Volume 77, Number 40 The Chicago Maroon Wednesday, February 12, 1969/ By Wendy GlocknerTuesday’s general strike of social sci¬ence classes was not successful.According to social science professors,class attendance was not affected sig¬nificantly.Demonstrators who picketed, however,felt that the strike successfully led tomeaningful discourse with students con¬fronted at the picket line.Plans for the strike were completed bydemonstrators at a meeting Monday night.Social science graduate students thereagreed to honor the picket lines, “in hopeof furthering student solidarity.”Students called the strike to demand“changes in the University that will helpbuild a more humane institution, whosepriorities are people, not abstract knowl¬edge.”“The classroom is the heart of the aca¬demic community” one picketer said, “wechallenge the existence of any such com¬munity when faculty members are actingas cops fingering people in the ad build¬ing.” The strike will be attempted againWednesday, in the social science building.About ten students at each door of thesocial science building formed picket lines.Demonstrators said they felt successful inblocking students from entering the build¬ing.Students who did pass through the linessaid that they “weren’t striking”, “class istoo good to miss”, or “have appointmentswith professors.”Students and faculty who pushed then-way through the picket lines to enter thebuilding were called “scab” or “cop.” “Ifyou go in you’ll be supporting the Univer¬sity’s discriminatory policy toward wom¬en,” one female picketer stated.One student in favor of the strike said:“I agree with the demands, but not withthe tactics of the sit-in. I respect the tac¬tics of the strike more.”Students against the strike commented:“The demonstrators imply that to study isto become part of the establishment.”And: “I’m waiting for tomorrow — they’llprobably burn Morris Janowitz’s books.”Faculty Will Retain AllResponsibility in HiringShils Advises Not To Rehire MarleneEdward Shils, one of the biggest guns ofthe sociology department, has come outstrongly against rehiring Marlene DixonTuesday.Shils describes Mrs Dixon’s work as “un¬qualifiedly mediocre,” in a 10-page critiquereleased by the department.“She has not a single relatively originalor even bold idea,” he said.Asked in a press conference Tuesdaymorning why Mrs Dixon was hired in thefirst place, Shils said “it was a mistake.”“There was no mistake about her sex orher politics,” he added. “Those wereknown; but there was a mistake aboutabilities. She looked promising, but she didnot fulfill her promise,” he said.In the statement, Shils, a noted sociolo¬gist and a member of the UC committeeon social thought dryly criticized the pa¬pers that Mrs Dixon submitted to the per¬sonnel committee of the sociology depart¬ment.He said seven of the eight papers aboutengineers reiterated many of the sameideas.“It is evident,” Shils wrote, “That thereis no sign of any independent imagination,new insight, or erudition in Mrs Dixon’sanalysis of engineers.”He stated that Mrs Dixon “has not per¬ked a central theme with rigor nor indepth.“Her knowledge of the literature of hersubject is limited to the best known publi¬ cations of recent years. She lacks analytic¬al skill. She is unimaginative. Such per¬spective for theoretical brainwork as shepossesses belong to the problematicalcliches of the present day,” Shils said.Shils pointed to what he called a “lack ofany historical depth of comparative rangein Mrs Dixon’s treatment of the professionof engineering.“Some application of the insights of Veb-lin, Marx, and other writers would havebeen helpful to her.,” he said.In the press conference Shils discountedthe idea that there is some kind of inter¬national conspiracy behind the sit-in. Hesaid conspiracies are no longer needed tofoment disturbances now that the massmedia cover them so thoroughly.“Physical force will not be used to re¬move a suspended student from his dor¬mitory room,” said Edward Turkington,director of student housing.Speaking to Pierce Tower residents, Tur¬kington said, that his letter to John Fox,’72, notifying him of eviction was drastical¬ly misconstrued. Tufts house had said thatit was prepared to take any action neces¬sary to prevent Fox’s eviction.Turkington added that no suspended stu¬dent had ever refused to leave his housing.Turkington did not respond to one ques- The sociology department issued a state¬ment last Wednesday, which said that “if adetailed public criticism of Marlene Dixon’swork, much of which is still in a prelimi¬nary state, were undertaken be the depart¬ment, it would be contrary to her best in¬terests and to the best interests of the de¬partment, and to the University as awhole.”Shils, out of the country until last week,did not sign the statement. Asked at thepress conference what will happen if theGray committee recommends Mrs Dixon’sreappointment, Shils said the faculty wouldhave to “grin and bear it.”“I am certainly not going to sit in at MrsGray’s house” he said.tion on the suspension procedures. Sum¬moned students are temporarily suspendeduntil their case is resolved by the dis¬ciplinary committee. Those who appear be¬fore the committee are allowed to live intheir dormitories. Students who refuse toappear are suspended and not permittedresidence. But does this mean that the sus¬pension would take on a “more permanentform” if a student failed to appear? DallinOaks, disciplinary committee chairman,was reached at his home and said that infact, this was the case.Turkington Clarifies Eviction Notices• David TravisPICKET LINE: Student stands in front of Soc Sci during strike yesterday. While the University must take into ac¬count the ideas and attitudes of its stu¬dents, the faculty must still retain “ulti¬mate responsibility” on decisions on facul¬ty hiring and firing, the committee of thecouncil of the University senate and thedeans have declared.In a statement issued Tuesday, they said, “For many months efforts have been madeto establish and strengthen channelsthrough which (student) ideas and atti¬tudes can be communicated freely and pro¬ductively. On many topics, students viewsmay indeed be conclusive, and in manyareas of common concern they may effectfundamental change.”A “relatively small number of issues,”however, called for full faculty responsi¬bility, the council and deans wrote. Theseincluded questions of faculty hiring-firing,and “disciplinary proceedures which pro¬tect the University and its freedoms.“This is what is now being done in ac¬cordance with the principles formulatedand repeatedly affirmed by the council ofthe senate,” the statement concluded.“To disregard these principles would bean abdication of faculty responsibility. Weare confident, however, that the facultywill meet this responsibility.”One student, after picking up the state¬ment from a pile in Ida Noyes hall said“this is just another example of proclama¬tion by the official University with little ofthe rational and none of the discourse.”Gray ReportAs of press time on Tuesday, theGray committee report, promisedfor late Tuesday afternoon, had notbeen received by either John Wilson,dean of faculties, or D Gale Johnson,dean of the social science division.Wilson said that expecting the Graycommittee report was similar to aprofessor waiting for a student’sassignment. It might be promisedfor Tuesday afternoon, but thatdoesn’t mean that it will be ready.Mrs Hanna Gray, chairman of thecommittee appointed to review thedecision not to rehire Marlene Dixon,would not come to the telephone ather home, although a typewritercould be heard in the background.Dixon Bothered by Publicity from Current CrisisBy Sue LothPublicity can be obnoxious if one is thecenter of a University-wide controversy,Mrs Marlene Dixon discovered recently.In the two weeks since the adminis¬tration building sit-in began, she has beenannoyed by hate letters, telegrams andphone calls, and some “very unsavorycharacters.”The annoyances eventually worried herfriends enough to move her out of herBlackstone Ave apartment last weekend,Mrs Dixon said. “They didn’t want me liv¬ing alone.”The charming, talkative, stocky blondeassistant professor of sociology sat inWRAP headquarters at the ad buildingMonday, where she had stopped to visit.Several minutes earlier she had beengroaning with student and faculty col¬leagues over the satirical “Marleniad,”which had appeared in the Maroon thatday.“It’s been wretched,” Mrs Dixon saidwith a weary glance that betrayed herbusy schedule of television appearances,interviews, and discussions. “The needlingwas very painful at times.“I’m hardly upset by a hate poem,though, compared to what I’ve received al¬ready.”“I may well do a sociological analysis ofthe senders of hate letters, hate telephonecalls, and hate poems.”Los Angeles has been home for most ofMarlene Dixon’s 32 years. Born there Octo¬ber 13, 1936, of a working class family,Mrs Dixon “experienced many of the depr¬ivations that I am now angered by” as shecompleted grammar and high school.She worked her way through the Univer¬sity of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)and received a bachelor of arts degree,summa cum laude, in 1960.“Before becoming a sociologist,” MrsDixon said, “I was a writer and a painter.Senior year my play was voted best stu¬dent play at UCLA.“Fellowships and research and teaching PROFILEpositions financed the rest of Mrs Dixon’seducation. She was a teaching assistantin the sociology department (1960-62), anda graduate research sociologist in the col¬lege of engineering (1962-63) at UCLA be¬fore earning her sociology MA in 1963. Shenext served as a research associate in thecollege of engineering, UCLA (1963-64),and an assistant professor in the depart¬ment of sociology at California State col¬lege at Long Beach (spring, 1966) whileworking toward her PhD in sociology,awarded in 1967.Mrs Dixon received University fellow¬ships from UCLA between 1963 and 1966while working toward her PhD. She alsowon National Science Foundation summerfellowships in 1963, 1964, and 1965, and aNational Institute of General Medical Sci¬ence traineeship (1964-65).Radical activities also figured in MrsDixon’s busy college schedule. She was ac¬tive in UCLA’s militant chapter of CORE;worked 18 months as chairman of ProjectFreedom House, a community organizationcommittee in the Venice, Calif ghetto; andserved on the steering committee of theUCLA branch of the Free Speech move¬ment during the Berkeley crisis.Mrs Dixon moved to Chicago in autumn,1966, to join the University faculty as assis¬tant professor for the committee on humandevelopment and the department of sociol¬ogy. She has since become national coor¬dinator of the women’s caucus of the NewUniversity Conference, and a member ofthe national coordinating committee forthe radical caucus of the American Sociol¬ogical Association.She has given numerous talks on wom¬en’s liberation and black power, and worksactively with radical students on campus,especially members of WRAP.Students Attend Liberation ClassesIn Political Science and SociologyAbout 30 students attended two “liber¬ation” classes organized by political sci¬ence and sociology graduate students inSwift yesterday.Students said their departments lackeddiversity of thought.In the political science discussion, onestudent complained that there was no criti¬cism available from a Marxist professor toguide him in studying and researchingMarxist outlook in political science. Anoth¬er, commenting on the teaching of politicalBULLETINWednesday, February 12MEETING: Undergraduate math students to discuss un¬dergrad program, Eckhart 312, 3:30 pm.SWIMMING: Rockford College, Bartlett Gym, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: “Magnetic Resonance Studies of Dehy¬drogenase Mechanisms Using a Parametric Analog ofNAD'', Dr Albert S Mildvan, Institute for Cancer Re¬search, Philadelphia. Abbott Hall 101, 4 pm.SEMINAR: "The Story of Two Brothers: A local southIndian Epic", Brenda Beck, assistant professor andlecturer in anthropology in the College. Foster Lounge,4:10 pm.DOC FILMS: '‘My Little Chickadee", Cobb Hall, 7:15and 9:30 pm.COUNTRY DANCERS: Ida Noyes Dance Room, 8 pm.FOLK SONG WORKSHOP: Hillel Foundation, HillelHouse, 8 pm.DISCUSSION: "Biafran Secession", Derick Nowosu, IboTribe. Blue Gargoyle, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: "Looking for Ishuwa: An International Ef¬fort along the Turkish Euphrates'', Hans G Guterbock,professor of Hittitology, and Maurits N Van Loon, as¬sistant professor of archeology and field director, Eu¬phrates Valley Expedition. Breasted Hall, 8:30 pm.Thursday, February 13RECRUITING VISIT: Cooperative College Registry,Philadelphia. To meet with representative, call ext3282.WRESTLING: VaparaUo University, Bartlett Gym, 4pm.ISRAELI FOLD DANCING: Hillel Foundation, IdaNoyes, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "Immunology in Transplantation", DrFrank Fitch. Pre-Med Club, Billings M-137, 7:30 pm.DOC FILMS: '‘Duel in the Sun", Soc Sci 122, 8 pm.POETRY READING: Blue Gargoyle, 8:30 pm.REYNOLDS CLUB THEATER: "America Hurrah'', pre¬view performance. 75 cents, 8:30 pm. sociology in the University, said researchis often done to verify established con¬clusions.In the sociology discussion, the criticismwas made that because of a desire tocreate a value-free science, many studentsfinish by separating themselves fromsociety in an attempt to be objective.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisNews Board:Ad Building: Wendy GlocknerFaculty: Sylvia PiechockaGraduate Students: Rob CooleyAdministration: Richard ParoutaudDisciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussProduction Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Robin Kauf¬man, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift, MitchKahn, Sue Loth.Ad Building Bureau: Wendy Glockner (bureauchief), Jim Haefemeyer, Bruce Norton,Paula Szewczyk, Leonard Zax.Contributing Editors: John Welch, Michael Sor-kin, Jessica Siegel, John Moscow, RobertHardman, Barbara Hurst, David Aiken.News Staff: Marv Bittner, Debby Dobish, ConHitchcock, CD Jaco, Blair Kilpatrick, SteveCook, Gerard Leval.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examination—* periods. Offices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60837. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service.2/Th* Chicago Maroon/February ,12, 1*69'' 4 ( Ben GilbertCONTROVERSAL SOCIOLOGIST: Mrs Dixon attending one of many meetingsduring the past week, this one held Monday at the Blue Gargoyle.The Qntoersttg of ChicagoBEARDSLEY RUML COLLOQUIUMWHAT CAN BE DONE TO END WHITE RACISMFriday, February 14, 1969:3:30 PM. Quantrell AuditoriumRACISM, ITS FORMS AND FUTUREKenneth Clark, Harold Baron, Kenneth Prewitt6:00 PM. Hutchinson Commons DinnerTOWARD ENDING RACISM: THE FUTURE OF BLACKPOLITICSHon. Richard Hatcher, Richard Wade, Harold Baron8:00 PM. Ida Noyes Cloister ClubTO END EXPLOITATION IN THE GHETTORichard Applebaum, Leon Finney, Tony Henry,John Kain, Arthur Saltzman, George TolleySaturday, February 15, 1969:10:30 AM. Quantrell AuditoriumWHITE RACISM AND PUBLIC EDUCATIONWarren Bacon, Roald Campbell, Willard Congreve,Morris Janowitz, Meyer Weinberg, Jr.1:00 PM. Quantrell AuditoriumWHITE RACISM AND ECONOMIC PARTICIPATIONRev. Calvin Morris, Milton Friedman, Robert McKersie3:30 PM. Quantrell AuditoriumPANEL DISCUSSIONAl Raby, Ira Kipnis, Tony Henry and others6:00 PM. Hutchinson CommonsInformal Dinner8:00 PM. Ida Noyes Cloister ClubSUAAMARY STATEMENTKenneth Prewitt, Alvin PitcherDinner tickets can be purchased in Gates-Blake 428. Allother meetings free without tickets.TAnti-Sit-In Students Deliver PetitionTo Sit-Ins in Administration BuildingBy Alfred RyanA petition asking for the voluntary termi¬nation of the sit-in was distributed yester¬day by a group of students to those stu¬dents in the ad building.The petition was signed by 1708 studentsand 584 workers of the University commu¬nity.The petition did not directly condemn thesit-in nor did it discuss any of the issues,but ‘advocates the resumption of more meaningful dialogue under normal condi¬tions.”Twenty percent of the student bodysigned the petition. Of the students whosigned, 891 were undergraduates, one-thirdof the undergraduate student body.The organizers of the petition were fourgrad students: Jack Crabbs, history, Car-ville Earle, geography, Carl Kohrt, chem¬istry, and Conway G Ivy, economics.In a joint statement, they declared, “Ifthe students involved in the sit-in, regard-Campus Protests Span USAs the UC sit-in enters its 14th day,campus disturbances have broken out inWisconsin, Mississippi, and Canada.At the University of Wisconsin, two tothree thousand students picketed Mondayin support of black student demands. Theparticipants of the peaceful picket calledfor more black student admission and ablack curriculum.About 20 students held a sit-in in the so¬ciology department offices there Mondaynight.Students staged a massive sit-in Tuesdaynight at Mississippi Valley State College,in Itta Bena, protesting 185 students whowere suspended Sunday. Students weresuspended for staging a sit-in in responseto the university’s lack of due process indisciplinary procedures, remedial pro¬grams, and endownment programs forscholarships.A bust came to protesters at Sir GeorgeWilliams University in Montreal, Tuesday,after students “liberated” and computercenter, set it on fire, and burned severaluniversity files. Students were protestingover an allegedly racist professor. Seventy-nine students were arrested. The firing of a dissident professor atWindsor University in Ontario resulted in asit-in in the theology offices. A clash be¬tween protesters and anti-protesterserupted an a result.Students Meet, DiscussCurrent Campus CrisesA meeting of social sciences graduatestudents to consider the strike against so¬cial sciences classes is scheduled Wednes¬day at 7 pm in Kent 107.Social science students voted to holdtonight’s meeting for further considerationof the strike at their Monday night meet¬ing.Monday, about 200 students voted not tocall a strike of their own against socialsciences, but to honor the picket lines ofthe sitters-in.Undergraduate psychology students arescheduled to meet Wednesday at 7 pm inIda Noyes to discuss departmentalchanges, according to Leo Schlosberg, ’69,psychology.Rip up our instructionson self-defense.After all,it’s Valentine’s Day.■=3g«p“\p a <3& upNormally, we insist that every man read the instructions on self-defense that we put in every package of Hai Karate® After Shaveand Cologne. But we’ve got a heart. So on Valentine’s Day, we’dlike every woman to tear our instructions to shreds. That way youcan give your guy Hai Karate, with some instructions of your own.Hai Karate-be careful how you use it.Aim less of their goals, have any respect forcampus opinion, they will abandon this ac¬tivity. Then both the student body and theadministration should resume a mean¬ingful discussion under more normal condi¬tions. Any refusal now to leave the admin¬istration building can only mean that thoseinside believe only in student power for thefew and not for the many.” Who?Tuesday’s Maroon identified (bymistake) Saul Balagura, assistantprofessor of psychology, as Salva¬tore Maddi, associate professor ofpsychology.Balagura spoke at a meeting Mon¬day called by the social sciencesgraduate student council. The coun¬cil had earlier supported amnestyfor the ad building demonstrators,though the “mass meeting” rejecteda three-part proposal which includedamnesty.Hearings Question Political MotivesThe special disciplinary committee heardtwo students charged with participating inthe “disruptive” ad building sit-in Tuesdayafternoon in the law school. The studentswere Amy Levine, ’72, and Naomi Langst-rom, 71.The committee asked Miss Levine ques¬tions about her politics, motives, and pos¬sible future actions, and a few concerningthe merits of her specific case.Some of the questions were:“Why did you leave the administrationbuilding?”“Do you still approve of the methods thedemonstrators used?”“Do you believe that you have the rightto use civil disobedience against the Uni¬versity?”“Couldn’t you have stayed outside thebuilding to make your point? Do you thinkoccupying a building was justified in termsof giving the group a power base?” “Were you aware that some people werenot paid because of the sit-in?”“If you had been aware of that, wouldyou have gone in?”“You said you know how the Universityhires people. Will you tell us the process ofhiring, appointing, rehiring, granting ten¬ure?”“If I don’t think a student listens to me,should I go to his office and sit in?”“I wish she would explain herself. It stilldoesn’t tell me how she justified to herselfwhat in my opinion is one of the mostserious acts she could take against thisUniversity community.”Naomi Lindstrom, and her counsel beganher hearing by asking whether presencewithin the administration at any time dur¬ing the last 13 days constituted a dis¬ruptive action. The committee respondedthat they would not answer that, but wouldquestion only whether Naomi participatedin a disruptive act.a perfect size7look perfectonlf21day§everfmontR?It has nothing to do withcalories. It’s a specialfemale weight gain...caused by temporarywater-weight build-up.Oh, you know... thatuncomfortable fullfeeling that sneaks upon you the week beforeyour menstrual period.This fluid retention notonly plays havoc withyour looks but howyou feel as well.(It puts pressure ondelicate nerves andtissues, which can leadto pre-menstrualcramps and headaches,leaves emotions on edge.)That’s why somany women take PAMPRIN*.It gently relieves water-weight gainto help prevent pre-menstrual pufliness,tension, and pressure-caused cramps.PAMPRIN makes sure a perfectsize 7 never looks less than perfect.Nor feels less than perfect, either.febrvaiV 12, 1*69/11m CUktfo Maroon/3 U(TWtL VrI' ;*k. fC ^ ■ ji |j .j j ’{ 8 t .; ;, , ii . ;■ ; . , i ; ; ■ u n n a il ii ii s ; . • , > , ; ; i i i a a a a » « » i i i< : 1 v :LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONUsefulThe unwary reader of Melvin Rothen-berg’s “Gadfly” article or Steve Roth-krug’s piece in the Red City Journal mightsuspect that Morris Janowitz is somehowconnected with “the Pentagon, or to theright wing of the political machine, or toMcNamara and his action intellectuals.”Well-informed people, of course, know thatMr Janowitz was one of the most activeintellectuals in the country in the Kennedyand McGovern campaigns, that his workon the social basis of riots was extensivelyused by the Kerner Commission, and thatas a member of the Social Science Adviso¬ry Board to the US Arms Control andDisarmament Agency he has been doingmore than many others in trying to bringan end to the present dangerous armsrace.These activities may seem right wing tosome, but they seem responsible and use¬ful to me.Richard C WadeProfessorDepartment of HistoryMilk and Honey with our university and all the freedomswe hold dear. The radicals have taken aninflexible stand. Now, the only way to keepthe University flexible is to sever its con¬nection with the radicals.If Professors Rothenberg and Flacks areunhappy here — if they believe that at Chi¬cago they are enduring the slavery of Eg¬ypt — then let them go and follow theirleaders of the New University Conferenceto the academic land of milk and honey.They have broken the commandment of allfree institutions: that thou shalt tolerateall those who tolerate thyself. The studentsand teachers who wish to impose theirideas on the rest of us by force, who havesplit this campus into warring factionsgoverned by passions and not by reason,and who have brought to our campus theirspiritual twin-brothers of the Minutemencan not be allowed to stay here; we can nolonger tolerate their intolerance. How canwe negotiate non-negotiable demands withpeople who are using strongarm tactics tohold our administration building — andbedecking it with Anglo-Saxon profanitiesin letters six feet high for all the world tosee? We can not deal with them now or ever. The radicals have risked all on a onehundred percent win-or-lose gamble, andnow if the university is to win, the radicalsmust lose.Let them go. Make them go! For thosewho want Chicago to be a tolerant, flex¬ible, free and open university, this is a mat¬ter of life or death.John WinstonGraduate StudentPolitical Science ner in which the University makes deci¬sions. Militant confrontation and arbitrarychanges in operating policy are almost cer¬tain to impair the quality of this Univer¬sity.ReasonThe University of Chicago now offers toits students one of the best educational ex¬periences obtainable in the world, and itoffers to its faculty a uniquely stimulatingintellectual environment. The position ofthe University is not an accident but a re¬sult of its dedication to reason and to qual¬ity. The probability must be close to zerothat this distinguished record can be im¬proved upon by accepting the politics ofconfrontation as a legitimate method of re¬solving conflicts or by accepting drasticand unstudied proposals to alter the man- I know of no reason to deny to students,faculty, and administration the opportunityto participate in a different intellectual en¬vironment than that which is offered here.There are many colleges throughout theland in which student participation andpromotional qualifications differ substan¬tially from ours. I defend the right of othercolleges to engage in a different education¬al experience than ours, and I hope we willdefend our right to offer to members of theUniversity one of the finest educational ex¬periences obtainable. The best way to en¬sure the ability of all persons to find theeducational policies and environment thatthey seek is to endorse free and open com¬petition between colleges and to resist theattempts by some to prevent this com¬petition and free association through theuse of militant action.Harold DemsetzIt is clear now which way the studentrevolution here is going. The militants aretrying to impose on us by force their ownnon-negotiable demands for radicalizingthe University. By the Newtonian law thatpostulates an equal and opposite reactionfor every action, they have aroused theirpolitical mirror-image, the Minutemen, toaction. Those of us who are not radicals oneither side have a choice: either we muststop this outburst now or be caught in amurderous crossfire and destroyed, along Crockett Elected RepThe graduate humanities student councilhas elected Steven Crockett, history of cul¬ture representative to replace Sid Huttner,philosophy, on the steering committee ofthe joint council.Huttner said he was too busy to continuein the post.The biological sciences student councilmet Tuesday night, but no report on themeeting was available at the present time. UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTS-AMERICAHURRAHFeb. 14, 15, 16 at 8:30Reynolds Club Theatre Tickets $2.00, 1.50R. C. DeskTHE JEWISH COMMUNITYCENTERS OF CHICAGOOFFER SUMMER EMPLOYMENTOPPORTUNITIES IN SOCIAL WORKORIENTED AND COUNTRY CAMPSDAYCAMPS |oc(Jjej fijfougi^yf the Chicago areaPositions: Counselors - Male OnlySupervisory StaffSpecialistsCAMP CHIlocated 50 miles North of Madisonand the University of WisconsinPositions: Counselors - Male & Fe¬maleSupervisory StaffSpecialistsWaterfrontCampcraftArts & CraftsDriversNursesCooksIf you are interested in any of the above, pleasecall FI 6-6700, extension 509, Camp Chi officeto make an appointment for an interview. In¬terviews will be held on Monday, February 17,1969, at the Hillel Foundation, 5715 SouthWoodlawn.UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOJlrdrdves4/The Chicago Maroon/February 12, 1969 Putting you first, keeps us first. ’69 Camaro Sport Coupe, "The Hugger”Most of the cars that are competitive with Chev-rolets are clamoring for you to buy them now.Big deal. (You hope.)Chevrolet offers something even better than hope.Many popular items are priced less than a year ago.Such as Powerglide and large V8’s. Head restraintsare now standard. New advanced-design power discbrakes are priced over a third less than our power discbrakes were last year.So we’re offering a ’69 Camaro Sport Coupe for less money than last year.$147.00* less if you equip it with the new 350-cu.-in.250-hp V8 (as compared with last year’s 327-cu.-in.275-hp Eight), the Powerglide and power disc brakes,whitewalls and wheel covers.Help us deflate inflation.Show up at your Chevrolet dealer’s Showdown.You’ll win.* Rased on manufacturer’s suggested retail prices,including federal excise tax and suggesteddealer new car preparation charge.Value Showdown:$14700 less thanlast year% Camaro withcomparable equipment.:——