DAILY MAROON1966 1968rENDOF FILMi iPLEASE REWIND"JX.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOSEPH REGENSTEIN LIBRARYPHOTODUPLICATION DEPARTMENTDAILY MAROON1968 - 1969INCOMPLETE OR IMPERFECTAT THE TIME OF FILMING THIS WAS THEMOST COMPLETE FILE THAT COULD BELOCATED.IF AN IMPERFECT OR MISSING SECTION ISSUBSEQUENTLY LOCATED IT WILL BEFOUND AT THE END OF THIS REEL.; Last Daysof JResurrectionCityBy Michael Sorkin S' rSfnoF chi C/i& MAY.2 3 1S70WashingtonTHE FRAGILE house of cards the PoorPeoples’ Campaign had been buildingthese past months has collapsed underthe real “war on poverty” Washingtonis waging. It was made a little sturdiera week ago Wednesday, shored up bySolidarity Day and by the uniting spiritof the first jailings, but it was still ahouse of cards, clumsy, destructable,unpredictable, with huge gaps betweenits members, yet in many ways beau¬tiful and strong. SundayThe two Puerto Rican matrons listeningto Ralph Abernathy’s address to a pre¬march rally yelled in accents, “Sock it tothem, Abernathy!” Few Puerto Ricans livein Resurrection City. And the Mexican-Americans have their own quarters else¬where in Washington. No one knows whereAbernathy lives.The leadership of the Poor People’s Cam¬paign is, and has been, badly spilt on anumber of issues, Resurrection City fore-Turn to Page 2By Robert FactorVIOLENCE, so long a popular form ofAmerican expression, has now become anequally popular subject for conversation.Every newspaper and magazine writer inthe country has rushed (violently) to histypewriter to pour out as many words onthe subject as he can before his deadline.Last week’s Time and Newsweek carriedguns on their covers pointing out at us.Huntley and Brinkley exchange sad com¬ments on the murders, assasinations, wars,rapes, riots, and busts. During the com¬mercials everyone turns to his wife to re¬late his fear, anger, or frustration. Thewords soken, written, printed, telegraphed,related in every possible way, have grownup so that not only do they “cover” the is¬sue in the reportorial sense, they complete¬ly becloud it. Confused and frightened, wewalk down 53rd Street, apprehensive ofthose who pass, both black and white. Theair is charged. Citizens across the countryarm themselves for defense against eachother, and policemen, operating in a cli¬mate of fear, arm themselves now with twoguns — they too are scared.The response thus far has been one offright and defensiveness. A vicious cycle istaking place: we are in the process of adomestic arms race, a domestic escalationof mutual hate, fear, and distrust. Ourpreparations for violence, both at homeand abroad, increase, and the realizationgrows that if we do not do something now,we will be hopelessly engulfed.It is this climate which must be changed,the climate of violence, of the common andaccepted violation of human lives. To sub¬mit under the threat of violence, to allowoneself to be violated, is to lose some partof one’s own humanity. But to retaliatewith violence, while possibly avoiding im¬mediate self-destruction, will if carried outas a general policy, lead to ultimate totaldestruction. Violence is basically a destruc¬tive force, and we have no hope for ourhumanity if, in the end, the gun is ourchief defense.The only alternative is de-escalation, onboth sides. Those with power must be hu¬man themselves: they must allow thosewho have been violated through a depri¬vation of their humanity — of autonomy, offree choice and of power — to begin to beable to be human as well. They must relin¬quish some of their power so that all willhave power, so that all may be creative.Such a change must come through thedevelopment of new kinds of “leaders” andnew kinds of social and political groups,and from the interaction between thesepeople.By leaders, I refer not only to establishedpolitical figures, but to all those whom peo¬ple, at some time or another, respect andfollow: Presidents, alderman, social critics,organization chairmen, and so forth. Butwe are currently experiencing the situationwhere leadership and authority are fre¬quently neither believed nor trusted.An ideal leader should generate the sameexperiential process in his followers that agood teacher generates in his students. Agood teacher does not merely tell some¬thing, but guides, focusses, and providesinformation so that a student can gothrough the process of “discovering” some¬thing by himself. Similarly, a good leadershould be a focus for information, energy,and order within a group. He should not bebelieved simply because he is the leader,but should rather serve as a sensitive guidewho can aid people to autonomously workthrough ideas for themselves. Having ex¬perienced this process, an indvidual isable to say “here is the situation and howI feel about it, and this is what we are do¬ing in response and how I feel about that.”It does not take an “intellectual” to beable to do this — anyone who is truly hu¬man has the ability to feel.As people become more human, a “vi¬cious” cycle also can take place, only this will be one of increasing creativity. Work¬ing to become “experientially’ aware ofthemselves and of the world around them,individuals may say “I see how I (or somepart of the world) operate in a certain wayand am willing to really face this. I don’tlike the way I (or the world) am and Iwill involve myself to work for change.”As individuals become more aware ofthemselves and the world, more sensitiveand more human, they can put this towork, and the cycle expands.Leaders will also become more respon¬sive. For when they are selected for beingindividuals who focus and guide a group ora particular aspect of a group, they mustbecome, as it were by definition, respon¬sive. Now of course no groups or leadersare so ideal as to make this “definition”operate so simply, but groups made upof active, autonomous individuals whoseenergies are guided and focussed bya leader serve to encourage sensitivity andresponsiveness in their leader(s).Thus, it is the job of groups to select, in¬formally and formally, good leaders of theresponsive, focussing, human kind. It is al¬so the responsibility of these leaders to de¬velop humanness in the members of theirgroup, to elicit and encourage the autono¬mous working through of ideas andfeelings.This kind of “psychotherapy” is whatone aspect of community organizing can be.The SCLC Poor Peoples’ Campaign wasdesigned, among other things, to attemptthis. (For a vast number of reasons, theCampaign’s success in this area was mixed,but why is a subject for another analysis.)It hoped to bring the experience of pover¬ty to Washington, and to bring the human¬ness of the lawmakers and of the nation,however latent in some cases that may be,to respond to the conditions of poverty.This is to say that community organizingof the “group psychotherapy” type willforce established leaders to respond. Theactivity can take various forms, includingcivil disobediance, both to protest a givenlaw or condition, or when absolutely neces¬sary (contrary to Justice Abe Fortas’ opin¬ion expressed in the New York Times Mag¬azine of April 14), to “shock” individualsinto awareness as a last resort, and soforth.Once established leaders begin to re¬spond, once they realize it “is in the bestinterests of all” to be human to all, the vi¬cious cycle of creativity can overtake thatof destructive violence. For it is these lead¬ers who act to influence greatly, if not todetermine the climate of the large part ofpresent society. In the New York TimesMagazine of April 21, Harvard Universitypsychiatrist Robert Coles compares citi¬zen response to the initial school desegre¬gation in Atlanta and in New Orleans. Thedesegregation of schools in Atlanta was rel¬atively free of violence, while that in NewOrleans was marked by it. Dr. Colesplaces the cause for the different responsesnot in a difference in the racist characteror violent nature of the people, nor in theirdislike of the desegregation itself. Rather,the difference lies in the action of the lead¬ership. He writes: “I have seen how re¬sponsive people are to the subtle and not-so-subtle cues that Presidents, governors,mayors, newspaper editors, business lead¬ers, police-chiefs and school officials all manage to give from time to time.” In At¬lanta, these leaders were “determined thatno violence should occur, that the law beobeyed, that change be accepted and ef¬fected quickly and quietly. Men who mighthave rioted and worse got the messageand stayed home.” In contrast, he de¬scribes the political leadership of the cityof New Orleans and of the state of Louisi¬ana as having ‘said ‘yes’ to every fearfulracist and to thousands of alarmed citizens— who in such moments can go eitherway, toward panic, and violence, or towardaccomodation to change.”Chicago leaders, such as Joseph Woodsand Richard Daley can find it necessary torespond to group pressure. The armed cit¬izen anti-riot possee of Cook County Sher¬iff Woods was stopped in the courts. In ret¬rospect, it appears that the work of groupsRESURRECTIONContinued from Page Onemost. Abernathy is not, in general, highlyregarded for efficiency as an organizer.He is a rock. At a press conference hearticulately and eloquently decried thedesperate plight of the poor of America.The first question from the floor: “Sir,when is the mule train scheduled to ar¬rive?” 1300 newsmen covered SolidarityDay. More asked about the mule train thananything else.Byrd of West Virginia, scourge of demonWelfare, reintroduced the word “car¬buncle” into contemporary political usagein describing Resurrection City. Rejec¬tion City is not a carbuncle. It is a swamp.An old Negro woman explained the incred¬ible rains as God’s way of telling them togo home. God decided, however, to allowthe big march to take place unmolested.He held off on the rain until two hoursafter it had ended and I was trying tohitch a ride home. I did get a ride andthey took me all the way (well past Alex¬andria) because it was raining. The marchitself was hot — 500 people collapsed fromthe heat while 1,000 others held a hugewade-in in the reflecting pool. Thespeeches were all the same except forSenator Brook’s which was worse. Aswell as a sellout. Every minute of com¬promised eloquence reminded us that theKing really was dead. Everyone knew it,many said it, I felt it. Of course it wasn’tlike 1963.Crime is a major problem at Resurrec¬tion City. Within its walls there have been20 rapes and numerous thefts. This after¬noon, four white suburban kids werebeaten up and one white man was shot inthe City. This morning, stones, bricks, andflaming sticks were thrown at passing cars.The Park Police (just as brutal as the copsin Selma says Abernathy) threw tear gasgrenades into the City in reply. All this isapparently very attractive to tourists andthey flocked to the site all day.Some of the residents don’t care aboutthe Campaign, some do. All are frustrated.Frustrated by having nothing to do. Frus¬trated by having no real leadership thatcan tell them what to do. Frustrated by such as the Blackstone Rangers was muchmore effective in preventing riots on thesouh side than any possee could have been.In the current issue of Fortune, there isan article condemning Mayor Daly’s re¬sponse to lower class Chicagoans. The lo¬cal press in Chicago is often a force,through editorials and (selective) report¬ing, which acts to maintain the unbalancedcondition of power. But even they find itnecessary to reassess their views of his ad¬ministrative policy.If we are to survive, the climate must bechanged from one of hate to one of love,from one of death to one of life, and thegrowing escalation of violence, of humanviolation, must become one of understand¬ing, of creation.Communities must work together to de¬velop viable and effective groups with pos¬itive, creative programs for changing theclimate. They must direct their activityboth to increase their own popular sup¬port, and to encourage the development ofsensitive, creative leaders in the largersociety.The response of those who are violentnow, and those who are being violated,must be a creative, non-violent one, and itmust be meaningful and genuine. This willbe difficult, but we have no alternative.having no organization, no meaningfulmeans of participation. Frustrated by pov¬erty. Half of them are sick and most ofthe southern residents suffer from someform of malnutrition. All are poor. Theyare not rich as Governor Agnew, champ¬ion of delusion, piously insists. They arenot “lobbyists like we have in Annapolis.”They are poor. Very poor. Senator Stennis,on the other hand, is rich because hedoesn’t grow the food they need to survive.“How ya gonna keep wages low withouta lot of them poor around?”, Americaqueries.A call was received at the march head¬quarters from an old woman in Maryland.(March Headquarters: suburban house¬wives and college students (mostly whitemiddle-class) taking orders from the reg¬ular staff (mostly white middle class.)She wanted to know if the poor peoplecould use a nice meaty bone she had saved.Someone told her that provision had beenmade to feed the poor people but she in¬sisted. Down at the monument grounds thepolice proved more helpful if less sincerethan the woman by keeping the balky gen¬erators running so we could have light.The march was probably bigger than re¬ported and it was a good march. It mayhave been the last of the good marches. Iknew it would be a good march when theman introduced as the candidate for thePresidency of the United States turned outto be Harold Stassen. No one made asound. Non-Violence. I also knew it wouldbe a good march when the cheerful, eman¬cipated Czechoslovakian reporters askedabout the mules. And when the men fromTass told me that they were twoArmenians and two Russians. Integrated.The Poor People’s Campaign has wonsome few of its demands. But it has notwon nearly enough. Nor does it seem pre¬sently to be in any position to win more.If the Campaign is to move ahead, and itmust move ahead, it will have first tomend the disintegration within its ownranks. It must be fully united and com¬mitted again. Only this way can it hope towin back the needed support of an increas¬ingly alienated public. The Campaign maybe due for some new leadership. The truthof what the poor are saying will not col¬lapse with their campaign; their hopes forgetting the decent living they deserve inthe near future might.!The Chicago Maroon June 27, 1968If we are to survive, the climate must bechanged from one of death to one of life,and the growing escaltaion of violence,of human violation must become one ofunderstanding9 of creation.NEWS FROM THE QUADRANGLESUC and TWO Join on Model CitiesSign of the times: An anonymous observer comments on the local OEO program.SSA Professor Denies OEO Fund Misuse ChargeIrving Spergel, a professor in the Schoolof Social Service Administration, is in¬volved in the controversial Youth Man¬power Program of The Woodlawn Organi¬zation (TWO) and has replied publicly tocharges that the Office of Economic Op¬portunity (OEO) misused funds on theBlackstone Rangers,Spergel issued a statement Monday in¬cluding a chronology of his involvement, alisting of expenditures, and an expressionof his belief that “all obligations, includingthe submission of reports, have been metto the full letter and spirit of the law.”The Congressional subcommittee headedby Sen. John McClellan (D. Ark.), whichthis week continued hearings on the near-$1 million manpower program, had raisedquestions about Spergel’s role and hadsubpoenaed his records.During the hearings last week, formerBlackstone Ranger warlord George (Wa-tusi) Rose charged that the Rev. John Fryof the First Presbyterian Church had as¬ sisted Rangers in various crimes and hadallowed them to use the church for an ar¬senal and for marijuana parties. Fry calledRose a liar and testified that the Rangerswere instrumental in keeping peace inWoodlawn during recent civil disorderselsewhere.Anti war leaders have called an “emer¬gency” conference in Chicago this weekendto help try to assure the nomination of ananti-war candidate. There is a possibilitythat Sen. Eugene McCarthy, reknownedanti-war candidate, will address the meet¬ing.Leaders stressed, however, that the con¬ference had no official connection with theMcCarthy campaign. This is to ensure thatanti-war elements not happy with Sen. MeCarthy will still come forward and givetheir views. The McClellan subcommittee is investi¬gating whether the OEO’s grant, to financea demonstration project under the Man¬power Training Act, in effect subsidizedcrimes committed in Woodlawn by theRangers, many of whose leaders weresalaried under the project.According to leaders, the meeting has twoprimary goals:• First, to dramatize for political leaders,particularly in the Democratic party, thedegree to which the public opposes, thenomination of candidates whose “policieswere repudiated in the primaries.”• And to start a concerted discussion ofall possible tactics in an effort to assurethat the voters have a chance to vote for aPresidential candidate who is not associa¬ted with Vietnam war policies that havecontributed to the domestic crisis. The University and The Woodlawn Or¬ganization (TWO) have become partnersin an undertaking that could result in sev¬eral million dollars of Model Cities moneyfor the community—on Woodlawn’s ownterms.By October 1, TWO and the Universityhope to have completed a proposal forWoodlawn that will be accepted instead ofthe Model Cities proposal of Mayor Daleyand the City of Chicago.A “central student task force” is gather¬ing data on Woodlawn that will be given toten specialized task forces which will helpput together the final proposal.The specialized task forces consist main¬ly of Chicago faculty members who willwork with two committees on such areasas housing, employment, health, and so on.Daley Might AcceptIf TWO’s proposal is better than thecity’s, it is likely that Daley could be pres¬sured into submitting it instead of his ownto the Department of Housing and UrbanDevelopment (HUD), or at least into mak¬ing major concessions to TWO.According to University and TWOspokesmen, this means the Woodlawn com¬munity would have a greater voice in theModel Cities project and Daley would haveless control over the purse strings.Daley is reported to be trying to woosupport from influential Woodlawn groupsin exchange for consideration in the city’sproposal.On the other hand, it remains unclear ex¬actly what the University contemplatedwhen, according to Professor of UrbanStudies Julian Leyi, it accepted TWO’s in¬vitation to give technical assistance. Butan alf-day meeting Saturday at St. Cyral’sChurch between TWO and the Universityindicated at least what the relationship issupposed to be.‘We’re Glad You Asked Us’Speaking slowly and forcefully Levi re¬peatedly emphasized that it was TWO whohad asked for the University’s assistance.He also talked of local initiative, citizenparticipaton, and self-government.“If you didn’t ask us to come,” Levisaid, “we wouldn’t have come . . . But wewant to be here and . . . we’re glad youasked us.”Levi, who is director of the South EastTurn to Page FiveAnti-War Leaders Call City ConferencePritzker Family Donates s12 Mil to Med SchoolThe Pritzker family of Chicago has an¬nounced a gift of $12,000,000 to the Univer¬sity of Chicago for support of the Univer¬sity’s School of Medicine.President George W. Beadle announcedthat the school will henceforth be knownas the Pritzker School of Medicine.The gift is one of the largest single con¬tributions in the* $160,000,000 campaign forChicago, now in its third and final year.According to President Beadle, “Thesefunds will be used to strengthen the facul¬ty, including the creation of four endowedchairs in different branches of the PritzkerSchool of Medicine, and to assist other ac¬tivities that will increase the stature andthe vigor of the Pritzker School.”The gift brings the total contributed tothe Campaign for Chicago to about $140,-000,000. The Campaign is the first phase inthe University’s ten-year drive for $360,-000,000.Several other large contributions to theUniversity have been made in recentweeks. Among these:• A pledge from the Inland Steel Ryer-son Foundation’s for $500,000. $300,000 ofthe pledge was in the form of unrestricted funds for the University. The remainder ofthe gift is being used to carry on programswhich the Foundation has been supportingat the University for years.The unrestricted funds are being used asresearch grants for twenty-one facultymembers of the College.• A $400,000 grant from the Alfred P.Sloan Foundation to support its programin mathematical biology.The Sloan grant will be paid over a twoyear period and will permit significant ex¬pansion into biorhythmics, the biology ofrhythms related to molecular developmentof cells, and into problems of morphogen¬esis, the structural development of an or¬ganism.• A $321,000 grant from the DanforthFoundation, to extend and modify the teamteaching and tutor program now used forundergraduate students of the College.Wayne C. Booth, dean of the College, saidthe extended program would be designedto ensure that undergraduates at the Uni¬versity, particularly freshmen, will haveincreased personal contact with personsteaching them.The program will use teaching teamsTurn to Page Four Generous donors: Seated from left are: Robert A. Pritzker, A. N. Pritzker, andDonald N. Pritzker. Standing from left are: Jay Arthur Pritzker and Jack N.Prtziker.The Chicago Maroon S'JW<r 27f 1969SUMMERThe Summer Issuesof The Chicago MaroonRoger Black, EditorJohn Recht, Managing EditorRobert Factor, Associate EditorJeffrey Kuta, Senior EditorCorrespondentsMichael Sorkin, David Sutter, WashingtonRobert Hardman, New YorkPhotographersMark Steinhoff, Marc PokempnerThe University and WoodlawnCooperation with The WoodlawnOrganization in formulating aModel Cities proposal on Wood-lawn’s own terms seems to be fur¬ther testimony that University pol¬icy is changing.Julian Levi, who helped engineerthe Hyde Park-Kenwood renewalplans that were rubber-stamped bya non-representative Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference,is now talking about widespreadcitizen participation in the planningprocess before the plans are drawnup. Actions at St. Cyral’s Church onSaturday support his talk.TWO, of course, is not entirelyrepresentative of Woodlawn; noorganization is. But since TWO isthe University’s only link to theWoodlawn community, it cannotafford to let the Model Cities pro¬ject slip out of TWO’s hands; it would rather settle for a juniorpartnership than risk losing TWO’sfriendship. Things have come along way since the days of SaulAlinsky.Although the University’s publicstance is highly commendable, itdoes not represent any basic changein philosophy regarding communityrelations. What the University isdoing it is doing mainly out of self-interest. If the Woodlawn commu¬nity had not been forewarned bythe Hyde Park-Kenwood results,things might be proceeding differ¬ently right now.Morality and self-interest do notalways coincide, however, and untilthe University bases its actionsmore on the former than the latter,it will be vulnerable to strong oppo¬sition.Guns and Abner MikvaOn Monday of this week, AbnerMikva, the Democratic nominee forCongress from the 2nd Congres¬sional District (whom The Maroonhas endorsed) issued a statement inwhich he proposed that a vigorouspush be made “for national legisla¬tion which will declare handgunscontraband.” By this he meant sim¬ply that “they be treated like ma¬chine guns, poison gas, and a vari¬ety of other weapons for mayhem.Their manufacture and sale andpossession must all be declared il¬legal.”It is true, as Mr. Mikva asserts,that the terror in the streets isrelated to the presence of hand¬guns, and that it might be highlydesirable to erradicate every singlesuch gun in America.But legislative prohibition is notthe answer, simply because it couldnever be completely enforced. Notonly would criminal elements inour society still be able to acquireguns, but they would do it throughillegal manufacture and illegal im¬ portation. The effect would there¬fore be the creation and growth ofan entire and elaborate criminalindustry devoted to the bootleggingof hand guns.The licensing of both guns andgun owners, combined with manda¬tory waiting periods between thetime an individual orders a firearmand the time he can receive it wouldbe a means of inhibiting the “nor¬mal” citizen from the use of a gunduring a temporary seizure of vio¬lence. It would be as effective asMr. Mikva’s plan in keeping gunsout of “the wrong hands” — bothwould be as effective as the licens¬ing laws are sound and the desireof society to make them work isreal. But licensing avoids the knowndangers of the prohibition of “com¬mon” articles, lessons we learnedforty years ago.The Chicago Maroon is published bi-weekly on Thurs¬days during the summer, and twice weekly on Tues¬days and Fridays during the regular academic year.Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois. Subsequentissues of the Summer Maroon will appear on July 11,July 25, August 8, and August 22. Subscribers to theCollege Press Service. Founded in 1892. EUDOSMedal to NewellDr. Frank W. Newell, professor and headof the University of Chicago Department ofOphthalmology, received the Lucien HowePrize medal of the Section of Ophthalmol¬ogy, of the American Medical Association(AMA) at the annual meeting of the AMAiq San Francisco recently.The prize is awarded each year for out¬standing contributions to the field of eyecare.Stern Gets GrantRichard G. Stern, professor of English,received a $2,500 grant from the NationalInstitute of Arts and Letters at the annualCeremonial of the American Academy ofArts and Letters and the National Insti¬tute of Arts and Letters on May 28.Grants and awards toaling $60,000 werepresented to 10 writers, 11 artists, and fivecomposers at the Ceremonial.Stern is the author of four novels and abook of short stories. He is currently onleave of absence from the University whileworking on another novel.1,386 HonoredThe University awarded three honorarydegrees and 1,378 academic degrees at its323rd Convocation on June 7 and 8.The University also awarded Jesse L. Ro-senberger Medals to five men for theirachievements in public medicine and medi¬cal education.Recipients of the honorary degrees wereHerbert C. Brown, the R. B. Wetherill pro¬fessor of Chemistry at Purdue University,Lars Onsager, professor of chemistry atYale University, and Dr. Efraim Racker,the Albert Einstein professor and chairmanof the section of biochemistry and molecu¬lar biology at Cornell University.Recipients of the Rosenberger Medalwere Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, a trustee ofthe University of Chicago, Dr. Morris Fish-bein, former editor of the Journal of theAmerican Medical Association, John SchoffMillis, chancellor of Case Western ReserveUniversity, John McFarlane Russell, pres¬ ident of the John and Mary R. MarkleFoundation, and Dr. James A. Shannon, di¬rector of the National Institutes of Health.Meds Select KasikDr. John E. Kasik, assistant professor ofmedicine and pharmacology at the Univer¬sity, has been selected as the eighth recip¬ient of the J.A. McClintock Award.Outstanding teaching quality is the maincriteria for the award, which is voted bythe senior class of the University’s PritzkerSchool of Medicine. Last year, the awardwas presented to Dr. Hilger P. Jenkins,professor of surgery.Quantrells NamedPresident George W. Beadle has an¬nounced the winners of the 1968 LlewellynJohn and Harriet Manchester QuantrellAwards for Excellence in UndergraduateTeaching.Recipients of the awards are John C.Jamieson, professor of geophysics, EdwardJ. Kollar, assistant professor of anatomyand biology, Lester K. Little, assistant pro¬fessor of history, and Dudley Shapere, pro¬fessor of philosophy.The Quantrell Awards were established in1937 by the late Eugene Quantrell, a for¬mer trustee of the University, in honor ofhis parents. Each Quantrell Award recip¬ient receives $1,000,Honorary DegreesSeveral University faculty members andadministration personnel have receivedhonorary degrees in recent weeks.President Beadle received an honorarydoctor of science degree from SyracuseUniversity; A. Adrian Albert, dean of thedivision of physical sciences, received anhonorary doctor of science degree fromYeshiva University; Milton Friedman, thePaul Snowden Russell Distinguished Ser¬vice professor for economics, received anhonorary doctor of laws degree from Rut¬gers University; and John Hope Franklin,professor and chairman of the departmentof history, received an honorary doctor oflaws degree from Dickinson College.ABOUT THE MIDWAYNew Veep NamedPresident George W. Beadle and Pro¬vost Edward H. Levi have jointly an¬nounced the appointment of William B. Can¬non as vice-president for programs andprojects at the University, effective Aug¬ust 1.Part of Cannon’s antics will be as suc¬cessor to William B. Harrell, for Adminis¬tration and for Special Projects. Cannon’sduties and responsibilities are indefiniteat this time, however.Cannon is presently deputy chairman ofthe National Endowment for the Arts, afederal agency which makes grants in sup¬port of the arts throughout the country. Hehas a long record of government service,and he was one director of social sciencedevelopment and an assistant vice-presi¬dent at the University.Jobs for Social ChangeVocations for Social Change, a new kindof employment agency, officially came intoexistence this June with the first publica¬tion of job listings. A very extraordinaryemployment agency.The group is concerned with helping in¬terested people find jobs aimed towardssocial change—rather than social servicejobs which work to perpetuate the statusquo, a spokesman said, VSC is concernedwith job opportunities which will allowpeople “to creatively search for new waysof coping with modern social problems.”Job listings in the June newsletter, forexample, range from intentional commun¬ities (modeled on Walden II), to organizingfor the Resistance, legal rights of under-priveleged classes, middle class awareness of lower class problems, to alternativeservice to the military.A copy of the June job listings is avail¬able in the student activities office in IdaNoyes.New Bookstore ManHarlan L. Davidson, newly appointedGeneral Manager of the University Book¬stores, is now hard at work, reorganizingthe bookstore.“We’ll make every effort to have a wiseselection of general books,” said Davidson,former midwestern regional manager anddirector of marketing for the college de¬partment of Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.One of the main efforts Davidson is mak¬ing is to clean up the place. “When I ar¬rived there were books stacked up every¬where,’ Davidson said. Some books unsoldhad not been returned and had been lyingaround for years, he said. “I am trying tomake space for the customers to walkaround,” he said.Peace Corps To VisitVolunteers returned from the PeaceCorps will be on campus July 8 and 9with the Minister-Counselor from Dahomey,Virgile Octave Tevoedjre.This summer, Peace Corps is involvedin specialized recruiting for Africa becauseof some new requests—one from newlyindependent Swaziland and another fromNigeria, a return invitation for two hun¬dred volunteers .These are in addition tofourteen other programs already on thefall schedule for other African countries.As of May 30, 58 students from the Uni¬versity had applied for the Peace Corps.Representatives will be testing and inter¬viewing in the placement office.4 The Chicago Maroon , June 27. 1968UC AND TWOContinued from Page ThreeChicago Commission which played a ma¬jor role in the transformation of HydePark-Kenwood in the urban renewal daysof the 1950’s, said that problems in Wood-lawn, “are not solved by brick and mor¬tar—they’re people problems.”Quoting from Model Cities guidelines oncitizen participation, he told TWO mem¬bers that “you’re going to decide, not thetask forces, what kinds of solutions you’regoing to propose. Describing what hecalled the meaningless way citizen partici¬pation usually works, he said that “we’regoing to do things a little bit differentthis time.”Levi said the University is taking the po¬sition that it is “because it is the right po¬sition, ... because it’s our job . . . andbecause it won’t work any other way.”Later at the church meeting, workshopsdiscussed problems Woodlawn residentswould like solved through the Model Citiesproject. At a general meeting on housing,it was decided to survey the community-at-large before discussing concrete proposals.The target area of the Woodlawn propos¬al is bounded by 60th St., 67th St., LakeMichigan, and Cottage Grove Ave.Started in MayAccording to William Swenson, a gradu¬ate student in ideas and methods who ischairman of the student data-gatheringforce, the University’s involvement in theTWO proposal began to take shape in May.By that time, the City of Chicago’s Mod¬el Cities application for four target areashad been approved by HUD and funds allo¬cated for planning. The University’s taskforces are being financed through founda¬tion support. “A MOST EXTRAORDINARY FILM!-NEW YORK TIMESGene Wesson. Albert Schwartz & Harry Diamond preset A FILM OF GILLO P0NTEC0RV0 • An ALLIED ARTISTS ReleaseWATCH FOR THEPREMIERE OF THEJEAN LUC GODARDIMASTERPIECELA CHINOISE AT CHICAGO’SEXCITING NEWAVANT GARDETHEATRE2424 N. Licoln at Fullerton-Halsted. One.block east of[Fullerton “El” stopFREE PARKINGat 2438-40 N. Halsted THREEPENNYCINEMAaunxjL (Jbnu~3uxdL $orrcC ~fnad<^ a*<tkj uita.,-ve always Hftve s j ,~.... ~ QJ <i ' *ohm hue. (?/«■<:. /jJL• ■■■ * i. j , n; 4 pv f jy? fa i rs a fhtjlunwM P\ayyrM-(^u<is nAt,ftS- CD p*»'*«&*f f JlfylU fojuU C/uJUsJune 27, 1968 The Chicago MaroonTHE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSMaroon classified ads cost SO centsper line for UC students, faculty,and staff (40 cents per line whenthe ad Is repeated) and 75 centsfor others (60 cents for repeatedlines). 35 characters and spaces equala line. Ads must be mailed to orplaced in the Maroon office by 3p.m. on the Monday before Thursdaypublication.YOGAEXERCISE, relax, concentrate, meditate fortranquility and autonomy. Come alone or ingroups. Yogi Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.CAREER OPPORTUNITIESTHE CHICAGO REVIEW, literary quarterlyand famed forum of fhe avant-garde, invitesyou to join the staff to read fiction, poetry,essays, concretist fantasies to argue, edit,contribute. Drop in; 5757 Drexel Ave., cam¬pus ext. 3571.ROOMMATES WANTEDLUXURY APT: Beautifully furnished. Sharewifh 1 male grad student for summer. Pri¬vate bedroom, direct view of lake, 50th St,11th floor, $81 mo, HY 3-9123 after 8 pm.TO share with one other cool large 2 bedrmapt Hyde Park. July to mid-Sept. $50/mo.Call 493-9586.FEMALE roommate wanted forJuly andAugust. Furn. Phone 363-0773. FOR SALE7 room co-op apt. across from UC campus,monthly maintenance $67.50. Shown by ap¬pointment, phone C. Greeg after 3 p.m. PL 2-8117.FURNITUREFRENCH provincial bedroom suite $165. Twoupholstered chairs. SO 8-5437.PERSONALSTHE Chicago Literary Review wants alert(meaning awake at least) student reviewersin almost every area: poetry, politics, novels,theater, films, records, you name it. Wewant long or short well-considered reviewsof Malcom Lowry's new novel, for example,or of the new Peter Weiss novel, of Wm F.Buckleys new book, of the selected letters ofTheo Roethke, of Muriel Spark, of Jan Myr-dal, of Ho Chi Minh's biography, of Kirst'snew novel, of Seymour Krim, of OrlandoCepeda, and much much more. Please comesee us on the 3rd floor of Ida Noyes or callus at ext 3276 or get in touch with our editor,Jeff Schnitzer at HY 3-2909 or 324-7813. Wewant you; we need you, we may even loveyou.APARTMENTS WANTEDApartment wanted for school year '68-'69 inHyde Park area. Married couple. Write toLewin, 1612 South Blvd, Evanston, IllinoisAPARTMENT5508 So Cornell-—8 rooms—3 baths—4 beds.Rehab. Conservatives. Appoint, only Wilson288-5381 or Costa 667-0757.APARTMENT BUILDINGSouth shore deluxe 3 6's and 3 garages, re¬modeled kitchens. SO 8-5437.CAMPING EQUIPMENTCAMPING equipment rental: tents, sleepingbags, stoves, lanterns, contact Hickory ext2381 or 324-1499. SUMMER IN THE CITY, PART II:Storage and Service Receipt and Agreement.Terms and Conditions. 5. There shall be noliability for loss of or damage to articlescaused by or resulting from: A. (1) Hostileor warlike action in time of peace or war,including action in hindering, combating ordefending against an actual, impending orexpected attack, (a) by any government orsovereign power (de jure or de facto), or byany such government, power, authority main¬taining or using military, naval or airforces; or (b) by military, naval, or a i rforces; or (c) by an agent of any such gov¬ernment, power, authority or forces; (2) anyweapon of war employing atomic fission orradioactive force whether in time of peaceor war; (3) insurrection, rebellion, revolution,civil war, usurped power, or action taken bygovernmental authority in hindering, combat¬ting or defending against such an occurrence,seizure or destruction under quarantine o rcustoms regulations, confiscation byorder ofany government or public authority, or risksof contraband or illegal transportation oftrade; (B) Failure of refrigeration because ofgovernment order; (C) Any cause beyond thecontrol of the furrier, nor for deterioration,discoloration from natural causes or inherentvice. WANTED: Young Girl; Preferably beautiful—Preferably English — Preferably namedCoulette—who says she is Very, Veeery Do¬mestic-Needed to keep an Irish Swami to¬gether. Please call if you can 822-0651.GET TO SHERMAN HOUSE THIS WEEK¬END. THE LAST CHANCE FOR THE NEXTFOUR YEARS.THE Maroon is seeking writers, reporters,copy editors, photographers, artists, graphicdesigners, critics, columnists, a Culture Vul¬ture (or Vultures), contributors of all kinds,persons with sense of humor, for the summer,for the years ahead. If you are interestedplease come by the office. We are open Mon¬day through Friday from 10 to 4. Or callMl 3-0800 ext. 3265.LOST CAT, black, sveldt, hungry, male. Invicinity of 53rd and Kenwood. He is not oursand the vacationing lady owner will be heart¬broken if she finds him gone when she re¬turns. Please call 955-5240 if you have orhave seen him. Thank you.TAKCAM-YMICHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESCLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take OutT3U EAST 43rd ST. MU 4-1042 Expert Typing ServiceFast, Accurate, Hassle-lessJudy 858-2544SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 ^ foreign car hospitalService and Sales5424 Kimbark1 Ml 3-3113'priedGoidDn’4REr>TAURAN T132 1 East 57th ST.MOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OTTHE SOUTH ‘SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent Discounts EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd Plaza.HYde Park 3-8372LEARN FOUR RELATEDLANGUAGES SIMULTANEOUSLYEnroll in TEUTONIC GROUP Iand use and compareDanish-God dag min herreGerman-Wie geht es ihnen?Swedish-Mycket bra,tack,Och Ni?Dutch-lk ook.dank U. Totziehs.Enroll in ROMANIC GROUP Iand use and compareFrench- Bonjour monsieurSpanish i Como esta usted?Portugese-Muito bem,obrigado.E o Sr.?Ital ian-Anch'io grazie.Arri vederci.• small classes, two-hour sessions; 13 sessions; once ortwice a week.• new comparative method.Courses specialize in: correct pronunciation, new internationalphonemic alphabet, basic vocabularies of 800-1000 wordsWritten materia! furnished to students: comparative vocabulary,basic grammatical aids, special texts. Also language tutoringSPECIAL STUDENT RATES: $2.50 an hour for classesof five or more.CLASSES BEGIN JULY 8GROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTE - 28R-0675 Is it possible that the University of Chicagohas gotten a bookstore manager who knowswhat he is doing and is doing things well?Probably not.In the matter of insistence on the supremacyof technique at the expense of nutriment, theUniversity of Chicago is the child of Harvard,as Harvard is the child of German know-how. . .Both anguish and starvation of mind arethe normal condition of those engaged on theassembly lines of Harvard graduate study,forcing the constant importation of talent.This inability to supply its own staff is awell-known paradox about Harvard, but theHarvard methods and pursuits differ littlefrom those of any other graduate school. Thepressure is higher there, but, humanly andintellectually speaking, Chicago is almost asbadly off in its unconscious and uncritical as¬similation to the rigid modes of a technologi¬cal world. But to hope that even the best trainingin criticism can cope with the constantstorm of triviality and propaganda that newbeats upon the citizen seems to me to ex¬pect too much of any educational system.. . .Why has it not occrured to Dr. Hutchinsthat the only practical answer to the "stormof triviality and propaganda" is that it bebrought under control by being inspected. Itsbaneful effects are at present entirely de¬pendent on its being ignored. In launchingsuch a part-time program of uninhibited in¬spection of popular and commercial cultureDr. Hutchins would find himself on a radicaltack at last. Why shouldn't the young inschool and college be invited to scrutinizewidely selected examples of this unofficialeducation? Their studies and their liveswould be considerably enlivened thereby.Best of all this procedure would help to pro¬mote that unprecendented self-awarenesswhich harmonious life in an industrial societyrequires.—Marshall McLuhan, 1951And when a stranger walked amongst us, wetook him in.How could a dirty old man write such mar¬velous devotional poetry? After all, I sawhim fall down the stairs but yesterday in hissuspenders. SAH WADT DEE.LULLABYWide as this night, old as this nightis old and young as it is young,still as this, strange as this,filled as this night Is filled with thelight of a moon as grey;dark as these trees, heavy as thisscented air from the fields, warmas this hand,as warm, as strong,is the night that wraps all the hutsof the south and folds the emptybarns of the west;is the wind that fans fhe roadsidesire;are the trees that line the countryestates, tall as the lynchtrees, as straight, as black;Is the moon that lights the miningtowns, dim as the light upontenement roofs, grey upon thehands at the bars of Moabit,cold as the bars of the Tombs.—Kenneth Fearing.Tell me, if you know, is it true that the mod¬ern poets are really psychological?I carry Kierkegarde in my pocket. What doyou carry?If you don't like country music, don't comeround Jimmie's bar.PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, To a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants A Mill Rt'urns at fractianof the Ongmal Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional iOTo Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYM CornJt DLut j?'M 1645 E. 55th STREET > WCHICAGO. ILL. 60615 £p2 Phone: FA 4-1651 UfcW. # W. W. W. # W.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 We Serve and ProtectOurselvesTURIN BICYCLE CO-OP1952 No. Sedgwick WH 4-8865m-f 2-8:30. sat. -sun. 10-8closed thursdayswe'd love to turn you on DISCOUNTART MATERIALSe Office Suppliese School Suppliese Picture FramesDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111UHURU!...means Freedom! Freedom todetermine your own life, earn humandignity, develop leadership. Freedomfrom racial strife. Freedom for blackand for white.Africa can give you perspective-black or white. And Africa is readyto give now. It’s people are readyto share their spirit, their jivestheir strength.You can share in building Africa.Help teach its young people, itsteachers. Help build its schools, itsroads; train its farmers to grow bettercrops—to grow stronger people. Now.This summer and fall Peace Corpswill train Volunteers for Kenya, Nigeria, the Ivory Coast, newly inde¬pendent Swaziland and other deve¬loping African nations.Get involved. You'll learn a lotabout people, a lot about you. And alot about helping people learn whatyou’ve learned. Apply for PeaceCorps training. Do it now.The Peace Corpswill be on campusJuly 8th and 9th.For information contact the place¬ment office or call 353-4990.VOTE FOR THE PARTY OF YOUR CHOICE!Hyde Park Car Wash1330 E. 53rd StreetFrom now until August 35th we will feature Donkey and Elephant inflatables at 69<t each withany gasoline purchase.We will maintain a tally to datein our window. Drop in and parti¬cipate in our straw vote.The Chicago Maroon June 27, 1968- ■ . *■*.CULTUREVULTURENEARLY TWO WEEKS into the summerquarter and the campus is rather quiet,wouldn’t you say? Or maybe that s just aswell. In any case, the plethora of campusactivity during the spring quarter seems tohave given way to a paucity thus far thissummer. For everyone who feels saferanyway off the streets at night, a new voicehas come forth which we can turn you onto. WGN’s purchase of Fine Arts FM Radiostation WFMT (98.7) seems thus far tohave been nothing but productive in nature,FMT will go all night starting Monday,July 1 with a program suitably titled“Through.” For all of Hyde Park who can’tget enough of WFMT during the day, thisshould be a most welcome programmingaddition. So for the next two weeks, youeither stay home and turn on something ortravel a bit.Theater’Tis a Pity She’s a Whore. Court Theatreopens its fourteenth season in HutchinsonCourt tomorrow with their production ofthe rarely produced Jacobean tragedy byJohn Ford. Directed by D. Nicholas Rudall,it will feature Diane Rudall, familiar toChicago audiences from her several ap¬pearances in leading roles at Hull House.Kevin Kline and Diane Rudall in CourtTheater's ’Tis a Pity She's a Whore.ExtraCopies ofitions.Are AvailablefromThe Maroon This first play of their three play seasonwill run four weekends, Thursday throughSunday. Curtain is at 8:30 in HutchinsonCourt (or in Mandel Hall weather notpermitting) and tickets are $2.25 on Thurs¬days and Sundays, $2.50 on Fridays, and$3 on Saturday. Student and faculty dis¬counts of 50 cents apply every eveningbut Saturday. Season tickets also available.The Deputy. Rolf Hochhuth’s controver¬sial play will be in its final performancesthis weekend at the Shoreland Hotel, 5454South Shore Drive. Produced by TheFlayers at the Shoreland (formerly the St.Paul’s Players) it features members fromthat company as well as actors who haveappeared in Hull House, Encore Theatre,Salisbury Repertory Company in England,and the New Old Fashioned Baroque Com¬pass Players. Dealing with the failure ofPope Pius XII to speak out against thepersecution of the Jews in Nazi Germany,it has been praised by the late Albert Schweitzer, alternately criticized andlauded by various representatives of theRoman Catholic Church, and picketed bythe late George Lincoln Rockwell’s Amer¬ican Nazi Party. Performances are sched¬uled for Friday and Saturday at 8:30 (tic¬kets $2.75 and $2.25) and Sunday at 7:30(tickets 25 cents less). Students ticketsavailable at $1.75 and $.90.FilmsNothing on campus for a while, but theHyde Park Theatre will be running MikeNichols’ The Graduate through July 18.The north side offers the award winningClosely Watched Trains at the Cinema, atChicago and Michigan. And on northLincoln Avenue, the Three Penny Cinemais still showing Battle of Algiers, to befollowed by Jean Luc-Goddard’s newestproduction, La Chinoise. And if you arewilling to make the effort to go to theMurray Theatre at Ravinia (see above). Orsen Welles’ spectacular production ofFalstaff will be shown on July 28, and theRussian production of Hamlet on August4. Well worth the trip.MusicRavinia Festival. The annual summerfestival at Ravinia park opens tonightwith a gala opening concert by the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra. Throughout the sum¬mer, Ravinia will feature concerts by theChicago Symphony under the direction ofSeiji Ozawa and guest conductors, andjazz pop and folk concerts, as well as artexhibitions and films (see below). Tonightsconcert includes the Beethoven 7th andSaturday night, Ozawa will conduct ByronJanis in the Beethoven Pianos ConcertoNo. 3.The Electric MovementIN CONCERT presentsTHEBEACHBOYSWith special guest starsGEN. GARY PUCKETT & THE UNION GAPAUDITORIUM THEATERTickets $5.50, 5.00, 4.50, 3.50, 2.50Tickets available atTicket Central, Marshall Fields,all Montgomery Wards, Crawford, andLowes Record StoresFoodDrinkPeople B»klm Good Books for Children 2.95 Jacksoni Life In Classrooea 3.95Long! Conflict In the Claasrooa 5.50 Vsyasyi Emergence of the American University 10.00Popperi American Middle School 8.75 Tolstoyi On Blucation 6,00 Rileyi Head Start In Action 7.95Rossi and Biddlei The New Media and Blucation 1.75 Rlckoveri American Blucation — A National Failure 1.95Katti Teachers' Guide to American Negro History 2.25 Bloom Taxonomy of Blucation Objectives 9,45 (set of 2)Trubovltzi Handbook for Teaching In the Ghetto School 4,95 Theism Blucation and the Human Quest 4,75Tyleri Basic Principles of Curriculum and Instruction ,75 Orem Nontessorl for the Disadvantaged 1.65B1 wardsi Courts and the Public Schools 11,50 Beck and Saxei Teaching the Culturally Disadvantaged Pupil 10,50Llggeroi Successful Appraoch to High School Counseling 7.95 Trent and Goldsi Catholics In College 9,00Woodringi Higher Learning In America 2,95 Roblnsoni Meeting Individual Differences In Reading 5.00COME FIND THESEAND HUNDREDS OF OTHER BOOKSOF SPECIAL INTEREST TO EDUCATORSAT YOUR FRIENDLY UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORENOW'311 E. 23/d Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaCeTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 •■am to 9 pm/closed Sundays'Party facilities to 400 University of ChicagoBookstore 5802 S. Ellis Avenue CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award WinnerCLOSELYWATCHED TRAINS“A girl telegrapher whoseseduction is surely one ofthe great comic erotic se¬quences in film history ....Best movie I have seen thisyear!” L,feTen Best List! Sat. Review“Wonderful film!" Chicago DailyNews*** i/j* Chicago Sun-TimesStudents $1.50 with I.D. CardsGood every day but Sat.COURT THEATRE1968SEASONJohn FordTIS PITYSHE’S A WHOREJune 28-July 21Bertolt BrechtGALILEOJuly 26-Aug. 11ShakespeareAS YOU LIKE ITAug. 16 - Sept. 1Tickets:Tliurs. & Sun. $2.25,Series $5.25Friday $2.50,Series $6.00Saturday $3.00,Series $7.50GROUP RATES ON REOUESTStudent DiscountsCOURT THEATRE5706 S. UniversityChicago, Illinois 60637Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3581June 27, 1968 The Chicago MaroonSAVINGSCERTIFICATESUniversity National Bank offers you—• Savings Certificates paying the highest rateof interest permitted by law5% per year on certificates of $5,000 or more• Savings Certificates backed by bank safetymember: Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationChicago Clearing House AssociationFederal Reserve System• Savings Certificates tailored to fit your needsavailable for 6,7, 8, 9,10,11 or 12 month periodsFor maximum income with maximum safety and maximumadaptability to your personal needs invest in fluctuation free UniversityNational Bank Savings Certificates.Just ask any of our officers. They'll be happy to handle thedetails for you.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL RANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and servicemember: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve SystemThe Chicago Maroon June 27, 1968