Against the Strike: An Editorial—See P9 mo Maroon1Black Group Holds Brief Sit-in;White Students Schedule StrikeSIT-IN CALLED'DISRUPTIVE'About 40 black students marchedinto the Administration BuildingWednesday afternoon and thenmarched out again. The studentsheld the building for just underfour hours in the first Universitysit-in since last spring.The Black Students AllianceiBSA) moved into the buildingWednesday after they received Chi¬cago’s official response to the de¬mands they had presented on May8. They left after the administra¬tion informed them that their dem¬onstration was “disruptive” as de¬fined by the University Senate in1966 and that they would thus beheld for disciplinary action if theyremained in the building.The black students are demand¬ing an eleven-per cent black quotain the College, conversion ofBoucher Hall into a coed blackdormitory, and acceptance of otherdemands submitted in June of lastyear.These proposals were that moreblack students be admitted to theCollege, that these students be of¬fered special programs prior toentrance, and that special assist¬ance be given them during the reg¬ The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISBLACK TAKEOVER: Students demonstrators on the 6th floor ofthe Administration Building during the sit-in Wednesday.ular year.Sudden and UnexpectedIt was impossible to learn moreabout the black demands because of BSA’s long-standing policy ofnot speaking to campus newsmedia.Turn to Page 3 CRU ISSUES NEW DEMANDS;ULTIMATUM RESPONSE TODAYBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorAbout 300 white University ofChicago students crowded into theDisciples of Christ Church Wed¬nesday night and voted to organizea student strike for Monday if theUniversity does not accede to theirdemands by 1 p.m. today. Nearly100 students then marched througha rainstorm to President Beadle’shouse where they presented theirdemands in person.The student proposals consist ofthe original demands incorporatedin the Committee for a Responsi¬ble University (CRU) petition plusdemands for a student-elected stu¬dent-faculty disciplinary commit¬tee and official University opposi¬tion to the proposed federal legis¬lation punishing disruptive campusprotestors by revoking their finan¬cial support.The original CRU petition in¬cluded demands for a 20-percentblack quota in the College, low-cost housing for both neighborhoodresidents and students, morecourses dealing with black cultureand history, and open Universityfacilities.Administration sources have in¬ dicated it unlikely that they willaccede to the CRU demands today.“We don’t deal in ultimatums,”Dean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell stated when asked about theCRU demands.“We’re trying to show some jointconcern on genuine problems. Butwe’re not going to come up withsome new revelations.”O’Connell refused comment onstudent demands for an electeddisciplinary committee and a Uni¬versity statement on legislation at¬tacking student demonstrators.The new Student Governmentassembly passed, 14 to 13, a resol¬ution endorsing the student strikeThursday night. The resolutionstated that SG will provide aid tothe strikers including office space,mimeographing, telephones, andlimited financial aid. The assemblystipulated that the 20 percent Negroquota be interpreted as “a targetfigure for which the universityshould strive, and not a strictquota.”The Whites ActThe white students acted Wed¬nesday night after black studentsTurn to Page 3Student Busted in DormBy JOHN MOSCOWN*ws EditorPolice officers Monday enteredPierce Tower with a search andarrest warrant and arrested afirst-year student for alleged nar¬cotics violations.The youth, whose name is beingwithheld, was arrested when he re¬turned to his room after hearingthat the officers were there. Hehas since been released on $1000bail.According to witnesses, seven of¬ficers attempted to enter Pierceand go up to the youth’s room. Aguard intercepted them, and askedthem to show some identification.They showed the search warrant,which enabled them to enter onenamed room in the dormitory, andwere permitted to enter. Accordingto University authorities the guardhad no other choice.When the officers got up stairsthey were escorted to the room and allowed in by Assistant Resi¬dent Head Bruce Stark. At no timewere the police allowed alone inthe dormitory.When the officers entered thebuilding at 9 p.m. they were ob¬served by some students, includingPeter Ratner, ’69. Ratner immedi¬ately called various members ofthe administration, and within 10minutes. Edward Turkington, KarlBemesderfer, and Edgar Larsenwere all present, together withsome uniformed members ofcampus security. The policemenwere all in plainclothes.Turkington is director of studenthousing, Bemesderfer is assistantdean of the college, and Larsen isresident head of the dormitory.Bemesderfer asked to see thesearch warrant, which was pre¬sented. Meanwhile, some studentshad gone over to Mandel Hall,where the Cream concert hadstarted, and told the student thathis room was being searched so that he might want to get back tothe dormitory. Other students inthe same house were also alerted,as no one knew whether the largenumber of policemen meant thatth University was being raided orwhether just one room was beingsearched.The ComplaintThe student arrived back at thedormitory, where officers pre¬sented the two warrants. Thesecond warrant was in the form ofa complaint charging that on agiven day the student had sold nar¬cotic drugs in his room to the com¬plaining party, telling that partythat he could always buy drugsfrom him, the student.The name of the complainingwitness is being withheld on ad¬vice of the student’s legal counsel,but informed sources stated-posi¬tively that the complaintant wasnot a student at the University,implying, that there may be an undercover narcotics agent oper¬ating on campus.Following the arrest, one of theofficers asked the youth, “Do youknow what your rights are?”“No” was the answer. The police¬man told the student that he didnot have to answer any questions,then asked if the student would,indeed, answer. The student againanswered negatively, and the policedropped the matter.‘Narcotics Found’In their search of the room thepolice said they found quantitiesof narcotics. Following its seizurethe youth was brought down to thestation house for booking, accom¬panied by Larsen. Bail was not setuntil early Tuesday morning, andthe student was released later inthe morning.While the student was under ar¬rest Bemesderfer, a law schoolgraduate not yet admitted to theIllinois Bar, asked him if he had a lawyer. As he lacked one Bemes¬derfer called one of the lawyersassociated with the Legal Aid Clin¬ic, who is presently handling thecase.The legal penalties for sale ofnarcotics, if that should be the fin¬al charge, are a ten-year manda¬tory sentence, with no probationor suspension of sentence allowed.If the present charge, possessionof marijuana, is the one that theyouth is tried on, the penalty usu¬ally is a two-year suspended sen¬tence, according to reliable legalauthorities here.Prior IncidentThe student arrested had beeninvolved in another incident a fewmonths ago when campus securityreceived a phone call from theFederal Bureau of Investigationtelling them that a student wascarrying a quantitiy of drugs onhis person, and that he was stand-Turn to Page 5$ v l > I I v (Lipsch Overwhelmingly Elected SG PresidentJERRY LIPSCHNew SG President Student Government (SG)elected Jerry Lipsch, ’68, presidentfor the 1968-9 academic year lastnight in Ida Noyes.Lipsch, chairman of the StudentPolitical Action Committee(SPAC), defeated Bill Phillips, ’69,for the office by a vote of 27 to 6.Thirty-six members were presentat the meeting after the breakingof ties. The Assembly elected JohnDruska ’68 (humanities), VinceKaval, ’69, and Harvey Wigder,’70, (business), and Jane Peterson,’70, (biology) to break ties. TheExecutive Committee will fill theremaining humanities seat.Arthur Hochberg, ’70, defeatedChelsea Baylor, ’70 for vice presi¬dent, 21-10. Dave Kohl, ’68, waselected secretary; Lenny Handels-man, ’69, treasurer.Northwestern TrusteesOK Pact With BlacksThe board of trustees of North¬western University gave qualifiedsupport Tuesday to the adminis¬trations’ agreement with blackstudents there. The 40-memberboard approved of the agreementto recruit more black studentsbut rejected the agreement’s refer¬ences to Northwestern as “racist”in its past policies.The student- administration |agreement followed a 36 hour sit-in by black students May 3 and 4.In the agreement the administra¬tion also acceded to black stu¬ dents’ demands for increasedblack enrollment, separate hous¬ing for black students, and thecreation of salaried positions forblacks on the Admissions Com¬mittee to aid in recruiting blackstudents.The board of trustees, in itsstatement on the agreement, de¬plored the actions of the protest¬ing students and commended theadministration for its “sincere” ef¬fort to understand the problems ofthe black student group and to seeka satisfactory program for resolv¬ing them.” Mike Krausss, ’70, was chosen tohead1 the campus action commit¬tee; Carol Burroughs, ’71, the com¬munity relations committee; TobeyKlass, ’68, the undergraduate aca¬demic affairs committee; andMary Nelson, the graduate aca¬ demic affairs committee.The assembly named five mem¬bers to serve on the faculty-studentCommittee on Recognized StudentActivities (CORSO): JeffreySchnitzer, chairman, Paul Barron,’70; Scott Bennett, ’70; Harvey Wigder, ’70; and Joe Wolfson; ’69The Assembly also elected to theelection and rules committee:Chairman Jonathan Dean; 7oAlan Lahn, ’69; Steve Landsmand’69; Jane Levine, ’69, and RichardSpeiglman, ’68.Sit-in Won't Affect Admissions PolicyRU Students Veto Weil BidRoosevelt University studentsThursday voted not to accept aDroposal by the university presi-ient, who had promised amnestytor demonstrators in the pastweek’s sit-ins in return for an endto such demonstrations.The proposal would have allowed“student participation by approp¬riate representative process in themaking of faculty personnel de¬cisions.”Six women and five men werearrested Tuesday at RooseveltUniversity to bring the total num¬ber of arrests on trespass charg¬es there to 69. So far Roosevelthas suspended 45 and expelled 16students.Students at Roosevelt have beensitting-in and demonstrating atRoosevelt since last Wednesdayagainst Roosevelt President RolfA. Weil’s veto of the appointmentof Staughton Lynd, outspoken po¬litical activist, to the Roosevelt his¬tory department, and have beendemanding a greater voice in otherUniversity policies.The first negotiations betweenstudents and administration,which began earlier Tuesday con¬ tained a demand by students thatthe criminal charges be droppedand that the university not sus¬pend of expel demonstrators.Weil’s refusal to hire Lynd cameas a veto to a unanimous recom¬mendation from the History De¬partment to hire Lynd. Weil claimsthat his decision was not basedupon political reasons but on adhominum reasons which he hasdeclined to make public.The arrests at Roosevelt weremade peacefully. When the elev¬en students refused to leave thebuilding when it closed at 10:30p.m. they were taken to waitingpolice wagons by Chicago police. By BARBARA HURSTEditorial AssistantUniversity admissions officialsand faculty said Wednesday after¬noon, that the black students’ de¬mands for an eleven percent blackenrollment would not affect admis¬sions policy.Only one Chicago student at¬tended the open meeting, which be¬gan after the sit-in staged by theblack students to press their de¬mands.According to Chauncy D. Harris,professor and chairman of the De¬partment of Geography, “We seekqualified students. The mere quotadoes not get students on campus.”Other members of the panel —Anthony T. G. Pallet, director ofadmissions and aid, and Charles W.Wegener, professor in the Human¬ities and the New Collegiate Divi¬sions and chairman of the FacultyAdvisory Committee on Admissions— agreed with Harris.“We do have in mind increasingthe number of black students oncampus,” Pallett said. “This mayresult in 10, 12 or 14 percent. Butthis is incidental. Obviously our ef¬forts are paying off in a number ofways. The number of black stu¬dents is increasing every year.What is important is the directionwe are going.”Pool the ProblemThe problem, Pallett said, is thesize of the pool of applicants thatthe College has to work with. “Thepool this year is almost identical tolast year’s. Our recruiting effortsare designed to increase the pool.”Pallett saw another problem inenlarging the number of black stu¬dents on campus. “Only 33 percentof the black students that we ac¬cepted last year accepted us,” herevealed. This year we have exact¬ly 50 percent and it may runhigher.”Pallett went on to outline the re¬cruiting policy of the admissionsSEAWAY CYCLE CO."Seaway for Service"HONDATRIUMPHBULTACO• SERVICEPARTS • SALES 2812 East 79th StreetSA 1-9129 SA 1-8999EUROPE THIS SUMMERSTUDENTS ■ FACULTY - EMPLOYEESStudent Government Charter Flight Program has a limited number of seats available onthe following Jet-Flight to Europe.£0 d June 25 Chicago - ParisSept. 4 London - Chicago $310Call Shirley Xt: 3272/4 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. or visit her on 2nd FloorIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. office and the efforts being madeto increase black enrollment.The big problem, Pallett said “isthat the qualified Negro high schoolstudent is the most sought afterstudent in the country.”“What we should be doing isgetting at the bright studentswhose future is not secure, he said. “We want to get at them in heeighth or ninth grade level andwork with the students and par¬ents to give them the encourage¬ment they need to go on to the col¬lege level.“We hope by the time they areseniors in high school, they willwant to come to Chicago.”Sit-ins Sweep CountryBy COLLEGE PRESS SERVICEIn the wake of the upheavals atColumbia, Stanford, Northwestern,and Roosevelt there were studentsit-ins and demonstrations on awide variety of issues on othercampuses.Following is a round-up of thedemonstrations:Temple — About 100 Philadelphiapolice and sheriffs deputies massedon or near the campus last weekafter about 50 students stayed in auniversity building over night.Sheriff’s deputies served an injunc¬tion on the students, ordering themto leave the building.Among the students’ demandswere a student-faculty committeewith the authority to overturn “anyadministration policy affecting stu¬dents “and the hiring of Dr. SidneySimon, who was denied tenure ear¬lier this year for giving all A’s in his classes.The Temple faculty has askedPresident Paul Anderson to with¬draw the injunction but he has re¬fused. Two of the demonstratorshave been threatened with legal ac¬tion. The students have not yet de¬termined what future action theywill take.Southern Illinois — Campus,state, and local police broke up abrief sit-in at the administrationbuilding in protest against the uni¬versity’s refusal to sponsor aspeech by black power advocateStokely Carmichael.Marquette — Milwaukee policebroke up a sit-in by about 400 stu¬dents who were attempting to pre¬vent dinner guests from leaving acampus dinner. The protest wasagainst the university’s “lack ofconcern for the plight of the blackman.”Cohn & Stern(Haunt Sc (ttantpiiBShopSEERSUCKER’SBACKAnd welcome!Back in naturalshoulder graces,looking crisper,cooler, moreimmaculate thanever. Blue/Whitein Dacron/cottonby Palm Beach.$0Other 3 buttontraditional sport¬coats iir blazersto $60IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARK2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 17, 1968The MaroonCRU MEETING: White students gather Wednes- decide response to the sit-in. If the universityday night at the Disciples of Christ church, to doesn't meet their demands, they'll strike Monday.O'Connell Refuses Demands,Suggests Black Culture HouseContinued from Page 1The Wednesday sit-in was suddenand unexpected. The 40 studentsmarched into the building shortlyafter 1 p.m., placed signs saying“Building Closed” on the doors,and prevented other students fromenterihg. - - -During at least part of the sit-ina campus security officer who re¬mained inside the building assistedthe demonstrators by letting blacksand members of the city press in¬side the building while keepingwhite students out.About 45 minutes after the sit-inbegan, the University told campusemployees working in the buildingto go home. Campus phones con¬tinued in operation with some min¬or disruptions. At one point, asmall group of city policemenwalked in one door of the buildingbut then quickly walked out theother. Administration sources indi¬cated that the police had not beencalled.Tense SpectatorsOutside the building, a largegroup of whites gathered and tense¬ly awaited the outcome of the dem¬onstration. But the mood did notappear especially tense inside. Oneblack student pressed his faceagainst the glass door and madefaces at those looking curiouslyinside.The black students dispersed atabout 5 p.m. after they were hand¬ed the statement informing themthat their demonstration was con¬sidered disruptive. Dean of theCollege Wayne Booth addressed thestudents inside the building in aneffort to convince them to leave.The black students had previous¬ly submitted their May 8 demandsby marching up to the fifth floor ofthe Administration Building anddemanding to speak to ProvostLevi. When Levi could not be lo¬cated, they left their statementwith Dean of Students Charles O’Connell, refusing to speak to himfurther about them.In their May 8 statement, theblack students responded to thenew University recruitment driveby stating, “We repudiate this‘talent search recruitment pro¬gram’ since it is based on the as¬sumption that Black people aredeprived of culture and motivation,and because it further implies thatallowing Black students in the Uni¬versity who have not been subject¬ed to white acculturation will lowerthe standards of this institution.“Consequently, we feel that theUniversity’s program entails noth¬ing short of brainwashing and paci¬fying Niggers, in short producingblack faces wth white minds.”In his response released Wednes¬day, O’Connell stated that nextyear’s freshman class w^uld havemore black students than any otherclass in the University’s history.He added that the Office of Admis¬sions would accept the applicationof any black student who applies toChicago up to September 1 andmeets the same criteria for admis¬sions that the University uses dur¬ing its regular competition.Afro-American HouseO’Connell refused to accede tothe black demands for separatehousing. He did propose, however,the establishment of an Afro-Amer¬ican student center on the modelof Hillel, Brent, and Calvert housesto be financed in part by Univers¬ity funds.“These centers, when truly effec¬tive as parts of the Universitycommunity, can help contribute tothe discussion and communicationamong all students,” O’Connellstated.“As we have indicated, however,we feel it imperative that such cen¬ters stop short of that isolationwhich would divide the Universitycommunity and thus impoverish itby depriving it of the intellectualand cultural benefits that its mi¬nority groups can offer.” It could not be immediately de¬termined whether the student andadministration positions havechanged since the sit-in or whatfurther actions BSA is planning.The Committee of the Council metin emergency session Wednesdayafternoon while the students werestill in the building, and the Councilmet later Wednesday night.Council Spokesman George Stig-ler, professor of economics, refusedto disclose the contents of themeeting.Possible CompromiseThe Maroon has learned fromsources close to the administrationthat, while it is unlikely that theblack student demands will be metformally, efforts are under way tofind a compromise solution.In particular, while the Univers¬ity is not ready to institute officially segregated housing, some kindof “Open-transfer” plan might beadopted which would allow blackstudents to in fact have a dorm forthemselves.Similarly, although there is sub¬stantial opposition to any kind ofofficial quota, the Admissions Of¬fice is making intensive efforts toattract more Negro students andwill continue to look for means ofincreasing the number of blacks oncampus.As for the students, it could notbe learned whether BSA planned torespect the white picket line onMonday or whether they planned tomove into the AdministrationBuilding again some time in thefuture.Sources close to the black stu¬dents said that BSA was fearful ofbeing ‘used” by white students,and that this was behind their re¬luctance to communicate withwhite groups. In the past, BSA hasoperated in almost total secrecy,and a number of administrators aswell as students have expressedfrustration at not being able tospeak with members of the groupor learn of their plans. Continued from Page 1istration Building to back up theirown demands.Representatives of the Black Stu¬dent Alliance (BSA) are not coop¬erating with the white protest.BSA declined to send a spokesmanto speak at the white meeting Wed¬nesday and a member of BSA wasreported to have remarked thatwhite students “could do anythingthey want.”Although some support wasvoiced Wednesday for not takingaction until more definite word washeard from the blacks, the major¬ity of those present felt that someimmediate steps in support of thewhite demands was necessary.Sources close to Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) andCRU report that the white groupswere taken off guard by the blacksit-in.At lease some students in thewhite left-wing groups were an¬noyed that the black students didnot inform them of their plans anddid not include in their demandsrequests for student power and forUniversity action in Woodlawn.According to plans drawn upWednesday night and amplified ina meeting yesterday, students willmeet again at 3 p.m. today to de¬termine whether Chicago’s re¬sponse is satisfactory. If it is not,they will begin their strike at 9a.m. Monday mornng.Picket lines will be organizedaround major campus buildingsand students and faculty will beurged to stay away. It could notbe determined immediately whatfaculty support would materializefor the strike.Testing and BuildingAccording to Chris Hobson, agraduate student in political sci¬ence and a spokesman for thestrike group, the strike is viewedas a means of testing and buildingsupport for the student demands.He said that the strike was notdesigned immediately to shut downChicago completely and that itmight last only one day if giveninsufficient student support.The students completed the firstpart of their planned action Wed¬nesday night by presenting theirpetition to President Beadle at hishome. Beadle was roused by threeloud knocks on his door and cameout into the rain to silently acceptthe petition. The University’s response to thenew demands could not be immedi¬ately learned, but Chicago has inthe past indicated its disapprovalof a number of student points.The white groups acted Wednes¬day after representatives fromCRU had spoken before the Coun¬cil of the University Senate Tues¬day. White representatives char¬acterized the response from Coun¬cil spokesman George Stigler as“a lot of verbiage.”Letter to LeviWhite leaders had also writtena letter to Julian H. Levi, a pro¬fessor of urban studies and chair¬man of the South East ChicagoCommission, asking him to put inwriting his support of student par¬ticipation in the work of the Pres¬ident’s Advisory Committee onWoodlawn and an opening of Uni¬versity documents and meetingson the Woodlawn problem. Thestudent group found Levi’s re¬sponse unsatisfactory as well.In general, Chicago’s responseto student demands has been con¬ciliatory in tone. The Universityhas refused to accede to the keydemand of a 20 percent black quo¬ta, however.In his statement to the Council,Stigler announced that a facultyCommittee on University Policiesfor Black Students under the chair¬manship of Chauncy Harris, pro¬fessor of geography, had alreadybeen formed.“The problems raised in the pe¬tition are both gravely importantand extraordinarily complex,”Stigler said in his statement.“Impetuous action could easily domore harm than good to both theblack students and the University.“Yet speed is surely called forat this time in developing univer¬sity policies to cope with the prob¬lems of the black students andalso of students from other cul¬tural minorities.”In his response to the studentletter, Levi repeated his opinionthat Woodlawn “could not be re¬garded as a convenient laboratoryfor the University,” stated thatUniversity activities in Woodlawnare publicly reported, voiced hisview that the Woodlawn FacultyCommittee would welcome stu¬dents as full members, and sug¬gested that this committee holdopen meetings at least once perquarter.The Maroon — PHIL LATHROPBLACKS ONLY: White students, barred from the building, peerinto the Administration Building lobby Wednesday afternoonduring the sit-in.May 17,, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONGADFLYThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor ....Michael SeidmanNews Editor John MoscowPhotographic Editor David Travis Literary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergEditor Emeritus David A. SatterAgainst a StrikeThis spring we have seen the politics of confronta¬tion applied at universities throughout the world onlocal grievances, traditional issues of academic free¬dom, and more and more frequently the responsibilityand relevance of their institutions to society. Respon¬ses have ranged from total acceptance to total rejec¬tion by university administrations.The politics of confrontation has led to violencein the past, but here black students appear to havemade every effort to avoid disruption. They stoppedtheir demonstration after they had made their pointand when they found that to continue holding thebuilding would jeapordize their own education, andthus their goal of more education for blacks.We do not wholly agree with the BSA’s two spe¬cific demands. We cannot endorse the right of any stu¬dents to make the University deny the rights of others,nor can we support any kind of quota on admissions.As far as the actions of the white radicals go, theCommittee for a Responsible University has symbolizedthe white liberal concern with race as well as the frus¬tration and resentment at the neo-segregation blackstudents enforce in their own ranks and demand else¬where. But the CRU’s demands have been from thebeginning uncertain and sometimes irrelevant.To their petition they have added demands thatthe University repudiate the impending sanctionsagainst anti-war demonstrators by Congress and thatit establish a new, half-and-half student-faculty discipli¬nary committee elected by students. The Congressionalscheme to punish campus demonstrators is ill con¬ceived and dangerous, and the University should doall in its power to prevent this incursion upon its aca¬demic freedom. But although a new disciplinary sys¬tem is certainly needed (because students should decidefor themselves issues that affect only students), thespecific proposal indicates the haste with which bothdemands were put together, a haste caused not so muchby the necessity of immediate action as by the desirenot to lose momentum and to join the wave of con-fronation.As late as Wednesday morning, CRU leaders ad¬mitted that there would be little student support formilitant action to dramatize their demands since Chi¬cago, unlike Columbia and Roosevelt, was opening upchannels of communication. But after the black sit-in,the CRU hurriedly decided instead on a confronation.The new demands were formed and presented to Presi¬dent Beadle with an ultimatum timed to make a studentstrike inevitable. We advocate the use of confrontationpolitics where the normal courses of reason and dis¬cussion have failed. But change is coming, and it iscoming very fast.Let us preserve the atmosphere of education atChicago. If we must introduce the politics of confronta¬tion, let us first involve all the students, let us showeveryone that “channels” are exhausted; for some timein the future when reason and argument have actuallyfailed, we may find we must resort to more and moreviolent confrontations that would not only disrupt, butdestroy this place of learning.We urge students and faculty not to strike onMonday. . Etzkowitz Proposals:Hard to ImplementBy ROGER WEISSMr. Etzkowitz’ gadfly is encour¬aging in that it brings the discus¬sion of the University’s role downto levels that can be evaluatedfor cost, benefit and the Univer¬sity’s capacity to implement.There is still a muted referenceto enclaves, but it is chiefly tofrighten us to endorse Mr. Etz¬kowitz’ proposals. There is agree¬ment about the aims of the Uni¬versity. I think Mr. Etzkowitz’view of present activities is notentirely fair, but our disagree¬ment here is not critical.Operation Breadbasket has, asI understand it, negotiated withemployers to create jobs, not pri¬marily to sell Negro products. Re¬ference to the Legal Services toYouth Project omits mention ofthe Legal Aid Clinic (6020 S. Uni¬versity Ave.) that has been openfor years giving free aid on a va¬riety of problems. The Clinic isnot closing and has not been con¬ducted as a research facility.Neither is the Woodlawn ChildHealth Center, which he did notmention (936 E. 63rd St.). TheSocial Services Center will at least conduct SOME services;that it is not doing better stemsfrom the requirements of thosewho gave the money.MILTON FRIEDM A N-styleschools require public money topay tuition. At the inadequatelevel of $800 per student, a smallschool of 500 students (probablyless than one-tenth of Woodlawn’sstudents) would require $400,000per year, if a building could beobtained. This is approximatelythe current deficit of the Univer¬sity. A proposal to the FederalGovernment for such a school (ithad to be called experimental)was rejected.It seems to me that we arearguing over two issues: (1) whatcan a research institution do forits community, and (2) wherewill the money come from. As henow states the case, the gap be¬tween our positions is not terriblywide. But his assumptions aboutthe availability of funds from en¬dowment greatly exaggerate thediscretion of the University; alarge part of the endowment isearmarked for support of parti¬ cular activities; the free part ofthe endowment is needed for sup¬port of all the “poverty” pro¬grams within the University.FOUNDATIONS do not takeover the support of projects thathave already been launched, asMr. Etzkowitz himself discoveredin his valuable work in Bedford-Stuyvesant. If it can be persuadedto support anything, a foundationmust have the illusion that itsmoney is needed to get it startedand that it is original. And mostfoundations prefer “pilot pro¬jects” and a terminable committ¬ment. The Bedford StuyvesantChild Care center was organizedon hope. It is not operating today.Don’t make facile assumptionsabout foundations. Be carefulabout spending the University’smoney. The $400,000 yearly costof even the small school wouldrequire the income of $10 millionsof uncommitted endowment. Thisis one-twentieth of the total avail¬able, if we got rid of our facultyand scholarship students.Mr. Weiss is an associate pro-?ssor of social sciences.Letters to the EditorsStrike SupportA strike on the issues raisedby the petition of the Committeefor a Responsible University(CRU) amounts to a very mod¬erate response to an extremesituation.This University—one of therichest in the nation—sits in themidst of neighborhoods in whichsome of the poorest Americanslive, at a time when Americafaces the possibility of violentinternal disruption. Yet the Un-versity refuses to consider anyaction at significant cost to itself.Most indicative of the Unver-sity’s response is its plan to ex¬pand between 60th and 61ststreets, destroying about 1700 liv¬ing units, according to JulianLevi. These would be replacedunder present plans with onlyabout 500 units of housing in theWoodlawn area—and most ofthese are intended for peopleearning $6,000 to $11,000 a year.The only response by Mr. Levito CRU expressions of dismayhas been quotation of laws whichsupposedly guarantee relocationvictims fair relocation rights. Butsurely Mr. Levi is aware that,in fact, few people are evermade aware of or receive theseso-called rights, and that, in anycase, very little adequate hous¬ing is likely to be available toBlack people in segregatedChicago.Even students forced to movewill find few apartments avail¬able at reasonable cost. The pro¬posed “student village” on 55thstreet will not meet the realneeds of students for decent, rea¬sonably priced apartments.It will almost certainly be ex¬pensive for the University tochange its plans in Woodlawn,but after bqing pushed by theUniversity out of Hyde Park,black Woodlawn residents are due for a break, even at UC’sexpense.In this context, and in the con¬texts of black rebellions and tru¬ly disruptive demonstrations atsuch schools as Columbia andHoward, the strike proposed byCRU is undeniably moderate andreasonable. It is designed tomake one more attempt to per¬suade the administration, and tocommunicate more effectivelywith other students and faculty.We feel that meaningful concernfor poor people in this crisis re¬quires that students and facultysupport the strike.DAVID L. AIKENLiterary EditorJOHN SIEFERTEditorial AssistantED BIRNBAUMStaff WriterLSY PleaWe feel that the University ofChicago has an obligation to ac¬quire and/or provide funds dur¬ing an interim period while LegalServices to Youth is transformedfrom a University-controlled re¬search project into a community-controlled service program. Blackcommunity leaders, black organi¬zations (especially, the Black Con¬sortium and Black LiberationKouncil), and black lawyers areconcerned about the terminationof LSY and feel that it can ulti¬mately become a creative andrepresentative community organi¬zation.We feel that it is a responsi¬bility of the University of Chi¬cago to support these efforts andprovide funds for the orderlytransfer of control to the blackcommunity.LSY was publicized in the blackcommunity and news media as aproject of the University of Chi¬cago. The project served the pub¬lic relations interests of the Uni¬versity and was widely publicized in the press and on television asan example of the Unversity’sbenevolent interest in the localblack communities. Recent state¬ments by the University admini¬stration suggest a concern for theUniversity’s relationship to thesecommunities. Here is an oppor¬tunity for the Universty to showits good faith on this issue.Funds are urgently needed dur¬ing the coming summer months(June through September) for (1)a staff counsel, (2) an office man¬ager, (3) two community aides,and (4) office overhead. Othersupport for the program will beprovided on a voluntary basis bymembers of the black communityand Cook County Bar Association.We expect the University to actwith the utmost speed on thismatter and we would like to meetwith you at the earliest datepossible.ANTHONY M. PLATTResearch DirectorLegal Services to YouthHENRY W. McGEE, JR.Legal DirectorLegal Services to YouthKERMIT B. COLEMANFormer Associate CouncilLegal Services to YouthLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma- >roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the day jbefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded In 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school V*®'and intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 3j»of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Ch-cago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800 ext3265. Distributed on campus and in tneHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mall $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, 111. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.I 1 ■ I ) >J.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 17, 1968; |After ColumbiaTHE DEBRISBy Robert HardmanNew YorkFOR MOST people here, it is easy now toforget that Columbia was a battlegroundtwo weeks ago. The last physical remind¬ers of the university’s civil war are dis¬appearing : security guards no longer askI to see indentificaton when you enter ther campus, the last of the police have finallyleft, and grounds crews are busy replant¬ing trampled flower beds and reseedinglawns which were destroyed during the“incident” (as one member of the admin¬istration euphemistically described it).SDS has been assimliated for the pres¬ent into something called the Strike Co¬ordinating Committee, which has been at¬tempting to keep momentum going for ageneral student-faculty strike. Monday, thecommittee failed to raise more than ahandful of supporters for its daily noonrally at the center of he campus, despiteurgent pleading over a bullhorn. And Tues¬day, for the first time, no one seemedI to be interested in picketing classroomI buildings, which are almost empty any-I way.But the external indications that Colum-* bia is back to normal are deceptive. Thestrike has garnered little support becausethe faculty has, in effect, ended classes.A student in the collge can elect to takea pass and receive full credit for theterm’s work on the basis of what he haddone up to April 23, the day the sit-inbegan. Most classes that are still heldmeet informally in faculty apartments orout on the lawns, many students are leav¬ing for the summerThe decision to end formal classes wasmade a week ago Sunday at a meetingof the joint faculties of the university con¬vened by Grayson Kirk, the president. Anobserver who was at the meeting said thatthe faculty decided to end the classes be¬cause they were anxious above all to avoidmore violent action. They feared the con-■ sequences of a student strike directedI against formal classes, yet they did notwant the university to capitulate by of¬ficially closing down. The action finallytaken in effect allows each student to de¬cide for himself whether the year is over.The faculty also appointed at that meet¬ing an executive committee to work witha subcommittee of the trustees on struc¬tural changes in the university.The executive faculty committee nowseems to hold most of the power to makesubstantive changes in the conduct of Co¬lumbia’s affairs. Just last week, it appoint¬ed a fact-finding commission to nvesti-gate the causes of the disturbances.| Already the new centralization of powerhas aroused opposition. SDA and SAS (theStudents’ Afro-American Society) walkedout of the first hearings of the fact findingcommission Monday- And Eric Bentley,J a professor of dramatic literature, de-1 . nounced the faculty executive committeeas “a bunch of old dodoes like Grayson Kirk.” Junior faculty members, too, resentthe fact that the joint faculties of Colum¬bia which chose the executive committeeis composed only of tenure faculty.But since the university has been infor¬mally closed, SAD’s policy of confronta¬tion politics has little to confront. Thereins of power have for the time beingbeen handed to the senior faculty by thetrustees and administration, and it re¬mains to be seen what sort of recommen¬dations they will come up with.It is, in fact, almost impossible to as¬sess the extent of support SDS will havein the next confrontation, assuming thereis one. The Strike Coordinating Commit¬tee claims to represent about 6000 stu¬dents who elected representativs to thcommittee. But whether all 6,000 can besaid to support all of the strike commit¬tee’s action is another question, and thematter is complicated further by the wild fluctuations in campus opinion that haveaccompanied recent events.Indeed, one of the most noteworthy phe¬nomena of the past few weeks has beenthe docility of student opinion when t issubjected to stress and uncertainty- If thefaculty as a group can agree by next fallon a new structure for the university, astructure that will shift the power to thefaculty and students from the trusteesand administration, it is likely that thestudents will accept the authoritativenessof the solution.If on the other hand, the restructuringprovokes an outspoken negative reactionfrom the junior faculty, SDS’s policies offorceful action may be much more ef¬fective.And SDS itself has been unable to de¬cide how to handle the situation. Notwith¬standing an AP report and an article inthe New York Times to the effect that■ f v’l'*'1 the takeover was planned last fall, vir- •tually every close observer of the events *has agreed that SDS got itself into some¬thing much bigger than it had expected.It was the blacks, it should be noted,who first decided to take over a building,and SDS moved into Low Library onlyafter the blacks had turned them out ofHamilton Hall.Mark Rudd, the leader of SDS and theStrike Coordinating Committee, has saidall along that the situation at Columbiais unfortunately not revolutionary. Thiswould lead one to expect that SDS wouldpush for its substantive demands and for¬get about matters of principle. (The in¬sistence on such a relatively trivial matteras amnesty rather than mild punishment,Continued on Page TwoMr. Hardman, Columbia, *70, is aspecial correspondent for The Maroon.v.l>j M" <.’,v • .•>CULTURE VULTURESPRING HAS COME, in typical Chicagofashion, backwards and grey. The old juic¬es and fluids are beginning to flow again.Our spongey minds, squeezed dry by thesoot and the snow, and lately drilled withmore holes, have begun to resume theirformer shapes. Perhaps they will soonagain be soppy enough to withstand thesummer’s fire.TheaterTonight, Saturday, and Sunday night at8:30 in the Reynolds Club Theatre will beperformances of English Professor Paul D‘Andreas, They Reached For His Gun, withcollection of characters brought together inTHE UNIVERSITY THEATER productionof Camino Real, by Tennessee Williams,illustrated the value of enhancing an al¬ready good play with creatively-designedeffects. The play itself is subject to vari¬ous interpretations. In essence, it is anallegorical representation of life and death.Camino Real symbolizes the existence ofboth a real and gilded path through life.The setting of the play, a town in LatinAmerica, is the point of junction of thesetwo paths.Under the excellent direction of AndyKaplan, the performance was interestinglyand successfully carried out. The strengthroy—a former boxer around whom thestory centers, was disappointing; his un¬deracting at times made him appear rath¬er shallow and expressionless .However,when he was called upon to display strongemotion, he was quite good. Joe Ehren-berg excellently portrayed the pompous,yet sensitive Jacques Casanova. He alongwith Jeanne Wickler, who portrayed a cos-molitan, sophisticated Gypsy, were themost convincing actors in the perform¬ance. However, Marc Cogan, as Gutman,appeared superficial in his portrayal of what may be the funniest play of UT’s sea¬son. Among the stars are hip minister Lar¬ry Hill, The Maroon’s own Michael Sorkin’,Bob Swann, Dennis Harmon, Laura Doli-ner, and Gareth Mann Sitz.Competing with D’Andrea will be JerryCcGann’s magnificent production of LordByron’s Cane, repeated from last quarter.This was themost moving theater experi¬ence this Vulture has been through—in re¬cent memory. If you possibly can, see it.The music Theatre of Hyde Park and theCommittee on Human Relations of St.Thomas the Apostle Parish will co-sponsora special benefit performance of the music¬al Finian’s Rainbow on behalf of the PoorUniversity Theater PresentsCAMINO REALBy Tennesee WilliamsDirected by Any KaplanCAST: Lee Strucker, Ed Letchinger, MarcCogan, Greg Skala, Larry Stout, John Levitt,Susan Kimmelman, Linda Gossen, Joe Ehren-berg, Vicki Kaplan, Lucy Liben, Neil Nathan,Greg Ferguson, Jeanne Wikler, Nancy Dickler,Richard Vertel, David Weiner, Bill Reddy,Larry Stout, Dennis Dingemans, Oscar Ander¬son, Richard Lymn, Phillip Rosenthal, DavidWeiner, Jim Kemey and Eugenie Ross.an insensitive businessman.The technical aspects of the performancewere creative and defective. Lightingranged from orange and green lights flash¬ing around an arch, to a light show, com¬plete with strobes, during a fiesta. Fore¬boding sound in the distance throughout theplay were also effective. The slides pro¬jected above the stage however, which sup¬posedly represented the actors thoughts,did nothing.The overall performance, was however,enjoyable and well done—a refreshingchange from UT’s major productions dur¬ing fall and winter quarter.WENDY GLOCKNER Peoples’ Campaign on Sunday evening,May 19th at 7:30 in St. Thomas the Apo¬stle Auditorium, 55th and Woodlawn Ave.All proceeds will go to SCLC.MusicThe world premiere of Concerto for Vio¬lin and Orchestra (“Invocation”) by RalphShapey, associate professor of music, willbe performed by the Chicago Symphony at1:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, May 24 and25, in Mandel Hall.Jean Martinon, music director of the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra, will conduct theorchestra in Variazioni per Orchestra byCOLUMBIAContinued from Page Onefor example, is an attempt by SDS toforce the administration to a de facto ad¬mission that it is illegitimate. Its substan¬tive importance is minimal)But SDS’s strength seems to have origi¬nated in the forcible take-over of the build¬ings. If SDS testified before the fact-find¬ing commission, or if it offered candidatesin the forthcoming election to representstudent views before the trustees, it wouldbe abandoning its position of strength, andreducing itself to only one contending fac¬tion among many. Consequently, SDS hasdone little to involve itself in the emerg¬ing, new power structure in the University,although it admits on the other hand itcannot topple the structure. orchestra in Variazioni per Orchestra byLuigi Dallapiccola and in the first Chicago>erformance of Concerto for Piano and Or¬chestra by Elliott Carter. Jacob Lateinerwill be the soloist in this concerto.Shapey composed his concerto in 1953it consists of the traditional three move¬ments. The concerto is the second work ina trilogy. The first and third works, bothfor orchestra, are Ontogeny and Rituals.PopThere will be a blues rock show in Har¬per Theater Saturday night at 8, with theKnights of Soul, among other groups.Unable now to accomplish anything,SDS will wait until the university has beenconcretely reorganized and decide on ap¬propriate action then.It is, therefore, of crucial importancewhether the administration and faculty areable to heal the wounds of the universityover the summer.It is almost certain that the leaders ofthe SDS takeover will be expelled ButSDS will probably not be able to buildup out of this issue alone enough supportfor forceful action next fall. As for theremainder of SDS’s demands, every indi¬cation at present points toward some posi¬tive action on ail of them. And in thebroader sphere of faculty-student power,the sentiment is widespread among senioras well as junior faculty that a perman¬ent, more liberal reorganization of theuniversity is essential.A revolt by SDS next fall against anewly constituted, flexible authority, freefrom the burden of guilt associated withthe present administration, would proba¬bly be unsuccessfulIf, on the other hand, the students re¬turn to a substantially unmoved univer¬sity, SDS would be able to institute asuccessful strike, and once again coerciveforce and manipulative rhetoric might bethe ultimately decisive poltical factorsThis eventually will be particularly unac¬ceptable to a body of students and facultywho have just discovered power within theadministration.THEATERCamino Real: A Refreshing Change1 PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare fhe Price1.1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 tIDISCOUNTART MATERIALS• Office Supplies• School Supplies• Picture FramesDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUM £tizabetli (jordcMa i, 2 es ty tiers1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856HandcraftedExoticWater PipesSelect from our veryspecial exotic water-pipes. Collected fromAfrica, India andLatin America.Handcrafted in wood,brass and copper foryour pleasure. Useone 01 more foran ideal dec¬orative accent?!$2.50 to $49.95StieKs ant stonesInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient houri: Noon to 8 p.m. daily) Noon to S p.m. Sunday We have thenew Volvo 144.WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE HR.,INC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P-S. We have all the other Volvos too!2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE May 17, 1968Vol. 5, No. 6 May, i968Reality breaks the spellThe Last Unicorn, by Peter S. Beagle.Viking Press. $4.95.by S. Eileen JackWhen you were very young, a fairytale was a wonderful, promising thing.There, in a land which never was yet al¬ways is, were princesses to love and her¬oes to worship, witches to fear and evilkings to hate. And there was good andthere was evil, but nothing in between,and it was easy to love and hate. Andthey all lived happily ever after and itwas real and you knew that was the wayit was going to be — because you wereyoung and the world was a simple place.But then you grew up and so did theworld.Peter Beagle tried to write a modernfairy tale, The Last Unicorn. Like all theothers it is a fantasy. The last unicornlives in a lilac wood and, although she isvery old, wherever she is, there isspringtime, for she is eternal beginning.One day the unicorn, until now happyand contented to be alone, overhears twohunters say there are no more unicorns.The story becomes her quest for her fel¬low creatures, a quest which brings herto the castle of King Haggard and theRed Bull.But Beagle grew up too and his fairytale is for adults.Oh, it has all the usual ingredients: theclassic, romantic unicorn as heroine, abrave and handsome prince as hero, an evil king, a magician, a monstrous beast,an old hag and of course a few plain oldordinary human beings.Only, The Last Unicorn is written froma “grown-up” viewpoint — always witha touch of “it isn’t really like this in thereal world, you know.” For one thing, Beagle’s characters are too much likeyou and me in many ways. The unicornis breathtakingly beautiful but jarringlyvain; and compassionate only when itsuits her. When she is turned into a girlto save her from the Red Bull her beautyis that of the classical heroine. But rath¬ er than brightening, it leaves the castlemore cold and dim, for it is humanbeauty and therefore doomed.The hero-prince is soft and lazy untilhe falls in love with the unicorn-turned-princess and becomes a hero because itis the thing to do in a case like this. Hisfather is not the easy-to-hate archvillainthat rumors would lead to you expect,but only an old man who long ago forgothow to love and tries to keep his heart’sdesire by imprisoning it.And Schmendrick, the inept magicianon whom everyone relies, is Beagle’sgreatest anomaly. Immortal until he canproduce more than parlor-magic, he isdiscomfortingly a quasi-Christ figurewhose moment of glory paradoxicallybrings him mortality.No, The Last Unicorn is no children’sfairy tale. But don’t feel bad. It really isa fairy tale and one of rare whimsy andlyricism and wit. One that you can laughat or cry at as the mood hits you. Onethat is deceptively simple and surpris¬ingly complex, apparently imaginativeescapism that plunges you into the age¬less problem of where does man find sat¬isfaction and joy.Reality. That is the problem with TheLast Unicorn. Just when Beagle hasdrawn you deep into the rosy, securefairy tale world and you’re getting allwarm and sentimental, he smashes youwith reality.S. Jack is a junior majoring in Politi¬cal Science at Mundelein College, Chi¬cago.And how should we assume?%The Draft? Prepared by the AmericanFriends Service Committee. Hill andWang. Cloth $3.50, paper $1.25.by Jeff SchnitzerThe twenty men were herded,naked save their shorts, into thecold, almost featureless room.They were ordered to stand, oneto each, in the twenty numberedboxes painted on the floor. Theywere ordered to strip themselvescompletely. The twenty were thenordered to do exercises to showtheir relative physical conditionwhile, leisurely, the second-rate“doctors” watched and smokedcigarettes.More detailed examination fol¬lowed; the “doctors” poked andprodded each man, for some rea¬son paying special attention tohis genitals and anus. Then,briefly and mumbled, subordi¬nates were told which men wouldlive, which be killed, which wereto kill.No. Obviously not a report on Ausch¬witz or Siberia; just a description of part of a draft physical in Chicago. Wasit terrifying? No. Everyone present as¬sumed that all was in order.But that assumption is terrifying. Be¬cause it is upon the assumption—that,somehow, the authorities knew what wasbest and would do the right thing — up¬on that assumption has been based everyone of the horrors of our century.The Draft?, a report prepared for thePeace Education Division of the Ameri¬can Friends Service Committee, is asmall, hard and brilliantly beautifulbook. Like a diamond, it cannot easilybe condensed. In simple, unloaded proseit reasons away any but a purely sadis¬tic rationale for the present SelectiveService System. It shows the SSS to beunfair, arbitrasy, destructive to the so¬ciety it supposedly “serves,” and, mostironic, perhaps the least effective andmost expensive way of maintaining astanding army.It shows that the SSS amounts to in¬voluntary servitude, that it gives “thePresident the power to engage in over¬seas military adventures or even to pre¬cipitate war without consulting eithercongress or the people,” and that the psychological effects of the draft uponthe young individual, his family and hissociety are all harmful, indeed danger¬ous to all three.The nine-member working party thatprepared The Draft? was both prestigi¬ous and broadly based, including Ken¬neth E. Boulding, Stewart Meacham andArlo Tatum. In their introduction, theworking party admits openly that theyviewed “with skepticism the continuedreliance on military solutions to prob¬lems which are basically social, politi¬cal, and economic.” They affirm thatMen have God-given inner re¬sources, the development ofwhich can provide answers topersistent problems. Violenceperpetuates and aggravates so¬cial ills; violence divides menand postpones the co-operativesearch for peace. The conscript¬ing society limits men in theirright of free personal decision;it thereby thwarts moral respon¬sibility and growth.Although the authors thus admit theirpreconceptions, their book cannot becalled biased; it is too closely reasoned.i tfttm The Draft? gives a brief history ofconscription and conscientious objectionto it, shows both the viability and advis¬ability of a volunteer army, totally de¬molishes the proposed universal “nation¬al service” as totalitarian, and establish¬es a broad ethical concept of “universalservice to the “community of man¬kind,” a humanistic concept sharply incontrast to the non-ethics of “selectiveservice.” In addition, what hope there isfor rational peace in the world is out¬lined.Rather an impressive number ofthings for a book of just 88 pages to do.Nonetheless, The Draft? does themeffectively.Of course, one must remember thatJoseph Conrad was able to sum up mostof the Twentieth Century in four words:“The horror. The horror.”It is rumored that Princeton Univer¬sity has unofficially denied rumorsthat Mr. JSchnitzer, presently a grad¬uate student in General Studies in theHumanities at the University of Chi¬cago, has ever had any official associ¬ation with Princeton. Moline also dis¬claims him, and both deny any knowl¬edge . of his. grandmother.SVHSKOMfi CJATiWSH L Ai..vi *0 iV• o-»-> 1 .•3 bRewritinghistorybooksTowards a New Past: DissentingEssays in American History, editedby Barton J. Bernstein. PantheonBook. $6.95.by Harvey WassermanAmerica has been at war for 28 yearsnow, and the alliance of America andher intellectuals against things un-Ameri¬can has taken its toll. Indeed, one mightsay it has changed the whole course ofAmerican history, from the colonialdays on.In many ways under the influence ofthe Cold War, Amercian historians haveextended the American consensus all theway back to the Indians, and it becameat long last possible to write a historyof the 1910s without mentioning the so¬cialists, to discuss the Civil War withoutmentioning the Copperhead secessionistmovements.Where breaches in consensus weresomewhat too large to be ingnored (suchas those forced by the Abolitionist andPopulist movements) that most notableof the social scientist’s weapons, psy¬choanalysis, was employed.Thus recent historoiography leaves uswith a nation whose history has beenunmarred by disunity except for a fewperverts, nuts, fascists and some assort¬ed others who couldn’t sublimate. Therehave, of course, been no real grievances.Reaching a hand into the memory hole,one finds the country’s history has beena good deal more interesting than that.Without specifically analyzing the ColdWar as a prime origin of recent con¬servative historiography, Barton Bern¬stein introduces Towards a New Pastas an attempt to move “beyond con¬sensus.” What he opens is a somewhatmixed bag of anti-elitist radicalism,moderate revisionism, pseudo-Marxistelitism, and liberalism (his own).Jesse Lemisch begins the book withan essay on “The American Revolutionas seen from the Bottom Up,” in whichhe intoduces us to one very importantphase of the problem, historical elitism:Many social scientists continue todraw conclusions about entire socie¬ties on the basis of examinations ofthe minority at the top. . .Our earli¬est history has been seen as a periodof consensus and classlessness, inpart because our historians havechosen to see it that way.Analyzing the anti-mass sentiments ofeven the great democrat Jefferson, Le¬misch calls for a new approach to thehistory of the period, one which will“continue to examine the elite, but in¬stead of using them as surrogates forthe society beneath them, it will askhow their beliefs and conduct impingedon that society (and) it will study theconduct and ideology of the people onthe bottom.” Staughton Lynd, in his essay “BeyondBeard,” adds another level to the de¬bate on the origins of the Constitutionand its relationship to the Civil War byshowing that Charles Beard in one sensedoes not go too far in his economiccritique of the Constitution’s origins, butrather, in failing to consider the tem¬porary nature of North-South accordover slavery, does not go far enough.The theme is carried well beyond itslogical conclusion by Eugene Genovese,according to whom the Civil War wasmost importantly a cultural one, madeunavoidable by the need for the slavesystem to expand and its concurrent in¬ability to reform itself from within be¬cause of the deep roots of the plantationculture. Genovese’s own affection for theslaveowner class, remarkable comingfrom a Marxist, somewhat blinds him inallowing the slaveholders perhaps a bitmore hegemony than they really had.Despite Genovese’s feeling thatthese men (the slaveholders) wereclass conscious, socially responsible,and personally honorable; they self¬lessly fulfilled their duties and didwhat their class and society requiredof them,one questions both the true merit andthe ultimate power of the slaveholdingclass. If, indeed, Genovese is a Marxist—and his analysis in most parts is keenand class-conscious—his Marxism is somarkedly elitist in orientation as to makeone shudder for the common man in hisutopia.By the twentieth century the argu¬ments begins to be waged in somewhatmore familiar, pedestrian terms of whatthe government elite did and did not dowrongly or rightly. Lloyd Gardner illus¬trates that Woodrow Wilson waved TR’sbig stick every bit as much as Teddy,and that the traditional “realist” critiqueof George Kennan, (the State Depart¬ment was motivated by an old-fashionedlegalistic moralism) falls before an anal¬ysis of the commercial needs of Ameri¬can capitalism.Similarly, Robert Freeman Smith car¬ries the Open-Door theme through 1940,and demonstrates the very importantpoint that isolationism in the thirties wasvery definitely not outside the consensusof an expansionist America. Freeman’sown critique of Cold-War historiographyin this period is far better than Bern¬stein’s in general, and in effect illus¬trates that the picture of naive non-inter¬ventionists tripping the U.S. belatedlyinto a pre-emptable war has more to dowith current consensus than past reality. Written with far less insight are Bern¬stein’s own two essays covering the Roo¬sevelt and Truman administrations. Ina disjointed and somewhat non-thematictreatment of the New Deal, Bernsteinis unwilling to give an adequate treat¬ment of the social forces underlying thestruggle in the thirties. He comes to theold conclusion that Roosevelt was indeeda conservative fellow, and then wonderswhy corporate leaders would not “redis¬tribute political power,” which is vague¬ly akin to wondering why Lyndon John¬son doesn’t appoint Tom Hayden to bePresident. Bernstein’s essay on Trumanis similarly disappointing.The shortcomings of Berstein’s es¬says are thrown into deep relief by thebrilliant concluding essay by ChristopherLasch on “The Cultural Cold War: AShort History of the Congress for Cul¬tural Freedom.” Lasch begins his essayby contending that closeness to powererodes an intellectual’s need for detach¬ment, and that “especially in the fifties,American intellectuals, on a scale thatis only beginning to be understood, lentthemselves to purposes having nothingto do with the values they professed —purposes, indeed, that were diametrical¬ly opposed to them.”He traces the history of the Congressfor Cultural Freedom, which embracedso many of America’s leading intellec¬tuals in a frenetic CIA-subsidized nation¬alistic attack on anything Red. NotingThe ChicagoEditor-in-Chief David L. AikenManaging Editor .... Mary Sue LeightonAssociate Editors Jeff SchnitzerRichard HackArt Editor Bob GriessBusiness Manager .... H. Wayne MeyerEditorial Staff Jeanne SaferGiudi WeissCampus EditorsAlbion College Jonathan GosserBarat College Mary BoldaUniv. of Colorado Susan SchmidtConcordia College Herb GeislerGoucher College Karen SandlerUniv. of III., Chicago .... Ronald PrimeauIllinois Inst, of Tech Steve SavageLoyola University, Chicago . . Paul LavinMundelein College Kathy RileyShimer College Ken MolinelliSouthwestern University,Texas Charles NeufferTemple Buell College,Denver Judi FranksValparaiso Univ Kathy WilleWayne State Univ Tony ZineskiUniv. of Wisconsin,Milwaukee Mike JacobiCollege of Wooster Gary Houstonmmmmmmmmwmmm m mmmmmmm %.«^CHICAGO{LtTERARf' REVIEW 4 Way,1968 the high incidence of ex-communists inthe Crusade, Lasch offers the very im¬portant insight thatelitism was one of the things thatattracted intellectuals to Leninism inthe first place (more than to ortho¬dox Marxism); and even after theyhad dissociated themselves from itsmaterialist content, they clung to thecongenial view of intellectuals as thevanguard of history.Thus authoritarian elitists of the left,such as Franz Borenau and James Burn¬ham, had little trouble passing into thequasi-official authoritarianism of theanti-communist right, liberal and con¬servative.By 1958 the CCF was mature enoughto change its tone, to assume “a newofficial style. . .urbane, cool, and bu¬reaucratic,” and by 1960 these intellec¬tuals were fully streamlined enough toshift their attention from Russia to theNew Third World Frontier of John Ken¬nedy.Further, the intellectuals by now nolonger needed the carrot of power tokeep them going:The American press is free, but itcensors itself. The university is free,but it has purged itself of ideas. Theliterary intellectuals are free, butthey use their freedom to propagan¬dize for the state. . .The very free¬dom of American intellectuals blindsthem to their unfreedom.Lasch concludes with the somewhat dis¬concerting plea that intellectuals returnto uninvolvement, to regain their detach¬ment so that once again real perspectives may be sent down from on highThis clearly will not do. A “class” ofmen who percieve of themselves as in¬tellectuals alone will always promote ananalysis and prescription for perpetuat¬ing their existance as an elite. Indeed,it is precisely the existence (in manycases officially cultivated) of an elitecorps of intellectuals which in large mea¬sure accounts for the ease with whichAmerican intellectual life was central¬ized into a phony consensus.As Lasch notes, “a society which tol¬erates an illusory dissent is in greaterdanger, in some respects, than a soci¬ety in which uniformity is ruthlessly im¬posed.” “Towards a New Past” offersa mixed step forward in taking someof the illusion out of historiographic dis¬sent, though indeed there is much yetto be worked out even in basicapproaches.Mr. Wasserman is a graduate stu¬dent in the Department of History atthe University of Chicago.Literary ReviewChief editorial offices: 1212 E. 59thStreet, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Phone:Ml 3-0800 ext. 3276. Subscriptions: $2.50per year. Copyright 1968 by The ChicagoLiterary Review. All Rights reserved.The Chicago Literary Review is published six times per year at the Universityof Chicago. It is distributed by The Chi¬cago Maroon, The Albion Pleiad, The Ba¬rat Heurist, The Concordia Spectator, TheGoucher Weekly, The l.l.T. TechnologyNews, The Loyola News, The MundeleinSkyscraper, The Shimer Excaliber, TheSouthwestern Megaphone, The ValparaisoTorch, and The Wooster Voice. Reprintrights have been granted to The ColoradoDaily, The U. of I. Commuter-lllini, TheTemple Buell Western Graphic, The WayneState South End, and The UWM Post.A summer edition of The Chicago Literary Review will be published on July26, 1968.Once and future ChristCity of Fools, by Michel Bataille,translated by Arthur Train, Jr. CrownPublishers. $5.95.by Stephen MacdonaldConsidering the kind of novel now be¬ing translated from the French, it mightbe best to say what Michel Bataille’sCity of Fools (La Ville Des Fous) is not.It does not emerge, for one thing, fromcertain corners of “le nouveau roman:”there lacks, for example, the clinical de¬tachment of a Robbe-Grillet, or his ob¬session with the relative, piecemeal qual¬ity of spatial and temporal perspectives.Nor is this, in any real sense, a novelof the absurd which, more in the spiritof Beckett than Camus, has evolved ascircular, episodic narratives, with arraysof ironic and often grotesque images.Not that City of Fools is absent ofthese elements. Indeed, there is the useof shifting perspectives, with severalvariations on both omniscient and sub¬jective narration, as well as the oc¬casional peppering of the sermonic sec¬ond-person. At times, Bataille releasesthe absurd with near-precision: almostincidentally we are told, for example,that during the “liberation” of France“. . .the Allied bombers, attackingindustrial centers, dropped all theirbombs at a distance from the fac-toriesand turned the neighborhoodwhere people were living into ashambles. In this way they pre¬served precious, expensive machin¬ery for future use; humans don’tcost anything. They reproduce them¬selves of their own accord; machinesdon’t. You have to build them. May¬be destroying the man instead of themachine is an example of the servi¬tude imposed by capitalism.”In the final analysis, however, it is anovel of the engage', and .because this sense of commitment is so often blatantand unyielding, City of Fools succeedsmore perhaps as a document of dedica¬tion and action than as a novel of dis¬covery. Inherent in Sartre’s doctrine ofcommitment—that a work of literatureis in itself a manifestation of choice, andthat like an indivdual the work mustclearly take a side—is the temptation, asseen in the writings of Sartre himself,to end up with essays rather than de¬scription and its more subtle suggestions,to create martyrs, heroes, and demonsrather than characters of dimension. Itis obvious that Sartre fears literaturemight come to resemble, and thus per¬petuate, the amorality of the age, andthere is reason to argue that the overttendencies of engage' literature is pref¬erable to the sterility of a Robbe-Grillet, or the poetic meanderings of aBeckett. In any case, it is a tendencywhich occurs when “commitment” isviewed too strongly as a stylistic imper¬ative. Such is the case with City ofFools.The author offers us this passage be¬fore the novel begins:(As Christ had just cast out the de¬mon), the whole city immediatelycame out to meet Jesus, and havingseen him they besought him that hewould depart out of their country.It is partly through this Christ, theChrist of Ivan Karamazov and “TheGrand Inquisitor,” that Bataille wishesus to see both of his major protagonists:Victorien Sauvage, a brilliant architectwhose genius and vitality are slowly crucified upon the stupidities of bureau¬crats, the jealousies of fellow architects,and the confusions of a desperate urbanpopulace he is trying to save, a peoplewho, unlike the termite, cannot “put upimmense buildings, towers, and verticalvillages. . .using as the only buildingmaterial their own excrement,” althoughthe stench and appearance often seemthe same; and his young, predestineddesciple-architect Georges Amyot, whodedicates his life to preserving Sauvage’sgenius, and his dream of a “solar city,”a place worthy of human habitation. AsAmyot tells the world: “It must haveseemed ridiculous enough to you, thecity’s ground transformed into a park;those vertical villages spaced in such away that every room received the sun,with every room sound-proofed. . .didthat seem stupid to you? You’ll come toit. You’ll come to it. You’ll be forced to;you’ll see. You’ll take my road, becausethere isn’t any other.”It is finally not the spirit of this visionthat is bothersome,—our urban centersare far removed from the City of God,—but rather the proximity of that vision interms of the reader. There is little doubtas to Amyot’s decision to become a fol¬lower of Sauvage (indeed, the novel be¬gins at Sauvage’s funeral, amidst hy¬pocrisy and belated love and public rec¬ognition, when Amyot is well-entrenchedas disciple), and thus the reader mustgrope alone toward an already canonizedideal, with the author (or, in one sense,Amyot) as forerunner—no, torch-bear¬er—and not as fellow traveller. What moves the novel away from thesermon is Bataille’s personal glimpses ofboth characters. To devote a chapter onthe Manichaeanism of Sauvage—“Theperson who takes refuge in passivity pro¬vokes extreme measures on the adver¬sary’s part. . .a torment that is proof ofthe doctrine: the world is indeed evil,since it kills me if I am a saint”—is atlast less revealing than those few sen¬tences that describe Sauvage as he si¬lently walks out of a conference of nose¬picking bureaucrats without a fight, onlyto continue working toward a dream hewill probably never see fulfilled.It is here, in the modulations of witand irony, in those occasional side-glances at humans who, for the momentat least, are neither monsters nor saints,that Bataille becomes the novelist ratherthan the literary evangelist. The deaf¬ness of Amyot is an example. We watchhim nod in response to what he cannothear, only to arouse the talker to newerheights of verbiage: or as we hear himreflect on his love affairs in Paris as ayouth: “We had to stroke their thighsand at the same time talk to them ofArthur Rimbaud. If we laid hands onthem without reciting poems or playingsome music, we struck them as boorish.But if we sang our songs without goinginto action afterwards, they decided wewere stupid.”City of Fools begins and ends with thedeath of a contemporary Christ whocould create richly sacred churcheswithout believing in what they represent,a man who was somehow both artist andSavior. The book is surrounded as wellby the presence of a devoted disciple ofa devoted disciple of that modern Christ.For the reader, perhaps, the novelmay well begin elsewhere.Mr. Macdonald is a third year studentof English and Drama at Albion Col¬lege.Mr. Russ sees things for himselfHappy Hunting Ground by MartinRuss. Atheneum. $5.95.by Rod Granberry^.’Martin Russ has a knack for produc¬ing accurate, nonbiased accounts ofmodern warfare. His first book, The LastParallel, is about his experience as aMarine during the Korean War. His mostrecent book, Happy Hunting Ground, isbased on the Vietnam War.Russ went to Vietnam in 1966 as aself-sponsored war correspondent towrite a personal, rather than a statisti¬cal account of the War. He stayed sixmonths and during that time, was prettymuch on his own to decide how to gath¬er his material.As the book opens, Russ is at KennedyInternational Airport waiting to catch hisflight to Vietnam. Immediately, thereader is drawn into the author’sthoughts. It is as if the reader and Russare feeling and experiencing everythingfor the first time.The contemporary feeling of “discon¬nectedness,” isolation, and loneliness isexpressed in the opening pages of thebook, “If I had been able to check in, togive some clerk my name and baggage,I wouldn’t have felt so isolated. . .1would have had a clear identity.” Ofnecessity this feeling pervades the bookand perhaps is the most appropriate ba¬sis for understanding the complex prob¬lems facing modern man.The absurdity of the entire situationengulfing the men in this war is some¬thing to be pondered. These are timeswhen even a hot face towel given to acorrespondent by an airline stewardessbecomes an object of security and com¬fort. Yet this same human being canlook at an ugly, bullet-riddled corpse andfeel no compassion. One second a manis a soldier with a girl back home and afamily. The next moment he is the vic¬tim of a sniper’s bullet and becomes astatistic on a news report. Russ’ wholeidea in organizing the trip to Vietnamwas to experience this side of the War.Most of the men involved in this bookare rough-edged, hard-fighting Marines.They are “grunts,” a mixture of thefriendly, loud American and coal-rolled steel, hammered and molded by theUnited States Marine Corps. As Russwould say, “some of the Marine in younever dies.”The author seems to be intrigued withthe idea of being on the field of battleagain. Although he never actually parti¬cipates in a military way, his presencealongside our fighting men makes himrealize the sobriety of the situation. Butno matter how brutal has environment,the ethic that his civilian life has givenhim has prevented him from acceptingthe situation as the soldiers do.In one of the more vivid accounts ofnight patrol in Vietnam, Russ is the onlyman awake when a Viet Cong patrolpasses nearby. He cannot force himselfto alert the sleeping Marines and havethe responsibility of so many possibledeaths on his conscience. Yet there arehundreds of thousands of younger men inuniform who can kill without feeling. In¬deed, killing as many of the enemy aspossible is even a thing to be proud of,according to most Marines.In one instance cited in Russ’ book, acivilian Vietnamese farmer is corneredin a small house while the Marines setfire to it. The death of this farmer wasactually a murder but it appears that allone needs to do is label him a Viet CongSuspect. The farmer’s wife was given$65 and some other form of aid with thepromise that the death would be “lookedinto.”Why does an outwardly humanitariannation produce such terribly inhumanpeople? This question, although not act¬ually posed by Russ himself, is necessi¬tated by the utter desperation of the sit¬uation at hand. Perhaps part of the an¬swer to this question lies hidden in theyouth and relatively undeveloped ethicsof most of the soldiers in Vietnam. Mostof them are college age or little over andare still suffering from the ethicalvacuum that one floats in for a certainperiod of his life. Quite possibly it is thelegendary Marine Drill Instructior thatshocks the naive youth into realizingthat all one has to do to kill a man ispull the trigger.At times this book is so exciting thatone feels urged to go try a little war himself, or dodge bullets when someoneopens the bedroom door.Russ had originally planned to let him¬self be captured by the Viet Cong as acivilian. Throughout the book he is at¬tempting to find safe ways to do this,but does not realize the naivete of hisplan until the end of the book after manydiscussions with officers and beinglaughed at many times.He does, however, try his best to getshot (or so it seems) and actually suc¬ceeds near the end of the book. This hap¬pens while he is accompanying somemen in a Medevac helicopter which isflying into a battle zone to lift out someof the wounded. The description is ex¬tremely vivid and is equal to some ofthe best writing of our time.Another instance which is a compli¬ment to Russ’ literary ability is an ac¬count of his first parachute jump. It isso realistic and conveys his emotion sowell that it can only be appreciated by actually reading the book.Happy Hunting Ground is acutally acollection of letters written to Russ’ wifeand brief notations put down in haste onthe battlefield. All this is successfullyput into his book in the form of semi¬fiction. Frequently, the only thing pres¬ent to remind one of the book’s journal¬istic origin is the references to specificpeople, their rank, and where they live.This works smoothly, however, in relat¬ing the reality and the importance of thesituation to the reader.Russ’ style is original and unusual. Itis straight-forward and blunt at times,eloquently descriptive at others. It isdefinitely the book to read if one wantsto discover what a soldier’s life in Viet¬nam is really like. It is also a book thatwill cause many a dust-covered moralissue to jolt one out of his comfortable,American-made chair.Mr. Granberry is at Southwestern Uni¬versity, Texas.On! without endOnwards! by Nat Hentofj. Simon &Schuster, Inc.by Mary SextonNat Hentoft’s second novel Onwards!is, as befits its title, a considerationnoticeably lacking in beginning and end.The presentation of an individual’sevaluation of his political, social and in¬tellectual stance, it begins in media resand concludes in much the same man¬ner. By interspersing dialogue and re¬flection, Mr. Hentoff has succeeded incapturing something of the pattern oflife.Aaron Philips, the character whosetransition from evasion to confrontationis charted in Onward!, is a college pro¬fessor well-schooled in the pragmatismof his self-willed wife and in the patienceof his Jewish heritage. The result is anoverly cautious professionalism whichseeks to know much and to judge little.For purposes of research, Philips — tothe distress of his wife and the delight ofhis students — involves himself in a massive anti-war demonstration. Aftermuch violent disagreement over the par¬ticulars of non-violence, the protestorsmanage to immobilize an induction cen¬ter already closed for renovations.Although the progress of this Day ofReckoning committee is the principalaction of the novel, primary attentionfocuses upon the inner turmoil whichPhilips’ reluctant commitment produces.His position as the silent member of asteering committee composed of oldguard liberals as well as advocates ofstudent power and black power neces¬sitates a balancing not of right andwrong but of better and worse.His decision, like his participation inthe protest, is a complex of ambiguousantithetical leanings. The conclusionbecomes as symbolic as a protest — atentative stance which gains resonancein articulation.Miss Sexton is a junior majoring inEnglish at Barai College, Lake Forest,III.* «politics of 1984and protests of politicsProtest: Pacifism and Politics, byJames Finn. Random House. $8.95.The New Politics, by James M. Perry.Crown $6.95by Peter BrunetteA decade ago, Aldous Huxley prophe¬sied the death of democracy at thehands of the new political technology, inconspiracy with the then infantile Madi¬son Avenue salesmen who were justlearning their tricks.In Brave New World Revisited, hesaid: “The political merchandisers ap¬peal only to the weaknesses of voters,never to their potential strength. Theymake no attempt to educate the massesinto becoming fit for self-government;they are content merely to manipulateand exploit them.” The subtitle of JamesPerry’s new study, “The ExpandingTechnology of Political Manipulation,”is, perhaps, a grim indication that Hux¬ley’s prophecy has been fulfilled.Perry, a political reporter for the Na¬tional Observer, paints a somber pictureindeed. Despite the telegraphic, journal¬istic style, with its mini-paragraphs(which, book-length, is a bit hard totake), and an occasional cliche (sample:“We have been dehumanized enough asit is, what with credit cards and compu¬terized bank statements and digit dial¬ing and zip codes.”), what emerges is areasonably interesting, informative ac¬count of the new scientific direction ofcontemporary politics.Perry has studied little-known mono¬graphs, interviewed countless of the newpolitical scientists (also little-known butvery influential), and his book providesinsights into the methods of the men whoscorn ideology as “non-scientific.” Heclosely analyzes several campaigns con¬ducted over the past two years, fromMilton Shapp’s unsuccessful bid for gov¬ernor of Pennsylvania to the successfulmayoralty effort of John Lindsay in NewYork.Perry maintains, interestingly enough,that Lindsay conducted an “old-fashioned” campaign which gave himvictory by only a small margin.The conclusions he reaches are lessthan apocalyptic. On the basis of the evi¬dence, Perry decides that a victory takesmoney and lots of it, and that television,scientific polling, computers, and theother tools of the new political trade arebecoming a necessity. This will be hard¬ly new to most readers. While the auth¬or’s discussions and explanations ofthings like semantic differential polls andPrecinct Index Priority Systems are en¬lightening, the real importance of thebook lies in the author’s examination ofthe ramifications of the new politics onour form of government, whatever nameone wishes to apply to it.The author frankly labels the new pol¬iticians “mercenaries,” men “willing togo almost anywhere for a buck,” and headmits that the new technicians deliber¬ately distorted the poltiical bias of suc¬cessful Michigan senatorial aspirant Ro¬bert Griffin to make him appear moder¬ate (the position held by most voters, ac¬cording to pre-election polls), when infact his views were and are quite con¬servative. And he multiplies theexamples.Yet he can say “I refuse to believethat anyone can be elected, given money,good television, experts, and time to de¬ploy them.” Later, however, he concedesthat “If they so desire, these new man¬agers—acting rationally fro mtheir pointof view all the while—can play upon the voters like virtuoso.” Perry’s solution tothe threat? “Understand it. Deplore it.Raise hell about it.” But somehow thisdangerous and largely ineffective tactic.Perry’s greatest concern seems to bethat the Republicans are the only onesusing the new techniques to any greatextent. He suggests, however, that theDemocrats will eventually wise up andthat a system of “checks and balances”will result from the tension between thetwo parties. The reader may be led toask what happens to the voter after theother party catches up. Perry avoids thequestion. But the reader may safely pos¬tulate the answer, I think, that, then, theDemocrats too, in the great Americantradition of fair play, will be able to de¬mand equal time to manipulate the vot¬er’s mind.A book of a totally different sort,though it bears a somewhat similar title,is James Finn’s Protest: Pacificism andPolitics. This book is composed of 35 in¬terviews with pacifists and war dissent¬ers of varying hues: representatives ofthe major religions and the major polit¬ical and pacifist organizations, figuresThe Autobiography of W. E. B. DuBois. International Publishers. $10.The Philadelphia Negro, by W. E. BDu Bois. Schocken Books. $2.95.by Tom RoseIn 1903 DuBois wrote,the Negro is a sort of seventhson, born with a veil, and giftedwith second-sight in this Amer¬ican world, — a world whichyields him no true self-con¬sciousness, but only lets him seehimself through the revelation ofthe other world. It is a peculiarsensation, this double-conscious¬ness, this sense of always look¬ing at one’s self through theeyes of others, of measuringone’s soul by the tape of a worldthat looks on in amused con¬tempt and pity.One ever feels his twoness, —an American, a Negro; twosouls, two thoughts, two unrecon¬ciled strivings; two warringideals in one dark body, whosedogged strength alone keeps itfrom being torn asunder.This emotional hell still exists today,fed by institutional racism, as the Pres¬ident’s Commission on Civil Disorderspoints out.We know little about W.E.B. DuBois.He was born in Great Barrington, Mas¬sachusetts in 1868, and died in Ghanaon the eve of the March on Washingtonin 1963. This is the 100th anniversary ofhis birth, yet to most of us his namemeans nothing because he was a blackAmerican who, at the end of his life,moved to Ghana when he became con¬vinced that the dream of equality couldnever be realized in America. AlthoughDuBois is a great American intellectual,poet, scholar, civil rights activist, andearly advocate of black power, you willfind little mention of his brilliantthoughts in high school and college texts.DuBois writes of himself, “I have aflood of Negro blood, a strain of French,a bit of Dutch, but, thank God, no Anglo-Saxon.” Although Western Massachu¬setts had been the scene of abolitionistsentiment in earlier years, the young representing only themselves, such asJoan Baez and Mitchell Goodman.Finn is the compleat reporter—he pro¬vides huge footnotes, describing speech¬es, demonstrations, etc., that inter¬viewees mention, and he punctuateseach interview with continuity material,enabling the reader to maintain perspec¬tive within this often bewildering varietyof opinion.No two views concur on any but a fewpoints, and from this fact, ultimately,comes the book’s most welcome service.It forever buries the myth that “peacemovement” is a viable classification orcategory at all; Finn tells us that itdoesn’t even exist. After all, even Presi¬dent Johnson wants peace.What we see instead are 35 highly in¬dividual views on war, pacifism, socialprogress, society itself, and perhapswhat is most significant and revealing,their interrelation. Much of what is saidis not new, but Finn has more than ful¬filled his task by simply bringing it alltogether between two covers. The bookwill be heartening to many youngerreaders who will be able to compare andDuBois had little contact with other Ne¬groes or civil rights activity in his earlylife. At his high school graduation, how¬ever, he delivered an oration on theabolitionst Wendell Phillips. He wentto Fisk University in Nashville and thenearned his doctorate at Harvard.It was not long before he discardedthe assumptions of his New Englandeducation. Nevertheless a third of theAutobiography is about his youth andcollege years. One reviewer has de¬scribed this section as “Lyric in tone,rich in detail,.. .a wonderfully evoca¬tive account of life in a New Englandtown of the late 19th century.” Mostof the book is devoted to his adult life,his discussions and disagreements withBooker T. Washington, and his role asfounder of the NAACP and editor of itsjournal, The Crisis.Like another great black American,Malcolm X, DuBois had the courage tochange. Originally he advocated thatblack America develop a “talentedtenth,” who would lead the rest of theirbrothers, but later in life he urged allblack Americans to undertake an “in¬ner cooperative effort” to prepare them¬selves for a possible tragedy: he spokeof black power long before Stokely Car¬michael. Both his belief in socialism andhis move to Ghana to become editor ofthe Encyclopaedia Africana came latein life.He had a hatred for the cold warideology of the United States, and wrotein 1959 in a three volume historicalnovel of the Negro people in the UnitedStates:One thing I know, today morethan ever, war is utterly eviland completely indefensible interms of human morals or de¬cency or civilization. Nothing onearth is so completely useless,so inexcusably vile. War nolonger brings victory to eitherside. It is planned and deliberatemurder of human beings, thecomplete destruction of theearth’s treasures. . . . Down withwar! Never again war. War isthe bottomless pit to which hu- contrast the philosophical underpinningsof various types of dissent. The diversityitself is heartening in a time when youthis forced to be so sure of itself, whetherit wishes to be so or not. The fact thatour elders, too, are confused offers somesolace.Finn’s collection is no answer book,certainly, nor is it intended to be. Butthe questions themselves are of courseworthwhile, especially since the new pol¬itics is now forcing both candidates andvoters to consider complex issues in five-second spots on television.Finn raises sch questions as: What isthe proper relation of morality and poli¬tics? Are they to be mixed, and, if theyare, who is to establish the code andjudge the particular (Vietnam) in termsof it? Can a pacifist condone the use ofviolance in overthrowing a tyrant?These and similar questions obviouslyadmit of no easy answers, but it isequally obvious that answers must be at¬tempted, in spite of the new politics.Mr. Brunette is a third year graduatestudent in English at the Universityof Wisconsin, Madison.man beings have fallen in this20th century of the miscalledPrince of Peace!A few years after he obtained hisPhD from Harvard, DuBois got an offerfrom the University of Pennsylvania toconduct a one-year study of Negro lifein Philadelphia. The Philadelphia Negrohas been out of print for decades. Firstpublished in 1899, it has been reprintedin paperback this year by Schockenbooks. It is a classic sociological com¬munity study of the 8,000 Negroes inthe black ghetto of Philadelphia Itshowed how the problems in the blackghetto were caused then by the treat¬ment of black people by that city, justas other studies do today. Many of theproblems DuBois found nearly 70 yearsago still persist today among the 155,-000 black people in Philadelphia.Herbert Aptheker, the editor of theAutobiography, writes in the introduc¬tion about the book’s history. “The man¬uscript was carried by the Doctor toGhana late in 1961 and published, insomewhat shortened versions, in 1964and 1965, in China, the USSR, and theGerman Democratic Republic. Rescuedfrom Accra, after the military coup ofearly 1966, the manuscript is now pub¬lished for the first time in the languageof its composition and in full.”Although this book is a great historicaldocument, and often written in a kindof poetic prose, I doubt that many stu¬dents will run out and buy it for tendollars. But perhaps you were impressedwith the first excerpt in this review,which was from a small paperback,costing only 75 cents, The Souls of BlackFolk. It gives the reader brilliant in¬sights into the life of black Americansat the turn of the century, and into theprofound thoughts of W.E.B. DuBois.In one of the short essays in this littlebook, DuBois prophetically writes, “Theproblem of the 20th century is the prob¬lem of the color-line—the relation of thedarker to the lighter races of men inAsia and Africa, in America. ..Mr. Rose is a graduate student inthe University of Wisconsin at Mil¬waukee.Thank God, no Anglo-Saxon”A rt,4 • CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW • May, 1968 * < <■.-< / // :<.<» / iHe Meet Nick Dozoryst, 22He’s a law studentHe rebuilds carscan read 2000 words a minuteWatching Nick’s hand * fly over the pages (his hand acts as a pacer)you swear he must he skimming. But lie’s not. Nick Dozoryst has learnedto read an average novel in an hour, and even the toughest material inat least 1000 words a minute with understanding and recall.Nick isn’t some kind of genius nor was he always a fast reader. In fact,Nick is just one of the average graduates of the Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics Institute. Most of the more than 350,000 Reading Dynamicsgraduates obtain at least a 4.7 increase over their average 300 words aminute starting speed—some even go as high as 3000 words a minute.And, there is nothing difficult or tricky about this scientific methoddeveloped over an 18 year period by Mrs. Evelyn Wood, a prominenteducator. The successful results of the course, which numbers amongits graduates, senators, congressmen, lawyers, students, housewives, andmany professional people, have been reported in TIME, BUSINESSWEEK, and many leading newspapers as well as on radio and TV. We guarantee to refund your full tuition if you do not at least tripleyour reading efficiency. (By reading efficiency we mean a combinationof speed and comprehension, not just speed alone.) All we ask is thatyou attend all classes and practice one hour daily.You can learn more about the course, which consists of eight weekly2V2 hour sessions, by attending a free orientation. You’ll see a short filmwhich includes interviews with people who have taken the course, andyou’ll also see a graduate read a book at amazing speed and tell you whathe lias read.Check the schedule below and plan now to attend one of these orien¬tations. In just eight weeks, you could be reading as fast or faster thanNick Dozoryst. A special rate for students is available.FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL ST 2-9787 IN MILWAUKEE, CALL 272-1780FREE ONE HOUR ORIENTATION SESSIONSIN CHICAGO—at Reading DynamicsInstitute,180 N. Michigan Avenue, Suite 400Monday June 3—12:15, 5:30 PMTuesday June 4—12:15, 5:30 PMWednesday June 5—12:15, 5:30 PMThursday June 6—12:15, 5:30 PMFriday June 7—12:15, 5:30 PMSaturday June 8—1:30 PMMonday ..June 10—12:151, 5:30 PMTuesday June 11—12:15, 5:30 PMWednesday June 12—12:15, 5:30 PMThursday June 13—12:15, 5:30 PMFriday June 14—12:15, 5:30 PMSaturday June 15—1:30 PMMonday June 17—12:15, 5:30 PMTuesday June 18—12:15, 5:30 PMWednesday June 19—12:15, 5:30 PMThursday June 20—12:15, 5:30 PMFriday June 21—12:15, 5:30 PMSaturday June 22—1:30 PM10540 S. 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North Avenue, Suite 201Thursday June 6—8:00 PMSaturday June 8— 1:30 PMIN PARK RIDGE-Park Ridge Inn,Touhy at SummitMonday June 3— 8:00 PMWednesday June 5— 8:00 PMMonday June 10— 8:00 PMWednesday June 12— 8:00 PM IN DOLTON—Dorchester Inn15500 S. Harper AvenueTuesday June 4— 8:00 PMWednesday June 5— 8:00 PMTuesday June 11—8:00 PMThursday June 13— 8:00 PMIN AURORA—Valley National BankBuilding in the Northgate ShoppingCenter (Rt. 31)Monday June 3—8:00 PMWednesday June 5— 8:00 PMTuesday June 11— 8:00 PMThursday June 13— 8:00 PMMonday ..June 17— 8:00 PMWednesday June 19— 8:00 PMIN ELMHURST—Y.M.C.A.211 W. First StreetTuesday June 4—8:00 PMThursday June 6— 8:00 PMMonday June 10— 8:00 PMThursday June 13— 8:00 PMIN ROCKFORD—at Reading DynamicsInstitute206 W. State Street, Suite 1011Monday June 3— 8:00 PMTuesday June 4—8:00 PMMonday june io— 8;00 PMWednesday June 12— 8:00 PMFor Milwaukee Orientations, callphone number listed above The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute180 N. Michigan Ave. • Suite 400 • Chicago, III. 60601□ Please send more information.□ Please send registration form and schedule ofclasses.I understand that I am under no obligation andthat no salesman will call on me.Name— —Street —CityState Zip.May, 1968 CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW • 5, » . ' V/V; ■ ■■ . . ••Poetry of peaceby Paula MenshThis year's Peace Calendar and Ap¬pointment Book, put out by the War Re¬sisters League, contains an anthology ofcontemporary poetry that will continueto live as an integral whole long afterthe year 1968 passes. Compiled and ed¬ited by Denise Levertov, the strength ofthis anthology lies not simply in the suc¬cess of each individual poem, but in theunity, achieved on many levels, of theanthology as a whole.In the middle of the anthology is apoem by Robert Duncan, entitled, “God-Spell.” It begins:“We have lost. No,we have not lost our waybut we have found the waydark, hard to make out, and yetjoyous.”The poems in this anthology are an ex-Snyder andhis ShibuiBack Country, by Gary Snyder. NewDirections. $4.by Robert SalasinThere is a concept in Japanese art,almost untranslatable, known as Shibui.It is a demand for a calm expressionof life that is characterized by a cleansimplicity and a natural and unhurriedfreedom. It is defined in the texture ofunpolished wood, the movement of itsvisible grain; in the touch and tone ofa ceramic made for use, in true andunhindered line, in the functionality ofsimple things intended for human useand done well; the single sure strokeof brush on paper, unobstructed, delib¬erate, and spontaneous; in the viewover which the eye wanders and themind is still; in the movement withoutword, the deep calm and precisionfound in the simple rightness of com¬mon things and action still held beauti¬ful.It is an art described in terms of ac¬tion; pure movement without hesitationor correction, movement withoutthought that frees both body and mind.Gary Snyder can be found in theDharma Bums sitting in the pine for¬ests of Big Sur, a hand constructed ca¬bin of rigourous simplicity in immacu¬late order, half lotus, and translatingChinese poetry. Friend and fellow poetof Ginsburg, Kerouac, Corso, and Fer¬linghetti, he belongs to the group ofcontemporary American poets whoformed the vanguard of occidental in¬terest in the practice of Zen. Snyderhas gone more deeply into these studiesthan any of his contemporaries, spend¬ing several years traveling throughoutJapan and India and studying at the ZenBuddhist monastary in Kyoto. His workshows a profound insight and apprecia¬tion of both the form and spirit of Ja¬panese verse, verse strongly influencedby the Japanese experience of Budd¬hism in Zen. He well understands thetensionless balance of the Buddhist ex¬perience and his work comes closer tocapturing the seed of great Japanesepoetry and its traditions than any otherI have seen published in English inquite some time.The book is divided into three por¬tions. “The Far West” covers experi¬ences on the West Coast from Washing¬ton to California, the work, the wild¬ernessThe shack and a few treesfloat in the blowing fogand the shipsDown in the bilgesor out of sight on the bulkheadstime after timeyear after yearwe paint right over the dirt. our relationship to this war, and pushedploration of this “way” that Duncanspeaks of: full of traps and torments,dark places and sun-lit days, pettinessand magnificence.“This is a civilization at war,” to quotefrom Gail Dusenbery’s poem, “The Sha¬dow.” This realization comes at differ¬ent times, in different ways, to differ¬ent people. Lucky enough not be in theheat of the war, but only in its shadow,we are chilled by its course, and its imp¬lications. We are pushed to recognizeour guilt for its occurrence and becauseit continues. We are pushed to question“The Far East” consists of poemswritten in Japan and includes the fol¬lowing description of Zendo life:Bell from the hondo chanting su-tras. Gi:deep bell, small bell, wooden drum,sanzen at fourkneel on icy polisht boards inline. . ..nine o’clock one more sanzenten, hot noodlesthree bowls each.and a section, “Kali,” on the Indiantravels, followed by “Back”.Of futher interest are poemsSynder has chosen to translate of Mi-yazawa Kenji (1896-1933) with whosework (so New Directions’ press depart¬ment would have it) Snyder feels “aclose affinity.” The translations areeasy and devised with a real feelingfor the near wordlessness of the origin¬al Japanese, though Kenji’s work seemsbusier and less fluid than Snyder’s ori¬ginal English compositions.All this verse is taut and very muchto the point, incredibly alive and pre¬sented without artifice; it is not somuch poetry as a swiftly sketched view,indistinct only in juxtiposition of whatis there and what has been deliberatelyleft out. There is room for the mind tomove after the reading like ringsspreading from a single stone droppedin still water,gone wildstrawberry vineeach year more smallsourmulcht by pineThere is a world view all inclusive andwithout categorizationSpray drips from the cargo-boomsa fresh-chipped winchspotted with red leadyoung fir-soaking in the summer rain.What is seen is seen.Mr. Salasin, poet and student at theCollege of the University of Chicago,was a survivor of recent civil dis¬orders. further to assess our relationship to theuniverse.Realization—that is, in this case, anacute awareness of the reality of thewar—is the first step in a process thatbegins in awareness and ends in action.Each poem in the anthology can be seenas an aspect of this process, and in thisway each poem becomes part of a living,moving whole. “Summer, a Far-OffWar,” by David P. Young, expressessuccinctly in its title what it elaboratesin its content: the speaker’s awarenessthat, though he is thousands of milesaway from the war, he is, as an Ameri¬can as well as a citizen of the world,implicated in it. This awareness, whichhas not yet become an active commit¬ment, is the basis for further realiza¬tions that make up the material of sev¬eral of the poems, such as “DrivingThrough Minnesota During the HanoiBombings,” by Robert Bly, and “TheWar in Winter,” by Ross Feld.Identification is the emotional link be¬tween awareness and action. It is em¬ployed in variou ways throughout theanthology. In one poem it takes the formof an attempt to feel the spirit and an¬guish if the Vietnamese people, in an¬other it takes the more general form ofan attempt to feel the anguish of allpeople in war-ridden countries. In “Aug¬ust 6, 1945,” Millen Brand identifies him¬self with a man in Hiroshima the day ofthe bombing.Poems of action are part of the an¬thology as well as poems of identifica¬ tion. Action is the inevitable result of thedisoveries we have made through theexperience of identification. Action istransformed in poetry into making astatement and/or taking a stand, as insuch poems as “Flowers,” by RobertCreeley and “For A. J. Muste” by Walt¬er Lowenfels.The anthology does not confine itselfto America and Vietnam, but containspoems with numerous other themes. TheVietnam crisis is not treated as an iso¬lated phenomenon, but is related to allthat has come before it and even to whatwill follow it. This inter-relationship ofseemingly diverse material is reinforcedby the order in which Denise Levertovhas arranged the poems, creating theunity that so distinguishes this anthologyfrom others.Miss Levertov has taken excellent ad¬vantage of the fact that this is an an¬thology within a calendar. The arrange¬ment of the poems is in part due to acorrespondence between their contentand a certain day or week, or time ofyear. This natural editing process, sup¬plying the qualitative with quantitativesupport, give the anthology an interest¬ing sort of scientific validity. This doesnot become grating because it is not soobviously consistent that it becomes agimmick or a trick.The last poem, “Report From An Un¬appointed Committee by William Staf¬ford, offers a vision of awakening andnew movement, a vision of continuity.It begins, “The uncounted are count¬ing/ and the unseen are lookingaround,” and ends, after a series of ob¬servations, “And a new river is not feel¬ing for a valley/ somewhere under ourworld.”Miss Mensh is a sophomore majoringin English at Goucher College, Balti¬more., mComparative PoliticsA now quarterly journal from Tho University of Chicago PressComporotive Politics is sponsored and edited by the Political ScienceProgram of The City University of'New York. It will publish articles andbook reviews devoted to comparative analysis of political institutionsand behavior.Manuscripts and all editorial correspondence should be addressed to:The Kditors, Compum/ivo Politics. The City University of New York,33 West 42nd Street, New York. N. Y. 10036.Among articles to be published in the first issues:Harold D LasswellYale University“The Future of Comparative Politics"Melvin RichterCity University of New York(Hunter College)"The Comparative Method in theWork of Tocqueville and Montesquieu’Editorial Committee:Bernard E. BrownJohn H. HerzArnold A. Rogow—The City University of NewHoard of Editors:Gabriel AlmondDavid ApterRalph BraibantiGwendolen M. Carter|ames S. ColemanRalf DahrcndorfBertrand de (ouvenelHarry FeksteinS. N. F.isenstadtOssip K. FlechtheimJoseph G. I.aPalombaraS. M. i.ipsetRoy C. Macridis|ohn MontgomeryKenneth OrganskiLucian VV. PyeFred W. RiggsBenjamin RivlinStein RokkanRichard RoseDankwart RustovvGiovanni SartoriK. II. SilvertRobert E. WardMyron WeinerDon’t miss a single issue!Subscribe now and save 20"I roc, with your paid one-yea York|oseph G. I.aPalombaraYale University"Macro- and Micro-Theory inComparative Politics"Dankwart RustowColumbia University"Modernization ns a Concept inComparative Politics’.’Roy C. MacridisDrandeis University“Trends in the Comparative Analysisof Institutions"Samuel H. BeerHarvard University"The Comparative Method and theStudy of Individual Political Systems"Ivo DuchacekThe City University of New York(City College)"Constitutions: A Functional View"n on this Charter Subscriber offer: First issuer subscription to Compnrotive Politics.To: The University of Chicago Press5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637Please enter my name as a Charter Subscriber to ComparativePolitics and send me the first issue free. I am enclosing $8.00for the succeeding four issues.Address.CityState6 • CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW ♦ May, 1968».*- Yf,Arlr?7) .* vVtVAi'd;' * *•««} '.%*}&t - - *Helping us to seeThe will toNone of Us Will Return, by Char¬lotte Delbo. Grove Press.by Alfie MarcusThis book is a personal memoirin which Mrs. Delbo recounts herexperiences as an inmate at Auschwitz.It is very difficult and almost unfair tocondense what Mrs. Delbo has said. Onlythe victims, those who have actually ex¬perienced the horror can honestly speakfor themselves.The most striking fact about the con¬centration camp, as Mrs. Delbo des¬cribes it, was the complete breakdownof all the rationality that men tend toassociate with normal situations. Argu¬ments became senseless and reason be¬came irrelevant when the inmates con- survivestantly had to breathe the fumes of burn¬ing flesh. All physical necessities werereduced to the barest minimum. To theconstant fear of death was added hunger,thirst, cold, dirt, nakedness, and lack ofsleep. Besides subjecting inmates tocruel beatings and harsh labor, the Na¬zis shaved all of the inmates’ hair fromtheir bodies and sterilized many of them.Only a numbness, an insensibility, anda bewilderment was left. The inmatesconstantly waited, waited for whateverwould happen, while “each body is acry — each woman is a materializedcry, a scream that is not heard.” Theidea of running away, according to Mrs.Delbo, “occurred to no one; one has tobe strong to want to escape.”Under these incredible circumstancesthe inmates began to question their willto go on, their will to survive. Mrs.Delbo recalls this feeling: -The Bikeriders, by Danny Lyon. TheMacMillan Company. $5.95 hard$2.95 paperback.by Richard GordonDanny Lyon is 25 years old, rides abig Triumph bike, holds a University ofChicago B.A., wears a gold earring, isa member of Magnum, and he has justpublished one of those rare books of pho¬tographs that owners will long cherish.Now that is quite a bunch of thoughtsto integrate, but Danny cannot be putinto one bag, he is not a person easilylabled, except, perhaps as a photograph¬er. He can look back to a one man showat the Art Institute of Chicago and tojoint shows at the Museum of ModemArt, Brandeis University and the GeorgeEastman House.I surrender and it is sweet to sur¬render to death, sweeter than sur¬rendering to love and it is sweet toknow that it is the end, the end ofsuffering and struggling, the end ofasking the impossible of a heart thatcan bear no more.Three factors, however, enabled thewomen who survived to continue, to en¬dure the pain. These were the past, thefuture, and their fellow inmates. Con¬cerning the future Mrs. Delbo says:The women who had stopped believ¬ing in their return were dead. Wehad to believe — believe despite ev¬erything, against all odds, to makethis return convincing, to give itreality and color, while we preparedfor it, while we conjured it up inall its details.Mr. Marcus is a second-year studentmajoring in history in the College ofthe University of Chicago. Now, with The Bikeriders, Danny hascreated a statement as pure and honestas Let us now praise famous men, thelegendary document of the life of share¬croppers by James Agee and Walker Ev¬ans, in the 1930’s. But Danny has goneone step beyond Agee and Evans. The ef¬fect of their work was achieved throughempathy (the empathy of outsiders);Danny lives the life he portrays. He rodethe big bikes before he became aphotographer.The Bikeriders is divided in half, textfollowing photographs. The text is a tran-serption from tape recordings, allowingthe bikeriders to speak for themselves,to tell it like it is, to express what theythink and how they think without thetimestyle misrepresentation and pander¬ing to sensationalism so common in oursociety.The reproduction of the photographscould be better, but some of the fault liesin the original prints which lack a suffic¬ient tonal range. Failings in techniqueinterrupt the poetic flow especially inthose taken in very low light situations.Yet even where he fails, there isstrength in Danny’s vision as in his por¬trait of “Cal,” which lacks rich tones,but which is nonetheless a strong andsensitive portrait.The photographs illuminate a world un¬familiar to most of us because of preju¬dices we don’t know we have, becausewe don’t take the time to see the worldwe live in. We look sometimes, but thoserare artists like Danny Lyon help us tosee.Mr. Gordon is an alumnus of theCollege of the University of Chicago.He is currently working as a photog¬rapher in Chicago.FOLLETT'S FOIBLES By E. WinslowA prof thought students bought tomesFrom Follett’s for knowledging their domes. JUNEBut it’s not quite that pure;It’s their way to make sure They’ll have moneyto get back to their homes.Textbooks are take-home pay when you sellthem for quick cash At semester-end you probably find yourself with morebooks than you need, and less cash than you can use.The answer to both problems is one and the same. Simplysell your books to Follett’s where you get cash on thebarrel-head. No waiting. And as much or more than you'llget elsewhere, even if they’re not to be used on campusnext year. So treat your texts like take-home pay.They may be your going-home ticket.FOLLETTS BOOKSTORESCHICAGO • CHAMPAIGNWEST LAFAYETTE • ANN ARBOR •MINNEAPOLIS OXFORD, OHIOATHENS, OHIO."t” JlMay, 1968 • CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW • 7Catholics and the Left: The SlantManifesto, by Adrian Cunningham,Terry Eagleton et al. Templegate Pub¬lishers. $1.95 paperback.by Paul LavinSlant is an English radical Catholicperiodical founded by undergraduates atCambridge in 1963. Five members of theSlant group decided to explain their posi¬tion in a book; Catholics and the Left isthe result.Five authors and no editor is a com¬bination that seems likely to produce arather odd book—and it does. It is reallya 120-page book by two men (Cunning¬ham and Eagleton) with three essays bythe others tacked on to the end.Cunningham and Eagleton’s book-with-in-a-book is a socialist analysis of West¬ern Christianity, especially Catholicism.The terms essential to such a discussionas they see it are politics, community,work, capitalism, culture, liberalism.They see the task of Christianity as“creating community.” This phrase hasbeen a cliche for years, but they carry itfurther than usual. They see capitalismwith its view of society as a market¬place and with its glorification of com¬petition as destructive of community.Their conclusion “is that Christianscan never be conservatives or liberals oreven right-wing socialists; they mustalign themselves, perhaps, with all thosetraditional enemies of the church, left-wing socialists and atheistic Marxists.”The 19th century attempt to form aChristian Socialist movement failed tomake any real difference in society, sayCunningham and Eagleton. becauseit attempted a radical critiqueof contemporary society in thecontext of an ultimate disbelief cin social reality as an objectworthy of absolute attention.Christian socialism was so con¬cerned to assert, against thepressures of merely utilitarianchange, that socialism was abouthuman morality and relation-ships. that it tended to forget On the left...CATHOLICS...and in collegethat it is only in the detailed in¬stitutional processes of societythat feelings and relationshipsare negotiated.The two authors also outline some ofthe techniques that the church has tra¬ditionally used to suppress any truly radi¬cal social comment within its ranks.These include inducing guilt feelingsabout the questioning process itself, andproviding liturgical reforms and otherharmless amusements to keep restlessmembers busy. Perhaps the most subtleis the method of answering moral quest¬ions on two levels, one abstract and uni¬versal, the other in terms of idealizedindividual relationship with other persons.Thus, the “just war” theory and “turningthe other cheek” imperative, both arecombined to evade answering questionsabout real human conflicts, which alwaysfall between these two levels.Cunningham and Eagleton’s cause isweakened somewhat by their penchantfor pinning impressive sounding nameson processes they only vaguely under¬stand. and by general sloppiness. The im¬pression they give is of a hasty andpreliminary sketching of ideas that real¬ly need more careful work.The ideas they present are nonetheless,valuable ones.Mr. Lavin is a junior majoring in his¬tory at Loyola University, Chicago. Crisis at St. John’s, by Joseph Scimec-ca and Roland Damiano, RandomHouse, $5.95.by Mary M. O'ConnellIf you are looking for a book on thecrisis in contemporary American highereducation, forget this one. Crisis is thestory of the revolt two years ago at St.John’s University in New York. If theschool is really anything like the book’sdescription of it, it is highly doubtful thatSt. John’s is part of 20th century highereducation, let alone representative of it.The problem is really more one ofCatholic higher education; and thus thetitle is misleading. Readers unacquaint¬ed with Catholic universities will proba¬bly be incredulous of the attitudes andpractices related here; those familiarwith the system will more likely be skep¬tical of the simplistic, one-sided viewtaken. The latter is this reviewer’sposition.The authors were faculty members atthe university when, in December of 1965,a group of professors who had opposedcertain aspects of university policy werefired outright. A faculty strike followed;it met with meager student support, totaladministration intransigence, and a gooddeal of publicity. The AAUP and similarprofessional organizations protested, andSt. John’s almost lost its accreditation.Gradually things died down, the pro¬fessors got other jobs, and St. John’sgoes on. Scimecca and Damiano decided toanalyze the crisis in view of the generalcondition of St. John’s and of this uni ¬versity’s relation to the community iff!serves. For good measure they threw in-ja short account of American Catholic’®higher education. The result is an amal-ttgamation of journalism, history, sociolllogy, and bits and pieces of in-grouppresented without any real insight or an\attempt at objectivity.The New York Irish-Catholic commurrSlity which St. John’s serves, we are toldlgjis “permeated by formalism, authoritar8|ianism, clericalism, moralism, and de-slfensiveness, and . . . proffers apologetics!?!and belittles intellectualism.” No attempt!!is made to understand this community^with any sympathy or even neutrality;^we are given a totally one-sided accountswhich is neither objective nor creditable*Similarly in the university crisis: theMstriking professors are the good guysfSwith the white shirts and the administrajptors are the bad guys with the blacjSilhabits. The whole description becomes!!pathetic when we are treated to; tfiSjokes by the good guys and get to laugh®at the stupidity of the bad guys. 'amThe account of Catholic higher educaflltion follows the same pattern: Catholilljuniversities, for which St. John’s standj|j|as the example, are traditionally obscufl|pantist, parochial and authoritarian, andattempts at reform face a questionable^^future in such an atmosphere. I•s;;;The problem with the whole analysis^: $is not that such evils do not exist in Cath-||Volic communities and Catholic univers||||lties, for they most certainly do. But th||||tpicture is not that simple; no situation®^could possibly be as simple as theseSlauthors make it out to be. -jimpLfltaThe irony is that the authors, in theirg|p;:total lack of objective understanding, fanaglto transcend the very attitudes they aresfffilattacking. •::Miss O’Connell is a senior rnajorif|§|j^in history at Loyola University.Wm„ ’<V;. ,' '* 'r .' VV /.V /■ 'W 1‘ ’Ki•-F- v- ----o'vv % XXXi/ : ' I Ladies and Gentlemen, Your Attention, Please.We Wish To Announceills- V ~ ■' : ‘ ; <■' ■J <....; ,•- '•, • j • ‘ - :i S S ’ „ !*<[' i; \- -s; ’ ^.■rXXXtiXX I§1 The First Anneal Gigantic SpringBOOK SALEStock especially selected by our stockroom boys, warehousemen, cashiers, gen¬eral manager, secretaries, book buyers who have left the store, graduate students,stray members of the faculty, and publishers agents of questionable Integrity.Some books on sale are of doubtful value, some are collectors items, some arerun-of-the-mil, many are genuine bargains, and all of them are priced at half priceor less.f 1»*MW ‘ i Wl.■ ..‘I-;■ - •-.<. V,;' - / ‘■* *r 41 L ’ - ' - »XMrXt’il : ■XhXX • 7 S'/ THE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORESituated in charming, gracious Ellis Hall(Ye Olde Faculty Stables)5802 Ellis Avenue8 . 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DATEAn Equal Opportunity EmployerWEEKEND MAGAZINE May 17, 1968 *Davis and Gendlin Ask for 'No More VietnamsBy JOHN RECHTEditorial Assistant“The United States is involvedin war crimes as serious as anythat have ever been perpetratedby another people,” said RennieDavis, a radical community or¬ganizer, at the “No More Viet¬nams” discussion in Cobb Auditor¬ium Wednesday.According to Davis, “One of thenext tools of organization andmovement in this country shouldbe to carry out war crimes tri¬bunals based on the Nuremburgstandards. »“People in the anti-war move¬ment are aware that the policy inVietnam is how the United Stateswill operate in the world, and ithas been growing since World WarII,” he said. “If this policy doesnot change, there will be moreVietnams. It is my own frankopinion that the anti-war move¬ ment has not learned even somefundamental lessons that it shouldhave learned from the VietnamWar.”Davis declared that “the UnitedStates has been defeated militarilyby an army of peasants. The finalthing that we have lost as a move¬ment by this war is an understand¬ing of the National LiberationFront (NLF).”Concerning the NLF Davis said,“I think it’s one of the most ex¬citing, democratic, people’s revo¬lutionary movements in the world.In many ways the NLF representsthe best revolutionary movementsin the American ideal.”The audience of 40 people alsoheard Eugene Gendlin, assistantprofessor of psychology; MarvinZonis, assistant professor of po¬litical science; Steve Perkins, agraduate student in psychology,MAROON SPORTSVendl: Beautiful!By JERRY LAPIDUSSports WriterDue to an unusually light (andsuccessful) sports week, we havesome space here to discuss the for¬tunes of one of the University’s fewinternationally known athletes —Bill (Vendl) of the physical educa¬tion department.Vendl, who coaches soccer andis assistant intramural director, isone of the top pentathalon com¬petitors in the United States andmay compete in this difficult eventin the 1968 Summer Olympics inMexico City. He participated inthe 1956 games and qualified forthe 1960 Rome competition but wasunable to attend.Modern pentathalon competitionincludes steeplechase riding, fenc¬ing, pistol shooting, 300-meterswimming, and 4000-meter running.Chicago’s pentathlete began hisathletic career at Eastern Ken¬tucky State College, where in 1953he was an All-American swimmerand an All-Conference runner.While in the service he learned theskills necessary for the otherevents and in World Military Pen¬tathalon competition in 1956 fin¬ished second. In that year he setrecords in shooting and ridingexcellent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant2017 E. 71st €T. which still stand in pentathaloncompetition.In the 1956 Olympics the Ameri¬can team finished second to Rus¬sia; Vendl was second on theAmerican squad and seventh inoverall competition.After the Olympics Vendl quitregular competition, although heremained with the sport and servedas technical advisor to the 1959Pan-American Games. He made acomeback in 1960 and amassedenough points in the trials to makethe Olympic team but suffered in¬juries in the runnings trials andwas unable to compete.Since that time he’s stayed awayfrom competition but still kept incondition. Late in 1967 the U.S.Olympic authorities, noticing ashortage in young competitors,asked former pentathletes to re¬enter the competition to spur onthe younger men. After checkingthe times of the present compet¬itors, Vendl decided to begintraining.He has now been training forover ten months. At the beginningof that time, he ranked 22 in worldrankings. In the last few monthshe has been consistently in the topten and was ranked first for ashort period.SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL’’SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200c£c************** **************5&*************************** UNIVERSITYSYMPHONY ORCHESTRARichard Wernick, ConductorSPRING CONCERTROSSINI:WEBERN:MUSSORGSKY:Saturday, May 18FREE William Tell OvertureSymphony, Opus 21Pictures at an ExhibitionMandell Hall8:30 ******************************************* *************** representing Cousins and Youngfor McCarthy, and John Beal, ’68,representing Students for Kennedy.Gendlin spoke on how to preventfuture U.S.-backed “imperialistwars.” He called for an education¬ al campaign to get people to un¬derstand two points:The United States often setsu p unrepresentative dictorialgovernments in other countries and supports these governmentsmilitarily and economically.Money is flowing out of poorcountries into the United States,in the interest of large Americancorporations.SG Asks For Discipline ReformBy PAULA SZEWCZYKEditorial AssistantThe Student Government Com¬mittee on Discipline has releasedformal demands for the reform ofthe legal status and disciplinaryprocedure of students in theUniversity.The demands are an outgrowthof several meetings held lastmonth as a result of an increase ofdrug charges brought before theUniversity Disciplinary Committee.The SG Committee recom¬mended that the composition of theDisciplinary Committee be changedto include an equal number of stu¬dents and faculty elected by thestudent body. The defendent wouldbe able to choose to be judged byan all-faculty group, an all-studentgroup, or a mixed group. Therewould be complete separationbetween the committee and theprosecutor.Procedural demands in the SGproposal are based on the proceed¬ings of civil courts. The student would have the right to cross-ex¬amine witesses against him andthe right to be informed of thecodes of the DisciplinaryCommittee.The SG Committee also re¬quested that all charges against astudent be written and be pre¬sented to the student several weeksbefore the hearing. The studentwould be guaranteed counsel andthe right to appeal.Code of rules are to be ratifiedby the student body under the SGproposal.Other SG proposals include com-Continued from Page 1ing in Kent. The FBI requestedthat the campus police arrest thestudent.The police acceded to the re¬quest but called Dean of StudentsCharles D. O’Connell, who toldthem to release the student im¬mediately. This was done, but onlyafter the student was informedthat the FBI was looking forhim. plete house autonomy in all rulesaffecting house members and noUniversity-wide policies concerningsexual morals or drugs. The com¬mittee also called for the clarifi¬cation of the nature of the Univer¬sity’s files on students and theright to determine who may haveaccess to them.The faculty Kalven Committee,currently looking into possible re¬forms of the Disciplinary Commit¬tee will meet before the end of thequarter with the SG Committee onprocedures until the Kalven Com¬mittee has made its report.University officials stated thatthere is nothing that they could doto stop the police entering dormi-ories when armed with the properwarrants. No university action willbe taken against the student, ac¬cording to Acting Dean of Under¬graduate Students Meyer Isenberg,however, because the Universityhas no official cognizance ofwrong-doing.Student Warned PreviouslyUHURU!... means Freedom! Freedom to deter¬mine your own life, earn human dignity,develop leadership. Freedom from racialstrife. Freedom for black and for white.Africa can give you perspective—blackor white. And Africa is ready to give now.Its people are ready to share their spirit,their lives, their strength.You can share in building Africa. Helpteach its young people, its teachers. Helpbuild its schools, its roads; train itsfarmers to grow better crops—to growstronger people. Now.This summer and fall Peace Corps willtrain Volunteers for Kenya, Nigeria, theIvory Coast, newly independent Swazilandand other developing African nations.Get involved. You’ll learn a lot aboutpeople, a lot about you. And a lot abouthelping people learn what you’ve learned.Apply for Peace Corps training. Do itnow.Peace CorpsWashington, D.C. 20525Attn.: Division of RecruitingComplete and mail today for additionalinformation about □ Africa□ Latin America □ East Asia/Pacific I□ North Africa/Near East/South Asia IIn Chicago the 35-minutelanguage aptitude test isgiven each Thursday at 3p.m. in the Peace Corpsoffice, 205 West WackerDr., Room 1510, Phone353-4992. Please bringcompleted application. | Name jAddress IICity State Zip IField of Specialization II! (Work Experience or College Major)II Date of (Expected) Graduation JApplications received before June 20 will beconsidered for training programs this summer;after June 20, for this fall.This advertisement donated by Friends of the Peace Corps.May 17, 1968. r r THE PfHCAGO MAROON 5Maroon 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.WORKChallenging . . . Interesting . . . Part-timeWork. Woodlawn Business Men's Associationis looking for a male executive secretary,for about 20 hours per week (flexible).$2.25/hour Call DO 3-5362THE CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW isoffering a desk near the window in an officewith a delightful old English atmosphere,undying affection, and a HANDSOME COM¬MISSION to an enterprising and responsiblestudent (preferably out not necessarily inthe Business School) in exchange for hisservices as Business Manager. Fringe bene¬fits include access to volumes of the finestcontemporary literature, congenial associates,a chance to make potentially useful personalcontacts in the fields of advertising andpublishing. Hours flexible, relations betweeneditorial and business staff excellent. Guaran¬teed annual income. Interested persons pleasecome to Ida Noyes 305 or call x3276 be¬tween noon and three weekdays. Or speakwith Wayne Meyer (Business School), DavidAiken, Jeff Schnitzer, or Mary Sue Leighton.Former University student leaving job forgrad school. Good job open as secretary-girlFriday in architect's office. Student withlight class load possible. Call Naomi at 427-5410.APARTMENT FOR SALECONDOMINIUM _Hyde Park 8. 55th StreetPrice $20,500 8, UP. DO 3-6842.HOUSES FOR SALEThree Bedroom HOUSE with cedar sidingand paneling inside. Two baths. Fireplace.Oil Heat. 3 car garage and storage on 25acres of hilly, wooded meadow and orchardland garden. Wildlife. 50 min. from Chicago.By Car. $50,000 or best offer. Phone 219—462-1593 this week.DELUXE CORNER RANCHCreiger 8. 87th Place. Fabulous 7'/j rooms,3 bedrms., den, l'/z ceramic baths, attachedgarage, central air-cond., large living room,formal dining room, carpeting, drapes, ap¬pliances, low $40's. Private. BA 1-7723 orSA 1-5478.HOUSE FOR SALESouth Shore deluxe Georgian 7 rooms,3 bdrms., formal dining room, paneled den 8>rec room, l'/2 ceramic baths, cent, air cond.,2 wd-burning fireplaces, w/w carpet, drapes,appliances, 2 car brick garage. Near 81stand Crandon. Upper 20'.s Private. Call375-7209WANTEDONE AAALE BIKE. Will pay $20 now forpossession at the end of school year. CallSlade Lander at 288-7961 or MU 4-6100,Ext. 5800.Respectable working college student needssummer residence near U.C. Imm. occu¬pancy. Call Edith at 734-0953 aft. 5.IN LOCO SORORIS still needs BIG SISTERS.For info., call BU 8-2333, late eves.Driver to take car to N.Y.C., late May orJune. Std. Shift. Call 538-1027. Share Exp.Volkswagen car rack, 624-3320, No. 36 S.ROOMMATE WANTEDMale roommate wanted to share 7 room,furnished, air-conditioned, Northside apt.with 2 other students. $50 a month forsummer. Call evenings at 935-8469.ANNOUNCEMENT"I don't care if people have girls in theirrooms. I don't care if people have inter¬course on the front lawn at noon." KarlBemesderfer, Assistant Dean of the College.SUBLETSublet with option to renew Oct. 1. Onegigantic room in basement. Complete kitch¬en. Available June 15. $75/mo. In SouthShore W. nearby campus bus (I I I) stop.MU 4-5949, evenings.June 1-Sept. 30. 4 room unfurn. apt. 76th &Yates. $110. 6 blks. to Rainbow Beach, 3 toI.C. Campus bus route. "S" 221-9469 after5 p.m.Apt. to sublet. June 10-Sept. 10: 3 bdrms.,,, living rm, din. rm„ 2 baths, spacious kit¬chen. Furn., convenient to Campus. $150/mo.Call 643-1559 or 643-9462. Really big 8, beautiful 4 bedroom apt. June15-Sept. 15. $180/month. Furn. 667-8928.2 bdrm. fur. apt. to sublet on 1 IT Campus.June 1 to Sept. 1. 842-3587.Will sublet 1 bdrm. apt. to U. employee.667-5026 after 5, $124/month.2V2 rms. for Summer Sublet. Option to takelease in Fall. Unfurnished. 667-3363.Sublet June 15-Sept. 5110 Kenwood. Furn.1 brm. $115.50 or bargain. 643-6226.Large, cool, neat Basement Apt. 3Vi rm. c.6/15-9/15. $85/mo. 5130 Kimbark. 643-3518.SUMMER ROOMMATEUnusually nice apt. Own room, dbl. bed.Good location, near everything. Live withtwo other girls. For more information, callApartment for four girls to sublet for thesummer. Call 324-7637.Well furnished, clean apt. for 2, $140/month.June—Sept. 54th 8. Drexel, Ml 3-6000, Ext.130.Summer Sublet (possible option for Fall).Furnished, 6 rooms, 53rd 8. Woodlawn. 643-6669.Sublet 6 room, 4 bedrm, furnished, air-conditioned apt. to female students. 57th &Dorchester. 324-2864.Great apt. 57th 8, Maryland, 6 rms, 4 bed¬rooms, June-Oct., 5 min. from Campus.$165/mo. 2 bathrooms, 288-4303.Summer sublet/own room in house withwasher & dryer. 5450 S. Dorchester. $43/month (female). 493-5419.Large, airy ROOM near Lake, shopping,and I.C. Call 493-6698 for Rich.15 months. Completely furn. 3 bedrms. 2baths, washing machine, June 15, 1968 —Sept. 15, 1969. $167/month. Call 288-4004.5-Vj rm Apt. $100. June-Oct. 643-5060.ICHEAP! 53rd Harper. June-Sept. ICHEAP!Call BJ 110 or X3562, room 114.IIFURNISHED SPACIOUS 6 room APT.!!VERITABLE PALACE. Summer sublet. Falloption. 7 rooms, 3-V2 bedrooms, 2 baths,open veranda. South Shore. Call 363-4615,evenings.Own room, 57th 8, Drexel. $40/mo. DO 3-7548.'Parents say you can't live with him/her??Defeat Middle-class Morality!! 2 Apts., 1-V4rms. Each, 57th 8< Blackstone. Sublet eitheror both, option for Fall. 667-8283 or 752-4934.Sublet June 1, 54th S, Harper, 5-V2 largerms. Furn. 363-5607. $175 or best offer.Spacious 8-rm townhouse. Kitchen, parlor,dining and living rooms downstairs; fourbedrooms upstairs. 2 blocks from campus.$200/month, summer quarter. JUNE RENT-FREE. 667-7246.Sublet 3 rm. Madison Park apt. Fully furn.Pref. U. of C. married couple. $103/mo.6/15 to 9/1. 924-0158.4 rooms, 6/15—9/15, $100, Furniture, 61stand Ellis, BU 8-6610, Ext. 3121.SACRIFICE. 3 rooms, cool, light, $95, incl.utils. June-Sept. Gd. Bldg. 955-8664.3 bedrooms, living, dining, kitchen, 2 baths,57th 8. Ellis, $135. 6/16-10/15. 752-5868.Summer Sublet, I-V2 rooms, very reas., Fallopt., cool in summer, nr. Lake. HY 3-3802,eves.Just painted! Clean 2 bedroom furn. apt.54th 81 Greenwood, 667-1353, eves.HUGE HOUSE — 10 rooms 8. basement.6 bedrooms. Completely furn. Individs orgrps. Do your thing. 5604 Maryland. 667-5012.Large, furn. apt. 1900 sq. ft. 7 rooms, 2baths, air conditioning. Washer, dryer, dish¬washer. Exc. HI-FI. T.V. Blackstone be¬tween 57th S> 58th. Available June 1-Dec. 23.Call 493-6535 after 6:00 P. M.HOUSE, June-Sept. From 1-6 people needed.Furn. Washing machine. Will rent to groupor rent individual rooms. 684-4999.CAMBRIDGE SUBLET6 RM. 3 Bedrm. $150/mo. June 1—Sept.l, R.Leibman. 35 Brookline St. Cambridge.RENT4V2 rooms, $112, with option for Oct. lease.UNUSUALLY elegant 1 BR apt. w/lakeview, pool, etc. 5500 South Shore Dr., June1, $200. PL 2-3800, Apt. 510.FoodDrinkPeople311 E. 23rd Street2 Blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 1.1 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400#mtcrb 2 to share 3 man apt. in Hyde Park. $50/mo.Summer opt. for Fall. Evenings, 684-3644. South Shore Townhouse, 2 bedrooms, car¬peted, yard & lawn, garage. $135/month.Available July 1st. Call 626-1388.2Vi RM. APT. NEW FURNITURE.Overlooks garden. Married students only.$124. util. incl. July 288-7047.Lge. 1-Va rm. basement apt. furn. or unfurn.$75/mo. unfurn. Avail. June 15, 5437 Woodlawn. 324-0969.BE-INAfter the BE-IN, Saturday, May 18, comedig the BIG BLUES ROCK SHOW at theHarper Theatre. 8:00. $1.50.MIXED MEDIALIGHT SHOW, music, film, poetry, mime.Coming to Quantrell. May 25th.WORSHIPDUKES OF KENT, Jazz Worship Service,United Church of Hyde Park, 53rd 8< Black-stone. Sunday, May 19, at 4 P.M.CAMPING EQUIPMENT RENTALCamping Equipment Rental: Tents, SleepingBags, Stoves, Lanterns, Contact Hickory atExt. 2381 or 324-1499.DOMESTIC MAID SERVICENEED your house cleaned by trustworthyservants? ? ? Let Fanny do it! I I FannyMaid Service, Ml 3-3543.RENTAL SPACEMin. 500 sq. ft. work space with electricoutlets needed for 3 months, beg. June.Inexpensive. 643-6039.TYPING SERVICELAST MINUTE MSS. Expert Typing Ser¬vice. Fast 8< Accurate. Call Judy 858-2544.FILMSCOMING NEXT WEEK: Boris Karloff, Vin¬cent Price, Peter Lorre, W.C. Fields, Bar¬ney Oldfield, Mogubgub Ltd.It would be a chime to missLEAGUE OF GENTLEMENSat. 7:15-9:30 Cobb Hall CEFCOMING NEXT WEEK:Mind-Bender FlicksMastriano and Loren. Friday, May 17.THE ORGANIZER. 8 $ 10 P.M. Cobb.BLUE GARGOYLE presents OCCURENCEAT OWL CREEK BRIDGE and THEWORLD OF APU, directed by Saf|ajit Ray,music by Ravi Shankar. 8 P.M.SOIREEPOL. ECON. CLUB SOIREE TONIGHT.It is said this event should NOT be missed.CATERERSHAVING a party or feel tired of cooking—Let Mary Lou do it for you! I I HorsD'oeuvres, menus, buffet, and family din¬ners. Mary Lou Catering. Ml 3-3545. Tryour original Leberkase.DRAFTGive the Draft your funky finger And thengo dig the STAGE SHOW at the HarperTheatre, Saturday, May 18, 8 p.m.DANCING IN THE STREETSCome to a super-party (BE-IN?) on Sat¬urday, May 18, on the 5700 Block of Ken¬wood. Bring food, music, balloons, flowers,etc. For further info., call Spring FestivitiesCommittee, SA 1-8886.PERSONAL PROBLEMS CLINICVery Coincidentally, These Were the FIRSTTwo Letters We Received:Dear Sir:I am the President of a major urbanuniversity in the midwest. As you canimagine this can be a rather trying jobat times, what with sit-ins and panty raidsand other activities that the boisterousstudents here occasionally engage in. Butwhat disturbs me much more than theirengaging in such relatively harmlessactivities is their continuing involvementwith grass.Although it has been made dear tothe students time and again that they shouldkeep off grass they continue to flaunttheir defiance everywhere on campus. Ithas been estimated that at least 80% ofJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOOD *PL 2-2870. PL 2-8190. DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd the undergrads and 65% of the gradstudents have been on grass during theirstay here. And many of them were on grasseven in high school. Don't they realize thatthis sort of activity can lead to worseactions in the future? What has happenedto traditional respect for authority?What can I do?—Perturbed Proxyme, cffKiMQ.mwot/lK.\t i V i W W. Wil J , May w 3968V Fi Dear Perturbed:We have decided to let the 80% andthe 65% answer your three questions.Responses will be printed as soon as wereceive them. Please bring or send to theMaroon Business Office, Ida Noyes Hall,Room 304, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago-60637.Dear PPC:I'm a first year student from the Westand have had minimal experience withdrugs and dealing. However, I do smokeand have witnessed one bust and heardabout several others in Hyde Park andWoodlawn. My Personal Problem is — Howcan I keep from being busted, or rather,how can I tell who is a NARC?Good Luck! — T.O.K., T., we'll try (and if anyone has anyadditions or corrections, PLEASE send themto the Maroon Business Office):A NARC around U.C. can be any color,size, or style — a South Side black whorides a bicycle; any hippy-looking person —most often a male; a Hyde Park regular —someone you see everywhere and have noreason not to trust; or a North Sidewhite with dirty white sneakers.He's often a bit older (22-23 8> up to40's). If white, he can be a little straighterthan you'd expect. And so can come oneither as new to getting stuff or wise andexperienced.He always wants "to get some for hisfriends," but also can usually turn you on.He starts with nickel bags, later wantskeys, and is always interested in the HardStuff — especially hash and opium whichhave to come from Foreign Countries.He knows many people who have beenbusted (speaking of coincidences), but hisplace has been untouched. He talks littleabout the MAN being everywhere (unlikeeverybody else).He can be astonishingly open — 4 ofmy friends & I were buying shoes at Sakswhen a fat, sloppy-looking white approachedus and said "Say, where can you get somegood acid around this town?"But, usually he's rather cool — hehangs around bars, restaurants (especiallyon 53rd Street), dorms, and, of course, thePoint and casually opens conversations,making obvious attempts to be friendly.He talks little about himself and gets knownas a 'regular guy' who might buy some stuff.He's willing to go almost anywhere topick up what he wants and is delightedwhen you can get it easily — so he doesn'thave to go thru changes with his oldsupplier wno has mysteriously disappeared.He's rather unparanoid, considering thatyou might be the Man, also.He can always get enough money tobuy shit and rarely disputes your prices,even when you burn him. He MAY givehimself away by "observing" all the timeand asking too many questions. He's verywiling to discuss how unorganized dealingis in Hyde Park and how much more moneycould be made if only you could get beyondyour middle man (whose identity he's reallyafter unless you happen to be the middleman).He usually avoids personal conversations.He also goes to many parties and maydrink alot. Has very shifty eyes and isnoted for having been seen at a party ina place which is busted the next day ...he obviously has discovered a place whichusually has the stuff ... few parties arebusted while happening.And by now, you've probably read aboutthe guy (some months back In the NEWREPUBLIC) who slept with a chick til hefound out who her supplier was, then turnedthem both in.Occassional I y, the NARC (in this case,usually a very hip spade) seems to knoweveryone in Hyde Park since he grew uphere (which is the reason he got the job).Finally, he's usually a friend of afriend ... if someone you don't know well,but have seen around, asks you for stuffor offers to turn you on, better skip it.Anyway, T., be very cool and don't trustanyone too much — even your best friendswon't tell you ....—PPCP.S. Generally, a NARC is not supposed togrow a beard and remember, even ifyou're clean, the Man can bust you forobscene pictures (it happened in Mil¬waukee — with Beardsley Posters).PERSONALWhat did little Ernest croon,in his death at afternoon?does?SLIBS: Wouldn't a GADFLY have beenjust as effective? ? ?"I've been touched by the Fifth One. . .' The HUTCH GALLERY is a non-profitmaking organization—Help save it— s* iTONIGHT, 7-11.30 P.M.ISRAEL-TWENTY YEARS AFTERAN ARAB VIEWLecture by Dr. Fayez SayighSaturday, May 18, 8:00 P.MBreasted Hall, 1555 East 58th streetSinai Kosher Sausage Corporation-nightly at the BANDERSNATCH.PJ—Maybe your baby will be back in timefor Father's Day.RICCARDO: A deputy of Christwho sees these things andnonetheless permits reasonsof state to seal his lips—who wastes even one day inthought hesitates even for anhour to life his anguished voicein one anathema to chill theblood of every last man on earth—that Pope is ... a criminal.COMING!—THE DEPUTYTrial of GUNNAR KNUTSEN. For inductionRefusal, 10 am, Mon., May 20, at the Fed¬eral Building, Jackson & Dearborn inJudge Will's Court (23rd Floor).RAVI SHANKAR at the BLUE GARGOYLE.How many people realize that Schnitzer gotover 9% of the vote for President of SG atthe SPAC Caucus? Now that you know thatwhat are you going to do?Eat?Blue Gargoyle: Monday nights the BEST inavant-garde cinema.BLUES ACID ROCKDig the Rhythm Blues of the Soulful X,the Exotics, the Knights of Soul, theRealistics, and Jimmy Jackson.Only $1.50 at the Harper Theatre, 8 P.M.This Saturday, May 18Where have you gone Joe Dimaggio? ?to the BANDERSNATCH?HIGH-RANKING U. C. OFFICIAL:"Short of shooting the cops,what else could we do."You could sue them for unreasonableSEARCH and SEIZURE of Kool-Aid.Actors in Politics! Professors on the stage?P.E.C. SOIREE, Friday, May 17.Bike riding is a better trip than LSD.Sell your bike to Slade Lander.He's doing a story for TIME on bike tripping.Get your Henri Buisson MEURSAULT andBuche Lorainne Cheese only at the PartyMart—take a trip to South Shore and pickit up for Sunday Brunch or a Saturday nightcelebration. What better idea for these fine,funky, freezing days. . .Coming in June . . . Hochhuth's THEDEPUTY. Shoreland Hotel.(Continued on Page 7)IGNORANCEISSLAVERY!The Illinois Democratic Primarycoming up in June is NOT apresidential preference primary.Rather, its purpose is to dirpctlyelect delegates, representingPresidential hopefuls to theConvention in August.It is therefore imperative thatyou know whom each delegateis supporting.If elected as delegates, COUS¬INS & YOUNG WILL SUPPORTEUGENE MC CARTHY.UNIVERSITY THEATER PRESENTSTHEY REACHED FOR HIS GUNa comedy by Paul O’AndreaMay 17, 18, and 19 at 8:30Reynolds Club Theatre (57th and University)Tickets $2, $1 for students at Reynolds Club Desk and at the door.Ml - 3-0800 Ext. 3572g mmmm mMaroon 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, May 17SEMINAR: (Committee on Social Thought),"The Outlook of Personal Knowledge,"Michael Polanyi, Oxford University. So¬cial Science 106, 4 p.m.SECRET MEETING: (Intervarsity ChristianFellowship), "Underground Church," ledby Deacon Tom. 5704 Harper, apt. 202,7:30 p.m.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: (Solo Ensemble),music by Ockeghem and his contempora¬ries; Howard M. Brown, director. BondChapel, 8:30 p.m. DRAMA: "Cain," by Lord Byron. Rocke¬feller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.FOLKSING: Israeli and American folk songs.Hillel House, 8:30 p.m.THEATER: (University Theatre), "TheyReached for His Gun," by Paul D'Andrea.Reynolds Club Theatre, 8:30 p.m.RADIO SERIES: (Conversations at Chicago),"Advertising and Image Making," Com¬mander Edward Whitehead, Schweppes;James H. Lorie, School of Business; Ken¬neth J. Northcott, moderator. WFMT 98.7,10:30 p.m.Saturday, May 18SPRING IN: Bands, BYO (food); Kenwoodbetween 57th and 58th, 1 p.m.LECTURE: (The College), "How PoetsTalk," Arthur Heisermen. Breasted Hall,10:30 p.m.TELEVISION SERIES: "Charlando," aSpanish language program. WGN-TV,Channel 9, 11:30 a.m.DRAMA: "Cain," by Lord Byron. See Fri¬day's listing.CONCERT: (Folklore Society), Skip Jameson piano and guitar. Ida Noyes CloisterClub, 8:30 p.m.THEATER: (University Theatre), see Fri¬day's listing.CONCERT: (University Symphony Orches¬tra), "William Tell Overture," Rossini;"Pictures at an Exhibition," Moussorgsky- Ravel; "Symphony Opus 21," Webern;Richard Wernick, conductor. Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Middle East Center StudentsAssociation), "An Arab View: IsraelTwenty Years After," Fayez Savegh, Sen¬ior Consultant to the Kuwaiti Mission.Breasted Hall, 8 p.m.FILM: (Contemporary European Films),"League of Gentlemen," Cobb Hall, 7:15and 9:30 p.m.Sunday, May 19JAZZ WORSHIP SERVICE: (United Churchof Hyde Park), Dukes of Kent. 53rd St.and Blackstone Ave., 4 p.m.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "TheNew Man," Reverend E. Spencer Parsons.Rockefeller Chapel, 11 a.m.RADIO SERIES: (From the Midway),"Privacy: A Constutional Right in Searchof Definition," Louis Henkin, ColumbiaUniversity. WHPK 88.3 FM; 9 p.m. (Satur¬days); WFMG 100.3, noon (Tuesdays), 6a.m. (Fridays).TELEVISION SERIES: (The University ofChicago Round Table), "Changes in SovietHegemony," Andrew C. Janos, Universityof California; Chauncey D. Harris, andJeremy Azrael. Channel 11, 5:30 p.m.RADIO SERIES: Contemporary ChamberPlayers. WHPK 88.3 FM, 7:10 p.m.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: (Solo Ensemble),see Friday's listing.DRAMA: "Cain," see Friday's listing. THEATER: (University Theatre) see Fri¬day's listing.Monday, May 20LECTURE: (South Asia Seminars), "NewApproach to Bhakti and the Bhakti Move¬ment," Dr. Krishna Sharma, Delhi Uni¬versity. Foster Lounge, 4:10 p.m.TRIAL: Trial of Gunnar Knutsen for induc¬tion refusal. Monday, May 20 at the Fed¬eral Building, Jackson and Dearborn,Judge Will's court, 23rd floor.GENERAL NOTICES"BIG SISTERS": The Women's House Presi¬dents' Committee has instituted a "bigsister" program for entering female stu¬dents to help them adjust to life at theUniversity. Students interested in parti¬cipating may sign up in the dormitoriesor call 288-2333.TENNIS CLUB: The East End Tennis Clubwill hold a meeting in the basementmeeting room of the Co-op supermart onWednesday evening, May 22, at 7:30 p.m.The club uses the clay courts located at53rd St. and Lake Shore Dr. New mem¬bers, both men and women are invitedto join.INTERNS: There will be a meeting of Uni¬versity of Chicago students who have ap¬pointments as government interns in Wash¬ington this summer, on Friday, May 24,at 3 p.m. NEWS BRIEFSH. STEFAN SCHULTZ, Professor of Germanat the University, will deliver the me¬morial address at a special exhibit come¬morating the 100th anniversary of thebirth of Stefan George (1868-1933), oneof the leaders of the European symbolismmovement in poetry. He will speak onMay 25 at the Scheller National Museum,Marbach, West Germany.THE DEPARTMENT OF STATISTICS hasreceived a two-year $102,700 grant fromthe National Science Foundation. WilliamH. Kruskal, chairman of the department,said the grant will be used primarily forresearch being done by Leo A. Goodman,professor of statistics and sociology. Good¬man's research includes studies of thepossible effects of birth control methodson the sex-ratio at birth, the incidenceof anomalies in children, and the relation¬ship between the incidence of anomoliesand birth-order.CONFERENCE: Students from 56 Chicagoarea high schools will attend the Univer¬sity's annual Biomedical Career Conferenceon Saturday, May 18, for a firsthand lookat modern medical research and practice.Approximately 200 students and 50 teacherswill attend the 8:15 a.m. to 3 p.m. pro¬gram, which will be highlighted by 25labore^v-y demonstrations and a paneldiscussion on "Problems in Organ Trans¬plantation "mmm mmmmmMore Maroon Classified Ads(Continued from Page 6)ROOMS FOR RENTLarge, furn. front room. Porch, closet, 8<cooking. Quiet Building. Good trans. Couple.Call PL 2-5827. 6418 S. Maryland Avenue.LOOKING FOR A ROOM WITH SEXX????appeal? We have private, furnished, inex¬pensive rooms and suites with kitchen,laundry, and recreational facilities—in ourfriendly building at 5555 Woodlawn. (N. E.comer of 56th & Woodlawn). Share the bestof both apartment and dorm life: independ¬ence without humdrum responsibilities.Why not spend the summer with us, atour convenient campus location? Stop byor call 752-2989 or 752-9704.POLITICSThe MAYOR will dig his nose at the HAR¬PER THEATRE, Saturday, May 18, 8 P.M.FOR SALERETURN TRIP. U.C. Charter Flight. (Lon-don-Chicago). Sept. 20. $110. 493-7038.Double bed, $20; Coffee table, $8. 643-6909.FURNITURE BONANZA. The whole apart¬ment must go. Everything in good condition,everything negotiable. Call 643-7004.1961 JAGUAR, 3.4 Mark II Sedan, Excel¬lent Condition. Radio, Overdrive. 684-7884.For Sale: Student furniture 8, '65 HONDAS90. 493-3136.Bureau, shelves, filing cabinet, lamps, ta¬bles, ALL FOR SALE! Call 752-8282.Beat up English Bike. Runs but needs fixing& cleaning. $10 or best offer. Call BU 8-6610,room 3127.GERMAN SHEPARD DOG. Male 1 yearA.K.C. Phone 312-276-2068.CITROEN DS 1963, Excellent condition; lowmileage, gas consumption, one owner, $750.Call 667-0725.Gibson single pickup hollow body/guitar—$55. Harmony 420 guitar amp. $55. CallHale Hurst at 29 Hitchcock. Will bargain.12 VOLT battery. $5. 624-3320, No. 36 S.1966 YAMAHA YDS 3 250 CC. Exc. Cond.w. alarm. Also, new helmets. 493-5346, even¬ings.SOFA, chest of drawers, end-table, bed. Allexcellent condition. Call 324-3612.Electric typewriter w. table. $40. June De¬livery: 684-1365.'62 CORVAIR. Auto trans. reas. cond. Mustsell. $175. Will bargain. 288-4910 after 5.1967 Bultaco Metrella. 250 cc. New—justbroken in (200 miles). Roadracer, fastest250 made. 80 mph. in 12 sec. Must sell.$550 or best offer (includes Bell helmet).$750 new. Call David at HY 3-8335.LOSTNotebook from Modern Art Class. If found,please call 493-9533. Reward.COMEDYTHEY REACHED FOR HIS GUN. May 17,18, 19. Reynolds Club Theatre 8:30 P.M.Tickets $2—$1 with I.D.WORK WANTEDWork wanted as hospital orderly. Leavemessage at either 285-5438 or 624-1262.LINGUISTICSTHEY REACHED FOR HIS GUNWho reached for whose gun? FELINESFoster parent wanted for female calico cat.Call 667-7675.TRAVELBurn someplace else! Marco Polo travel.288-5944.WEEKEND TOURS by International HouseAsn. Friday (6 pm) thru Sunday, Char¬tered bus to ST. LOUIS, June 7-9, Fare 8,lodging, $20. NIAGARA FALLS, June 21-23,Fare 8> lodging, $29. Bus leaves from Int.House, 1414 E. 59th St. Inq. evenings orSat. afternoon, FA 4-8200.BLUES TOMORROWTHE GREATEST BLUESMAN LEFT!SKIP JAMESSATURDAY, NIGHT, 8:15, IDA NOYES.APARTMENTS TO SHARERoommate to share 5 rm. apt. with 2 grad,males. Available now 8« forever. 955-0177.WANTED for summer and/or next year, mor f room with 2 tolerant girls. Own fur¬nished room. $45. 53rd 8. Dorchester. Call493-6761.GIRL needed to share apartment, June thruSeptember. Block from campus. Own room.$35.00 per month. BU 8-6610. Room 2321 or3407.Want 1 girl to share apt. for summer. Ownlarge room. Air cond. Beautifully furnished.T.V. 57th 8. Dorchester. $55/month. 643-3348.Three roommates needed for Psychedelic 4bedroom apt. for summer and option fornext year. $45/month. 53rd 8< Woodlawn. CallJohn at 667-4667.Need 2 groovy roommates for summer/optionfor lease in Fall. Nr. Law School. Call667-4667, Mr. K.Girl roommate. Own room. $50/month. 1block from Campus. June 7-Sept. 7. 363-9112.Wanted: Person to share Apartment duringsummer on 57th 8< Kenwood. $50/mo. Con¬tact or leave message New Dorms 1221.2 female grads, wanted to share large flatin Hyde Park. Near Lake. Own room. $50/month. June and/or October. Call 363-6446.3 girls need rm-mate, 6-15 to 9/1. 1400 E.57th, Air cond.. Own bedrm., $65/mo. 684-7215.Wanted—F. rmmate. for summer. Own rm.54th 8. Dorchester. $62.50. 324-6640.One roommate wanted. Own room. Fur¬nished. Piano. 5427 Blackstone. 363-5780.Need Female Roommate. Own room/bath.Unique. Air cond. Furn. 55th 8< Dorchester.Summer/Fall. June thru Sept. $65/mo. 684-5366.Roommates wanted to share luxuriouslyfurn. 8 rm. apt. $62/month, incl. utils., ex¬tras. Call BU 8-6610, rm. 2315 or 2322. Leavemessage.Second roommate (female!) for 4 rm. apt.2 bdrms., kitchen, living room. Furnished.30 seconds from laundry, co-op, I.C. 4minutes to Point. 55th 8< Cornell. $55/mo.324-7813.Female students wanted to share 6 roomfurnished apt. for summer. Own room,air-conditioned. 324-2864.Roommate wanted for summer/next year,4 bedroom apt., 3 blocks from campus.$48/month each. Graduate students only.Call Mike at 684-7449. 1-2 females to share Ig. furn. 7 rm. apt.near 57th 8< Kimbk. own rm. $35.50. Jun-Sept. 288-4910 after 5.1-2 men to share airy 6 rm, 2 bath apt.nr. campus, summer. $50/mo. 363-1949.2 female grads needed from June 17 toSept. 17. Apt. fully furnished. Air cond. $33.per mo. per person. Stereo 8< TV. Call 363-1245.MORE PERSONALSReturn Shapiros early, avoid the rush.Due Monday, May 27th.ALL COMPARISONS BETWEEN PETERSTEALING FROM FARMER MCGREGOR'SCARROT PATCH, AND PETER RABINOW-ITZ WINNING NCD'S MONOPOLY TOUR¬NAMENT ARE HEREIN DENOUNCED ASINVIDIOUS, UNFOUNDED, AND NOT VERYNICE AT ALL.the Hutch Gallery is Commons by dayit is uncommon by nightChicago Science Fiction Society—Meetingand Battle. May 21, Ida Noyes Hall SunParlor. 7:30.OLD FASHION BOWLING,FREE AT IDA NOYES.ALL THIS WORK, ALL THIS TIME devotedto reducing discrimination and eliminatingsegregation and now Black People are de¬manding SEGREGATION. Would someoneplease explain this. They refuse to sayanything.Silence is consent, SPLIBS.Male grad seeks female passenger for 10day trip to San Francisco. Leave June 8-9,363-9292. Apt. 421."I'VE BEEN TO THE TOP OF THE MOUN¬TAIN"—A liturgical happening following an Ecu¬menical Supper on the vigil of The Ascension.—Wednesday, May 22, 6:30 P M.—Hyde Park Union Church (5600 S. Wood¬lawn).Tickets only $1.00. Must be purchased byMonday, May 20, from either Calvert orChapel House.Friday night frenzy—Ersnatch Band, 10-11pm, at the BANDERSNATCH!I'm the Seventh Son—SEBASTIAN MOONDedicate yourself to the peace which passethall understanding.OCCURENCE AT OWL CREEK BRIDGEand THE APU TRILOGY, PART IIIat the BLUE ARGOYLE57th 8i UniversityFriday 8< Saturday, May 17 8> 18, 8:00 P.M.Dear Anonymous—I hate needless deaths.Consider me yours. Elaine.MIMI—please write—Love, Auntie.SUN TIMES: "Hippies are moral as well asmental dropouts."Jeffery: Charity begins at home.Shag—Are you going to take that lyingdown?SVCG meeting to discuss resistance workin Hyde Park this summer, 10:00 P.M.,Tuesday, May 21, at 5515 South University,in Jeff Blum's apartment. Call 363-2540for more information."Don't push the table," Persikov said withhatred. The visitor turned a frightenedglance at the table, at the far end of whichin a moist dark aperture, a pair of eyesgleamed lifelessly like emeralds. They exudeda deadly chill. WHAT KIND OF TOWN USES RED BAL¬LOONS FOR MONEY? ?See May 17, 18, 19. Reynolds Club Theatre.8:30 P.M.SRH—Wait until exams are over—JSHJSH—I can't—SRHSRH—Wait until exams are over—JSHAN EVENING OF FOLKSINGING.At Hillel. May 17th, 8:30 P.M.Middle East Center Students Associationpresents Dr. Fayez Sayigh speaking on"ISRAEL—TWENTY YEARS AFTER, ANARAB VIEW" Saturday, 8:00, Breasted Hall.GRANDMA—Please do to the doctor! ! ! M.Dinner tonight—whole meal: dessert & bev¬erage. 95* at the BS.The Maroon Classified Ad Secretaryis OUT-OF-DATE.BARTLETT SWIMMING—7-9 P.M.,Monday through Thursday, Co-ed.Swim at BARTLETT—get into shape forthe long hot summer.India's greatest film, Satjajit Ray's APUTRLOGY, Friday 8. Saturday, 8 P.M. 50C.Sound Track by RAVI SHANKAR.Writers workshop. PL 2-8377.EUROPE'S SUPEREGO SPEAKSMay 17, 18, 19. Reynolds Club.Tra la, it's May, the lusty month of May.YOGA YOGA YOGA YOGA YOGAExercises, concentration, and meditationlifts consciousness beyond existential hopeand despair to tranquility and ecstasy.YOGI SRI NERODE DO 3-0155.Lats chance for tickets! YAFFA YARKONI.$1.50 at HILLELWould the ORGANIZATION who removedALL of the may 3rd Maroons from theBusiness Office recently, kindly return atleast 10 of them or we will have no wayof billing our advertisers. Thanks."The politics of confrontation may shakepeople into thinking about things differently.On the other hand, it may shake them intojelly."—Robert Hardman, Columbia '69.Art for art sake, Shapiros for your sake.Return for our sake, May 27th goodness sake.Kosman: "Hmm. This place smells likemethanol." Sure ,..BLUES AT IDA NOYES !!!!???!!!!SKIP JAMES, Saturday night, 8:15.HELIX — made posters don't cost morethan the average but the difference inQUALITY is hard to believe — send yourphoto to HELIX, LTD. i\ West HuronStreet, Chicago, Illinois-60^. or call formore information at 642-9682. Only $3.50for a 18x24 poster. Your parents want toknow what you do with your time — sendthem a poster!DOYLE and BABBIC are the men to stayaway from unless you want to be withoutKOOL-AID for the rest of the quarter!Madame CIA is on her way.Why are there STILL no black teachersat U-High?It's such a long way from here to Denver—Will you write? MSL.Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393THE MUSIC THEATRE OF HYDE PARKpresentsFINIAN’S RAINBOWFriday and Saturday - $2.50 and $1.50St. Thomas Apostle Auditorium5467 S. Woodlawn Ave. - 8:30 p.m. THE LAST MAROON (Moron, to theSophomoric) of this quarter will be datedMay 28. Please get all ads for this paperto the Maroon Business Office by Friday,May 24, at 3 p.m.BATTLE OF ALGIERS, Pontecorvo prize¬winning film, opens May 29, Chicago's new3-Penny Cinema, 2424 N. Lincoln. Specialstudent group rates. Call 733-4613.How does Carolyn do it? P.E.C. SOIREE.Help a speed freak to freely freak. Sellyour bike to Slade Lander.DICK GREGORY: "If Jews ever got tohear what white Gentiles say behind theirbacks to black Gentiles, then the Jewswould have taken their heads out of theirasses and burned this country down a longtime ago."There's only one cool place in Hyde Parkwhere you can relax with a Vala's Sundae,fresh-baked pastry, or CREPE a la GAU¬GUIN and that's Hyde Park's Newest andMost Famous Restaurant—THE MAD HAT¬TER, 53rd and Hyde Park Blvd. Come asyou are and bring your thing!A tasty morsel—THE ERSNATCH BANDwha? . . . 10-11 P.M. Friday.Your mother is your father in drag.ROOTS, DIG?Bluesman SKIP JAMES—Saturday night.Ida Noyes Hall. 8:15.BLUE GARGOYLE: APU TRILOGY, RAVISHANKAR, Friday 8, Saturday. * 8 p.m.Dale Pontius, a Democratic Peace Candi¬date from South Side's 2nd CongressionalDistrict, in an interview on WVON'S "HotLine" Monday night, claimed that he wasthe only peace candidate in the 2nd Districtsupporting Senator Eugene McCarthy forthe Presidential nomination.C'MON TO THE HUTCH GALLERY!SRH—"BONK," said Ellis, thereby sum¬marizing most of Western Civilization. JHS.Buy Holiday Magic Cosmetics.L.S.—Do you pygmies have little feet tooo?MOE RADINSKY '70 died of cancer onMarch 20, 1968. His friends are contributingto youth worx at the Bakka SettlementHouse in Jerusalem. Contributions can bemade or sent to Hillel House, 5715 S. Wood¬lawn.GRAFFITIRENO, NEVADA-KILL ALL HIPPIESAND NIGGERS!UNIVERSITY THEATREPRESENTSBY LORD BYRONROCKEFELLER CHAPELTHURSDAY thru SUNDAYMAY 16,17,18,19 at 8:30ALL TICKETS $1.50AT THE REYNOLDSCLUB DESKSPECIAL REPEATPERFORMANCEllfay 17, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7 iiSPECIAL“PEACE OF MIND"OFFER*Wills • stocks certificates • income tax records • passports • mortgages •birth certificates • real estate deeds • insurance policies • coin and stampcollections • bonds • medical reports • jewelry • automobile titles •contracts • trust agreementsMany of these would be difficult or impossible to replace if they werestolen, lost or burned.All of your valuable papers and property need the protection and securityof a University National Bank safe deposit box. This is the best way to enjoy“peace of mind” with bank safety.It’s easy to rent a safe deposit box in our vault. The cost is as low as$5.00 per year. Just ask any of our officers. They’ll be happy to help you.*And to make it even easier, we have a special offer for new safe depositcustomers. We’ll give you your first six months rental free. So you can findout for yourself the “peace of mind” you can enjoy knowing your valuablesare receiving proper bank protection.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 41200strength and serviceG3 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association Federal Reserve System8 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 17, 1968