...the surfers at Malibu...stomping and yellingat the Monterey Pop kestival...and the New port Polk Pcstival...dancing all night at the Salvation...drinking beer at the Dodger’s game..Polk singing Sundays in Washington Square... the artists and writersat Big Sur...the big guys and the litrle guys...the people who agree withyou and the people who don’t...just being together...all the peopleat TWA who want you to have a good summer... kind them... kind youSummer is a finding-out time. ('heck your travel agent,or vour nearest J WA office! dawayContinued from Page 3volve more students and non-stu¬dents in forming local bases ofpolitical concern and activism.The coalitions formed for theApril march are reported by SMCto be the largest yet in the peacemovement’s history. Groups suchas SDS, YMCA, Students for Mc¬Carthy, religious organizations,faculty groups, professional groupsand others will be represented inStudents Strike TodayIn Viet War ProtestAn international student strikeagainst the war has been called bythe National Student MobilizationCommittee (SMC) today as part ofits program, Ten Days of Re¬sistance.One hundred campuses acrossthe nation and in foreign countriesare expected to participate in thestrike. Spokesman from the Univer¬sity of Chicago New Left groupssaid that this campus will not par¬ticipate in the strike.LOVE_ _ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313Nat Acad, of Sciences Recognizes Faculty Members' Research'Four Chicago faculty membershave been elected to the NationalAcademy of Sciences in recogni¬tion of their achievements in ori¬ginal research.The four new members are Al¬berto P. Calderon, professor ofmathematics; Richard C. Lewon-tin, professor of biology and asso¬ciate dean of the Division of theBiological Sciences; Stuart A.Rice, director of the James Franck Institute and professor of chemis¬try; and Valentine A. Telegdi, pro¬fessor of physics and in the Enricotin, Rice, and Telegdi brings to 38Fermi Institute.The election of Calderon, Lewon-tin, Rice and Telegdi brings to 38the number of members of Chica¬go faculty who are members ofthe body.The four are among 50 new members elected by the NAS atits 105th annual meeting this weekin Washington, D.C. Election tomembership in the Academy isconsidered one of the highest hon¬ors that can be accorded an Amer¬ican scientist or engineer.Research AreasLewontin’s work is in populationgenetics and evolution.Calderon is recognized as one of the most outstanding mathemat¬ical analysts of the present gener¬ation, with great achievements inboth classical and functional an¬alysis.Rice is a theoretical and experi¬mental chemist whose researchcenters on the study of liquids andsolids, the interpretation of thebulk properties of matter in termsof the behavior of constituentmolecules, and the electronic properties of liquids.Telegdi is an experimental phys¬icist who was one of the three mento have experimentally proved thenonconservation of parity theoryfor which two former Chicago stu¬dents (Chen Ning Yang and TsungDao Lee) won the Nobel Prize. Healso is distinguished for his sys¬tematic and thorough studies onthe properties of the weak inter¬actions in radioactive decay.GADFLYChristianity and Radicalism on Chicago CampusBy EDWARD A. PHILLIPS, Jr.1 am pleased to call attentionto the revival of radicalism onthe Chicago campus, particularlyin a man of professed Catholicbelief, Mr. W. Yakes-Reno (Let¬ter to the Editors, April 23). Per¬haps the convert does not realizeit, but to one neither a Catholicnor a radical the doctrine is eas¬ily recognizable, although the at¬mosphere and context arechanged.I refer to the doctrine of radi¬cal individualism and the claimof self-autonomy. While attackingthose who see white racism asthe fundamental cause of the in¬justice of American society andwish to confess this (and certain¬ly the implication in Mr. Yakes-Reno’s letter is that only “radi¬cals” would do this), Mr. Y-R as¬sumes a posture of very badChristianity, very bad sociology,very bad logic, and expresses allthis in what can only be describedas very bad satire. I hope that Iam being no more intolerant herethan Mr. Y-R himself, since weboth know that intolerance is anattitude characteristic of “radi¬cals”—to which group neither ofus belongs.MR. Y-R talks in terms ofChristianity when he criticizes“radicals” for the religious toneof their confession of white rac¬ism. His concept of Christianityseems to come dangerously closeto a syndrome known as “only onSundays” (with an occasionalgood Friday, maundy Thursday,and ash Wednesday thrown in forvariety’s sake). Or perhaps re¬ligion and religious concepts ofsin, confession, repentance, and- ' ' '' ■■ ' -EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 cast 53rd StreetHyde Park 3-8372CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganStudents $1.50 with I.D. CardsGood every day but SaturdayWeekdays open 6 pm. Sat. 8c Sun.open 1:30English Comedy in ColorFun 8c Laughs. An attemptTo steal the Crown JewelsCrowther N.Y. Times “Ingeniousthriller, A crimecomedy that compares to LavanderHill Mob”Sat. Review “Throughly absorbing,Delightful”Oliver Reed 8c Michael Crawford“THE JOKERS” reform really do not have anyrelevant place or application insociety and the extra-sanctuarysecular world. Perhaps the im¬plication of Mr. Y-R’s letter iscorrect: religious belief shouldnot extend past the church door;yet this ignores the best of theCatholic tradition.IN HIS dealings with societyand “the world,” Mr. Y-R speaksfrom the standpoint of a “humanbeing” and a “free man,” cer¬tainly not that of a Christian. For“any good Catholic knows” theimportance of responsibility andaction within a commnuity; butMr. Y-R abrogates both respon¬sibility and community: “I feelno responsibility for the wrongsthat have been committed by oth¬er human beings. . . .As a humanbeing, I can live comfortably withanyone who respects my right tolive the way I choose, and as afree man, I reserve the right tobe indifferent.” The gospel of in¬difference, I believe, is a radical¬ly new idea in Christianity, anda strangely Philistine attitude fora “catholic”—I might say radi¬cally Philistine. I find it hard to accept this rad¬ical freedom FROM responsibili¬ty to one’s society. Mr. Y-R maychoose to live with anyone hewants, but if he practices his“right of indifference,” he won’tbe living WITH them very long—“in the same general vicinity,”perhaps, but not “with.” If Chris¬tianity had practiced such isola¬tionism and abrogated responsi¬bility in this way for those as¬pects of society to which it choseto be indifferent (and indifferenceis “tolerance” in only the frail¬est sense), it too could not havelasted very long or veryeffectively.PERHAPS Mr. Y-R has missedthe point that racism is some¬thing structurally embedded inAmerican society, and it is“white” only because that societyhas been largely “white.” And al¬though he labels this as illogical,Elizabeth CjordtJJair 2b ediyners1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900 even to some of us “non-rad¬icals,” it is obvious that “indif¬ference” by its tacit acceptanceand support of the system, ac¬cepts and supports a structurethat is racist, and is thus1, in ef¬fect, itself racist. It seems to methat religious ritual and cleans¬ing is most appropriate here; andsackcloth and ashes are a farbetter response than a rational¬ized right of indifference.I find Mr. Y-R’s account of theevangelization of the “radicals”quite convincing. His satire hasperhaps been the unwitting med¬ ium of a TRUTH: perhaps, theradicals have embraced the “rit¬uals” of religion—perhaps also,their “doctrines” and “atmos¬phere” are significantly more inline with Christianity than thoseof Mr. Y-R. And this judgmentcomes from a non-Catholic andnon-radical—though, in Mr. Y-R’sterminology, I find myself muchmore closely alligned with his“radical” then with his “Catho¬lic”—the radicals, by his own ad¬mission, at least have a “com¬munity” and a “faith.”LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positionsavailable for students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueZoR BA THE GREEKSATURDAY 7:00, 9:30 p.m. CUBB LL, PIERCE TOWER CINEMA' $1.00in that wildmixed-media, all-elementtotal environment called1106 W. LAWRENCE, CHICAGO, LO- 1-8558DANCE. 00 YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICAB Rip out this ad row and bring it toB Cheetah this weekend for a: SPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGO- STUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL 212 NORTH MICHIGANGROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah far 50-2000WIDE OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 81P.M. SlicKs sul &o&esInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient hour.: .Noon to 8 p. in. daily; Noon to ft p. m. SundayApril 26, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5HARVEY WASSERMAN• The Chicago MaroonFounded in ltMJeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business Manager/Managing Editor Roger Black I Literary Editor David L. AikenExecutive Editor ....Michael Seidman Associate Editors ....David E. GumpertNews Editor John Moscow Daniel HertzbergPhotographic Editor David Travis I Editor Emeritus David A. SatterI Senseless LossThere is not much to say about the murder of RoyGutmann, except that Chicago has lost a student every¬one agrees was a good man to the senseless violencethat appears to be a characteristic of society today.Unlike the venting of frustrations over socioeco¬nomic oppression that typifies black rebellion, and un¬like the more-or-less calculated vandalism at Columbia,I| the Gutmann killing appears more as a freakish acci¬dent.iRelatively speaking, this may be so.Despite all the subsequent questioning about safetyin the neighborhood, statistics indicate that Hyde Parkcrime rate on the whole has not recently increasedand that it is still one of the lowest in the city. It wasa murder that took everyone by surprise.fNevertheless, it is the kind of tragedy that mustbe more carefully guarded against in the future, for soj long as this society remains one in which an adequategun-control bill cannot be passed, in which Richard' Specks are produced, there will be no security in itsj most secluded groves. The University is rightly worriedthese days for many reasons, and its immediate re-j sponse is a commendable one.i Academy in CrisisIt seems that our serene academic ivory tower world; is falling apart. Columbia leftists and black radicalsj occupy, at this writing, three University buildings.Boston University students seized their administration; building and forced the concession of their demands.A gaping split between the faculty and the administra¬tion has appeared at Roosevelt University over thehiring of Staughton Lynd.The “normal channels” are breaking down every¬where, and it seems that the universities can no longerkeep up with events. The New York Times editorializesabout the independence of the academy and how stu¬dents jeopardize it with their “hoodlumism” (c.f. TheChicago Tribune’s editorial two years ago on “Riots. on the Midway”).But what The Times, in its outrage and indignation,does not stop to ponder is the question: “Independencefrom what?” From the police? From the state? Fromthe students? From the ghetto?Clearly the “world” is impinging more and moreupon the “academy.” Administrators at Chicago, Co¬lumbia, Harvard, Yale, Pennsylvania, to name a few,are running scared over the fact that their immediateworlds may impinge so much as to do positive damageto their campuses.But what the administrators and all of us mustrealize is that the answers usually applied to theproblems (with the attendant gabble about “studentpower,” and “university neutrality,” may not fit. Weare now going to have to reach some decision on theways the University is relevant to society. We aregoing to have to begin to fulfill those ways. And weare all going to have to work together. '68 National Political Scene:No Real Choices OfferedDespite the confusion of the na¬tional political scene since Lyn¬don Johnson’s tactical retreatand his “peace move,” one thingremains painfully clear — 1968will be another year in which thetwo-party system offers no realchoices to the electorate.Indeed, perhaps Johnson’smove throws that into clearer re¬lief than before. Peace can¬didates Kennedy and McCarthyhad nothing to say — despite thequestionability of the limitedbombing as a military ratherthan a diplomatic measure —and that they were both left coldis perhaps the strongest indi¬cation yet that they offer no phil¬osophical objection to the war inViet nam.Each advocates a tactical re¬treat, McCarthy being apparentlywilling to swallow a little moredefeat than Kennedy who is ap¬parently (no one is really sure)willing to swairow a little moredefeat than Johnson.BUT NEITHER objects ot theU.S. presence there — in fact,each supports it even to the useof armed force. On the one hand,one can say it is “impractical”to demand of our candidates a clear anti-imperialist stand. Iwould argue it is the only prac¬tical stand, both for Vietnam andfor the wars to come.For if one studies the positionof the Vietnamese National Lib¬eration Front and, less clearly,of Hanoi, it seems less and lesslikely that a negotiated settle¬ment is even possible. The NLFhas consistently hardened its lineon whom it will accept into a co¬alition and the South Vietnamesegovernment has done likewise;the longer the war goes on, theless middle ground there is.Given the current state of mil¬itary affairs, it seems to me theonly pratical” alternative tocurrent military policy is imme¬diate and unconditional with¬drawal.BUT THE current exigenciesnotwithstanding, it must be madeclear to all that though Gene andBobby may not like the astheticsof bombing civilians, naplan, tor¬tures and the fact that the UnitedStates is fighting for a dictator¬ship, they not only logically fol¬low, but are the bulwark of anyU.S. interference. There is onlyone question — will the UnitedStates intervene against left-wing revolutionary movements in theThird World? If so, then the restfollows inexoreably.There is no argument for the“practicality” of supporting tac¬tical retreat without altering thebasic philosophy. Despite thecurrent odds, we must rememberthat the world will not end withVietnam, that there will be other,cheaper Vietnams that will bejust as wrong, and that no presi¬dent who supports counter-revolu¬tion only where it succeeds canbe counted on th allow our liber¬ation at home.IT SEEMS strange that allagree America needs basicchange, but that few are willingto break from precisely thosewho have made it and who canbe reliably counted on to con¬serve the country exactly as it is.Despite the apparent range ofparty personalities, the two-partysystem makes our votes mean¬ingless.A viable Peace and Freedomparty is both a possible and anabsolutely necessary alternativetoward a future where the realquestions of our generation canbe asked with force.Letters to the EditorsGuarantee AidThe University’s “Statement onReadmission,” printed in the Ap¬ril 2 University of Chicago Rec¬ord, states that “The Universitywill endeavor to make availableto all returning students . . . thefinancial resources they mayneed to resume their studies. Itis hoped that government pro¬grams, such as the G.I. Bill andthe National Defense EducationAct loan program, will continueto be a major source of support.”The emphasis on governmentprograms in this paragraphseems to discriminate againstpeople who will have violated thelaw (and therefore be ineligiblefor government funds) by draftresistance activity—either by go¬ing underground, to jail, or intoexile, instead of serving in thearmed forces. It also discrimi¬nates against conscientious objec¬tors who do alternative civilianservice. In addition, the state¬ment does not take into accountpossible discrimination againstsuch people by the governmentin allocating funds, even if theyare eligible for such funds.Independent of being readmit¬ted to the University, many stu¬dents cannot afford to attendwithout extensive scholarshipand fellowship aid. This appliesparticularly to graduate students.Not being financially supportedis for these people equivalent tonot being readmitted. The Uni¬versity has the obligation to in¬sure resisting students against fi¬nancial discrimination.THEREFORE , we propose thatthe University guarantee to allreturning students, and to thosewho were admitted but could notattend because of the draft, thatit will extend to them aid, finan¬cial and otherwise, equivalent tothat given to former soldiers bythe federal government underPublic Law 358, passed in 1966(the G.I Bill of Rights). Thisprovision will also apply in thecase of new legislation which Congress may pass in the future.This means that if a studentresists the draft or does alterna¬tive service instead of serving inthe armed forces, and is conse¬quently ineligible for Public Law358 funds or other governmentfunds, the University will subsi¬dize his education with at leastas much aid as he would havereceived from the government ifhe had served.JEFFREY BLUM, ’69PETER FRUCHTMAN, 71Special VietnamConvocation GroupDisciplineIt is embarassing to have topraise an administrator for cri¬ticizing a student’s editorial, butMr. Vice was quite correct in hisletter on Tuesday. John Moscowshould not have needlessly em¬barrassed and endangered a stu¬dent by discussing publicly cer¬tain alleged actions of his. Fur¬thermore, his column did con¬tain many errors. If both Mr.Vice, who is on the DisciplinaryCommittee, and the student, whowas punished by it, agree on that,then it must be so.However, even what Moscowdid say tended to confirm thecontentions of that student andhis supporters that he was pun¬ished through unfair and unjustprocedures. According to Mos¬cow, the resident head searchedthe room without permission,and yet, the student rather thanthe resident head was punished.Later, the student was again pun¬ished on the basis of one person’stestimony, as Moscow related.Finally, the student was forced toleave the dormitory, supposedlyto end friction between him andhis roommate.What Moscow did not add wasthat the two roomates had botharranged for new rooms alreadyand that the allegedly hostile boyhad signed a petition urging thathis roommate be permitted tostay in the dorm.ED BIRNBAUM, ’68 Kennedy StudentsI would like to correct the falseimpression conveyed in Friday’sMaroon that in Indiana RobertKennedy is not relying heavilyon the use of canvassing and vol¬unteer support.In point of fact, Senator Ken¬nedy is challenging a formidablepolitical machine in Indiana. Itis only through other than nor¬mal party channels that he willbe able to effectively reach thevoters, and volunteer canvassingand volunteer office help are es¬sential for success in this effort.If Robert Kennedy fails in In¬diana, the victor will be theforces of the status quo. The pur¬pose of the Students for Kennedyhere is to provide Chicago stu¬dents with the opportunity tomake an important contributionin this endeavor to change thecourse of the 1968 election and,thereby, the course of America.Anyone interested in workingfor Kennedy in Indiana shouldcall 288-6610, Ext. 3129 in theevening.JOHN BEAL ’68PresidentStudents for KennedyUniversity of ChicagoLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean-ig. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800 Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and In theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail S6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 26, 1968April 26, 1968 The Chicago Maroon of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwokTHEHAMWhat willYOUdo aboutPhoto by Randy PrimmJune is coming. Student deferments forall graduating College senior men andfirst-year male graduate students areabout to expire.Except for a small group of men whohad entered the second year of a doctoralor combined master’s-doctoral graduateprogram by last October, and for men en¬rolled in medical or dental school, no mancan expect to obtain a deferment from thedraft simply because he is a graduatestudent.Those about to graduate from the Collegeor complete their first year of graduatestudy should not count on such decisionsas that made by University of Chicago,which will no longer tell draft boards whena student ceases to be a student, to pro¬tect them. Each draft registrant has thelegal obligation to notify his draft boardwithin ten days of any change in his per¬sonal status which could affect his draftclassification.Failure to do so is punishable by penal¬ties the same as for any other draft of¬fense — up to five years imprisonmentand $10,000 fine. While most people do not worry toomuch about writing their draft boards ev¬ery time they sneeze, any man who ex¬pects to have extensive dealings with hisdraft board and the Justice Departmentshould remember that any failure to com¬ply with every section of the draft lawcan eliminate his chances of pleading thathe was wrongly classified should his casecome to trial.ACCORDING TO draft counselors atAmerican Friends Service Committee andChicago Area Draft Resisters, draft agemen inquire most frequently about Cana¬da, physical and psychological deferments,and conscientious objection in that order.While the official guidelines from Wash¬ington listing occupations acceptable fordeferred II-A status have been eliminated,most local boards, which now have soleauthority to grant or deny II-A defer¬ments, are still granting them about thesame as before, according to Rick Board-man, an AFSC counselor.Men who obtain teaching jobs in most;ity school systems, and obtain letters fromthe school administrators attesting to the system’s desperate need for teachers, havea good chance of obtaining II-A status, ac¬cording to both Boardman and RaymondTownley, a CADRE counselor.Obtaining a job is the first step, however.Those interested should contact the per¬sonnel offices of the school systems inwhich they are interested. Some systems,such as New York City, offer summertime“cram courses” in teaching skills. Others,such as Chicago, will accept a bachelor’sdegree for provisional teacher’s status, orfor full-time substitute status.VISTA, the Peace Corps, some kinds ofskilled trades and many positions with so¬cial service agencies are also still accept¬able to most boards for II-A status.Those who feel they have some physicalor psychological incapacity which couldgain them a deferment should first findwhether their ailment is listed in the offic¬ial publication of medical standards. It isavailable at draft counseling offices.They should then obtain written evidencefrom a physician that they do have such anailment. If the disability has only recentlybeen incurred, such a letter should be sentas soon as possible. If it is a chronic con¬ dition which has been present for sometime, but the draft board has not yet beennotified of it, the physician’s letter shouldprobably be sent just before the date ofphysical examination.COPIES OF PHYSICIAN’S LETTERSshould be taken to the physical examina¬tion. Examining doctors are unlikely todiscover deferrable disabilities unless suchevidence is thrust under their noses. It hasbeen estimated that almost 40,000 men inthe last two years have been released fromthe army after it was discovered they hadbeen inducted while suffering from disa¬bilities for which they should have beendeferred.This article (as well as the others in thisissue) are designed to give only brief in¬troductions to each available alternative.Men should consult experienced draft coun¬selors before embarking on any effort togain a deferment, or on the road toresistance.But all men should think things throughfor themselves.It’s your life, not Gen. Hershey’s.—D.L.A.by DavidLL. Aiken V*’**No one should assume he is not a poten¬tial conscientious objector.CO status is no longer the nearly exclu¬sive province of Quakers and Mennonites.Any man who sincerely feels that he couldnot participate in military training andservice, regardless of the consequences ofthis refusal, can consider CO as a realalternative, even if he has had little orno orthodox religious background.Even before the recent elimination ofstudent deferments, the number of CO ap¬plicants was rising sharply from rates ofpast years, when Vietnam was only aminor worry.According to Arlo Tatum, executive sec¬retary of the Central Committee for Con¬scientious Objectors in Philadelphia, andprobably the best authority on the subject,COs doing civilian alternative service haveaccounted for a steadily increasing per¬centage of those touched by the draft.Increasing numbers of applicants for COstatus are selective objectors, who thinkthey might have accepted service in pastwars but not in Vietnam, according toTatum, quoted in James Finn’s recentbook, Protest: Pacifism and Politics.More COs are also coming from non¬religious and Roman Catholic backgrounds,Tatum says. Even more striking to him,“for the first time in the history of theUnited States, conscientious objection hasbecome a political factor precisely becausemany of the men who are becoming con¬scientious objectors now are concernedwith the world, they do include politics intheir objection to war or to this particularwar.”Noting that, from his long experience,he felt “by and large local boards trypretty hard to be fair” to applicants forCO status, Tatum estimated that “80 to85 percent of those who are sincerely op¬posed to war in any form are given COstatus. This is no protection for the Viet¬nam war resister.”Clearly, many men have a chance toobtain CO status, but only if they obtainadvice from an experienced counselor be¬fore submitting their applications.THE BASIC question to ask yourself is:If I were confronted between a choice ofgoing into the army as a combatant, orbeing taken to jail, which would I choose?If you can honestly answer that youwould choose jail, you have a good founda¬tion for working out a CO claim.It is not necessary to state an orthodoxbelief in a God with a long white beardsitting in Heaven. Nor is it necessaryto have faithfully attended Sunday Schoolfor 20 years. If you do have a relativelyorthodox religious background, that is whatthe board is looking for, and your chancesof success are quite good.But even if you do not, you may stillbase your claim on beliefs which “occupythe same place in (your) life. . .as anorthodox belief in God holds in the lifeof one clearly qualified for the exemption.”That is what the Supreme Court decidedin 1965 in the case “U.S. vs. Seeger.”Under this decision, an applicant can quali¬fy under any sincerely, deeply held belief,whether theistic or not.Congress attempted to reduce the effectsof the Seeger decision by deleting any re¬ference to “Supreme Being” in the 1967draft law, and inserting the provision that“ ‘religious training and belief’ does notinclude essentially political, sociological,or philosophical views, or a merely per¬sonal moral code.”According to expert draft counselors,however, this provision in the new lawdoes not successfully narrow the qualifica¬tions. The original court decision soughtto define religious belief broadly enoughto avoid violation of the First Amendment,and any future court decisions are likelyto be based on the Seeger decision.In any case, the application for CO sta¬tus, Selective Service Form 150, still asksthe applicant to check whether or not hebelieves in a Supreme Being, and anyapplicant foolish enough to check “no”automatically counts himself out of therunning. Those with reservations shouldconsider checking “yes,” then writingsomething to the effect of, “It dependson definition,” or “See my statement.” In the answer to the question on defini¬tion of Supreme Being, you should statepositively what you do believe. Don’t worryabout anybody else’s systems; just stateyour own.ESSENTIALLY, the questions in SeriesII of Form 150 offer an opportunity towrite an essay covering the nature ofyour beliefs, the way in which you cameto hold those beliefs, and the consequencesof those beliefs for your attitude towardphysical violence, its use by governments,and your relationship to laws which mayrequire you to participate in organizationswhich use violence.If you first registered for the draft sever¬al years ago and are just now filing aCO claim, you should be especially carefulto explain how your views have changedsince age 18.Don’t fret about the fantasies of draftboard members who will ask you whatyou would do when the famous hypotheti¬cal rapist attempts to violate your grand¬mother, or what you would have done20 years ago in World War II, when thingswere nice and simple and we had anenemy who could easily be hated.Just think carefully about where youwould draw the line on the use of violence.Under the 1967 law, if your local boardturns down your application for CO, andif you appeal, you are given the oppor¬tunity to have a personal hearing beforemembers of your board.If the local board again turns you down,you may appeal to the state board. Thereis no longer an FBI investigation andreport on CO appeal cases, as there wasbefore the 1967 law was passed, so theonly evidence the state board will havewill be the material in your file. For thisreason, it is important to insert anythingand everything in your file which couldpossibly bolster your case.The letters of support you submit canbe of crucial importance, especially at theappeal stage. The ideal personal referencewould be from a respected resident ofthe community near your board, who at¬tests to your sincerity although he maynot agree with your anti-way views. Any¬one who can say he believes your beliefis sincere can be an acceptable reference,however.If the state board also turns you down,but not by a unanimous vote, you areentitled to make a “presidential appeal,”and have your case heard by the NationalSelective Service office.If you wish to bolster the evidence ofyour sincerity, and can begin your alter¬native service at any time, you may wishto consider “volunteering” for alternativeservice by filing Form 151. Volunteers aretaken first.For every step of the process of applyingfor CO status, it is crucially important tohave a copy of the latest edition of Hand¬book for Conscientious Objectors, availablefrom any draft counseling agency or fromthe Central Committee for ConscientiousObjectors, 2016 Walnut St., Philadelphia,Pa. 19103. It costs $1, and is the onlycompletely authoritative guide to CO ap¬plication.It is also of great importance to consult-with a trained draft counselor at everystep of the process. An applicant shouldbe especially careful to discuss the ques¬tions on Form 150 with a counselor, andprepare his answers to them, before hewrites his local board to request a'copyof the form, since he must return the completed form to his board within 10days after they send it to him.SEEING A counselor is important ervenif you are only toying with the idea ofapplying for CO, since there are manydecisions you must make before you apply.You must choose whether you would ac¬cept noncombatant service in the army asa medic, or whether you will insist uponexemption from all forms of military serv¬ice and serve for two years in civilianalternative service.It is usually easier to obtain noncombat¬ant military status called I-A-O, from mostlocal boards than it is to obtain civilian(I-O) status, but it should be rememberedthat men doing noncombatant service dif¬fer from plain old GIs only in that theformer carry no guns, and devote mostof their activity to caring for woundedsoldiers.They go through the same basic train¬ing as regular soldiers, except that theyare given no weapons training. Most med¬ics serve close to battle areas.The Army Field Manual states:“The primary duty of medical troops asof all other troops is to contribute theirutmost to the success of the commandof which the medical service is a part.”Saving lives and easing suffering are noteven mentioned as roles of medical troops.Their mission, according to the Army man¬ual, is “to contribute to the success of themilitary effort through conserving man¬power. . .(and) preventing adverse effectsof unevacuated casualties on combat ef¬ficiency.”CIVILIAN alternative service involves noconnection with the military establishmentother than the Selective Service System.After a man has been granted 1-0 status,he and his local board are required tocome to an agreement on an assignmentfor civilian work.The requirement officially stated for suchwork is that it must be with a non-profitorganization which contributes to the“maintenance of the national health, safe¬ty, or interest.”While there are lists available fromAmerican Friends Service Committee andother groups of organizations which arealready accepted as employers of COs,an applicant may gain approval for workwith any likely agency from the stateboard in which the agency is located, ifhe persists.If you first list of choices is not accepted,your board will send their own list. Ifyou do not accept anything on it, a medi¬ator steps in. If you refuse any assignmentat all, that amounts to refusing induction,and can lead to jail.Federal, state, and local governmentagencies, state mental hospitals, privatehospitals, church or other service organi¬zations are among the employers of COs.The Peace Corps is not acceptable.The CO in civilian service is supposedto be treated and paid just like all otheremployees in his job category. While doingcivilian service, his classification is I-W.After two years of service, he has com¬pleted his obligation to Uncle Sam.BEFORE APPLYING for CO status, itmay be helpful to clarify your own reasonsfor applying. A draft counselor can beof some help here, also.Many men, especially those reared inpacifist traditions, seek to perform alterna¬tive service because they feel they canbe of assistance to their fellow men insuch work. Many find hospital work, church service work, or similar activitiesdeeply satisfying.Many also see their civilian alternativeservice as a kind of “witness” which com¬municates their opposition to war and theirbelief in the power of love.Some applicants, particularly thosedoubtful of their success, file CO applica¬tions either as a mere “delaying tactic’before confronting the necessity to resistthe draft, or as a way of making a per¬sonal statement of opposition to the Viet¬nam war.Some also feel that it cannot hurt toask their draft board to ratify their de¬cision not to serve.However, there are also those who wouldreadily have been accepted, or had al¬ready been accepted, as COs, but whodecided to take a more “absolutist” posi¬tion of refusing all connection with theSelective Service System.One example of such a resister is RickBoardman, who was granted 1-0 status,but then was refused the alternative serv¬ice position he desired, which was to dodraft counseling work for the AmericanFriends Service Committee. Now awaitingindictment, he is doing highly effectivecounseling work for AFSC.When he decided to turn in his draftcard and “cut himself off” from the Selec¬tive Service system, he wrote his boardin Massachusetts:“When my claim as a conscientious ob¬jector was recognized I was pleased andbegan to think that perhaps we had avery “reasonable” system of conscriptionafter all. I found myself thinking that it’sa very good system of conscription that“allows” a man to try to help his fellowsto live constructively instead of destruc¬tively. I had failed to realize that my de¬ferment as a CO was a convenient wayby which my resistance to conscription andthe military (and the resistance of thou¬sands like me) was effectively silenced.“I had failed to acknowledge that myclaim as a conscientious objector was onlybegrudgingly given to me because my “cre¬dentials” were good, because I was articu¬late, because my education had made iteasy for me to produce a convincing de¬fense of my desire to live peacefully andlovingly; in short, because I fell withina certain small, carefully defined groupto whom the government felt it was bothwise and safe to give deferments; wise,because otherwise this small group mightraise some embarrassing questions aboutthe legitimacy of conscription and mili¬tarism, and safe because the group issmall enough so as to have little influenceon the populace at large.“I didn’t stop to ask how it is that thedraft borad’s judgment about what consti-tues “work in the national interest” shouldbe considered any more legitimate thanmine, or any more legitimate than thatof the American Friends Service Commit¬tee, until my board decided to reject myproposed alternative service work. Buteven when I realized the arbitrariness ofthis unilateral decision by the board, 1began to swallow my protest and my con¬scientious objection to such an undemo¬cratic procedure, and for a month I lookedfor another, “more acceptable” job. I havefound several jobs that would be accept¬able to my board, but I have decidedthat the whole procedure is unacceptableto me and my value orientation.“I have decided that the hypocrisy mustend, that the inconsistency of my moralstance must be rectified and that I cannotaccept an elitist 1-0 deferment from Selec¬tive Service any more than I can accepta I-A-O, and for the same reason: toaccept any classification is to tacitly ac¬cept legitimacy of the system of conscrip¬tion and the military for which conscrip¬tion exists.”In addition to CCCO and AFSC, the Na¬tional Service Board for Religious Objec¬tors, 15th and New York Ave., N. W.,Washington, D.C. 20005, offers assistanceto CO applicants. Their booklet, “Ques¬tions and Answers on the Classificationand Assignment of Conscientious Objec¬tors” is quite handy.2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE April 26, 1968- f . f u i > ? » ^ « ' » t •The following interview was con¬ducted by David Worstell, with CADREworkers Ed Entin, David Kuebrich,Kerry Berland, and Paul Rupert. Allexcept Rupert are or were Chicagostudents.Worstell: In a recent supplement to TheMaroon, Dean of the College Wayne C.Booth argued that although individualsmay become involved in political activities,they are unlikely to discover any meaningthere. He stated:“ ... it scares the hellout of me because these kids are being ac¬tive rather than getting an education.They’d be a lot better off in a good class¬room reading Aristotle or Plato ... Rele¬vance isn’t going to cure our ills. Activismisn’t going to cure our ills. Only educationcan cure ills.” Booth is able to see the lim¬its of other disciplines but his final state¬ment is a stupid one. He doesn’t see thelimits of formal education. You have allbeen students at UC. How did you decideto leave the academic world and becomeinvolved in draft resistance?Ed Entin: After graduating from the Col¬lege, I decided not to go into law school.That immediately put me face to face withthe draft. I figured it wouldn’t be too hardto get a I-Y on psychological grounds andit wasn’t. I was very frightened of the ar¬my and the kind of mentality that perm¬eated the physical. When I received the I-Y, I was relieved but became increasinglybothered by the fact that I had to convincethem I was crazy in order to get out.On Oct 21, I went to Washington to “con-A callBy Jeffrey BlumAn Anti-Draft Union is being formed inHyde Park. This group will grow out ofthe activities carried on since last quarterby the Special Vietnam ConvocationGroup (SVCG), which has been canvass¬ing all male students to talk about the warand the draft, and to get statements ofdraft-eligible males who will refuse induc¬tion and of oihtr people in support ofthem.SVCG will probably pass out of exis¬tence when its Convocation is held onFriday night, June 7. But the main thrustof SVCG is not to build a big, interesting,informative, relevant Convocation—theonly similarity with the official one is thesize—but to build, structure and makemore effective anti-draft and anti-warsentiment on campus and in the surround¬ing area.The group has tentatively decided tocontinue its work over the summer andin the next years as an anti-draft union.Such a union will be a major step in thedevelopment of the anti-war and freedommovements in Hyde Park, since the draft,more than any other issue, directly af¬fects us, and in a way that most of us op¬pose and resent.The draft union will appeal to everyonewho opposes being gentled into college, ordraft-deferable jobs, or graduate schools(as in the past and perhaps the future). Itwill work with more than the traditionaldraft resisters, that is, non-compliers whorefuse to register or who turn in theirdraft cards.Furthermore, it will not, and cannot,stop at just opposing the draft, the war,and university cooperation with them. Itwill hope to build a consciousness inpeople of the way the draft reflects Amer-can society, and of the society’s anti-dem¬ocratic and authoritarian features whichgave rise to the draft and which will stillexist even if the draft is abolished.It will aim at the development of largermovements for peoples’ control over theirown lives, whether workers and re¬searchers in their jobs, blacks in the ghet¬to, or students in the university. It will de¬velop opposition not only to the war inVietnam, but also to the wars in much ofAsia and Latin America, and to the politi¬cal and economic policies of the UnitedStates which cause these wars.The work of such a union will includeservices such as draft counseling; legaland financial support for resisters; politi- your bay?front the war makers” and to bum mydraft card in front of the Pentagon. Theact was meaningless since I hadn’t noti¬fied my draft board of the burning. Thisrealization forced me to look at the thingsI was doing and the life I was leading. Irealized that much of the way I lived wasgoverned by fear — fear of the govern¬ment, fear of the army. I realized that ifI wanted to reject the notion of living infear I had to confront the fear.It seems to me that most of us spend ourlives running from fear — just going alongwith the war, the army, and the draft andother institutions which we don’t reallylike. Confronting these institutions maymean going to jail for a while but I don’tfeel it’s such a large price to pay for car¬rying through the confrontation. I don’tlike to use the expression “taking hold ofmy own life” but I don’t know what elseto call it. It’s a matter of knowing I’mfree — that I’m going to respond to eventsin the way my conscience tells me to.That’s a great feeling of freedom.Kerry Berland: There are perhaps cer¬tain times when it might be better to con¬tinue your formal education ad infinitum.Maybe it’s grandiose to think that we can affect events, but for some of us events inthe world have become too pressing, toourgent for us to remain students.David Kuebrick: I didn’t really chooseactivism over non-activism; I just realizedthat non-involvement is never an option.Individual’s and institutions are eitheractive or reactive. That is they can eitherwork to create and maintain a healthy so¬ciety or they can be the victims of stupidand inhuman policies. This is well exemp¬lified by the University’s realtionship tothe draft. The University remained neutralwhile the old draft law channeled studentsinto various disciplines and created a lotor “time students” (some of whom willbecome “time professors”) — men whochose the university in preference to Viet¬nam. The university silently acceptedthese infringements upon quality educa¬tion and now with the drafting of graduatestudents, both it and the intellectual com¬munity will pay dearly for neutrality andnon-involvement. Certainly the moral re¬sponsibilities of citizenship demand that anintellectual exercise a modicum of sociallyaggressive inquisitiveness. Certainly theuniversity should provide an independentcritical function for the wider public. How-to actionThe writer of this article, JeffreyBlum, is president of student govern¬ment and a member of the steeringcommittee of the Special Vietnam Con¬vocation Group. This article should notbe taken as a statement of official of¬ficial policy of either group.cal support in the form of demonstrations,marches and the like; and other help forpeople going to jail, Canada or under¬ground.Another area of work will be building apolitical movement to insure that the Uni¬versity provides at least equal treatmentto resisters as to inductees and enlistees.This will raise important questions aboutthe University’s willingness to participatein the work of society in Vietnam and Bo¬livia as well as on the South Side.Most important, the union will work todevelop a large number of men who willnot serve in the armed forces except toorganize against their activities fromwithin, and to help keep those people andtheir supporters in frequent contact withAmerican radical thinking and programsall over the country.The union will attempt to resolve a fun¬damental political problem in dealing withthe draft: effective political action mustbe taken by groups, but the draft drawsoff men individually. This implies collec¬tive actions to support potential inducteesand to collectively bring pressure on thoseinstitutions and forces in society that legit¬imate and execute the draft.The union is designed to unite many in¬dividual moral concerns, which becomepolitical when acted on together. Perhapspeople will actually join the union, or per¬haps men will instruct their draft boardsto communicate with them through theunion, or perhaps groups of men will goin to make common demands of theirdraft board.Services for men, which can help themindividually get out of the draft, must betied to collective political action. We thinkit is misleading to deal with the draft perse: we must deal with questions of whatthe draft is for, in foreign and domesticterms; with who runs it; and with whowill be drafted.Basic to this effort will be the kind ofcanvassing which SVCG is now doing, be¬ginning with students and reaching outinto the rest of Hyde Park and beyond. Canvassers attempt to bring home topeople the way in which the basic struc¬tures of this country, specifically the in¬stitution of the draft, constantly affect allof us. They try to inform people of theirrights, such as they are, and how to usethem effectively. They try to bring peopleto decide not to submit to the channelingof their lives by the draft. They try to de¬velop and articulate sentiment against thiswar and all the oppressive aspects ofAmerican foreign policy. They try to getpeople who are against the war to workfor this or similar groups.An anti-draft union will work in harmonywith other groups in the rest of the city,leafleting induction centers, organizingamong working class whites, making con¬tacts with soldiers, etc. Hopefully, thedraft union, by concentrating on reachingmany people on campus who have not yetbeen reached, can increase the number ofpeople doing all these types of work.The one area particularly suitable to acampus-oriented union is opposition to therole the. University plays in society. Theunion should fight for a clear policy of theUniversity to readmit resisters and to givethem financial aid equal to that affordedveterans under the GI Bill of Rights. Itshould be on the alert to oppose any Uni¬versity cooperation with the Selective Ser¬vice with other related government agents.It should try to keep the University fromcooperating at all with any Federalgovernment research in counter-insurgen¬cy or other forms of special warfare, in¬cluding chemical and bacteriological se¬cret research.In doing this it should articulate a crit¬ique of the way in which the Universityintegrates into the predominant power re¬lations of the country.Providing many services to draft-agemen is also an important part of an anti¬draft union’s work. More students and fac¬ulty should be trained as draft counselors.Faculty, women and all non-eligible menshould be welded into a strong supportgroup, working with draftable men, financ¬ing and carrying on legal defense cases,demonstrating when men refuse induction,putting pressure on institutions and indi¬viduals to aid resisters. Parents should becontacted who will do the same in citiesall over the country : in this the Hyde ParkAnti-Draft Union can work with other sim¬ilar groups in universities and communi¬ties to coordinate and share actions. ever, at the present, involved in irrelevantresearch, mindless and soulless collabora¬tion with the government, surrounded byrebelling ghettoes and nuclear missiles, itrefuses to even inquire about itself.Berland: Most draft resisters and mostpeople who are active in any sense of thatword feel that by remaining silent, bycarrying student deferments or by findinga way to avoid a confrontation with Selec¬tive Service (e.g. CO or teaching) theyare sanctioning the institution of the draftwhich they dislike. To protest the war orthe draft on theoretical grounds when oneis supporting the draft actively through hisdeferment misestimates what sanction isall about.Demonstrations and protests by thosewith draft cards are pretty meaningless,ihe individual is obviously not willing t*take his own comments very seriously be¬cause he is willing to go on accepting de¬ferments from the system which he sayshe opposes. Unless one is more than a firstyear graduate student or has some medicalincapacity he will have to decide on his re¬lationship to the draft system within thenext few months. To say that activism isnot called for is to say that compliancewith the draft law is called for.Worstell: How would you describe the re¬sistance in Chicago? What are people do¬ing with CADRE after they’ve turned incards?Paul Rupert: We’re attempting to buildsome counter-styles of life. One of the pri¬orities has to be getting more people toturn in draft cards, to make that act polit¬ically meaningful. The original draft cardreturners, like those who went on the earlysit-ins had no idea they would be politicallyeffective. Within the past year 3,000 indiv¬iduals have publicly turned in their cards.Working in the resistance involves a cer¬tain faith. You go out trying to get morepeople to do it, believing that it is ultimate¬ly an act which the draft can’t stand.Large numbers of us are speaking atdifferent colleges, writing leaflets, writingarticles, talking to everyone we can, doingdraft counselling, putting out a magazine,doing radio spots and whatever we can toget the word out about non-co-operation, tomake that a real alternative. We’re send¬ing organizers to Canada to see if any ofthose people are interested in comingback. That’s not overwhelming evidence ofa new way of living. But at least individu¬als are living and struggling together inorder to create the kind of world theywant to live in.Berland: Draft counselling is an impor¬tant focus of our activity, not because itproduces more resisters, but because it’sinvolved with trying to help guys with in¬dividual problems, to keep them out of thearmy and give them time to decide ontheir relationship to the draft.When a person turns in his draftcard, he’s saying that the most importantthing in his life is building the kind of lifein which the present situation in both Viet¬nam and the ghettoes of Chicago is impos¬sible. For some people that means livingin communal apartments like CADRE’S.For some it means spending more of theirlives in social action.Worstell: What is your reaction to theargument that joining the resistance ismerely a decision to go to jail and becomemartyrs for the system of conscription andmilitarism which you say you oppose?Doesn’t going to jail hinder your effective¬ness?Rupert: Let’s face it. Any kind of choiceyou make with regard to the draft is a badchoice. There is no such thing as a goodchoice.The army is ludicrous. It’s especiallydangerous if you decide at some pointwhile you’re in the army that you don’twant to continue playing their game. TheSelective Service System is drafting thou-Turn to Page 7April 26, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINETo CANADABy Slade LanderCanada is waiting.The resisters are coming.In recent weeks, about 17 draft resistersa day have been coming to Toronto, ac¬cording to Mark Satin, chairman of theToronto Anti-Draft Program (TADP).This influx is expected to increase afterJune when college graduates will face im¬mediate induction into the army“We expect the number of Americansimmigrating to Canada to quadruple afterJune,” said Ed Miller, chairman of theMontreal Council to Aid War Resisters(MCAWR).With this increase in immigration ofdraft resisters there is expected to be achange in their motives.“People who immigrated a year agowere more political and had more po¬litical and moral objections to the warand to the army,” Miller commented.“Now there is a greater awareness thatthey do not want the army screwing uptheir personal lives.”But neither MCAWR nor TADP are con¬cerned with the motives of the refugees.They do not recruit immigrants. Theyview their main function as helping refu¬gees obtain landed immigrant status inCanada, by providing practical advice onthe immigration procedure.NO ONE in Canada has an accurateestimate of how many draft-age Amer¬ican males are currently in Canada. TDPestimated that in 1967 there were morethan 13,000 draft eligible Americans inCanada.However, John Volks, an official at theAmerican Consulate in Toronto, placed thefigure considerably lower.“The figure seems to be exaggeratedwhen compared with official statistics,”Volks stated. “I would estimate that it isin the low hundreds, if that high,” hesaid.An official of the Toronto District Officeof the Department of Manpower and Im¬migration stated that overall immigrationfrom the United States to Canada did in¬crease from 1966 to 1967. In 1966, 17,514Americans immigrated to Canada. In 1967,the figure was 19,038.However, the department did not havestatistics for specific age groups of immi¬grants from a single country.The official stressed that a person’smilitary status did not affect his chancesof becoming landed.“We do not encourage people to evaderesponsibilities in their own country,” hecommented. “But people who meet ourselection requirements are admitted.There is no law that says we should re¬ject draft evaders,” he continued.No part of the landed immigrant appli¬cation asks about military status.The official added that it is impossibleto tell whether a person was coming toCanada to evade the draft. Further, thedraft must have some influence on allyoung men who immigrate to Canadafrom the United States, he commented.ALTHOUGH THE reasons for immigrat¬ing to Canada may be personal, they can¬not be removed from their politicalconnotations.“Every cat that is in Canada isn’t goinginto Westmoreland’s army and isn’t killingpeople,” said Steve Smith, a TADP staffmember.“You can do more things in Canadathan you can in jail,” Smith continued“Some of them are illegal, though,” headded.Both MCAWR and TADP are staffedby Americans who were activists in theStates. TADP is an offspring of the Stu¬dent Union for Peace Action (SUPA), a Canadian peace group which started aid¬ing American refugees. A year and a halfago, SUPA decided to devote its effortsto refugee aid and became TADP. Cur¬rently it has six full-time staff members,all of whom are Americans.It occupies a small, two-room suite inan office-building on the outskirts of Tor¬onto. TADP’s office is much the same asthe others in the building except that itsname is painted on the door in the formof a psychedelic mushroom cloud.MCAWR was started a year ago by Mil¬ler and his wife, Ann. They came to Can¬ada from New York Cit yafter Miller hadrefused induction there. The Council hasfour full-time staff members, including theMillers.The office of MCAWR occupies the sec¬ond-floor flat in a store-front house neardowntown Montreal. The Miller’s apart¬ment is on the first floor, and activitiesin the office and the apartment inter¬mingle. The Council’s operation is ratherorganic.DURING THE two hours I spent there,two American men, two American couples,and a group from the New York Work¬shop in Non-Violence came to the office,seeking advice on immigration to Canada.Neither MCAWR nor TADP follow upon Americans once they have obtainedlanded immigrant status. In Montreal,however, two groups — one political, onecultural — are being formed for exiledAmericans.Americans in Exile (AIE), an Ameri¬can group organized by Jerry Bornstein,an American teaching assistant at McGillUniversity, hopes to get American exilespolitically involved in Canada.“For most exiles their last politicallyrelevant act was to refuse induction,”Bornstein said.AIE will sponsor a speaker program ofCanadian radicals, offer classes in French,and start a workshop on Vietnam.Le comite pour I’integration des refrac-taires americains is a Canadian groupaiming at getting Americans culturallyintegrated into the French-Canadian cul¬ture in Quebec province.“We feel these young people coming toCanada are the best America has tooffer,” said A1 Shapiro, one of the twoAmericans in le comite. “We want to usethese creative forces for building a newsociety in Quebec,” he continued.Le comite will offer courses in French,and in French-Canadian culture and his¬tory. Also it will try to find American ex¬iles housing with French-Canadian familiesand students, and to introduce Americansto French-Canadians with similar interests.IT IS HARDER to settle in Montrealthan in Toronto. Sixty-five percent of Mon¬treal’s population is French-Canadian, so,although it is possible to live in the cityknowing only English, an Americansettling there would have to learn Frenchbefore he could be fully assimilated.Fur-ther, he would have to be bilingual towork at a job that required contact withthe general public.Also, Montreal has the highest unem¬ployment rate in Canada, because of arecession following the close of Expo ’67.The cultural difference can be advan¬tageous, though.“A lot of people are really dissatisfiedwith the American way of life,” Millercommented. “In Quebec you come in con¬tact with a different way of life,” he said.Toronto is culturally more similar to anAmerican city. Smith of TADP describedthe problems of settling there as no dif¬ferent than settling in an American city.He stated, however, that American-ownedfirms did not hire draft resisters.However, a person’s draft status has noeffect upon his chances of being admitted to Canada and those chances are verygood.“We have never had a case where aperson who was serious about gettinglanded immigrant status hasn’t gotten it,”Miller said.Miller denied rumors that the Immigra¬tion Department was systematically dis¬criminating against draft resisters, or thatthe border will be closed to Americans.There have been cases reported of in¬dividual immigration officers discriminat¬ing against resisters. These, however,are rare. In such a case the resister cansimply withdraw his application and re¬apply elsewhere with no adverse effectson his chances of being accepted.IF ANYTHING, however, the influx ofresisters is advantageous to Canada.“We’ve reversed the brain-drain,” Millercommented. The number of college-educa¬ted Americans entering Canada now ex¬ceeds the number of college-educated Ca¬nadians entering the United States for thefirst time since the Second World War.“We aren’t concerned with why anAmerican is leaving his country,” an im¬migration official at the border station atWindsor, Ontario, said. “We’re concernedwith what he c?fi bring to Canada,” hecontinued.The most important single factor in be¬ing accepted as a landed immigrant ishaving a job in Canada, Miller stressed.Miller further stressed that being a stu¬dent does not qualify a person for landedimmigrant status. Students who want to goto Canada and continue their educationshould plan to work first and then, afterbecoming landed, become students. A stu-“Fuck! Who needs it? When I return tothe United States it will be at the van¬guard of a liberation army.”The speaker was in Toronto, fresh acrossthe border. He had cut out the previousnight after getting tired of waiting for theFBI to take him away for refusing to takethat big step at induction.“I don’t know how the feds are playingit,” he said. “I didn’t see any reason fortaking any chances.”And so he cut. He didn’t see the point oflong years in jail, especially when therewas Canada, home-free.He had stayed with a friend the nightbefore, but he knew that that arrangementcouldn’t last long. He had a bachelor’s de¬gree in education and knew he wanted toteach. But he had no leads on jobs. He hadcome to the office of the Toronto Anti-Draft Programme (TADP) for advise onimmigration and advice in general.THIS REFUGEE was like others. It hadcome down to a choice between Americaand jail or Canada and freedom. The refu¬gees chose freedomOne fell into the clutches of the fedsbefore splitting. Now a staff member ofLogos, the underground newspaper inMontreal, he refused induction in NewYork City. He was arrested the morningafter his refusal when he answered thedoor of his apartment in his pajamas.“There were two feds, a small one anda big one,” he said. “The small one wasthe brains and the big one was the brawn.Brains asked me if they could come in. Isaid no. So brawn slugged me and theywalked in and arrested me.”He bailed himself out and got a lawyerwho said it looked like he had a good case.So he decided to fight it. But fighting takes dent visa is temporary, is renewed everyyear, and does not guarantee permanentstatus.THE BEST procedure for becoming alanded immigrant is to first enter Canadaas a visitor and go to the city where onehopes to settle. Once there, a prospectiveimmigrant should contact the refugee-aidorganization in that city.TADP is starting a refugee hostel.MCAWR lost their hostel to Montreal’surban renewal program. CONTACT, aMontreal digger organization, has a“crash pad” at 3510 Jean-Mance Avenue,apartment 10.The prospective immigrant should firstobtain a job, then apply for landed immi¬grant status immediately. If an Ameri¬can starts work before provisional immi¬grant status is granted, he is subject toimmediate deportation.Provisional landed immigrant status canbe obtained within two hours of applica¬tion. It allows the applicant to start workimmediately. A security and medicalcheck-up follow and generally take severalmonths. If the applicant passes these, heis granted landed immigrant status andmay remain permanently in CanadaThe best place to apply for immigrantstatus varies from province to provinceIn Quebec, it is currently at Montreal In¬ternational Airport; in Ontario, it is at theborder.The criteria for accepting applicants forlanded status were standardized into a“point system” last October by executiveorder of the director of the Departmentof Manpower and Immigration. It appliesto all prospective immigrants, not onlyAmericans.Continued on Page 6.time and money. And even if you fight youcan still lose.Europe looked good to him, but Canadawas closer. So the night before his courtdate he packed his knapsack and hopped abus to Montreal. No one knew he was com¬ing; no one knew he was going. He left be¬hind the bail, the lawyer, the fees, and thecharges.He started with Logos when he met PaulKirby, its Canadian editor, in a hostelHaving a job, he could get immigrantstatus.He took a bus back to New York City, ataxi to Kennedy Airport, and a plane backto Montreal, applying for landed status atMontreal International Airport. It was along way home, but he got there withlanded status.NOT ALL refugees come because theyare faced with jail. Nor do all come forpolitical reasons.One such non-political immigrant rode onthe bus to Toronto with me. He was fromNorthwestern University and said he willreceive a Ph.D in philosophy this June. Hewas going to Toronto to visit relatives andto find a job. Then he planned to return tothe States to finish school. In June hewould return to Canada with his wife tostay permanently.His reason for emigrating was simple. “Idon’t like to kill prople,” he said.He had no regrets about leaving theStates, “I will feel very much alive,” hesaid, “and very guilt-free.”Like him, most draft evaders come toCanada quietly, not out of any great politi¬cal deliberation, but simply because theirpersonal values and that of their countrywere in direct opposition and they chose toresolve that conflict by acting according totheir personal convictions.Those who4 WEEKEND MAGAZINE April 26, 1968or ENGLANBy Nick PalevskyOne of the seldom mentioned alterna¬tives to military service in the UnitedStates is flight to England.Although England is not nearly as ac¬cessible as Canada, and the British gov¬ernment is. less co-operative, England stillhas attractions that, for some, make itworth considering.In the first place, the urban Americanmay have some trouble in conceiving ofCanada as anything but “the sticks.” Any¬one partial to city life is likely to preferLondon to Montreal. London’s proximityto the continent is another point in itsfavor. London may offer a less odiousexile for those who can make it there.Working in EnglandLondon should be a prime considera¬tion for all students with independent in¬comes who will never have to work. Formost students, however, the problem of“bread” will be the biggest stumblingblock to emigration to England.Foreigners may work in England onlyif they have working papers issued bythe British Government. These papers aregiven only to those who have secured jobsbefore their arrival in England. Workingpapers cannot be obtained in England.Furthermore, in order to have workingpapers issued, an employer must demon¬strate to the Ministry of Labor that hecannot find suitable or qualified personnelin England. What this means is that atechnical skill, such as computer program¬ming or engineering, will hold the studentin much better stead than a non-technicalskill. England is short on technicians be¬cause of the “brain drain” to America,haveTHE SEVEN draft-age Americans whocame to MCAWR’S office while I was therecould not be fit into a stereotype of a draftresister. They ranged from a crewcut Mid-westerner in suit and tie who wanted towork as an airplane mechanic, to a hip-radical from the New York Workshop inNon-Violence.Not all come through a refugee-aid or¬ganization. “We guess that for every oneguy that comes in here there’re four guyswho come up without seeing us,” com¬mented Ed Miller, the chairman ofMCAWR.But many do come to MCAWR’S office.They seem to come not only for advice onimmigration but also to have some anchor¬ing, some base in their venture into a newcountry. Miller counsels them about thepractical problems of applying for landedimmigrant status, talking more in gut-rap¬ping terms than in legal jargon. For be¬coming a landed immigrant is more thanjust going through a legal process. It isacquiring a state of being, a realizationthat one is turning one’s back to what is,for better or worse, his own culture andstarting anew in a culture which, thoughsimilar, is nevertheless different.Unfortunately, I was not able to talk toany Americans who had been exiled formore than a year. I was told that someAmericans had chosen to return to theStates and take their chances there.Miller knew of only one exile who couldnot settle in Canada. “He was a jazz play¬er,” Miller said. “He couldn’t find anyonein Canada who was in his school of jazz.He couldn’t live without his music so hewent back to where he could play it.”IT DOES seem that Canada offers littlefor those to whom politics—especially rad¬ical politics—have been vital. Though per- and is more likely to grant working pa¬pers to persons with these skills.Even if you have such skills, getting ajob won’t be easy. Unless you have somefairly influential contacts, it is rather dif¬ficult to get a job without applying inperson. The recommended procedure is togo to England as a tourist (a tourist visais good for 90 days) and try to line up ajob while there.If you are successful, your employermay be able to get around the require¬ment that working papers be issued be¬fore you arrive in England, or, you maybe able to hop across the channel and waitfor your papers there.In any case it is essential not to letthe immigration officials know that youplan to look for a job while on your tour¬ist visa. Last year, 1531 aliens were re¬fused permission to enter England becausethe immigration officials decided that,contrary to the claims of the individuals,these people had intentions of looking forwork while in England.So: have definite travel plans, have atleast $100 for each month that you claimyou will be staying, and do not have moreluggage than a tourist would carry. Be¬sides giving you away, a lot of luggageis a bad idea because you very well maynot find a job. Have everything sent later.One final word of caution: if you intendto renounce U.S. citizenship, do not do sobefore you are safely in England. “State¬lessness” is sufficient grounds for refusalof admission.Studying in EnglandStudents accepted for full time study atany reputable institution are always ad¬mitted. Those who can afford this for asplithaps only in a negative sense, America iswhere it’s happening. Canada is not.Internally, there is the separationistmovement in Quebec province. It is, in asense, the Canadian equivalent of BlackPower. Externally, there is little activity.“Politics in Canada are weird and irrele¬vant,” Steve Smith, a TADP staff-membersaid. “The only thing that would make itrelevant,” he continued, “would encouragethe wrath of the United States which noone wants to do.”The flight to Canada is not irrevocable.An American draft delinquent who returnsto the States certainly would not be muchworse off than if he had remained there.John Volks, an official in the AmericanConsulate in Toronto, said that even incases of draft evaders returning from Can¬ada the charges are generally dropped ifhe decides to serve in the army. Even if hedoes not do so the charges are rarely in¬creased. A draft evader in Canada does, ina very real sense, have the greatest num¬ber of alternatives open to him.HOWEVER, he has, by going to Canada,committed a political act which thoughsignificant, is negative. If unaltered, ne¬gates the possibility of future positive acts.Canada is at best a completely personalsolution.But still, I cannot forget the words of apanhandler in Toronto. He was a specialpanhandler because he was an unsucessfulbank-robber who had just served fouryears in the federal prison in Leavenworth,Kansas.“Leavenworth. It’s a good jail,” he said.“It’s a federal pen—not like the state ones.They treat you like a man there. Theymake you fight.”— S.L, little while might use their spare time tofind a job, but be sure to bring proof ofacceptance with you to show the immigra¬tion officials.Universities for undergraduate study:The minimum entrance requirements toany British university for American stu¬dents are ordinarily two years of collegestudy, and in some cases a bachelor’s de¬gree may be essential.Application for admission to all univer¬sities is made through the UniversitiesCentral Council on Admission, 29 Tavi¬stock Square, London, W.C.l. The closingdate for admission in the fall is mid-December of the preceding year for alluniversities except Oxford and Cambridge,for which the closing date for applicationsis mid-October of the preceding year.Graduate study: American studentsshould hold a degree from a recognizeduniversity or college and will be expectedto produce evidence, such as letters fromprofessors, of their ability to undertakeindependent research.Application should be made directly tothe registrar of the university selected.Graduate schools generally do not acceptapplications after March.Colleges: A student lacking the neces¬sary qualifications to go to a universitymay still be able to go to college in Eng¬land, and take a General Certificate ofEducation course, which is similar invariety to American college courses. Theannual fee for full time courses in Londonis about $360.Further information about British uni¬versities and colleges can be obtainedfrom the British Information Services, 845Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022, andfrom the Institute of International Educa¬tion, 809 United Nations Plaza, New York,N.Y. 10017. Also see Commonwealth Uni¬versities Yearbook and Higher Educationin the United Kingdom, which may beavailable in University libraries. (In Eng¬land, the Student Advisor’s Office, US-UKEducational Commission, 71 South AudleyStreet, London, W.I., has a great amountof information available.)Students, like tourists, must be able toshow the immigration officer that theyhave enough money for their purposes inEngland. They should in no case counton being awarded a scholarship or grantwhen in England. English grants are al¬most all restricted to English citizens.Grants for Americans are almost alwaysrestricted to those residing in the U.S.when making their application.British Government PoliciesIf you go to England as a tourist, it isnot absolutely certain that you will get in.The immigration officials can be quite un¬sympathetic and have been known to makebothersome inquiries into the draft statusof young American males.Demands to see draft cards and classifi¬cation cards are not uncommon. Anystrongly indignant response about one’srights are likely to result in refusal ofadmission.Furthermore, strongly committed activ¬ists should be warned that their status asaliens may very severely limit their rightsto free speech. Currently, active anti-warmembers of the expatriate community inLondon are having their visas renewedmonthly, and they may be asked to leaveat the end of any month.Standard of LivingAnyone considering emigration to Eng¬land should be aware that the standard ofliving is considerably below that of theUS, below even that local standard some¬times called “student Woodlawn.” For anexample, a school teacher who had beenteaching in the public school system for 3 years was receiving 1000 pounds beforethe devaluation. That is about $2,600, 47per cent of which goes to the English gov¬ernment in taxes. It is possible to live onthis amount in England, but the teacherin question had no central heating and noprivate bath. Most Woodlawn apartmentscan boast of both these luxuries.Computer programmers can expect tomake somewhere between 900 and 1,400new pounds, depending on their experi¬ence.The DraftA student who wishes to avoid confron¬tation with the draft, but wishes also tomaintain as long as possible his right toreturn to the US, can inform his draftboard of his new address once he arrivesabroad. Then, if he receives notice to re¬port for a physical he can request that itbe given abroad, pursuant to Local BoardMemorandum No. 69. He should cite thecity which he would like the physical tobe close to. This request will probably begranted. Anyone not willing to risk its notbeing granted can consult with his localboard before he leaves.Army doctors abroad do not havemonthly quotas and in general are a littlemore naive than their counterparts in theStates. A word to the wise. . .In any case, a student who passes hisphysical and receives an induction noticecan decide in England whether he will re¬turn home to comply with the order or not.Those who choose to remain in Englandrather than report for induction, as wellas those who never bother to tell theirdraft boards where they are going, arelikely to receive a little letter from theAmerican consulate once an indictmenthas been handed down, or delinquencystatus issued.In the case of the draft dodger, thiswill only occur after the draft board findsout where he is. The degree to which thepassport agency, the various foreign im¬migration officials, and the Selective Serv¬ice System are in communication overthese matters is as yet an unknown factor.In any case, should they know whereyou are, and should they declare you de¬linquent or induct you, the nearest Amer¬ican consulate will ask you to come inand have your passport restricted or re¬voked. If they only ask to restrict it, itis a good idea to comply. The Britishgovernment will be informed if your pass¬port is revoked, and they will probablyask you to leave.If your passport is restricted, it will bemade valid only for return to the US.However, the British government is morelikely to let you remain with a restrictedpassport than a revoked one.Failure to comply with a request tohave your passport restricted will resultin its being revoked, and then the Britishgovernment is sure to make trouble.SupportThe Support organization, formerly theStop-It Committee, is comprised of Amer¬ican expatriates and British sympathizers.They are amenable to correspondence andthose with specific questions can write to:Support, 4 Shavers Place, Haymarket,London S.W. 1. Their pamphlet, entitled“England and Draft Age Americans” hasextremely useful general information. Thecost is $1 plus postage for 15 copies.Another extremely valuable publicationis “The Draft Law and Americans Re¬siding in Europe.” It is published by theCouncil for Democratic Alternatives andcan be obtained from CDA, 46 LeckfordRoad, Oxford, England. I believe there isno charge, but postage should be sent.This publication concentrates on the legalproblems and the legal resources avail¬able to Americans in Europe.April 26, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 5What is it like in•JAIL?Federal prison is the most likely destin¬ation for most men who resist the draftand do not choose, or cannot obtain otheralternatives.According to the Central Committe forConscientious Objectors, as of January, 85men were known to be serving in federalor military prisons, or sentenced to beginserving.Three of these worked with ChicagoArea Draft Resisters (CADRE) beforethey entered jail. Other CADRE memberstalked about jail with them to help pre¬pare them psychologically, artd still visitand correspond with them.Three more CADRE workers have beenindicted and are awaiting trial.The first to go was Dennis Riordan, 21,who dropped out of Elmhurst College lastyear to do civil rights work in the South,then returned to Chicago. He filed an ap¬plication for conscientious objector status,but decided not to process the applicationafter discussing the draft with a friendwho is a resister. He also declined to seek4-F status, for which he may have beeneligible.He burned his draft card in the April 15,1967 demonstration, refused induction lastSeptember, and was sentenced to threeyears in prison in December by U.S. Dis¬trict Court judge Julius J. Hoffman.Riordan is now serving in the federalprison medical center at Springfield, Mo.,as part of a maintenance work detail.Also at Springfield is Daniel Fallon, 21,who refused to step forward to accept in¬duction last July. He, too, had first intend¬ed to apply for CO status, but then beganthinking about the war and the draft, anddecided to resist.He married last Thanksgiving, andspent his time straightening out personalaffairs before the trial January 19. Hereceived a five year sentence, which wasunexpectedly stiff, and also was deniedany time to finish arranging his affairsbefore the start of his term.Jeremy Mott, 22, a Quaker, had begunto perform alternative civilian servicewhen he “became sickened by the warand conscription and resigned from Se¬lective Service.’’He burned his draft card in last April’sdemonstration, then sent a letter to hisdraft board last June, announcing hewould no longer perform alternative serv¬ice.Penalty for such refusal is exactly thesame as refusal to perform military serv¬ ice—up to five years imprisonment and apossible $10,000 fine.Judge James B. Parsons sentencedMott to five years last December, thenreduced the sentence to four years on amotion by Mott’s lawyer.Mott is now in a prison at Marion, Ill.,in a minimum security wing within amaximum security prison.Two CADRE workers who have each vis¬ited one of the imprisoned CADRE menreport that the men miss their formercontact with the rest of the world, but areotherwise in fairly good shape.Diane Phail, Riordan’s fiancee, reportsthat he “wants out, but does not find ithighly repressive physically.” He is ableto exercise in a gym, and occasionally toplay basketball and baseball with fellowprisoners.Riordan and Fallon are near each otherin a large barracks-like room in whichabout 80 men have their bunks, Miss Phailsaid.While the two CADRE men are easilyable to talk with each other, they havefound some difficulty in working out rela¬tionships with most of the other prisonersaround them, she said.Many of the other prisoners in theirgroup are Jehovah’s Witnesses who werenot accepted as ministers of their religion.“There is a lack of rapport with the JWsbecause they have their traditional be¬liefs; it’s hard to talk man-to-man withthem about ideas,” Miss Phail said.So far, Riordan has had only one size¬able “hassle” with prison authorities, shesaid. The prison social worker to whichRiordan was assigned got “very up tight”when he saw several CADRE members onlist of correspondents and visitors whichRiordan requested.Every prisoner is entitled to a maxi¬mum of 12 persons who may write andvisit him.In general, Riordan has “plenty of timeto read,” and has found enough books tokeep him occupied in the prison library.Prisoners are allowed to receive booksonly from bookstores and publishers, andmust leave the books at the prison when they leave Many prisons have quite ex¬tensive libraries.Jeremy Mott is also “finding it easierthan he had though,” according to ReneeSchwartz, a CADRE staff worker andformer UC student.Mott lives in a sort of “dorm room,”with three other prisoners. Twenty ofthese rooms are strung along the tier heis on, with communal washroom facilities.Mott has a clerical job in the buildingmaintenance office, Miss Schwartz said.Most days he is given little to do, and isable to read on the job.Mott also “gets enough to read” fromthe prison library, and subscribes to sev¬eral anti-war magazines.Mott also found some problem in devel¬oping a “free exchange” with other pris¬oners “The JWs tried to convert him atfirst,” she said. Many of the other pri¬soners in his wing are young offenders injail for such things as auto theft, she said.“He doesn’t seem to complain too muchof the lack of privacy. The main problemis the separation from the outside world.He doesn’t like it there, and wants to getout, but he’s glad he did what he did,”Miss Schwartz reported.Men considering the possibility of re¬sisting and being taken to jail must con¬sider the consequences of a jail term ontheir future plans, as well as the incon¬veniences while they are actually in pris¬on.A felony, for whatever crime, is almostcertain to be sufficient reason for rejec¬tion from any federal or state governmentjob.Many occupations are licensed, and inmost states for many occupations, a fel¬ony conviction is evidence that the appli¬cant is not qualified for a license. Themost rigorous licensing requirements arefor teachers, attorneys, dentists, physi¬cians, and accountants. A felony may beless harmful for other less restricted oc¬cupations.At present, there are generally no re¬strictions on private employers’ use of afelony conviction as a basis for rejectingan applicant or dismissing an employee, according to the Draft Law Group at YaleUniversity.Whether a draft conviction will resultin rejection of an applicant depends on theemployer, obviously. But no resistershould assume that he will be able to eas¬ily regain his place in middle-class so¬ciety when he gets out of prison.It should also be noted that most statesdeny voting privileges to persons con¬victed of a “felony” or “infamous crime,”which is usually defined according to themaximum possible sentence which couldhave been imposedAccording to the Yale Draft Law Group,“The only states whose statutes or consti¬tution do not explicitly disqualify votersfor violations of laws like the SelectiveService laws are Maine, Vermont, Penn¬sylvania, and apparently Rhode Island.The California Supreme Court has heldthat violation of the Selective Service lawcannot constitutionally be made the basisof disqualification.”A final brief word of legal information:Courts are likely to rule favorably for thedefendant only if he can prove that hewas wrongly treated under the SelectiveService System’s own rules.Defenses based on the unconstitutional¬ity of the entire draft system are notlikely to be successful.If a defendant feels he has been improp¬erly classified, this defense can be raisedonly if “all administrative remedies havebeen exhausted,” that is, he has gonethrough all the appeal processes availablewithin the Selective Service System.According to the Yale Draft Law Group,the only way in which a man can presentthe issue of misclassificiation to the court“is by appearing for induction but refus¬ing to step forward. At that point he hasfully met all his obligations to thesystem.”It is only at the point of a man’s refusalof induction that the Justice Departmenthas any jurisdiction for prosecution. Untilthat point, the case is an internal matterwithin the Selective Service System.While the Selective Service System re¬tains jurisdiction, no man is allowed tobring legal counsel to any Selective Serv¬ice hearing. Any man who contemplatesresisting, however, should seek legal coun¬sel well before the day of his final refusal.Experienced lawyers can be contactedthrough American Friends Service Com¬mittee or CADRE. Copies of the YaleLaw Group’s report, “The Draft Law andAntiwar Protests,” are available atAFSC, CADRE, Quaker House, and theBlue Gargoyle —D.L.A.CANADA:Shave that beard9get a jobContinued from Page 4TO BE ACCEPTED, a prospective im¬migrant must score more than 50 of 100points from a standardized list of criteria.The criteria and the maximum numberof points that can be obtained in eachcategory are:•Education. One point is given for eachyear of education. No more than 20 pointsis given.•Personal assessment by the immigra¬tion officer of the applicant’s qualities of“adaptability, motivation, initiative, re¬sourcefulness and similar qualities.” Fif¬teen points maximum.•Occupational demand for the appli¬cant’s particular occupation in the areawhere he is planning to settle. Fifteenpoints.•Arranged employment. Ten points aregiven.•Age. Ten points are given if the appli¬cant is between 18 and 35 years old.•Occupational skill of the applicant. Tengiven if the applicant already has a jobin Canada.•Language. Ten points are given if theapplicant is fluent in both English andFrench, five points if he is fluent in oneof the two.•Relatives. Five points are given if theapplicant has relatives in the area wherehe is settling.• Employment opportunities of the areawhere the applicant is settling. Ten points.In the case of a student who has nooccupation, having a job in Canada could make a difference of 35 points in his score.When applying for landed immigrantstatus the applicant should have.the fol¬lowing with him:•Birth certificate or baptismal papers.•All academic diplomas.•About $500 in cash, travelers checks,or bank statements.It is also helpful to have the following:•A passport.• Personal and professional letters ofrecommendation.•College transcripts.•A letter of financial support from theapplicant’s parents, stating that they areaware he is emigrating to Canada andthat they will assume financial responsi¬bility for him.A security check is not made on everyapplicant. When it is made, it generallyconsists of checking with American author¬ities to determine if a person falls intoone of the four categories of people whomay not, under the Immigration Act, en¬ter Canada.The prohibited classes most relevant toresisters are:•Persons who have ever been membersof, or associated with organizations sub¬versive to democratic governments. Thisprohibition is rarely applied.•Persons who have been involved withillegal drugs, including marijuana, withinthe past five years.• “Persons who have been con viced ofor admit having committed any crimeinvolving moral turpitude.” Once a person obtains full landed im¬migrant status he has all the rights of aCanadian citizen except the rights to vote,to hold public office, and to travel abroadon a Canadian passport. After beinglanded for five years a person may applyfor Canadian citizenship. If he chooses notto apply or is rejected, he may still re¬main in Canada.A landed immigrant who has been inCanada for less than five years may bedeported for the following reasons:•If he was a member of a prohibitedclass upon entering Canada.• If there is a warrant for his arrestin the United States for a crime whichis covered by an extradition treaty be¬tween Canada and the United States. Thisdoes not, however, include draft offenses.•If he commits any drug offenses.Generally a person may voluntarilyleave for another country if he is facedwith deportation.The problem of renunciation of Ameri¬can citizenship is complicated. It is notnecessary to renounce citizenship to be¬come either a landed immigrant or aCanadian citizen. A person definitelyshould not renounce his citizenship beforehe becomes landed.IF A PERSON returns to the UnitedStates, renunciation will not exempt himfrom prosecution for any draft offensesthat he committed before leaving thestates.A recent statement from MCAWR onrenunciation said: “If an American renounces his citizen¬ship and takes up residence in Canada,he puts himself in the same position asany person who is neither a citizen nora resident of the United States — he isnot eligible for the draft into the U S.Army. He is reclassified IV-C, an alienwho is registered with the Selective Serv¬ice System but who is not liable formilitary service.“We think that the statement in the firstsentence of the preceding paragraph istrue as long as one renounces before theday on which he is supposed to reportfor induction, but it may be that he hasto renounce before the induction notice issent. It is essential that no offense havebeen committed earlier with SelectiveService — particularly, failure to reportfor a physical.”MCAWR’s statement noted that they arecurrently gathering more information onrenunciation, and that anyone consideringrenunciation should check with them be¬fore doing so.THE MOST comprehensive book on im¬migration to Canada is the Manual forDraft-Age Immigrants to Canada, editedby Mark Satin. It may be obtained bywriting TADP, 2279 Yonge Street, Suite15, Toronto 12, Ontario. The manual costsone dollar.The mailing address of MCAWR is P.O.Box 231, Montreal 6, Quebec.Le comite can be contacted by writingAllen Shapiro, 3552A Colonial Avenue,Montreal, Quebec.6 WEEKEND MAGAZINE April 26, 1968SO FOTA GOES on. With all sorts o!plays, readings, concerts, sidewalk chalkdrawings, happenings, seminars and all:he rest. We printed FOTA’s schedule inull last week, but look out for these things:Poetry workshop in Ida Noyes 3 p.m. Sun¬day. Readings by Chicago poets at 7 p.m.in Ida Noyes Monday. Folk music inReynolds Club at 8:30 Wednesday. Andneither least nor last the Beaux Arts Mas¬querade Ball a week from Friday at 8:30in Ida Noyes.MusicIn addition to the veritable cornucopia of?OTA music, the Collegium MusicumChorus is presenting Brahms’ LiebesleiderWaltzes, Thompson’s Americana; andSchubert’s Stanchen in Lexington Hall at8:30 Saturday night. Benjamin Hadley isthe director.The Rockefeller Chapel Choir and 50members of the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra will give the first Chicago per¬formance of Anton Bruckner’s Mass in FMinor at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, May 5 inRockefeller Memorial Chapel, 1156-80 East59th Street.They also will perform Budavari TeDeum by Zoltan Kodaly. Rickard Vik-strom, director of chapel music at theUniversity, will conduct the singers andmusicians in the final concert of the 1967-68 Oratorio Festival Series.Tickets are priced at $4.50 for reservedseats, $3.50 for general admission, $3.00for members of the University’s facultyand staff, and $2.50 for students of all col¬leges and universities.The Concert Band, reorganized lastyear after some ten years of inactivity, isnow a quite able musical organization ded¬icated to the performance of originalworks for wind ensemble. The band willpresent a joint concert with the CornellCollege Band from Mount Vernon, IowaCotinued from Page 3sands of men to go to Canada and theyshould be clear about why they’re leavingthe country. People who remain studentsfor long periods of time which they other¬wise wouldn’t have spent in school areclearly being drafted to be students. Thedraft is a very powerful, pervasive institu¬tion in our society.None of the alternatives in terms of con¬tent and service is very pleasant. That isnot where the real question lies. The basicquestion is what kind of life you’re goingto live, what kind of institutions you’re go¬ing to co-operate with.Co-operation with the Selective ServiceSystem means that an individual supportsin his life several values. It affirms theright of the state to dictate who will andwho will not serve. It affirms theright of the state to tell you to kill such asuch a gook, or to tell you what job youshould be doing so that you can bedeferred.Everyone agrees that the draft is aracist institution. In the wake of King’sdeath everyone is saying that white racismis a terrible thing, yet few are botheringto look at the institutions they support tosee which are racist ones.Individuals have to try to decide whatvalues they’re going to support and whichthey’re willing to actively work against. Idon’t see people who say, “You’re martyr¬ing yourself, stay out of jail and you’ll bemore effective,” being effective. I seethem sitting on their asses. We have a res¬ponsibility to say NO at some point, to be¬gin to use our lives as a tool to destroy theinstitutions which have brought this coun¬try to the point it’s at.Entin: Before prison there is a greatdeal of time to work organizing other re¬sistance groups. If I were faced with achoice between prison and the army Iwould choose prison on purely estheticgrounds. If one is considering resistanceone should at least learn something aboutthem, find out the differences between fed¬eral minimum security prisons like Allen-wood and the Cook County Jail.Berland: Prisons, unlike wars, are thingspeople go to and come out the other side.Kuebrick: To think of prison as being anoverly big sacrifice is showing very little CULTUREon Tuesday, at 8:30 p.m. in the CloistersUlub in Ida Noyes. The Chicago Band willperform works by Alford, Gossec, Mil¬haud, Holst and Sousa. The event is freeand open to the public.ArtJohn G. Demou, who you will rememberhad an excellent photography show inLexington last quarter, is now showingphotography, painting, drawing, andsculpture (a versatile man, this Demou)this time in the Midway Studios startingSunday and continuing through May 5.Three of the four plays presented at Reyn¬olds Club Theater under the “Tonight at8:30” (University Theater) billing lastweekend were quite successful. The fourthfailed miserably.An original play entitled The Peace¬makers, by Gareth Mann Sitz, ‘68, led offthe program. The short, unpretentious(and therefore highly enjoyable) piecedealt in a quite straightforward mannerwith the emptiness and coldness which of¬ten underlie much “friendly” behavior.When one of the couples in the play triesto inject some true feeling in the conver¬sation, the others walk out. The ostracizedhusband and wife find themselves left withnothing but their true feelings, which theydecide are “very nice.”This play will set no theatrical mil-stones. The staging, also by Miss Sitz, bor-ability to look at things with any histori¬cal detachment. The average prison sen¬tence is 32 months. This means, at themaximum, 22 to 24 months in prison, whichis the amount of time an individual whoplans to “serve reluctantly” would spendin the army. It’s certainly less than deathon a battle-field and, in my opinion, lessthan a lifetime in Canada.Worstell: Some individuals have tried todistinguish between those who take a standfor moral reasons, those who say, “HereI stand, I can do no other,” and on theother hand those who pick a particularalternative because they believe it willbe the most effective way to end the war.Can these two groups be distinguished?. Berland: I’m not going into the Resis¬tance in order to ask other people to takea particular stand. I’m trying to live outmy principles. What I’m asking people todo is integrate their principles into theirlives. It seems to me that if individualsare against the war they ought to rootin their lives and actions that belief. Ifthey’re against the war, the war will knowit. They won’t be merely rhetoricallyagainst the war. That’s the kind of atti¬tude people in the resistance have.That’s not a call for a mobilization.It’s a call for people to start living theirideas, if their ideas really include start¬ing isolated communities they ought to dothat. If their ideas include non-violencethey ought to do that.There’s a bad idea in the world of edu¬cation, which is saying: “Here is your lifeand you can start preparing to use it bytaking courses.” But many never getaround to doing what their life is all about.Integrate what you believe you should bewith what you’re doing.In Chicago we had a riot. It exists partlybecause individuals who call themselvesliberals have twisted the political organi¬zations so that they are unable to eradi¬cate the problem. Our own lives mustfunction to eradicate such problems as thedraft. I want to make as little distinctionas I can between my life and my politics.The people who are living their lives ina way which is going to force other peopleto make decisions — those are the peoplewho are most likely to have power in thesociety. VULTUREMoviesThis Friday (tonight) Luchino Visconti’sadaptation of Albert Camus’ The Strangerfinally arrives at the Hyde Park. The filmis in color and stars Marcello Mastroianniand Anna Karina and is one of the finestfilms of the last year.Tonight sees Doc Films showing of OI-mi’s II Posto on their Italian series. ThePierce Tower group is showing Zorba theGreek tomorrow night. The film reallystars Anthony Quinn (and not Perkins astheir ad would have it). Sunday brings therowed heavily from the Theater of the Ab¬surd. Nevertheless, the work does articu¬late a type of situation and emotion com¬mon to many, and for this alone should beapplauded.Anton Chekhov’s The Bear suffered fromone major problem: The play appeared, inthe context of the evening, an anachro¬nism. In an age in which audiences prefertheir theater “gusty” and “true-to-life,”this work emerges as incurably romantic.None of Chekhov’s penetrating insights in¬to human nature nor his almost Shavianhumor can change the fact of the saccha¬rine (and highly predictable) ending.However, taken out of context, this pro¬duction was excellent. Annette Fern wasfaultless as the widow Popova, a rolewhich could quite easily have slipped overinto the realm of ham acting. LeonardKrug was also competent in the less de¬manding role of Booka.By far the most provocative and enjoy- perennial showing of Tony Richardson’sTom Jones, this time in Cobb Hall andsponsored by the Contemporary EuropeanFilm group.Tuesday the John Ford series continueswith two particularly fine films Young Mr.Lincoln (7:15) and The Man who Shot Lib¬erty Valence (9:15). Wednesday Doc Filmsbrings experimentals again at 7:15. Amongthem is something called The PleasureGarden. Unfortunately this is not the Al¬fred Hitchcock silent but a particularly badand distasteful English short that can wellbe missed. The program is saved, however,by the feature which accompanies theshorts. It is Vincent Minelli’s Two Weeksin Another Town, one of the most ne¬glected masterpieces of the American cin¬ema.able show of the evening was HaroldPinter’s The Dumbwaiter. Pinter’s witmasks acute perception, and his dialogueis closely attuned to the modern Ameri¬can audience. He is a master of compres¬sion with a sure knowledge of the theaterand its uses.This particular play revolves around twohired assassins, Ben and Gus, waiting in arun-down, windowless hotel room for theirnext assignment and getting on each oth¬er’s nerves. Best acting honors of the eve¬ning go to Gerald Fisher for his portrayalof the sensitive, slower-witted Gus. TomBusch gave a convincing, if occasionallyflat, performance in the role of the semi-hardened, mechanical killer Ben.The final play on the program shouldnot have been permitted on the stage.This presentation of Bertholt Brecht’s TheException and the Rule can be summedup in one word: under-rehearsed.LEN ANDREWSm mm m mmWHERE TO GO FOR DRAFT COUNSELLINGHyde Park Draft Information Center, in Quaker House, 5615 S. Woodlawn. Open1-5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 7-10 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Counsel¬ling on medical deferments is also available in the evenings. Phone: 363-1248.American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), 407 S. Dearborn (near Van Buren St.).Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Holds periodic three-week ses¬sions to train new draft counsellors. Phone HA 7-2533.Chicago Area Draft Resisters (CADRE), 333 W. North Ave. Open noon to 9 p.m.Monday through Saturday. Phone 664-6895. CADRE members also maintain anapartment in Hyde Park, phone 493-8085.South East Draft Action, 2446 E. 75th, near Essex Ave. Open 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 2-5 p.m. Saturday.FACULTY: The following Chicago faculty members offer their services as traineddraft counsellors:Name Department Phone Leonard Korn Medical School MU-4-6100Howard Aronson Slavic L. and L. X 4326 Richard Levins Biology 2732William Baker Biology 2709 Richard Lewontin Biology 2712Donald Beldin Mathematics 8075 Lester Little History 2722Zena Blau Social Sciences MI-3-0130 Alan Nelson English Humanities 2774Richard Flacks Sociology X 2962 Peter Novick History 2775Seymour Glagov Pathology 5463 Richard Pfeffer Law 2389Michael Goldberger Anatomy 3919 Leonard Radinsky Anatomy 3907Peter Greene Mathematical Biology 8782 Melvin Rothenberg Mathematics 8071James Hopson Anatomy 3934 Marvin Stodolsky Microbiology 3933Leonard Kaplan Chemistry 8282Maroon Draft SupplementSupplement Editor David L. AikenAssistant to the Editor David WorstellTitles of Current Significance:Tax: THE DRAFT; A Handbook of Facts and Alternatives.Miller: WHY THE DRAFT; The Case for a Volunteer Military.American Friends Service Committee; IN PLACE OF WAR.Finn: PROTEST; Pacifism and Politics.Chapman: WRONG MAN IN UNIFORM.Fullbright: THE ARROGANCE OF POWER.And Many, Many More On Sale AtUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue $12.95$ 1.25$ 1.45$ 2.45$ 3.95$ 1.95April 26, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE’. a .. x" ’v :s'i”R«“slsl--i('s your life” THEATERFour from 8:30: Three Successes and One FlopUniversity Theater Presents Mrs. Four GusMrs. Five Directed by J. Roger Doddslo-Nigni 3T Mrs. Six . THE EXCEPTION AND THETHE PEACEMAKERS Written and directed by RULEGareth Mannstitz By Berthold BrechtMr. One .. THE BEAR MerchantMr. Two ... By Anton Chekhov Coolie ....Mr. Three . ..Dennis Dingemans Smirnov . Guide ...Mr. Four ... Popova .. Judge ...Mr. Five ... ..Sanford Rockowitz Booka .... InnkeeperMr. Six Directed by Joel Cope PolicemanMrs. One .. THE DUMB WAITER Colleague lMrs. Two .. By Harold Pinter Widow ...Mrs. Three Ben Directed by Dennis Hannon. J « *»MORE THAN 200UC STUDENTSWILL REFUSE TO SERVEEligible SignersMark Aarons onDavid AbrahamIrwin AbrahamRichard AdelmanDavid L. AikenH. David AlleyLeonard AlmquistH. Lenox S. AndersonOscar E. Anderson IIIBernard AronsonStephen AxelradThomas M. BallingerHenry BalserDavid A. BantzJack Vincent BarberaVictor BassPaul K. BeckerAlvin S. BegunGary BenesonPaul S. BerchHoward BergLawrence BermanJoseph BigelsonBruce A. BirchardEdward BimbaumJohn BirnbaumPaul BluestoneJeffrey BlumCraig BrestrupJohn L. BryantThomas BuschRichard ByrdDan CandeeBruce CatrerJohn L. CarterMark ChaetAndrew ClarkDavid CohenIra CohenPhillip CraftsThomas CrispenStephen CrystalWilliam Hsrold CullMichael E. DavidsonMichael DombroskiErnst G. DornfeldThomas DonaldsonJulius L. DrummondHenry G. Elkins, Jr.Herman Eliman STATEMENT FOR THE DRAFT ELIGIBLE jOur war in Vietnam is unjust and immoral. As long as the United States:is involved in this war, I will not serve in the Armed Forces. I am aware •that this statement will be made public. :I hereby give consentto have my name sent tothe selective service.YES □ NO □College 12 3 4Graduate 12 3 4 NAMESIGNATUREADDRESSRobert FactorBernard FarberMartin FarrellMarc H. FentonDaniel FieldDaniel FifeRichard FisherPeter J. FoxRobert G. FoxTerry Curtis FoxStef'en hreerJohn L. FriedmanPeter FruchtmanPaul A. GangseiThomas GarnettMark GennisRoscoe C. Giles, IIIEugene H. GoldbergMichael GoldfieldJeffrey GoldmanMichael GonzalesJeffrey GoodmanJoseph GordonTucker GreenDavid F. GreenbergHarvey M. GreenbergRobert I. GreenbergPeter GreenfieldMark A. GreenbergBernard Gulker David HalprinLen HandelsmanIvan HandlerRobert HansenRichard HarperJohn E. HeilmanSteven HensenRallh M. Hergert Jr.Mitchell C. HiltonAl«n G. HirshArthur HochbergJess HollenbackNicholas Kim HooperHenry HorensteinGregg HuskCharles S. IsaacsDonald JsbellLeonard JacobsT. A. JanesNick JankowskiDsna Peter JohnsonGary KahnMichael KaufmanMark KazanoffJames R. KellyKenneth D. KetchumMark KimbrellDavid KlafterTom KoehlerWilliam KornblumWilliam S. Kornrich Peter KountzJoseph M. KurlandGuy FDR KuttnerFlavio LaMorticellaSlade LanderThomas E. LaneEric LasserBill LazarusEdward R. LetchingerLewis LikoverDerek LintonKennard KipmanJerald B. LipschNorman LittleRobert Eric LoebBenj amin LowinskyIven LourieJosef LubenowHoward MachtingerBruce MagurnA1 fred MarcusBruce MarguiliesJohn MarinoErnest L. MarracciniLaurence A. MarschallHoward MasurMario MartinDavid W. McKayRichard S. McMillinFrederic G. MelcherMarc Messina II Irving MintzerJames E. MyersTimothy J. NaylorJohn D. NelsonStuart A. NewmanWilliam G. Nowlin Jr.Robert OliverDavid OstrowDavid ParisiRodney PatulaArthur PerloHarry PerlstadtR. Neal PetersonCharles A. Pinderhughes Jr.Andrew D. PolonBruce PosterMichael N. PresserPaul RabinowPeter J. RabinowitzRichard A. RiesWilliam Lloyd RitterbergMark RosinRobert RossStephen RoundsTim RowtonJim RundleCharles T. SanfordRobert S. SchehrRobert SchommerMichael C. ShapiroR. Carl ShiflettAmmon ShoenfeldFredric E. SilvermanMichael SilvertKeith J. SimonsMark B. SimonsJohn W. SnapperLouis SohnMark SolomonScott SorensenEric SouersRichard C. SpeiglmanJeffrey B. SpurrPeter StonePeter StumppLarry SvartJames G. SwansonJoel B. SwartzMark SwirskyEarl A. Turner, Jr.David VigodaJames WarrenHarvey WassermanJoel B. WeberRoger WechslerEarl WeissFred WellischSteven WestonWilson WheatcroftDavid WorstellPaul WrightThomas ZermanSTUDENTSCarol J. AndersonHelen AndersonRuth AtkinsElizabeth BalcomMaureen BatesAnn BaylesLenore BelskyVictoria S. BenhemPamela BergJean Best/ViI Mam Kt BakerElizabeth BlockDiane Bloom5 usan BlumHeather BoothHarry BoyleCharles BradleyMyra BraudeSusan BraudeCarol E. BrindleyPat BrodleyLouise BrotskySarah BurnsCarola BurroughsJean CallahanDeborah L.CantorKristen CarlsonEstelle CarolJoseph CarreraAmy CederbaumNora K. CharneyCarolyn ChaveMary Jane ChecchiLaura ChenverBetty ChewningJudy ClarkAnabel Cole Lauren GrossSusan Gutwi 11Sally HaimoRobert HallanerJohn L- HarrisonMike HelffrichSara HellerNina HelsteinJudy HendersonGeoffrey HeronDomingo Herrero ■Tom H irshEnid Hoffman •Mary HoffmanSusan Hoffman ■Mary ConnorsMarion DanisDevra Lee DavisMary Whitman DavisNaomi DiamondNancy DicklerJudith DubesterM. Dov DublinMary EisenbergLinda EIImanMargaret FarrellMary FathmanLucy FeberJudy FeldmanBetty FerberDiana FieldsMargery FineKay FingertLaura FinklerKaren FishmanRita FreebornAnne FreedmanPaula FriedmanCatherine FrerichsLisa FruchtmanJohn FyfeAdele Geffen Emo HonzakPhilip Gelber Barbara E. HorbergBarbara Golds ley Douglas HuntLinda Goldberg Mary IsaacsEvelyn Goldfield Emi ItoCal I ie Goldstein Bertha JosephsonJudy Goldstein Gale JustinJoel Gomberg Laura KaplanDonna Goodman Alice KarlinLinda Gossen Penny KashLois Grant Laura KatzGeorgia Green Susan KatzKaren Green Robin KaufmanPhilip A. Gronbach STATEMENT TO SUPPORT THOSEWHO REFUSE SERVICE G. Michael McCrossinRev. John Wiley NelsonLiz Eson Katherine PageTobey Klass Diane PerlutDavid Kohl Amanda PetersKit Kollenberg Susan PhillipsNetta E. Kripke Diana PickettJohn Kwasnik Anita PierceAlthough I am not subject to the draft, my opposition to our govern¬ment’s policy in Viet Nam compels me to support those draft eli¬gible Americans who have pledged to refuse induction. I pledge tosupport these young Americans with encouragement, counsel, andfinancial aid.I am aware this statement will be made in public. Susan LandayX; Carl LawyerDiana LeiferX- David Leonard*: Lois Levitanv: Sharon LevyX; Peter LipkeJoe Mantis Marilyn PingMarie PlazewskiGloria PoderdaPrudence PosnerJean PowersMargo ReichAlonzo ReidMelen Renovi 11— UC Student — Faculty— Alumnus Parent— Resident of Hyde Parkor Woodlawn NameSignatureAddressPhone Dorothy Marcus Robert RhodesDiana MarderPatrick MacBridePat McCauleyJanna McKenzieNancy McMi 11 inJohn MeadJessica MyersKaren OlsenJudith Ornstein=ACULTY Marlene DixonRobert M. C. Adams Wolfgang F.psteinRalph A. Austen Audrey E. EvansHoward Aronson James E. FarnellWilliam K. Baker John H. FishDonald R. Beldin D. G. FreedmanTom Benjamin Alan GewirthPeter M. Blau Eugene GendlinZena Smith Blau Langdon B. GilkeyAnne Pippie Burnett Harvey GilmanVirgin Burnett Michael Goldberger Richard LevinsVere Chappell Nathan Gross Judith A. LongPeter Homans Jerome ManganMarshall G. S. Hodgsorjames McCawleyJerome J. McGannRobert CoburnEric Cochrane Peter H. Grove Richard LewontenRobert J. Havighurs Barbara H. Monter Jerome H. SkolnickSusan StodolskyHewson SwiftGerhard E. O. Meyer John A Tay|orPaul B. Moore lra G Wooti M.D.Mariam H. Munroe jack SawyerAlan H. Nelson Marvin StodolskyPeter Novick cRabbi Daniel I. Leiffer Rafael OrtizRobert M. Lewert Rev. E. Spencer ParsonsRichard Pfeffer Merna VillarejoAnthony Platt Gilbert F. WhiteBert HoselitzJames A. HopsonRobert L. KahnLeonard KaplanMartha KlooRichard K. LashofLeonard RadinskyMelvin Rothenberg Marvin Zonis Paula RogovinJudith RosenPatricia K. RyanNancy SchaefferRuth SchoenbachEmanuel SchreiberMarion ShermanPaula ShulmanEI len Si IonLoretta SmithRoss Smi thLynn SonbergNancy SorkinJane SpielmanHelen Steinllene SteinJohn Picard SternJane SteinfelsBeatrice SternChris SternPaul StetnerNancy StokleyAlice SucherSara Anne SyerKaren WaysdorfJudith WeismanRuth Weissbourdludy WertheimMary SylvesterPaula SzewezykJanet TenneyJean TeppermanSusan TeshimaRev. Nelson ThayerFrancis VergataToby VolkmanJohn VogelFsther Gorgon WagonerRoger K. WarrenSusan WarwickCommittee onSocial ThoughtJo Anderson Jr.Paul AntzeJan BroekMichael DennenyMichael DolinerThese Departments Have IssuedSimilar Statements of SupportIrwin LevinsteinThomas P. MandelIrwin MillerArthur MoreyStephen MostWilbiam OlmstedFaith RafkindStan Spero Draenos Wendy RaudenbushRobert EdenMaurice FargeRockwell GrayMark GreenbergCharles HollanderMichael Korn William RouttJudy SchavrienAndrew SchmooklerMaurine SteinRobert VaccaEugene Wildman Medical SchoolKayode AdetugboMichael ApplebaumSam BlockClaire BloomfieldDan BlumenthalMelvin ColeStephen CohenMilton EstesKenneth GassPhilip GelberRichard Gottlieb Richard HeinrichLambert KingLeonard KamJoan LangCarol LangfordLee LessermanMarshall MorganFitzhugh MullanNeil SteinmetzMichael SherlockJohn VogelJames WallerDianna Woo CALENDAR OF SVCG EVENTSSaturday, March 27: CHICAGO PEACE MARCH, 10:30 a.m., Grant ParkSaturday, May 4: CONFERENCE: Alternatives to the Military," Law StudentsFriday, June 7: SPECIAL VIETNAM CONVOCATION, 7 p.m., RockefellerMemorial Chapel, Dean E. Spencer Parsons; Noam Chomsky,MIT; and others In honor of those who have signed the pledgeto refuse service.Friday, June 7 and Saturday June 8: WORKSHOPS: “After the Convocation.”Special Vietnam Convocation Group.Friday June 7, 10 p.m.: POST-CONVOCATION CELEBRATION and DANCE. yMail Signed Cards To w.v.vXvX'Xv/Xvav: AnnouncementsSVCG Information Table(For pledge cards, can¬vassing, contributions):Corridor of Mandel Hall,Mon.-Fri., I 1:30-1:30.Health Professions Re¬sistance Union (Adviceand referral service onmedical deferments): Mon.-Thurs. evenings, QuakerHouse, 5615 Woodlawn:363-1248.SPECIAL VIETNAM CONVOCATION GROUPIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60M7For further information, contactJeff Blum363-2540 Richard Speiglman363-3814 Joel Weber493-42068 WEEKEND MAGAZINE April 26, 1968GADFLYMaroon Endorsements for SG and Peter RatnerBy PETER RATNERWhat constituted the maincause for my alarm in readingTuesday’s Maroon endorsementswas the extremely mediocrejournalism demonstrated by themanner in which our editorialstaff went about compiling itspreferences for the coming cam¬pus elections. This is character¬ized by the following errors; lackof enough basic information aboutall eligible candidates to makeany significant choices amongthem; failure to bother to seekout the views of any of the eli¬gible candidates; and the use ofcriteria that are severely limitedto matters which have little bear¬ing on a candidate’s future per¬formance.This first point is rather clear.The mere fact that the Marooneditors overlooked many of thecandidates running for office sub¬jects their endorsements to thecharges of “incomplete,” “hast¬ily-contrived,” and, therefore,“invalid.” For instance, there isno mention at all of Dov Dublin,who is Chairman of FOTA thisyear, and who is running for bothSG and NSA.THE SECOND error com¬plements the first. Not only didthe Maroon editors make theirendorsements out of a basic ig¬norance of many of the candi¬dates running, but they failed tomake any attempt to invite allinterested candidates to presenttheir opinions in interviews priorto endorsement. This policy waspracticed by the Maroon editor¬ial staff two years ago. Why hasit been discarded since? Itseems that what the editors ofthe Maroon remain unaware of,they choose to ignore.The third criticism is partly aresult of the first two. Failure toseek out the opinions of the can¬ didates has forced the editorialstaff to limit its bases of endorse¬ment to either personal quirks ofthe candidates, or what theyhave done in the past Both cri¬teria smack of a vagueness, adetermined attempt to avoidspecifics of whatever kind, and,in some cases, an unhealthy in¬formality — all of which do notbefit the journalistic effort of theUniversity of Chicago, which isaddressed to the students andfaculty of this university.HAVING INDICATED somegeneral inadequacies that runrampant throughout (verily, gam¬bol about) the Maroon endorse¬ments — I beg your leave to de¬vote a few words to theapplication of these inadequaciesto my particular case.It is written in the Maroon(April 23) that I am one of themost “notorious” candidates forthe SG at-large position. “Notori¬ous” implies being well-known, and this, perhaps, in an unfavor¬able light. Even if both impli¬cations were to be assumed true,what kind of bearing would thissort of criteria have on determin¬ing how a candidate is to functionafter his hypothetical election?Will he do nothing in office be¬cause he is “notorious”? Alas,it takes no great pedant of logicto discern that the one premisedoesn’t necessarily follow fromthe other. So much for“notoriety”THE MAIN criticism levelledagainst my candidacy is that Ihave made a “nuisance” of my¬self in SG and IHC “for threeyears.” This is by far the mostserious charge, and merits someexamination.First, what is required by theeditors of The Maroon for one tobe branded a “nuisance” at theIHC and SG? Their failure toelaborate on this leaves me quitedoubtful. Secondly, in not quiteone year in Student Government and barely two quarters IHC at¬tendance, I hardly see why I amsentenced for being a “nuisance”in these bodies for three wholeyears. Once again, Maroon ad¬herence to facts is questionable.Thirdly, when in SC and IHC, Iworked to get a variety of signif¬icant legislation enacted. On allconstructive and progressive legi¬slation, whether or not it waspassed, my affirmative vote wasrecorded. I cite for one examplethe bill to reform the SG assem¬bly so as to give the Collegemore“voice” in its own affairsAT NO TIME could any act ofmine be considered “obstruction¬ist”. Furthermore, is it not acoincidence that one of the pre¬sent Maroon editors happened toserve on the IHC concurrentlywith me, and (representinganother Dorm’s interests), oftenexpressed his disagreement withmy position in long and ungram¬ matical monologues whichseemed grotesque and tedioustempts at eloquence. Successful¬ly able to biUdgeon most opposi¬tion by the very length of his ti¬rades, he indeed took offense atseeing a few members — myselfamong them — who managed toexpress their disagreement withhis views in spite of the pro¬nounced length of his perorations.Perhaps the term “nuisance”may have referred to one parti¬cular personal frustrations upondiscovering that there were otherpeople who could not be so easilydeceived by his verbal masquer¬ades. If this is so, then Maroonobjectivity — heretofore woundedand faltering — has now beendealt the coup de grace with theinjection of personal and capri¬cious hates into Maroon editorals.Mr. Ratner, ’69, is a candi¬date for Student Governmentfrom the college-at-large.< ►sure we’re a used bookstore!adding over 100 titles a day.part-time jobs, apts., loans, babysitting,rides & 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 9-10rgraduateto greatness...become"someone special”the new york city nurse! Make the mostproductive use of your education and your abilities by startingyour career as a New York City Nurse. You can select your areaof clinical interest from among 19 general and specialized hospitals, learnnew skills and techniques as you prepare for professionaladvancement, and make an important contribution not only to your particularjob but to the entire City of New York.You can be a good nurseanywhere, but you can becomea great nurse in New York City.Write today for moreinformation on how to become‘‘Someone Special"...The New York City Nurse. Professional Recruitment Division,Room 608, Dept. C-10DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALS125 Worth Street, New Yorit, N. Y. 10013Please send me your brochure about nursing inNew York City.NAMEADDRESS.CITY_ .STATE. .ZIP.SCHOOL. .GRAD. DATE.An Equal Opportunity Employer STUDYING ABROAD?Students who’ve been there,tell students who are going:On a rock-bottom budget (wellunder $7 a day!) in Europe, the Ba¬hamas, Bermuda, Jamaica, PuertoRico, the Virgin Islands, and Hawaii• In this totally new guidebook, students whohave lived and traveled in the countries theywrite about give you personal, detailed^-,l-was-there reports on the Inplaces for the high spirit, gglow budget jet set. They tellyou where the fun is —where to go, where to eat,where to stay, where toshop, where to play, whereto meet people. Where toswing: bistros, coffee¬houses, ski resorts, surfingbeaches, non-sightseeingsights. Plus straight factsabout local life and localcolor and how to live withit. Price $2.95 -vs*-"-' This guidebookis not for people over 30COMPLETE INFORMATION ONSTUDY ABROADPan Am's® NEW HORIZONS IN EDUCATION(222 pages, $3.95) gives you everything youneed to know about 258 schools and uni¬versities in Europe, Middle East, Far East,Latin America: Summer courses, Year-roundcourses, Language and culture programs;admissions requirements, costs, accommo¬dations, language of instruction and muchmore.Where The Fun Is, Pan Am’s Young Traveler's Guide writtenby Students and Pan Am’s New Horizons in Education areavailable at all bookstores or at your local Pan Am office.Published by Simon and SchusterApril 26, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONIAdministrators Resist Black Student MilitantsA.Second part of a two-part se- Without it, black students wouldries. The first part appeared in not have their inspiration, and theythe April 19 issfyie.By WALTER GRANTATLANTA (CPS)L- Despite theincreased influence of the blackpower movement, most Negro col¬lege administrators do not intendto implement the radical reformsbeing demanded of them by stu¬dents on their campuses.Black college officials, in fact,like-to minimize the long-range ef¬fects of the movement on the his¬torical Negro colleges and univer¬sities. They say the black powermilitants are in the minority, andthat the basic goals and directionsof their colleges will remain un¬changed.“There is a great deal of verbal¬ization about black power, but Idon’t think it will have that mucheffect on us,” says Dr. Lucius H.Pitts, president of Miles College irBirmingham, Ala. Dr. Vivian W.Henderson, president of Clark Col¬lege here, agrees. “As of now, Ithink black power will have only aminimal impact on the colleges,”he says.These administrators, however,make a distinction between “blackpower” and “black awareness.”The majority of today’s black stu¬dents, they say, fall into the “blackawareness” category, because theyhave become aware of their herit¬age and proud that they are black.The distinction is made becauseblack power has a connotation ofmilitancy and violence.Building Pride“I cannot argue against the ob¬ject of building pride in one’srace,” says Dr. Henderson. “Thisis a very good objective, and tothis extent the movement couldhave a very good effect. Militancytoday cannot be divorced from theblack power movement and its fullimplications to the entire society.As one black student activist putit, “Everything black people do togain power is black power. Itdoesn’t make any difference if we,as students, are involved in thesame issues as white students onwhite campuses. The fact that weare black makes it black power.”The student power movement onblack campuses cannot be viewedapart from the national black pow¬er movement for another reason.PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3*2800SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734^6393 would not feel they are fighting for: the cause of black people every¬where. In short, black power uni¬fies the students and makes themproud they are black. It inspiresthem to act when they think chang¬es are necessary.Although many of the demonstra¬tions on black campuses this yearhave involved local problems blackstudents across the country have acommon goal for black colleges.They think black colleges now arecontrolled by the white commuintyand oriented to the white culture.The students want to “blacken”their colleges by making them re¬sponsive to the needs and cultureof black people.Central RoleThe Student Non-Violent Coordi¬nating Committee (SNCC), with itsheadquarters here, is playing acentral role in encouraging blackstudent leaders to demand thatthe basic direction of black insti¬tutions be changed. At least twoother nation-wide black student or¬ganizations are doing the same.They are the Black Students Union,with its headquarters at Fisk Uni¬versity in Nashville, Tenn., and theAfro-American Collegians together,which is run out of the HamptonInstitute in Hampton, Va.Interviews with scores of blackpeople in the South produced sim¬ilar comments about the goals ofthe movement as it relates to blackcolleges.“Our basic goal is to make theblack college student aware of hisblackness, identity, and culture,”said Roscoe Ellis, a student leaderat Florida A&M University. “Theculture that is pushed down ourthroats comes from the white com¬munity,” said Howard Spencer, a student at Tougaloo College inTougaloo, Miss. “The whole direc¬tion of the college is set and con¬trolled by white supremacists. Weplan to change that,” Spencer add¬ed.Middle-Class ViewSome black faculty membersagree with what the students aresaying. “Most Negro schools havea white middle-class point of view,”says Dr. Vincent Harding, chari-man of the history department atSpellman College here. “The whiteswant to make us anything butblack. Black students must buildinner-fortitude that will make themrefuse to go into a white bag,” Dr.Harding said.If successful, the black powermovement will erase the whitenessof black colleges through a varietyof reforms. Among them are:• The curriculum of black col¬leges will be drastically altered.History departments will empha¬size Negro and African history soblack students will become moreaware and proud of their heritage.Students in economics courses willstudy such problems as the plightof the Negro due to automation.Political science courses may cen¬ter around problems Negroes havein gaining political power and thefallacies and contradictions of theAmerican dream, and music cours¬es will emphasize African music.• Extracurricular activities alsowill be changed, with emphasis onthe Negro culture. Concerts willfeature African or American Negrofolk music, and African-style danc¬es will be held.• There will be no place formany of today’s conservative-mind¬ed administrators and professors,who have been “white-washed bythe white society,” according toblack power militants. There will be more black professors, but notUncle Toms, on the blackcampuses.• Colleges will not encourage,students to get high-paying jobswith a major industry or corpora¬tion in the white society. Rather,students will be taught to organizeblack people in black communitiesso they can develop economic, po¬litical, and social power. Therewill be much closer ties betweenthe colleges and the black commu¬nities.It May KillThese are just a few of thechanges which may occur if theblack power movement on blackcampuses is totally successful.There is a strong possibility, how¬ever, that black power may killsome colleges before it changesthem.If student disturbances oft blackcampuses continue to increase,black administrators could havemore problems than ever before ingetting enough money to keep theircolleges going. There already havebeen some signs that the blackmilitants could endanger the veryfuture of their colleges. THE MAROONBLACK STUDENT DEMONSTRA¬TOR: Threat to the future ofcolleges?SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd1 mm wCoffee HousePersian Delicacies our SpecialityM-Th 11 am. - 12 pm.Fri 11 am. - 1 am. 1440 East 57th Street Sat 141 am - 2 amSun 9 am - 12 pm. For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAs Low As $6.95 per Day - All 1968 Models(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715mm.A9JErmanno Olmi’s IL POSTOA charming and perceptive comedy drama by one of the young directors of the Italian cinema. Tonight at 7:15 and 9:30. Cob Hall. 754 Doc Films.Beatles-EyeViewof the Guru.The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi—spiritual adviser to theBeatles and Mia Farrow, architect of TranscendentalMeditation, leader of the Spiritual Regeneration Move¬ment. A frail inan who sits cross-legged among cushionshigh in his own ashram—a Himalayan retreat wherebelievers practice meditating and exist on boiled rice andvegetables. The Beatles were there, and Mia, and a scoreof celebrated and not-so-celebrated believers from aroundthe world. Why? To find out, Post writer Lewis Laphamtalked to the Guru’s followers in the U.S., then went toIndia. You can see the Maharishi,his retreat and his message as theBeatles see them in the May 4 issueof The Saturday Evening Post. Getyour copy today. On newsstands now. * ON sale nowA CURTIS MAGAZINERTTm HYDE PARK THEATRE53rd & Lake Park NO 7-9071EXCELLENT FILM—Life MagazineCo-Starring Ana KarinaTHE CHICAGO MAROON April 26, 1968Roy Gutmann's Death: Tragic, IncomprehensibleFor those of us who knew RoyGutmann, his passing was a worldapart from the daily reports ofmurders somewhere in Chicago.Everyone is aware that such actsoccur, and it is a comment on our¬selves that we experience little orno sense of real loss and concernif they do occur, even only a mileto the north, south, or west of us.But last Monday, in our own neigh¬borhood, a friend of ours, and a fel¬low student of all those in the Uni¬versity community, was killed in amost violent way.The feeling of loss is differentwhen the loss is the result of an act of violence, but even more so on aperson such as Roy Gutmann. RoyGutmann was a truly non-violentperson, and had spent time serious¬ly examining the nature and mean¬ing of violence.For Roy, any act of violence dir¬ected at any individual, was a vio¬lation of that individual. His rela¬tionships with people were mani¬festations of his great sensitivityand empathy, and as a result, inhis too short life, he made a deepimpression on the many people whoknew him. He was not loud and didnot stand out among people in theconventional sense. He was rather quiet, sure, and deep in his feelingsand actions, and he had a greatawareness of and sensitivity to theworld around him.The murder of Roy has instilleda particular sense of fear in us. Allalone Monday evening on 56thstreet, he was apparently killedjust because he was there at thetime, and those of us who experi¬enced his loss feel deeply and in¬credibly helpless. We feel so help¬less not just because it could havehappened to any of us, not justbecause the isolated act which re¬sulted in Roy’s death is one whichis very difficult to prevent by shortCollege To Give Gutmann B A.Continued from Page 1pressed the official reaction to themurder. “Roy Gutmann was a per¬son of exceptional achievementand promise,” his statement read.“His mindless murder has les¬sened us all. It is a tragedy thatfalls most heavily on the family,yet it falls also upon the Univer¬sity community and the entireCity.“We will continue to work withall persons in this whole commun¬ity to advance the ideals he un¬derstood, served, and should havebeen allowed to serve muchlonger.”One of the most recent develop¬ments is the University announce¬ment that an Upward Bound pro¬gram, rejected because of insuf¬ficient funds by the Departmentof Health, Education, and Welfare,would be funded by the Univer¬sity whether or not outside financ¬ing would be available.Hyde Park ServicesMuch of the administration isdisappointed by the services of¬fered Hyde Park by the City ofChicago. The lighting and the po¬lice protection have both come un¬der attack recently, but FifthWard Alderman Leon Despresspoke up in defense of the neigh¬borhood.Speaking of the police protectionhere, he said that “under conven¬tional standards it is good. We doneed to improve it, however.”Despres called for the establish¬ment of an auxiliary patrol forcein both Hyde Park and Woodlawn— “in the lighted areas” — with | the volunteers aiding the regularpolice force. Despres did not favorthe expansion of regular police pa¬trols in the neighborhood.Fifth ward Democratic Commit-| tee Chairman and City TreasurerMarshall Korshak disagreedstrongly with Despres. “I am ter¬ribly concerned about the murder.I am working with the Superin¬tendent of Police to make sure the area is more than adequately cov¬ered,” he said.In a different series of develop¬ments, the flag on the Quadrangleswas kept at half-staff through thefuneral on Thursday. Also, Deanof the College Wayne C. Booth an¬nounced that Gutmann would re¬ceive a posthumous degree at theconvocation in June.Deprived Youths Offered HelpThe University has announcedthat it plans a special academicand recreational program for about100 youths from disadvantagedI areas this summer.The University decided to fundthe program after it was turneddown by the Office of EconomicOpportunity in Washington, but it isstill looking for an outside sourceof additional support.The program is designed forboys and girls who have completedgrades eight and nine. The facultywill consist of eight teachers from the University and Chicago publicschools, ten college students whowill act as tutor counselors, and adirector.Willard J. Congreve, assistantprofessor in the Graduate School ofEducation, will organize theprogram.It is expected that the programwill offer such subjects as Englishcomposition, literature and drama,English remedial reading, science,social studies, fine and industrialarts, music and physicaleducation.Friday 8:30 P.M. May 3OPERA HOUSE$6.00 - $5.00 - $4.00 - $3.00MAIL ORDER ONLYEnclose Stamped Self-Addressed Envelope.Box Office -- 20 N. WackerBox Office Tickets onMon., ApriI 15thExclusively onWarner Bros. Records. ~IN PERSON j*cPeter, ahuland dltary jI’ve Got My Eye On The Man.in a VAN HEUSEN’"417° VANOPRESS SHIRTAnd what I see of my classy mate, I like,I like! Ruggedly built, but with a cool, suavelook ... just like his permanently pressedVan Heusen “417” Vanopress shirt. It’s theone with new Soil-Away process thatwashes out stains and collar soil withoutscrubbing. Complete with authentic button-down collar and V-Tapered fit. In tough,turned-on stripes, checks or solids. Gee, Ijust can’t take my eyes off him. Funny,I don’t want to!r.~ Now from Van Heusenthe scent of adventure ... Passport 360... the first to last and last and last! term actions; but we feel helplessalso for Roy.Roys’ death is a symptom of alarge and growing problem in oursociety today, that of a breakdownin real communication betweenpeople, and of a loss of some ofthe humanity of man. Roy was inthe process of making his own con¬tribution to the world by directlyfacing the problem of the humanityof man, and he did this not onlythrough his numerous writings andacts of goodness, but by the veryexample of his life.Much too early in that life, hewas forced, solitarily, to confrontthe inhumanity of man in its mostextreme form. Tragically, that con¬frontation resulted in his owndeath, for one individual, no matterhow great, is helpless in the face of a killer who cannot be made to seewhat he is doing.What all of us must do now iswork together to do what no mancan do by himself.We must workto discover those aspects of uswhich are not human and deal withthem, and we must work to bringout the real humanity in ourselves.From that point, we must step out¬side and involve the other peoplewe can reach in this same process.Each of us is different, and eachmust do this in his own way —what we do share is our humanity,and it is this which we mustdevelop.This is what Roy Gutmannworked for dearly; this is where wemust carry on.— Robert FactorCancelled Class Has AlternativeContinued from Page 1burg. “A decision to offer him adeferred retirement until the ageof 68, if he so desires, has beenmade. But because of his illness,we cannot ascertain what hisplans will be.”Course AlternativesA series of alternatives for stu¬dents registered in Morgenthau’sPolitical Science 261 course hasbeen offered. These alternativesare:• Students wishing an “R” inthe course will be permitted totake one;• Students wishing to drop thecourse will receive a tuition re¬fund; • Students who want to take thecourse during the Summer Quar¬ter may take an “R” for SpringQuarter and register during thesummer tuition free;• A substitute reading coursefor second,- third,- and fourth-year students has been scheduledon Thursdays from 2 to 3:30 p.m.in Soc Sci 105.• Juniors will be given an “R”in the course which will count asfulfillment of the requirement• Seniors who need the courseto graduate will be given an “R”and will receive credit.Students should arrange an al¬ternative to Morgenthau’s coursewith their advisor, McConnellurged.^Nt Now, Everyone Can SeeJust a Little Bit Better!£OLDAZOR MINIATUREHMNTENSITY LAMPSComplete with 2No. 1073 Bulbs. FLEXIBLE-ARM MODELNo. 3612Ideal Gifts forV BirthdaysV ChristmasV Graduation, etc.V Reading, StudyingV Writing, TypingV Sewing, KnittingV ManicuringV HobbiesV OfficesV SchoolsV HospitalsV Plants, etc.Choice of Colors:• Pacific Coral• Biscayne Blue• Colonial White• Frost-Green• Frost-Tan• Ebony• Statuary - BronzeThe chrome-plated, IOV2" flex¬ible arm, coupled to theair-cooled reflector, providesample adjustability of thelight.. . . and there are built-inquality and safety features:air-cooled reflector, HI-LOswitch, long-life transformer,thermal circuit breaker, heat-resistant wires, 9-ft. cord, andtip-proof.Come in . . . see for yourselfhow these bright, little mitescan assist your personal see¬ing needs. You’ll find count¬less uses for ’em!NEAT, FOLDING-ARM MODEL No. 3615Folds into a compact unit; complete with 3 No. 1073 bulbsFor Your Personal Lighting Needs, Buy a DAZORStationary DepartmentUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue *1795April 26, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9IMaroon Bulletin, of Current EventsCALENDAR 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 16FILMS: (Blue Gargoyle), "A Time Out ofWar" with Alec Guinness and "Bridge onthe River Kwai." The Blue Gargoyle, 8p.m., 50 cents.EXHIBIT: Painting, Drawing, Sculpture,and Photography, director John Demou.Midway Studios, 6016 S. Ingleside Ave.MEETING: (Concerned Science Students),to draw up anti-conplicity statement. Ry-erson 358, 4 p.m.MEETING: (Campus Student Life Commit¬tee Members). Cobb 402, noon.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "ComparativeAspects of the Primary Structures of Pro¬teins: A Molecular Illustration of SomeGenetic and Evolutionary Phenomena,"Dr. Emanuel Margoliash. Abbott 101, 2p.m.LECTURE: (Genetics Training Program),"Chromosome Structural Rearrangementsin Human Populations and Some EvidenceMcCarthy Rally:Hoffman SpeaksAbout 900 students packed Man-del Hall Tuesday to hear DustinHoffman and Sam Brown speak ina rally for Sen. Eugene McCarthy(D. Minn.).Hoffman, star of the film “TheGraduate”, praised McCarthy forhis actions and his beliefs.Hoffman said McCarthy “hadstood up for his beliefs when it waspolitical suicide to come outagainst the war.”Hoffman concluded his speechwith a poem dedicated to men inVietnam.Sam Brown, chairman of the Ad¬visory Board of the National Stu¬dent Association, backed up Hoff¬man’s praise of McCarthy bytelling students what they can do toaid the campaign. Brown describeda “fundamental re-ordering of theway politics is done.”He stressed the fact that the Mc¬Carthy campaign was being runwith emphasis on the individualvoter. Campaigners, he said, weretrying as much as possible to keepthe election out of the hands of po¬litical bosses of machines.Brown stated that the campaign¬ers would concentrate basically ondomestic political issues, withemphasis on the race question,since McCarthy believes that “theproblem of race is the most funda¬mental problem facing the whitecommunity.” for Prezygotic Selection in Man," Dr.John Hamerton, Pediatrics Research Unit,Guy's Hospital Medical School, London.Argonne Conference Room, I 105B, 4p.m.SEMINAR: (Committee on Social Thought),"The Outlook of Personal Knowledge,"Michael Polanyi, F.R.S., Fellow of Mer¬ton College, Oxford. Social Science 106, 4p.m.FILMS: (Doc Films). "II Posto," directedby Ermanno Olmi. Cobb, 7:15 and 9:30p.m.MEETING: (Students for Social Action Com¬mittee), "A Talk-out, SSA's Strike againstthe War in Vietnam, Racial Oppressionand the Draft." Students and Faculty par¬ticipating. SSA Lounge, 1:30-5 p.m.PARTY: (Students for Social Action Com¬mittee), Poster Painting Party. SAA, 8-10p.m.MEETING: (Intervarsity Christian Fellow¬ship). Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 p.m.RADIO PROGRAM: (Conversations at Chi¬cago), "The Contemporary Art Museum'sResponsibility to the Public," Jiri Setlik,Director of the Museum of Modern Art,Prague; Jan ven der Marck, Director ofthe Museum of Modern Art, Chicago; andHarold Haydn, Moderator, Director orMidway Studios. WFMT, 10:30 p.m.ABRAHAM LINCOLNand 125 other life-like,life size wax figuresin 40 beautiful scenes(Ehp iSuyal iCmt&mtHax iluHPum©111 (Eotmt1419 No. Wells Phone 337-7786Group rates with guided toursOpen daily noon to midnight Saturday, April 27ANTI-WAR MARCH: (Students for SocialAction Committee). Chicago's Largest An¬ti-War Demonstration and Rally. GrantPark Bandshell, 12:30 p.m.FILMS: (The Blue Gargoyle). See Friday'slistings.DANCE: (Pharaoh, Vincent House). Ma¬hogany Hall House Blues Band at "TheDance on Saturday Night." BJ Dining Hall,9-1 p.m.FILM: (Pierce Tower Cinema), "Zorba TheGreek," with Anthony Quinn and AlanBates. Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:30 p.m.LECTURE SERIES: (Biochemistry), "Com¬parative Aspects of the Primary Struc¬tures of Proteins," Dr. Emanuel Margoli¬ash. Abbott 101, 10 a.m.SEMINARS: (The College), "The New Bi¬ology," by Dr. Humberto Fernadez-Moran,Professor of Bio-physics. Breasted Hall,10:30 a.m.COLLEGIUM CHORUS: Brahms, "Liebes-leider Waltzes"; Thompson, "Americana";Schubert, "Standchen," directed by Ben¬iamin Hadley. Lexington Hall, 8:30 p.m.Sunday, April 28FOLK DANCE:free. Ida Noyes Gym, 1-6 p.m.. UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "TheParadox of Power," President Samuel E.Stumpf, Cornell College, Mount Vernon,Iowa. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11a.m.RADIO: (WHPK), "Stonehenge Revisited,"freaky rock, blues, soul, and love. 88.3F.M., midnight.FILM: (Oriental Institute), "Out of theHistory of Mankind." Breasted Hall, 2:30p.m.LECTURES: (University of Chicago Con¬ference on Abortion), "Historical and Cur¬rent Data Concerning Abortion"and "Cul¬tural, Medical, and Psychological Aspectsof Abortion." Center for Continuing Ed¬ucation, 2 and 7:30 p.m.FILM: (Contemporary European Films):Tom Jones. Cobb Hall, 7 and 9:30 p.m.$1.RECRUITING VISITSTeaching(For appointments, call Ext. 3279.)APRIL 24: West Bend, Public Schools, WestBend, Wisconsin. Information on positionsnot available at this writing.APRIL 29: Waukegan Township High School,Waukegan, Illinois. English, mathematics, biology, social studies, guidance, andspecial education. Interested only in qual¬ified candidates who are eligible for teach¬er certification.Business, Industry, Government(For appointments, call Ext. 3284.)APRIL 29: California State Government,openings as employment counselors.NEWS BRIEFSJOHN W. DORFMEISTER, 28, has beennamed assistant business administrator forthe Biological Sciences. Dorfmeister, whohas been assistant contract administratorfor the U.S. Atomic Energy Commissionat Argonne National Laboratory for thepast four years, will have principal re¬sponsibility for the financial administrationof divisional grants and contracts. Heholds an M.A. in economics and a B.S.in industrial administration from the Uni¬versity of Illinois.THE CHESS TEAM swept the Midwest Re¬gional Intercollegiate Championship, heldat Lincoln, Nebraska April 20 and 21.The team, composed of Harold Winston,John Detrich, John Thomson, and BernardHagerty scored 13 out of a possible 16points to far outdistance second placeCreighton University. John Detritft, agraduate student in physics, won the in¬dividual championship with an undefeated316-V4 score.How to tap a keg(and tie into the best reason in the world to drink beer)IPick up a half-barrel of Bud(good for about 245 12-ounce cups. . . with foam) and the tapping equip¬ment on the day of the party. Justset the beer in a tub of ice to keepit cold. 2 Just before the party begins, tapyour beer. First, make sure thebeer faucet is closed (you wouldn’twant to waste a drop of BeechwoodAged Bud!). Then, insert the faucet-and-pump unit into the upper valveof the keg, give it a quarter turnclockwise, and lock it in place bytightening the lower wing nut.9^ Next, insert the lager tapin the lower valve of thekeg and give it a quarter turn.Now, set the keg upright in atub and pack ice around it.4 You’re now ready to drawbeer. Pump pressure to theproper point for good draw,usually about 15 lbs. That’s allthere is to it, but there’s no ruleagainst sampling just to makesure everything is perfect.Ahhhhh! It’s no wonder you’llfind more taverns with thefamous “Bud on Draught” signthan any other!Budweiser.ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON10 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 26, 1968■0«C«i'D MAROON SPORTSMaroons Are Mashed; Only the Golf Team WinsBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantUniversity sports teams foughta losing battle against rain andwind Tuesday as only the golfteam of three squads playingemerged victorious, taking two ofthree matches.The golfers scored wins overCarthage and North Park whilelosing to Lake Forest; Coach BillMoyle’s tennis team lost its firstmatch of the year by a slim 5-4margin to Wheaton; meanwhile,Illinois Institute of Technology wal¬loped the baseball team 10-0Mark Carpenter scored a fantas¬tic (considering the weather) 82 tolead all competitors in the three-way golf match. His fine playingwas vital in the Maroon’s 8V2-6V2win over Carthage and their 8-7victory over North Park. Comingin at 88 were Pete Munday andPaul Chambers, while Jim Peter¬son and Mike Nemeroff scored 92each.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Item* From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856we will go anywhere at anytime for the cause of sellingbicycles. LOWEST PRICES forCarlton, Raleigh, Robin, Hood,Ranger, Falcon, and Gitanebicycles. Touring and Compe¬tition equipment,TURIN BICYCLE CO-OP1952 No. Sedgwick WH4-8865“factory trained mechanics”fly-by-night rentalsused bicycles (spasmodically)free deliverym-f 2-8:30, sat. -sun. 10-8closed thursdayswe'd love to turn you on'piCHt/i 'pried SAranfiiqoVtlonJ? RESTAURANT1321 East 57th STThe University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueMAY 5SUNDAY AFTERNOON at 3:30BUDAVARITE DEUMZoltan KodalyMASS IN F MINORAnton Bruckner(First Chicago Performance)RICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRwith 50 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRAEDWARD MONDEL LO,organistPeggy Smith, sopranoPhyllis Unosawa,contraltoRobert Bowker, tenorHenri Noel, baritoneTickets; $2.50 for students of allcolleges and universities$3.00 UC Faculty/Staff$3.50 General Admission$4.50 Reserved SeatsOn Sale at: U. of C. Bookstore,5802 Ellis AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore,1311 E. 57th StreetCooley’s Candles,5211 Harper AvenueTicket Central at 212 N. Michiganandatall Montgomery Wrard Stores TennisThe varsity tennis team tookfour of six singles matches but wasunable to capture any of the threedoubles contests and dropped itsfirst match after five straight vic¬tories. Tom McCroskey easily tookhis first singles match 6-2, 6-3, butWheaton netters came back tooverwhelm Dick Pozen and JimGriffin, 6-1, 6-0, and 6-4, 6-4. MikeKoch-Weser kept hopes alive withan unusual 10-8, 6-0 win and wasfollowed by Don Mars, 6-1, 6-3, andBruce Simmons, 7-5, 6-4.In doubles, however, the Ma¬roons proved hesitant and ineffec¬tive. McCroskey and Griffin wereunable to break Wheaton’s serviceand dropped twin 6-4, 6-4 sets.Mars and Koch-Weser came backto take the second set after losingthe first but still finished behind7-5, 2-6, 7-5. In the day’s finalmatch, Pozen and Simmons lost a6-3, 6-2 decision.The squad will try for victory number six this afternoon at 1:30at home (Varsity Courts) againstMarquette.BaseballTuesday’s weather badly hurtthe University baseball team in itsquest for a winning record Withpitcher John Ryan unable to em¬ploy his collection of curves andsimilar breaking pitches, the squadwas unable to contain IIT. A fewuntimely errors also added to theproblems and helped cause the10-0 loss.With a record of two wins andthree losses, the roundballers willget a chance for that winning rec¬ord Saturday as they travel toLake Forest for a doubleheader.TrackThe first and second-year mem¬bers of the varsity track teamscored an 83-62 win over WilsonJunior College in a snow-streakedmeet Wednesday at Boucher Field.Jim Haydon and Ken Thomas dom¬ inated the field, scoring 18 pointseach on the newly opened Maroonfield.Haydon scored victories in theshot put, 440-yard dash, and thejavelin and took second in the dis¬cus. Thomas took only a single vic-I tory — the triple jump — but fin-; ished second in the pole vault, highhurdles, high jump, and interme¬diate hurdles. Ken also took third in the long jump.Also taking victories for the jun¬ior Maroons were Mike Berger inthe pole vault, Rich Jockman inthe discus, Dick Clark in the 880-yd. run, Scott Ferry in the highjump, and Pat Murray in the toughtwo-mile event. Jochman took sec¬onds in shot put and javelin, whileJeff Melby was only 0.1 secondback in the mile runFew 'Enthusiastic' about DraftContinued from Page 1and 3.9 percent of the first-yeargraduate students said they wouldenter into the armed services“enthusiastically.”The reason given by most peoplefor refusing induction was opposi¬tion to the war in Vietnam — 44.3percent of seniors who will refuseand 45.3 percent of graduate stu¬dents. Thirty-four and four-tenthspercent of seniors and 32.8 percent of graduate students cited self-preservation and interruption ofcareer plans as their first reason.Fourteen and nine-tenths percent ofseniors and 9.9 percent of graduatestudents cited opposition to allwar.However, the second reason citedby most people was opposition toU.S. foreign policy — 25.3 percentof seniors and 24 percent of grad¬uate students.A journey of a thousand milesbegins with a single step.He took that first step and he took thestep first, when he went alone into NewHampshire.But he was not entirely alone. Threethousand student volunteers, an actorand a poet were with him.Together they went into the countrysideto talk to the people. The studentstalked; the people listened. And thenin New England they cast the votesthat were heard around the world?As students we made it happen. We al¬ tered America's course. In Wisconsin,ten thousand of us came to work. A newpolitics of participation was born. Anunchangeable mind was changed.But our task is incomplete, our journeyunfinished. Thousands of volunteers areneeded during the coming weeks to dothe telephoning and canvassing, talk¬ing and walking, that must be done towin again in Indiana on May 7, and inNebraska, Oregon and California afterthat. It is hard work. Sometimes it is tediousand exhausting. But it is the work thatmust be done to insure our future andthat of America.If your help, your commitment, was im¬portant before, it is vital now.We have promises to keep, and miles togo before we sleep.Students for McCarthyClaypoo! Hotel, Indianapolis, IndianaCall your local group now.April 26, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11iMaroon 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.FOR SALE1964 VW SEDAN. 41,000 M. 643-3429.26" BOYS BIKE. Old, sturdy. *12. 924-9213.EXOTIC ABYSINNIAN KITTENS.Male 8< female. Reasonable. 684-7838.BEAUTIFUL DBL. BED, chest, table, 3 gal.Benj. Moore Paint. 955-3949.GIANT SIMMONS BEAUTYREST BED—QUEEN-SIZED, not KING-SIZed but a DUALTWIN-SIZED BED! ! ! ' For .,T°Ur,iNeed Quilted, not made with all thosefunky buttons. . . Complete with box springsand frame. . . Used by little old celibatecouple who are splitting for California.$250.00. Now — 6 months later — only$150.00 or best offer. 324-5751.1964 CHEVY II STATION WAGON. Radio,heater, ww, exc. condition. 493-5472.FURNITURE: Must be sold by May 1st:Double bed (w. box springs, etc.) —»zoCouch—converts to single bed 6152 armchairs, each * 5Call 493-0144, evenings.SOFA-BED *15, LARGE RUG, DRESSER,COUCH. Call 324-5206.MUST SELL — WILL BARGAIN:Uher Tape DeckLindell 4- Pickup Electric Guitar ..*4550 Watt Harmony Guitar Amp *6520 Watt Stereo HI-FI Amp *25Contact Hale Hust at 29 Hitchcock.1962 RAMBLER, Classic, 4-door, red-white,radio, new tires, must sell quickly. *150 orbest offer. Call BOB at 643-8948 or 324-1633.WORKTEACHERS WANTEDSOUTHWEST, ENTIRE WEST, AND ALASKASALARIES *5600. UP—FREE REGISTRA-TI0NSOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY1303 Central Ave., NE Albuquerque, NewMexico 87106J & J PUBLICATIONS, INC., Oowntown AdAgency, will be on Campus April 30 inter¬viewing students for SUMMER AD SPACESALES JOBS (Established Accounts). Jobspay salary plus commission plus expenses.Sign up now at REYNOLDS CLUB PLACE¬MENT OFFICE—ROOM 220 (If you want to).HOUSINGFOR SUMMER 8. NEXT YEAR. 5625 Wood-lawn. ROOMS WITH WARMTH. 684-9608.WANTEDUSED JEEP. 684-7838.Desire Vi STUDENT FLIGHT TICKET toEurope in June. 667-8069 after 6.LEAVING YOUR CAR HERE THIS SUM¬MER? Will pay for minimal use. 684-4119.1 or 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES for summerand/or next year to share 6 room apt. Ownbedroom(s). Kimbark & 54th. 363-7682.Need FEMALE ROOMMATE Own room &bath. Summer or longer. Furnished for sum¬mer. 1400 E. 55th, 684-5366.FEMALE GRAD STUDENTS seek 2 ROOM¬MATES. 6/15 8. 9/15. Own room. *40/month,due to campus. Call IRIS: 684-7597.RIDE WANTED: Will share driving and ex¬penses to Northwest Coast to arrive Mayfirstish. (sic) Phone Karl Simon at 643-6549.To finish MS in peace and quiet, U.C. Prof,will maintain house, apt., while you're away,now to August. Call Ext. 4038.Wanted: PLEASURE SEEKERS."The Dance on Saturday Night"Mahogany Hall House Band,BJ,9—1.PARTNER for summer backpacking in Rock¬ies and Sierras. Low budget. Some prior ex¬perience. 684-3942.BICYCLE WANTED. Call 324-5206.FEMALE ROOMMATE: 6/15. *45/month. 2blocks to campus. Own room. 643-1047, after 5MALE or FEMALE student fo do eveningbabysitting and dinner dishes in exchangefor room and board. Starting now or inSummer Quarter. Call Cohn—FA 4-0329.CAMPAIGNERS FOR KENNEDY in Indiana.Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129.APARTMENTS TO RENT1 BEDROOM APT. Available June 1. NearHarper Court. Call 684-6215 after 6.FOUR ROOMS. Newly painted, 54th 8, Ellis,*108/month, June 15 or sooner, option torent in Oct., Call 324-2487.FOUR ROOM APT. 54th PI. 8, Blackstone.Light 8. clean, well-serviced big. *130/month,incl. utils. Avail. May 1. 324-7583, eves.FOR PROFESSIONAL PEOPLE7129-43 South Euclid AvenueFormer CO-OP BuildingThese extraordinary apartments feature un¬ usually large rooms, loads of closet space,cabinet kitchens, and 2 door refrigerators.Immaculate grounds and public space.Garage included in Rental.4 Rooms *1505 Rooms $1756 Rooms *185Shown by Appointment only.Call TR 3-3226 weekdays,TR 3-7250, Saturdays and SundaysSACK REALTY COMPANY6549 S. Halsted Street2 BEDROOM HYDE PARK APT. Good Con¬dition. Want 1 female to share with 1 otherin summer with option. For lease in fallOR 2 people to occupy beginning Mid-June.Call BU 8-2333, 10:00 P.M. to Midnight.FOUR ROOM APT. Avail, in May. U. C.Married Student Housing. *99/month. 920E. 61st Street. 324-6597.BEAUTIFULNear South Shore APT. for 3 people; 3bdrms., 2 bathrooms, dining room kitchen,huge living room, off-the-street parking, fullfurnishings avail. Rent *55 per person. Avail.mid-June. Call 324-8762 around 6 P.M.lVi ROOM APT. *70. 324-5206.4 ROOM APT. Available May 1st. In HydePark. Call 324-1355.APARTMENTS WANTEDDESPERATELY NEED: Apartment or Roomin House or Apt. beginning May 1 June 15.Will pay. Call 324-5751.Law Profesosr and family seek COMFORT¬ABLE, FURNISHED 2 or 3 BEDROOM, air-conditioned (at least Partially) APT. forfirst or last 10 days of June. Will arrangefair payment. Contact Ray Parnas, 116Virginia, Fayetteville, Ark. 72701 with de¬tails.Need Summer Sublet. Furnished, 2Vi rm. 8.up. In Hyde Park. Call Paul at 924-9213 after5 p.m. Leave message.HELP! NEED 4-7 room APT. in Hyde Parkfor next year. Willing to Sublease and/orbuy furniture. Assistance will be rewarded.Call FA 4-4160.SUBLETSummer Sublet. Fully furn. 6 ROOM APT.1 block f. campus. Dishwasher, study, porch,yard, garage. Reasonable. 324-8592.Applications now being taken for 10 ROOM,3Vi bath, air-conditioned plush townhouse.June 15-Sept. 10. *300 per month. Refer¬ences 8. deposit required. Call 363-7150 be¬tween 6-8 P.M.Sublet 7/1/68 to 6/15/69. 6 ROOMS, com¬pletely furnished, 2 baths, wshr., dryer, air-cond. bedroom, nice yard, ideal location.Pref. fac. or grad, couple, w/o or 1 kids.*190/mo. plus deposit. HY 3-8099, evenings.Summer sublet. BEAUT. 3 ROOM APT.King size bed. *115. 684-7306.APT. to sublet, 53rd 8. Dorchester, Juneto Sept. Call 955-0817, after 10 P.M.6Vi ROOM APT. 2 baths. Fall option. *195.South Shore. Call 363-4615, evenings.SOUTH SHORE—1 BEDROOM, furnished,view of Lake, on U. C. busline, for Summer.*140/month. 955-7563.THREE ROOM ENGLISH BASEMENT. Sub¬let til Sept. *81.50. 67th 8, Paxton. Exc.trans via Campus Bus. Safe, secure location.324-6259, anytime.Fully furnished 6 ROOM APT. Porch. Tree.1 block from campus. June 10—Sept. 15.Reasonable. 684-3839.Summer Sublet. 6 Rooms. 55th 8, Kenwood.Call 288-3576 after 6:00.Sublet June 1 to Sept. 1. Furnished 4ROOM, 2 bedroom APT. Kenwood near 52nd.Rent *100 month. 493-8635.3Vi ROOM summer sublet at 54th 8> CornellSt. Furnished. SlOO/month. 667-0842.June-SEPT. 5 ROOMS. Huge Ivg. roomw/fr. place, sun room, furn. One of HydePark's nicest pads. *150. Vail 493-6507 orExt. 3397.3-4 PERSON APT. Summer only. 55th 8<University. Big, cheap. 363-0522.APT. TO SUBLET at 53rd 8. Dorchester.June to Sept. Call 955-0817 after 10 P.M.Summer Sublet. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths.*120/month. Greenwood nr. 52nd. 752-7669.June 15 thru Sept: 4Vi LARGE ROOMS.55th 8. Ingleside, *125/month. Couple Pref.Call 493-6831 evenings.FURN. 6 rm. APT., 57th 8, Dorchester, Air-cond. June 15 to August 31, 324-7294.TRAVELEscape Chicago??? NOW!!! With Marco PoloTravel. 288-5944.BICYCLE ACROSS EUROPE!!! An extra¬ordinary way to travel thru & be a part ofEurope. You don't have to be a muscle-bound hero, just a good sport and an in¬quisitive traveler. $698 for 47 days; $1148for 58 days and $1498 for 70 days includingall transportation, hotel, 8, most meals.Grad and under-grad only. Transatlantic |etnot included. Call Dick at RO 4-6264.HOUSE FOR SALETO SETTLE ESTATE—SOUTH SHORE.Spacious 7 room brick home, 4 bedrooms,2 closed porches, natural fireplace. Call be¬fore 5 P.M. Campus Ext. 6144, After 6 P.M.,call 734-2906 or ES 5-0533.DANCEBEAUX ARTS MASQUERADE BALLMay 3 at 8:30, Ida Noyes HallMAHOGANY HALL BLUES BANDFREE TICKETS at Reynolds Club DeskFor students and faculty. FILMZORBA THE GREEK (Pierce Tower Cine¬ma): Saturday, 7 and 9:30, Cobb Hall, $1.00.ROOM FOR RENTGROOVY LITTLE ROOM available now forGROOVY ROOMMATE. (Male, any Size).Call Scott at 324-3111.TYPING SERVICESEXPERIENCED. Reasonable rates. Willfurnish paper. Call 568-3056 after 7 P.M.EXPERT TYPING SERVICE. Reasonablerates also. Prompt, accurate, no bullshit.Call Harry at BU 8-4500.FOUNDIn the Grass, Monday afternoon. Watts'JOYOUS COSMOLOGY. Is it yours? CallExt. 3269 and leave name.LOSTTURQUOISE BRACELET. Reward. 667-7911.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.LOST—ZENITH HEARING AID. Behind theEar Type. Reward. Call DO 3-4300, Ext. 67.HORSEBACK RIDING SCHOOLSCHOOL owned and operated by Hyde Parkgroup for superior instruction. For begin¬ners and advanced. Jumping and Dressage.Also, Horses Boarded. Telephone Ml 3-0800,Ext. 3247.PERSONALSFrom the SEED: BAGS YIPPIES CAN GETINTO IN YOUR HOMETOWN: "Plan nowfor transportation to Chicago. Exclaim 'Yip-pie' right before orgasm. Have a Yip-in.Write a Yippie story and circulate it.Spread rumors. Rumors are fun. Anyonewho comes to Chicago should realize it willbe a heavy cop scene (Ed. shit, the WORLDis a heavy cop scene). Chicago Police es¬timate that there will be 50,000 to 2 millionYippies in Chicago."Man—sounds like some more good reasonsto split. . ."As Evans points out, it is paradoxicalthat Christian lawgivers who adopted theJewish code against intercourse with beastsshould have enlarged it to include theJews themselves.""THE COLLEGE BOWL TEAM challengedthe MAROON to a College Bowl Contest . . .Dare they accept?WHO OWNS TONY VARGAS?ML—Patience pays, nicht wahr? MSLSimon and Garfunkel have to "Look forAmerica." YOU can find it on May 2, 3, 4in Mandel Hall.Co-op consignments held over 1 year aresubject to Vi price cut, over 2 years, theybecome the property of the Co-op.Mary Worth:"In Marriage, when one is wise,"two are happy."The University of Chicago's SECRETWEAPON: A bowl of Chicken Soup con¬secrated by Mrs. Edward Levi!!!CAMPAIGN FOR KENNEDY in INDIANA!Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129."I washed and went out without a word.When I returned, there was no evidenceof the mess. She was in bed, and as I gotin beside her, I felt her arms close aboutme and she kissed me on the lips."Those CLEVER JEWS from Brandeis Uni¬versity will try to trick us and CHEAT us.BEWARE!Pol—Goddamn hippies!!!Lid—Pardonagain? Me; What was the nameBUT MARK, I'M the one who writes them! I—MarianneTHE .MAGICIANNOFBCP Improvisations:"In the Service of the Ego" ANDThe Lake County String Band.HARPER THEATRE COFFEE HOUSEFriday 8, Saturday 10:30 P.M.5238 S. HARPERCall for information about USED and NEWHI-FI EQUIPMENT FOR SALE: 256-4785after 7 P.M.KUTA, BLACK, SEIDMAN and LEVY areCHICKEN fo face SILVER, DOUGLASS,McPherson, and MOSCOW.Especially BLACK and LEVY. . .Why shouldn't the KITTY choose the Di¬vinity School?If you think the MAROON editorials couldbe improved, check out this excerpt fromTHE SUN TIMES . . . "It is high timemembers of Congress leaped down from thelobbyists' laps to serve the cause of commonsense and to reduce the carnage."About the U. C. CO-ED who refuses totalk—Well, that's all very cool and liberaland I'm sure RAMPARTS will go for It,but what about the next person this guyshoots?Why did the maid name her illegitimatechild JACOB? See AMERIKA—May 2, 3, 4.SARA—Come, grow old with me—JHS.JEFF KUTA—Stylistically, the next Editorof the WALL STREET JOURNAL.JEFF KUTA IS A STACKED and GAUDYCUT. The movie you want to see again)Sunday! TOM JONES7 & 9:30 P.M. in Cobb Hall AuditoriumSTACK JEFF in the RIGHT-HAND COR¬NER . . . definitely In the RIGHT-HANDCORNER.DAVID SCHOENBRUMPJM—You have a schoen skillet, but yourdoor is missing.Moscow, must you stick your tongue out ontelevision?From the MAROON, April 19, article onJOHN T. WILSON, Newly Named Dean ofFaculties at U. C.: "While In Washington,Wilson has kept intimately informed aboutdevelopments at Chicago and reads theMAROON regularly. He says he particularlyenjoys the personals and finds them hisfavorite source of entertainment after theNEW YORKER."!!!!J. Welch: How far he rambles, no oneknows. DLA.JIVE IN PERSON:DANDELION WINERhythm and Jive Band"anybody who can't dance to live blueshas got a hole in his soul "—OtatunjiIda Noyes, Cloister Club, Friday, April 269:00 P.M.75c men 25c womenRussian taught by highly experienced na¬tive teacher. Rapid method. Trial lesson-no charge. Call CE 6-1423, from 9 a.m. to 5p.m.JOHN MARTIN—If you still want the room,call me. SA.GRAD STUDENTS IN THE HUMANITIES:A vote for SCHNITZER is a vote for totalorgasm, Frederico Fellini, Peace, Tolstoy,and everything else that is good. Schnitzerwill make you totally happy—He will satisfyyour every need.Is that right—lust ask him to deliver theMAROONS on time.ED—Worse yet, remember when Lee wasabsolutely sure that the rectum was theuterus? The AMA.Don't miss this chance to seeTOM JONES7 A 9:30 Sunday in Cobb HallThe Maroon Business Office Staff Membersare TOADSTOOLS IN DRAG.PHARAOH opens his Gothic Fortress to theMAHOGANY HALL HOUSE BAND. Authen¬tic Blues Dance Music at BJ. Sat. 9 p.m.S/M Young Man, M, 23, needs Male, S,25 or less. Write Chip at Box 6184, SanFrancisco 14101. Give Details.Free CO-OP SERVICES—babysitting, jobs,rides.YOGAExercises, concentration, and meditationlifts consciousness beyond existential hopeand despair to tranqiuility and ecstasy.—Yogi Sri Nerode DO 3-0155DADA! BY GARBONZO!MAY 4! IDA NOYES!FOTA!Who owns Tony Vargas?The MagicianDavid Schoenbrun on Viet-NamThe Blue GargoyleMay 1 8, 2, 8 and 9:15 P.M.Admission 75c Profit to CADRE The "FUCK THE DRAFT" Photo wasbrought to you courtesy of the DIRTYLINEN CORP. DEPT. A., G.P.O. Box 2791,New York, N.Y. 10001. They have posters ofthe same for about $2.00.The Kitty meows out on the Old Fish!M (hook) G and SRH are old now. So isML."The mirror sees the man as beautiful,the mirror loves the man; another mirrorsees the man as frightful and hates him;and it is always the same being who pro¬duces the impressions."—JUSTINE(D. A. D. de Sade)First Year Medical Students:Hissing demonstrates lack of verbal acuity.If Mayor Daley will allow FREEDOM OFSPEECH—the RALLY Before the PEACEMARCH will take place at the GRANTPARK BANDSHELL at 12:00 NOON, to¬morrow. PEACE PEACE PEACE PEACECyrus Eaton subscribes to the MAROON.Steve: I found a screwdriver. Mary.Pharaoh Presents:MAHOGANY HALL HOUSE BLUES BANDBJ Dining Room Saturday 27th, 9 to 1Why does the Kitty prefer a sack lunchfor it?FOREIGN CAR HOSPITAL is here to serv¬ice your little car or sell you one. Call forAppointment. Ml 3-3113.Nothing is sacred.Why is Therese yelling "rape"?See AMERIKA—May 2, 3, 4.Two serious Amateur Photographers needFemale Models for Figure Studies. CallCarlisle at SO 8-4884 or Michael at 324-9257.Will the MAROON grovel? Or will it lose?In CHICAGO, ILLINOIS . . . The Sales ofVOLVO automobiles during the first threemonths of 1968 are the highest for any firstquarter in the 12 years that the companyhas been selling cars in the United States.WRITERS WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.Hours for freshman women are a grossimposition on a girl's privacy and freedomThey should be ended immediately.Does the MAROON need the *50?SEE THE ATHIESTIC GODLESS INTELLECTUALS of Brandeis University meet theATHIESTIC GODLESS INTELLECTUALSof the University of Chicago. This Sundayat five on Channel Five.Why doesn’t Karl have an pants on? SeeAMERIKA to find out—May 2, 3, 4 inMandel Hall.SPRING BLUES SUNDAY AFTERNOON(Save STEP'S BANKRUPT SUMMERCAMP) Old Town's Terry Collier, Clint andBill;The Mahogany Hall Blues Band; Angie Lee,4 P.M. Ida Noyes April 28 $1.00Although endorsed by the MAROON andSPAC, Schnitzer does not necessarily en¬dorse them.Jesus loves the little childrenAll the children of the worldRed and Yellow, Black and WhiteThey are precious in his sightJesus loves the little children of the World.GEN. THIEUWANTS12 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 26, 1968