Volume 77, Number 44 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 21, 1969A/tdrGh to the Law SchoolDavid TravisjllpNd^emfey1 t 'I %, 'Cohn A Stem(Fount Sc (EampuaShopMANY SPLENDORED JACKETOur 100% Nylon jacket by H.I.S. is waterrepellent, wrinkle resistant, light weight. Ahood is concealed in the collar. Sizes S,M,L,XL,in whiskey, navy or martini, $10IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsDid you know that IftUSMCtlAFT sell KLHcampacts with 2 year parts & labor guarantees, &does any necessary service on their premises!!48 E. Oak St. ' 2035 W. 95thOn Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYVWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY IIAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9c/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, 8c INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 Out of 7,180graduating MBA’s, theworld’s largest bank isgoing to hire 11.How do you like the odds?If the odds appeal to you, you’ve probably got thembeat. The 11 MBA’s we hire will be exceptionalmen looking for an exceptional challenge.And they’ll be starting exceptional careers withthe leader in world banking.If you’re one of the 11, you’ll fill a job in eitherSan Francisco or Los Angeles. Sorry, but there’s notraining program. Initially, you will get acquaintedwith our bank through completion of a series ofspecial projects.Your next assignments will be for developmentalpurposes in major functional areas. We aren’tinterested in specialists—certainly not in theearly years. Our objective is to build professionalbankers for positions of leadership in general management through demonstrated performance.It won’t be easy. But it will be satisfying. And ifyou’re one of the 11, the last thing you’re lookingfor is something easy.If it sounds like we’re trying to scare people off,maybe we are. It’s the ones who can’t be scaredthat we want.With that in mind, if you still want to talk to uswe very much want to talk to you. We’ll be on cam¬pus soon. See your placement office today to arrangean interview.Bank of AmericaNATIONAL TRUST AN 0 SAVINGS ASSOCIATION • M E M■(ft FEDERAL OC POSIT INSURANCK CORPORATEJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Fac tory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service'. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oi' change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393i;eo What todo abouta drainedbrain.Nothing drains a brain likecramming.Somehow the more you tryto remember the more you seemto forget.So start by remembering one thing.Remember NoDoz® And NoDoz willhelp you remember the rest.NoDoz has the strongest stimulant youcan buy without a prescription Andit's not habit forming.Next time you feela drained braincoming on, take a coupleof NoDoz And getV > M from y°Vr»rpjo(L ■ *2/The Chicago Maroon/February 21, 1969a. -U.200 March on Disciplinary Hearings7 , ' ' * ' * David TravisSTUDENTS MARCH: A crowd of more than 200 pack law school corridor bringing their demands to the disciplinary committee which met in the Kirkland courtroom.By Steve CookSome 200 students who ended a brief sit-in in the law school Thursday, planning toreturn Friday, will find no one home.At the three-hour sit-in, students present¬ed Dallin Oaks, chairman of the dis¬ciplinary committee, with a petition askingthat the more than 500 students who signedbe tried as participants in the recent adbuilding sit-in. Oaks accepted the petition,and students voted to return Friday to de¬mand a response.Oaks announced Thursday night that thecommittee will not conduct hearings in thelaw school Friday. An open hearing hadbeen scheduled for 4:30 pm Friday. Oaks,stated that Peter Lauriat, a law studentand spokesman for the defendants, re¬quested Thursday that the hearing be post¬poned “to give him additional time to getmore evidence.”Lauriat stated that he made the motionThursday noon before the sit-in. The com¬mittee will conduct private hearings Fri¬day “at an undisclosed location, not in thelaw school.”From 3:30 until 6 pm Thursday studentswaited in the north wing hallway blockingthe disciplinary committee in the Kirklandcourt room.A security guard suggested to the dem¬onstrators that he request to the com¬mittee that chairman Dallin Oaks come be¬fore the students to accept the petition ifstudents would insure Oaks’ safety. Thedemonstrators agreed to the suggestion.As protestors waited for a reply, a pha¬lanx of about 20 law students and securityguards charged through several demon¬strators who were watching the doors toallow members of the disciplinary com¬mittee to flee via a basement exit.Petitioners planning to march again Fri¬day will meet at 2:30 pm in front of the adbuilding.The demonstrators refused Oaks’ termsthat three representatives present a state¬ment before the disciplinary committee and that students clear the building. Theconsensus of the group was to present enmasse to the committee the statementssigned by 500 students. The statementsread:“The sit-in is over. It is time now forcollective defense. I hereby pledge myselfto act as follows on the condition that I amnotified that 500 or more have agreed totake this action also. On Thursday, Feb 20, Friday, Feb 21, or Monday, Feb 24, I willappear in person before the clerk of dis¬cipline in Eckhart 209 (or wherever theproper place is at that time) to give myname and take responsibility for havingbeen in the administration building duringthe sit-in.”The march from the ad building to thelaw school was peaceful. Students votednot to disrupt the hearing or to block those students wishing to enter or leave thebuilding. Law students and security guardssealed off the Kirkland court room fromthe demonstrators.Demonstrators did not try to force theirway into the hearing room. However,spokesmen were allowed in. Exits from thecourtroom were guarded by demonstratorsbut they made no attempt to force any vio¬lent confrontation.Discipline Cases Decided For 31By Leslie StraussThe special disciplinary committee hasreached final decisions on the cases of 31students charged with participating in thetwo-week sit-in. The decisions consist ofrecommendations of disciplinary action tobe taken in each case.None of the 31 students were expelled.There were no suspensions for over twoterms. Some of the decisions were sus¬pended suspensions, suspensions datedfrom the time the sit-in began, probationuntil June ’70, or for a shorter time, nodisciplinary action at all, and suspensionsfor two terms with the understanding thatif nothing happens, the suspensions will berevoked for the second term.Suspensions appear on transcripts as“student not permitted to register.” Proba¬tions are not recorded permanently.The committee has heard 53 cases sofar; 126 students have been summoned toappear before the committee, committeechairman Dallin Oaks said in a statementThursday.Most of the students were notified bymail what action would be taken againstthem earlier this week.The committee sent the recommenda-t i o n s to dean of students CharlesO’Connell, who hr? final authority to de¬cide what action will be taken against stu¬dents. O’Connell is not obligated to use the* /w committee’s recommendations, but he hasindicated that he will so so.Dallin Oaks, chairman of the committee,said that the committee would not maketheir recommendations public.O’Connell said he could not give the stu¬dents’ names as a matter of principle.One law student said about the decisions,“Given the nature of the early cases, itsnot surprising that those students were notexpelled. The real question will arise whenthe committee considers the cases of thosewho they consider leaders and/of parti¬cipators in earlier sit-ins”.One of the students who had been placedon probation commented, “I don’t see howthis will mean very much. I’m on proba¬tion now until June, ’70, but I’m not surewhat that means. I suppose social or aca¬demic probation. But I’m not going to beliving in a dorm next year, so. . .?”A student who received notice that“O'Connell was pleased to inform him thatthere would be no disciplinary action takenagainst him,” said that was a decision onlyfor one specific time, and that he intended to sign the petition asking for a collectivehearing on the basis of the other times hehad been in the building.One student said he was told he wouldnot be allowed to withdraw from the Uni¬versity as part of an interim suspension.He said, “I was planning to withdraw fromthe University as a protest, but if theywant to use the place for a prison, I’mhappy to stay here and try to learn some¬thing.”Several students who have received sum¬mons but have not yet answered them saidthat they felt that “it didn’t matter whatdecision the committee reached, because itwasn’t legitimate anyway.”Several employees of the bubble cham¬ber group at the Enrico Fermi Institutehave protested to President Edward Levi,R G Sachs, director of the Institute, anddean Adrian Albert of physical sciencesover the firing of Roger Wechsler, ‘70.Wechsler was dismissed after he drewtemporary suspension from the Universityfor not having appeared before the dis¬ciplinary committee.Did you know that mJSICkAFT not only hasthe LOWEST PRICES on STEREO COMPONENTSbut gives generous trade-in allowances.48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95th St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005* * «■ t»»♦February 21, 19*9/The Chkigo Maroon/3I-,,*. *< w * ► t“When I was in graduate school, I wantedto make sure I’d get to use what I was learn¬ing. That’s why I went into marketing at IBM,”says John Houlihan. presidents and the data processing manager.But I also have to deal with the presidentbecause he’s often the only one who can givefinal approval. in industrial engineering and manufacturing.Whatever area you choose, we think you’llagree with John: “Getting my MBA wasworth the extra effort.”•ii . John earned his MBA in 1936. He now sellsIBM computers to mutual funds, banks andother financial institutions.“It’s a management consulting job,” hesays. “The reason is, computers affect nearlyevery area of a business. I get involvedwith a customer’s accounting, finance, andmarketing. Which means I have to knowsomething about each of these areas. So I’mconstantly using the broad scope of knowl¬edge I picked up in graduate school."Working at the topAnother management consulting aspect ofJohn’s job is the level of people he deals with.“Most of the time,” he says, “I work with vice- “And when you’re working with people onthat level, you need the management toolsyou get in graduate school. If a customerstarts talking about a regression analysis, Ican stay with him. Or, I might get involved in alinear programming study to determine theoptimum stock mix for a portfolio. Believe me,getting an MBA was worth the extra effort.”Career areas for MBA’s Visit your placement officeSign up at your place¬ment office for an inter¬view with IBM. Or senda letter or resume toIrv Pfeiffer, IBM,Dept. C, 100 SouthWacker Drive, Chicago,Illinois 60606. ONCAMPUSMAR.5,6Marketing is only one of several areas for An Equal Opportunity EmployerMBA’s at IBM. Others include finance andengineering. MBA’s in finance can work inFinancial Planning and Control, FinancialAnalysis, Accounting, and InformationSystems. In engineering, MBA’s work mainlyMBA’s at IBM“Believe me,it was worththe extra effort!’mm " 1 - 1What End for Committee Hearings?DALUN OAKS: Disciplinary committee chairman addresses meeting.By Rob CooleyThe disciplinary committee is back inthe campus spotlight and student reactionto it could develop into renewed active pro¬test.With the sit-in over and moves for stu¬dent power going on quietly at the depart¬mental level, the major University-wide is¬sue now is the disciplining of sitters-in.And students are widely questioning thelegitimacy of the disciplinary committee,the fairness of its processes, whether sit¬ters-in should be disciplined at all and,above all, the political motivations of thecommittee.About 300 students sat in at the lawschool for three hours Thursday afternoon,blocking the committee into a room whereit was conducting private hearings.They were part of a group of over 500students who have agreed to turn them¬selves in to the committee for being in thead building during the sit-in.That move appears to be basically a pro¬test against disciplinary proceedings andsentences of suspension or expulsion. Thehope of the signers, mostly campus moder¬ates, is apparently that if enough peopleturn themselves in, the committee will notwish to suspend all of them and will in¬stead rethink its sentencing policies andpossibly reconstitute itself.It is more likely that the committee willrefuse to hear those cases on the groundsthat they are based purely on self-in¬crimination.That response, the group hopes, wouldshow the committee is not interested in ANALYSISpunishing all sitters-in and only wishes toget rid of radical leaders to set an ex¬ample for other students.On another front, about 50 summonsedstudents who have not yet appeared beforethe committee have demanded a collectivedefense.Their request was denied.The students involved charge that the re¬fusal of a collective defense is a politicaltactic by the committee to selectively ex¬pel ringleaders and break a radical move¬ment on campus.The committee claims that only by hear¬ing students individually can due processbe honored and fair judgments made.Those students say they will respond byappearing en masse at an open hearing toagain demand a collective defense. If theydon’t get one, they say, they will simplyrefuse to appear before the committee atall.The result would be that their temporarysuspensions would not be lifted, and allwould in effect be expelled.At open disciplinary hearings during thepast two weeks, student defense state¬ments and faculty questions have clarifiedthe nature of proceedings, and decisions ondisciplinary recommendations have startedto come out. Students have repeatedly made motionsrequesting that an appeal board otherthan Dean Charles O’Connell be set up, aquestion which has been left open by thedisciplinary committee.Jeremy Kunz, graduate sociology stu¬dent, in an open hearing Thursday statedthat “I do not recognize the legitimacy ofthe committee” and said he would notpresent evidence on his case unless thecommittee is reconstituted with studentvoting members.Chairman Dallin Oaks replied that the committee had earlier ruled to consider it¬self legitimate, and added that “the com¬mittee has decided that we are proceedingfailry and with due process.”At an earlier hearing, professor HermanSinaiko, acting as counsel for a student,criticized the disciplinary procedure forthe “patronizing condescension” in thetone of committee questions to accusedstudents.Observers say that tone has been appar¬ent in hearings primarily during facultyContinued on Page TenAFRO - AMERICAN STUDIES36 CHILDRENBLACK MUSICNEGRO POLITICSBLACK NATIONALISMTHE OTHER AMERICAAUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MALCOLM XNEGRO THOUGHT IN AMERICAGROWING UP IN THE BLACK BELTCRISIS OF THE NEGRO INTELLECTUALWHITE REFLECTIONS ON BLACK POWER CANERACE WARINVISIBLE MANANGER AND BEYONDTHE NEGRO’S GODBLACK SKIN WHITE MASKSA CENTURY OF CIVIL RIGHTSAMERICAN NEGRO POETRYNEGRO POLITICIANSURBAN BLUESTHE NEGRO REVOLTREBELLION IN NEWARK BLACK CARGOESBLACK RAGEALL TITLES IN PAPERBACK AND RELATIVELY INEXPENSIVETHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE — 58TH & ELLISTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.manuscripts unlimited664-585$866 No. Wabash Ave. Most complete photoand hobby store onthe Sooth SideMODEL CAMERAU42 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student-Discounts Only JfttJSMCRAFT has 15-day cash refunds onall STEREO COMPONENTS!! AND 30-day fullexchange privileges!!48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95thOn Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005 Pro Grafica ArtePrints — Pop/op and much other Stuff(friendly atmosphere)155 E. Ontario 642-0047• February 21,1949/The Chkfagb Maroon/b*4'V I.A 'kmi* •'*■>{>'fir.I? •V -■ >. tlift;J.W.afc■ y»Mif*Ytyl\k \ TAKtAM-YMfCH IN ESE-AME RICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYCUCtfTWiI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outim8>Eas^6Jn^>iMy4n^2i 1 mrDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometriste/e examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 4M-yrT* " » # ft ft ^ r v Ss tHr* ’ ^ ■ R ' V vT:/f/vo Here’s one cardfrom the establishmentthat no studentwill ever burn.TWA 50/50 CLUB YOUTH PARI CARDPOR AGES 15 THRU 51Th<s identification card entitles member to purchase transpor¬tation tor self only, subject to conditions on reverse side.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until to¬morrow if you call ustoday.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 The Carpet BarnA division of Cortland CarpetWe have an enormous selection ofnew and used wall-to-wail car¬petings. staircase runners, rem¬nants and area rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine and Americanorientals).We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 3.1258 W. Kinzie (at Racine)HU 4-1140 243-2271It'll give you a great trip on your spring vacation.It’s TWA’s 50/50 Club Card. And if you’rebetween the ages of 12 and 21, it entitles you tofly TWA anywhere in the United States athalf-fare (and it’s good for discounts on mostother airlines too). Now’s the time to get one, soyou can take off on your spring vacation. Fly skiing, fly swimming, fly home, fly anywhere.TWA flies just about everywhere. See yourtravel agent. TWA Campus Representative orstop by the local TWA office. Forget aboutclasswork and fly TWA somewhere at half¬fare. Even if your parents approve.TWAThe things we'H do to make you happy.If you plan to go on tograduate school, this bookwill save you time, money,and effort—and could saveyou from a serious wrongmove. It shows you whichschool is best for you ...how to apply ... how to getfinancial help if you needit... and lots more. Hereare the facts on every U.S.university (more than 200)offering graduate programs,in 37 different subject areas... the degrees awarded, thenumbers of students en¬rolled ... special programs...quality ratings based onthe American Council ofEducation study... fellow¬ships, assistantships, and other financial aid... Grad¬uate Record ExaminationTest sample questions ...and important informationon the draft. “Highly rec¬ommended lor all studentscontemplating enrollmentin graduate school.” — JIMranz, Dean of AcademicAffairs, Univ. of Wyoming,in Library JournalTHE RANDOM HOUSEGUIDE TO GRADUATESTUDY IN THE ARTSAND SCIENCESByE R WASSERMAN andE E SWITZERNow at your bookstore ITTRANDOM HOUSC6/The "Chicago Maroon/February 21, T969 GOLD CITY INN**♦* Merooa"A Gold Mino of Good Food"IO %Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKI-0UT Orders Final ReductionUP TO50% OFFSince the Nehru& the Edwardian-Didn't you always suspect thatSomewhere there was someonewho had the same kind of tasteyou did? We suspect we're thatsomeonePcfetotcfe, Htb.7104 SO.JEFFERY AVEIN SOUTH SHOREPhone DO 3-2700Open Daily 9:30 A.M. - 6; 00 P.Mmm1 ■College students are expected by theUniversity to earn more in summer andpart-time jobs over the next three years.Senior men, now expected to contribute$650 toward academic expenses, will be ex¬pected to give $950 by 1973.Anthony Pallett, director of college aid,says that the increases in expected earn¬ings will be made gradually. The earningsare part of the budgets that the college aidcommittee considers in deciding scholar¬ships and loans.Freshmen are now expected to contrib¬ ute $500 from summer and “term-time”earnings. After their first year, Collegemen are expected to earn $650, and Collegewomen, $600.Next year freshmen men will be ex¬pected to contribute $650 (freshmen wom¬en, $600) from summer and term-timeearnings. Each succeeding year they willbe expected to earn an additional $100.Expected earnings of students now in theCollege will be increased gradually, ac¬cording to Pallett. Here is the schedule:Black Student UprisingsPrevalent On CampusesBy Con HitchcockRepercussions of demonstrations stemm¬ing from black student unrest were promi¬nent in the news Thursday.The news ranged from a state assemblyinvestigation of the Chicago Illini to vio¬lence at Berkeley.Administration, faculty, and trusteestook action at six schools regarding dis¬ruptive tactics.Twenty black students burst into the of¬fice of Roosevelt university President RolfA Weil Thursday morning and presentedhim with a list of demands. The list includ¬ed amnesty for participants in last week’sdemonstration and the broadening of blackstudies in the curriculum.Reporter Jim Johnson of WLS-TV wasroughed up and two tape recorders weresmashed in the 15-minute foray.In a press conference Thursday after¬noon. President Weil said that he wouldpress charges against the students in¬volved. He also said he was “opposed toracism, white and black.”Wednesday, warrants for the arrest offive students were sworn, charging crimi¬nal trespass. The students had been ex¬pelled for disrupting classes last week, butreturned to disrupt again.The Roosevelt Black Student Association(BSA) held a rally today at the Loopschool to protest the administration’s ac¬tion and “to tell our side of the struggle toall the students.” The rally culminated inthe entering of Weil’s office.Approximately 25 uniformed and plain¬clothes policemen arrived on campusshortly after noon. They guarded the li¬brary card catalogues and wanderedaround the campus. No incidents betweenstudents and police occurred. At a meetinglater in the afternoon students drafted anotice demanding that the police leave thecampus.Tuesday night a faculty-student com¬mittee agreed to establish a black studiesdepartment. The action temporarily halteddemonstrations. Plans for the departmentcalls for the BSA to draft a course of studyand administrative set-up of the depart¬ment. It is estimated that if the plan issubmitted to the curriculum committeewithin two weeks, the department could beset up for this semester. At present, 31courses in black studies are offered.The Illinois State Assembly adopted aresolution Wednesday to order an in-UC to Grant BlackThe University has announced creationof a new, $250,000 fellowship program toencourage and assist black students to en¬roll in the four graduate divisions.The program was announced by John TWilson, vice-president and dean of facul¬ties, who said, “This is one of severalsteps the University has taken and is con¬tinuing to take to assure that capableblack students are not denied the opportun¬ity for quality graduate training because ofeconomic disadvantage, rising tuition fees,or intensive competition for limited fellow- vestigation of the Chicago Illini, studentnewspaper at University of Illinois Circlecampus, for use of obscenities in an articleFeb 11.The article was an analysis of obsce¬nities used by black students, written by aNegro editor, Theophilus Green. Represen¬tative Peter Miller of Chicago called thelanguage “inflammatory and despicable”and asked for the investigation before an¬other issue could come out. He said morestudent riots will occur unless student dis¬sent is curtailed.At the University of Wisconsin, facultymembers voted Wednesday to reject a de¬mand by black students that three expelledstudents from Oshkosh State be admittedto the Madison school. The vote was 518-524.Earlier Wednesday, fire swept the thirdfloor of the building housing the Afro-American race relations center. Policesaid it was caused by arson. Files weresaved, but furniture was burned. No onewas in the building at the time.University of Illinois trustees Wednesdayordered charges brought against leaders ofa black student sit-in last September in Ur-bana.They refused to discuss the 41 demandsvoiced during the sit-in. President DavidDodds Henry said, “There should be vigor¬ous prosecution of all those persons whothe evidence indicates bear material re¬sponsibility for the incidents.”Last September 250 students took overthree lounges in the Illini Union and stayeduntil they were removed by police nextmorning. They were arrested on charges ofmob action. The lounge was damaged. Sev¬eral disruptions have taken place sincethen, including the burning of 7,500 cardsin a library card catalogue Saturday.At Berkeley rocks, stinkbombs and bot¬tles were hurled at police in the most vio¬lent outbreak on campus in the month longstrike by the Third World LiberationFront. Five persons were injured, in¬cluding one policeman and a photographerfrom the Daily Californian, the studentnewspaper. Some 150 to 200 policemenchased students around the campus, ar¬resting 25. Approximately 35 windows werebroken in eight buildings. The incidentstarted when 20 sheriff’s deputies arrivedWednesday morning to supervise picketingstudents.Grad Fellowshipsship funds which are available throughregular university programs.”There are now about 286 black studentsenrolled in the University of Chicago out ofa total of 8,579 degree candidates. DeanO’Connell said the university is involved inan intensive recruiting campaign to attractand identify black and other minoritygroup applicants. “These efforts will beaided by the existence at the university ofobservable, financial evidence of our in¬tention to make a major contribution to therecognized shortage of black scholars,”Dean O’Connell said. Class of 1970 Men Women1st year 1944-47 >500 $5002nd Year 1967-48 450 6003rd year 1948-49 450 6004tti year 1949-70 450 600Class of 19711st year 1947-48 500 5002nd year 1948-49 650 6003rd year 1949-70 650 6004th year 1970-71 750 700Class of 19721st year 1948-49 500 5002nd year 1949-70 650 6003rd year 1970-71 750 7004th year 1971-72 850 800 university departments a request for list¬ings of summer jobs for which Universitystudents are given preference.The office of career counseling andplacement has issued a listing of summerjob opportunities throughout the UnitedStates. Copies of the bulletin and supple¬mentary job opportunities are available inReynolds club.The hike in self help, the first in sevenyears, was first considered late last fallwhen the aid committee became awarethat students were reporting earnings inexcess of requirements.Harvard and Yale expect first year stu¬dents to earn $900 with increases of $50(Harvard) and $100 (Yale) per year. JohnHopkins expects $600 the first year and anadditional $100 every following year.Employment opportunities have alsobeen considered along with the proposedincrease. The University’s personnel officehas been successful in placing most stu¬dents in term-time and summer jobs, Pal¬lett says.Each spring the office circulates to all UC Prof to Direct NewNigerian Research UnitRobert A LeVine, professor of anthro¬pology and in the committee of human de¬velopment has been named director of anew Child Development Research Unit(CDRU) at Ahmadu Bello University atZaria, Nigeria.The primary goal of the center will be:to produce basic information on childrenand parents in the northern states of Ni¬geria that will be of help in planninghealth, education and welfare services;and to further the development of trainingand research in the behavioral sciences atAhmadu Bello University, a spokesmansaid.CITY STATE ZIPI UNDERSTAND THERE IS NO OBLIGATION. Undecided about your future?It’s no disgrace.Even Einstein couldn’t make up his mind for quite awhileVan Gogh took time to get on the track.The Wright Brothers didn't start concentrating on aeroplanesright away.So, if you’re graduating from college and you still don’t knowwhat to do with your future...chin up.You can go tr Officer Training School. Become an officer. Getofficer’s pay and piestige. Travel. All while you're learning to fly.See? You can do something constructive, exciting, profitableand patriotic. Be an Air Force pilot.They’ll say you’re just another genius who has made up hisJ mind.UNITED STATES AIR FORCEBox A, Dept.SCP92Randolph Air Force Base, Texas 78148tfAMC AGEPLEASE PRINTCOLLEGEGRADUATION DATE PHONE Take off!CARLOr ni's •A *1 I18th CENTURY commcdia dell’ ar/WThe familiar, traditional characters of PANT ALONE,’ARLECCHINO, DOTTORE ... the silly lovers... the foxyservants... the old blustering parents...—in a revival of theCLASSIC commedia theatre!Full of COLOR! costumes—masks—scenery—LAUGHS! ... at us...as we see ourselves. Scenes that provoke an echo of Puck’s...“Oh! what fools these mortals be! ”If you are ready, in the mid-winter bleakness, to enjoy an evening ofbright, sprightly comedy ... saucy ... entertaining ... bawdy ... FUN!PLAN to see one of the performances of Goldoni’s. ..SERVANT OF TWO MASTERS“.. . a reminder not to take ourselves too seriously .. .FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY - FEBRUARY 21 • 22 • 23 8:30 P.M.tickets: university theatre, 5706 S. University Are., Chicago 60637General Admission $2.50 / Student Discount Tickets $2.00Reservations by phone: MI-3-0800, ext. 3581 / Group Rates Availableoc filmstonight!7:15 & 9:30 ALFRED HITCHCOCK'SMARNIENO ONE WILL BE ADMITTED DURING THE LAST 10 MINUTESas the dramatic riddle of “MARNIE” unfolds!TIBETAN BOOK OF THE DEADKIMONWONG JOSEPHJARMANCOThe Chicago Maroon presents a multi-media ballet withvisual effects by New Vista Audio-Visual.8:00 P.M. Sunday, March 9 MANDEL HALLTickets 2.50, STUDENTS $1.50Available at the Maroon business Office, Room 304Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., or at the door. LAST 3 NIGHTS!Renowned Country PickerDOC WATSON3 Shows NightlySPECIAL 8 PM SHOWSOPEN TO ALL AGESQUIET KNIGHT1311 N. Wells St.Old Town 944-8755Now thru March 15Shakespeare's "brack" corned/Measure forMeasureStarring Donald Harronand Clayton CorzatteGoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus DriveCE 6-2337LAST CHANCEOpen Auditions"Guys and Dolls" will bepresented at the HarperTheater May 23, 24.Auditions for orch., chorus,technical and all leads willbe held Sat., 2/22, at 1:30P.M. in the UnitarianChurch at 57th and Wood-lawn.MUSIC THEATEROF HYDE PARKCOUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7 100 So. Yates 363-9842 BLUESTONIGHT!JOE KELLYatBLUE GARGOYLE i— arkenjoy ourspecial studentrateTRC raM/ T timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow 3 a.m.• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 50clittle gal lery for galsonly• dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843ROGER EBERTDIGS‘LOVE AFFAIR ”!AND YOU CAN “DIG" IT, TOO, HE SAYS, IF YOU AREPART OF. . .“that specific American subculture con¬sisting of old Bob and Ray fans, Marvel Comicsreaders, Realist subscribers, people who can recitescenes from 'Catch-22', and people who write obsceneletters to large corporations. They will share Make-vejev's vision of the real world, where the grotesqueand hilarious are identical."'. . .(I was) weeping with laughter, gasping andwheezing and applauding "ROGER EBERT,Sun-Times“A RICH AND MEMORABLE MOTION PICTURE!Outrageously original...phenomenal daring.,unerring comedy. Vast sexual appetites!”Joseph Morgenstern, NewsweekLOVE AFFAIRthe case of the missing switchboard operator.Starring EVA RAS. RUZICA SOKIS. SLOBODAN AllGRUDICDiractad by Duton Mokovajav A Brandon Filmi ralaoia2424 N. Lincoln;528-91266", 8”, 10" DoilyPARK FREE:STUDENT RATE.8/The Chicago Maroon/February 21, 1969By Jim HaefemeyerThe Gray committee has denied that thecase of an alleged Red Squad cooperatorwho was initially denied readmission to theUniversity had any bearing on the decisionagainst reappointing Marlene Dixon.Associate professor Hanna H Gray,chairman of the committee, issued thebrief statement Thursday. The ChicagoJournalism Review (CJR) published a sto¬ry Monday making public the case of Rich¬ard Markin, a student accepted for PhDresearch under Mrs Dixon in the com¬mittee on human development in autumn,1967.Markin had been asked to reapply forPhD condidacy in December. 1967, but wasnot readmitted until last fall.The CJR story, written by the editorsand Lois Willie, Pultizer prize-winning re¬porter for the Chicago Daily News, statedthat Markin had cooperated with his cous¬in, Mort Franklin, an identified agent ofthe Chicago police intelligence division, bybringing him to meetings of Chicago leftgroups.Neither Markin nor Franklin could bereached for comment.Assistant professor of sociology RichardFlacks Wednesday issued a statement veri¬fying the CJR story on the basis of a per¬sonal investigation.The Flacks statement further accusedthe Gray committee of failing to considerthe Markin case sufficiently. Flacks sug¬gested that “defamatory material” fromred squad files on Mrs Dixon may havebeen communicated to University officials,that the decision to readmit Markin“might have been viewed as incompatiblewith keeping Mrs Dixon on the faculty,”and that university officials did not in¬vestigate Markin to find whether he vio¬lated the trust of those involved in his PhDresearch.The matter was not brought up earlier,Mrs Dixon said, “because I did not want topressure the Gray committee. I trustedthat the committee would seriously treatthe issue of police spies on campus, be¬cause it is a clear threat to academic free¬dom.”Mrs Gray said in her statement, “TheGray committee investigated in great de¬tail the circumstances surrounding thematter of Mr Markin, as now outlined inthe Chicago Journalism Review, in orderto ascertain whether this matter had hadany bearing on the decision with regard tothe reappointment of Mrs Dixon.”"All the facts noted in the Chicago Jour¬nalism Review were fully known to us. Wediscussed the case at considerable lengthwith Mrs Dixon, members of the com¬mittee on human development, adminis¬trative officers of the University, and aninformed member of the medical com¬mittee for human rights.”The medical committee on human rightswas the subject of Markin’s proposed re¬search. Miss Jane Kennedy, co-chairmanof MCHR and assistant director of nursingat Billings hospital, testified before theGray committee."We came to the judgment,” Mrs Graycontinued, “that the Markin case had in noway had any bearing on the decision madeon Mrs Dixon’s reappointment."As we stated in our report, ‘the com¬mittee had to investigate a number of mat¬ters which turned out to be extraneous.’The Markin case and its attendant circum¬stances come under that heading. We wereasked to look into it, and we did. We aresatisfied that it did not influence the pro¬cess of academic judgment.”In summer, 1967, Markin approachedMarlene Dixon with a proposal for PhDresearch, after he hed been turned downby several other faculty members, Markinproposed to study the political attitudes ofmembers of the medical committee for hu¬man rights, an organization of health pro¬fessionals active in civil rights activities.Still in the first year of her appointment,Mrs Dixon accepted his proposal and be¬came chairman of his committee. Others —The secret police in ChicagoThe secret police in Chicagoon the committee were William E Henry,chairman of the committee on human de¬velopment, and Lee Spray, a research as¬sociate in human development.During that summer, Markin represent¬ed MCHR at meetings of several left orga¬nizations, such as the Chicago Area DraftResisters (CADRE) and the Latin Ameri¬can Defense Organization.He brought along his cousin Mort Frank¬lin, alias “Marty Franker, who posed as amilitant seaman who kept no secret hishate for the police.MCHR knew nothing of Markin’s cousin.“His cousin never came into our midst;we never laid eyes on him,” said Dr Quen¬tin D Young, a Hyde Park doctor and one¬time MCHR local chairman.At the same time, Markin began to bringhis cousin to Mrs Dixon’s informal classeson the welfare system. The classes weresponsored by the Center for Radical Re¬search, an organization not affiliated withthe University.Franklin, along with Markin, often calledon the Dixon home; Franklin became apersonal friend of Mr Dixon. Franklinused his interest in Marx to put Mrs Dixonthrough “a continual political inter¬rogation,” she said.“But,” Mrs Dixon said, “there’s nothingI said to those agents that I wouldn’t shoutat the top of my lungs.”At the end of the summer, Mrs Dixonquit supervising Markin’s research. Shedid not suspect he was involved with thered squad, but felt he was a poor student,she said.Lee Spray supervised the last threedrafts of Markin’s PhD proposal. Early infall quarter the dissertation proposal wasapproved by human development.But early in December, 1967, the situ¬ation exploded. Mort Franklin’s cover was The "Red Squad" officiallyknown as the subversivesunit of the Police In¬telligent Division, City ofChicago Police Department,carries on overt andcovert investigations ofgroups considered sub¬versive by the policedepartment.Operating with some 40men from an importcompany front on NavyPier, the Red Squad isMayor Richard J. Daley'sjunior CIA.blown when a CADRE member spottedhim testifying as a covert agent for policeintelligence in a syndicate court case. TheChicago Daily news front-paged an articleexposing Franklin.Sid Lens, a Hvde Park activist who hadbeen investigating Red Squad activities,called Mrs L»ixon and asked her to publiclyreveal Franklin’s connections with her. Butunder advice of senior faculty members,Mrs Dixon refused.Informed of Markin’s association withFranklin, the MCHR then refused to grantMarkin any further assistance on his re¬search.“We came to the conclusion that wecould not present before our membershipany questionnaire prepared by Markin,”said Miss Kennedy, MCHR co-chairman.Markin had continually requested MCHRmembership lists from Mrs Irene Turner,the other MCHR co-chairman, both for hisresearch and for mailing committee pub¬licity. But he had not gained access tothem, according to Mrs Turner and DrYoung.Markin was now out of MCHR and with¬out a research topic. Mrs Dixon resignedas chairman of his PhD committee, notonly because of his involvement with theRed Squad, (about which she now knew);but because he was a poor student, he waswithout a topic, and he had violated theethics required of a social scientist, shesaid.The other members of the committeealso resigned. Lee Spray said that afterMCHR refused cooperation the dissertationproject was impossible.Markin was asked to reapply for PhDcandidacy at that time, according to MrsGray. When Markin did apply to human development, he was refused readmissionbecause of a poor academic record. Be¬cause of her experience with him, MrsDixon abstained from voting in any deci¬sion regarding Markin, she said.Markin then threatened the Universitywith a law suit. The grounds for legal ac¬tion are unclear. Mrs Dixon said thatMarkin was claiming that she had usedher influence against him because of hispolitics.D Gale Johnson, dean of social sciences,however, stated that political dis¬crimination was not the issue.“The other side’s case would have beenacademic mistreatment,” he said.Mrs Gray said Markin made personalcharges against Mrs Dixon and chargedthe University with political dis¬crimination. He said Mrs Dixon was tryingto blackmail him at other schools. MrsGray denied the charges.Walter V Leen, chief of legal counsel forthe University, could not comment.After Markin had pressed for read¬mission, two Red Squad agents “called ona University official to attest Markin’s in¬nocence,” the Chicago Journalism Reviewreported.According to several sources, that Uni¬versity official was Julian Levi, professorof urban studies in the division of socialsciences. However, the policemen whospoke with Levi — and there is no in¬dication they were Red Squad men — didnot approach him in his capacity with theUniversity, but in his capacity as executivedirector of the South East Chicago Com¬mission, an organization to improve the ur¬ban community. Apparently, Levi had ex¬pressed his worry that police forces werebeing withdrawn from the Southeast Chi¬cago area for duty at the Democratic na¬tional convention. In conversation aboutthis matter, the police officials said thatMarkin was NOT working for the subver¬sives unit, sources said.Levi refused to comment on the Markincase.Mrs Gray stated that university author¬ities “were never approached directly byRed Squad officials” to clarify Markin’sinnocence.Markin was readmitted. He is not regis¬tered this quarter, however, dean Johnsonsaid.“Rather than go to court, the universitydecided to readmit the student, on thegrounds that his academic qualificationswere not so deficient as to prevent hisreadmission,” Richard Flacks stated.“No one likes to get sued,” dean Johnsonsaid, “particularly when you don’t thinkyou can win.”A direct association between Markin andthe Red Squad has not been proved. Nei-Continued on page 14Petitioners Press Committee ReactionAn attempt by moderate students toforce changes in the University dis¬ciplinary proceedings swelled into actionThursday afternoon with a march on thelaw school and a three-hour sit-in there.That action was based on a complicitystatement which had been signed by morethan 500 students Thursday night.By signing, students agreed “to give myname and take responsibility for havingbeen in the sit-in.”The agreement was to be binding, how¬ever, only if at least 500 students signed.At a Wednesday meeting, students votedoverwhelmingly to proceed to action, sincealmost 500 signatures had been obtained atthat time.Meeting chairman Danus Skene, politicalscience student, pointed out that the dis¬ciplinary committee might not accept thenames, especially if students turning them¬selves in could not claim actual participa¬tion in the sit-in in addition to presence inthe ad building.Skene outlined three basic aims of theeffort. He said the disciplinary committee andits associated apparatus are currently “ina position to discriminate as to whom theybring before them, and how hard they wishto hit them.”He suggested that even if the only re¬sponse of the committee was to refuse tosummon and hear the students who turnedthemselves in, that would underline whathe called the politically discriminatory na¬ture of the discipline they are meting out,by making it clear that they wish only toget rid of radicals, not to discipline all the500 or more students involved in the sit-in.Skene said the petition effort aimed alsoto “mobilize support from the liberal sec¬tor of the University” for summonsed stu¬dents. At the same time, he said, there ishope of “safety in numbers: they are lesslikely to wish to execute 500 people thanfive or ten.”Discussion centered on ways to force ac¬ceptance of the names. Suggestions, in ad¬dition to going to the law school, includedsitting in in Eckhart until disciplinary ap¬ pointments were scheduled, or taking some“disruptive action” which would result inall signers getting summonsed for the newaction.One student reported that all faculty hadreceived letters requesting they evict fromtheir classes students who have been sus¬pended, and said she had been evicted inone class but not from others.Other students claimed they have beentold by their departments that, whether ornot suspended, they can expect no furtherscholarship help and that no professor willhelp them with dissertations.Following these reports, a motion waspassed that all students asked to leave aclass for having been suspended should re¬fuse and, if possible, get other students toassist them in bodily resistance.Another motion, passed without objectionafter many students had left, urged all stu¬dents to attend a meeting Monday at 3:30at Mandel hall to plan a collective defenseand not to appear individually before thedisciplinary committee until a collectivedefense is accepted by the committee.February 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/9By Steve RothkrugThe disciplinary committee has refusedthe request that members of the sit-in beable to present a collective defense. In theeyes of the disciplinary committee individ¬ual hearings are necessary to “determinethe nature and quality of each student’sparticipation, if any, in the disruptive de¬monstration.” It also feels that “a full andfair consideration requires a separatehearing for each individual.” At least thisis what they chose to say in their publicstatement.There were, however, other and moreforthright sentiments abroad in the meet¬ing that denied the request. Not made pub¬lic were the explicit desire not to lend thepeople in the building “the dignity of amovement” nor allow the disciplinarycommittee to become a “political agency.”In order for the meaning of these re¬marks to be clearer let’s take a look atwhat’s been happening on this campus.Students have been called before the dis¬ciplinary committee one by one and sub¬jected to inquisitorial treatment. As theMaroon reported on Wed, Feb. 12, peopleare questioned about their politics, mo¬tives, and possible future actions. The committee seems especially eager to deter¬mine who is a radical and who isn’t, whois a good sit-iner and who is a bad sit-iner.Meanwhile high University officials havetalked about the need for a few expulsionsand there have been several independentreports that four or five expulsions are infact planned. All the names mentioned sofar are of people closely identified withSDS. In addition, at least 80 students havealready never suspended. Many of thosesuspended never received disciplinarysummonses while many who did receivesummonses were never disciplined, not tomention that only one-fifth of the sit-in par¬ticipants received summonses at all. (Theactivities of the disciplinary committee areonly part of the University’s attempt to in¬timidate people. Notices of dorm evictionshave been sent out, jobs have been lost,students have been told to leave class be¬cause they are suspended, and some par¬ents were told that the University was wor¬ried in case physical removal from thebuilding were necessary since StudentHealth didn’t cover those suspended.)Why is the University acting this way,ie, what is it so afraid of about its studentsand why is it so eager to intimidate us. GADFLYCertainly the occupation of the adminis¬tration in and of itself could be treatedmuch as any other major inconvenienceand not as a cause for serious alarm. Butthe takeover of the building marked theformation of a serious student movementthat consciously opposes the University’spolitical policies. This is part of a largerprocess that Chicago had hoped to escape.Across the country those charged withmaintaining universities are being chal¬lenged by students and younger faculty onquestions of racism, war complicity, andeducational institutions as places to do re¬search and train people for corporationsand the government. When Marlene Dixonwas fired an underlying dissatisfactionwith our education and an opposition to theUniversity’s political purposes crystallizedinto a coherent movement. We see the fir¬ing as an act of political suppression, anattempt to keep the University ideological-Student Crime Disruption, Treason?Continued From Page Fivemember attempts to clarify the attitude ofaccused students toward the sit-in.Since mere presence in the building doesnot constitute grounds for discipline in thecommittee’s view — several students havebeen let off after proving that they were inthe building as reporters, to try to get oth¬er students to leave, or to conduct guidedtours — the essential question before thecommittee has become degree of participa¬tion.Faculty questions have often been on theorder of:“Could you state to me what the issuewas that you wanted to demonstrate on soforcefully?”“Why did you go in?”“What issues specifically did you have inmind?”“Would you be willing to outline yourreasoning as to why you felt it was desir¬able to occupy that building, and what youthought could be gained?”“Did you participate in any effort priorto the sit-in to bring these issues to theattention of the authorities?”“We would like an explanation of the na¬ture and quality of your presence in abuilding where it had been declared that adisruptive demonstration was takingplace.”Despite a concerted effort on the part ofthe committee to avoid playing politics inending the sit-in, and repeated statementsthat it is only trying to be fair to individualstudents, many students have claimed thatthe tone and direction of questions areclearly political.They say that the questions imply a pri¬or judgment as to the nature of the Univer-Discipline Report BackWith Kalven CommitteeThe long-awaited Kalven committee re¬port on student disciplinary procedures hasbeen sent back to the committee byCharles O’Connell, dean of students.The report, received Jan 31 and not twoweeks before that date has been rumored,“did not fly in the face of the current dis¬ciplinary procedures,” said O’Connell.O’Connell added that this does not meanthat the report does not recommend anyexpansion of student participation in dis¬ciplinary procedures.The report was sent back to the com¬mittee chaired by Harry Kalven, professorof law, because O’Connell wanted the com¬mittee to reconsider in light of recent dis¬ciplinary actions. sity — a judgment arrived at exclusivelyby faculty members — and that the deci¬sions on sentences will be based not on theamount of physical participation in the sit-in but on the extent to which accused stu¬dents say they accept or reject the facul¬ty’s definition of the University.Thus, students claim in effect “thesheep” who went in for no reason or badreasons will get off easily; the people whohad clear reasons for what they did butmerely wanted some reforms will receivestiffer suspensions; and the students whowant radical change at the University maywell be expelled.That, radicals and others have charged,amounts to trying students not for dis¬ruptiveness but for treason.Whether the current attempt to gathercampus support against disciplinary pro¬ceedings will succeed is an open question.In dozens of departmental and ad hocmeetings, many students have said theyfavor amnesty or leniency. No studentgroups we know of have asked for heavydiscipline, though some have simply saidthey strongly disapproved of the sit-in.Graduate students have almost unani¬mously said the sit-in has had valuable re¬sults in bringing about discussions of prob¬lems and possible changes with faculty. Onthat basis many have recommednded am¬nesty.Clearly, the administration could headoff a protest movement by any of severalactions which would satisfy all or most stu¬dents that the committee is being fair andreasonable.It is doubtful that the administration willagree now to reconstitute the present com¬mittee and start over. It might, however,agree to set up an appeal board, possiblywith student voting representation.The disciplinary committee has left thatpossibility open. And rumor has it that,early in the committee’s meetings, the ad¬ministration offered to let the four studentobservers vote — an offer the observersdeclined unless the number of students andfaculty were made at least equal.Another basis for hoping for an appealboard with students is the much delayedKalven committee report on discipline.That was scheduled to come out early thismonth. Reliable sources say it is finishedand is available to administrators andsome faculty.It has not been released publicly, how¬ever, perhaps because the content wouldcall into question the legitimacy of the cur¬rent disciplinary committee. Less reliablesources indicate, that it does recommendsome student voting representation.10/The Chicago Maroon/February 21, 1969 After things cool off, such suggestionsmight be incorporated in an appeal board.The administration could also requestdean O’Connell to mitigate the sentencesrecommended by the disciplinary com¬mittee. He is apparently empowered tolower sentences, but not to raise them.That course might raise faculty outcries,however. The faculty rather jealously pre¬serves its powers.One faculty member of them, apparent¬ly, is to sit in judgment on students asdisciplinary committees of the University.And it appears unlikely, inasmuch asO’Connell has already passed on the rec¬ommendations of the committee in manycases — and the administration hates tolook like it’s backing off from set policies.The appeal board, then, looks like theonly real hope for a change in disciplinaryproceedings that would answer the com¬plaints of students. It is doubtful, however,that such a board would be set up for sometime. Whether suspended students andtheir friends will wait for the ponderousprocesses of the University to bring aboutsuch action is another open question.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RochtNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisNews Board:Undergraduates: Wendy GlocknerGraduate Students: Rob CooleySpecial Effects: Mitch BobkinDisciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussAcademics: Sue LothThe Community: Bruce NortonNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Con Hitchcock, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Preida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Contributing Editors: John Welch, Michael Sor-kin, Jessica Siegel, John Moscow, RobertHardman, Barbara Hurst, David Aiken.Production Steff: Mitch Bobkin, Robin Kauf¬man, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift, MitchKahn, Sue Loth.Sunshine Girl: Jeanne Wiklerf..,—N ruunaeu in loy/. Ilished by University .•fr.: "b. Ti Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays through•Tout the regular schoct'^'year and intermittent!throughout the summerexcept during the tent-l-’ week of the academi' — quarter and during examination periods. Offices in Rooms 303 , 304, am305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Exl3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydPark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paiiat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PresService. ly pure so that we wouldn’t question thingsabout the “great university” in the “greatsociety,” but rather continue to assumethem as we are taught. In this situation wehad no choice but to act collectively in aneffort to prevent the firing from being fi¬nalized. We understand that students arekept powerless so they can be properlyeducated as determined by those with thepower to decide the correct political ori¬entation of the University. As a committeeto investigate political discrimination inadmissions said “. . .it is the right of theUniversity faculty and administrative offi¬cers to determine what shall be the ori¬entation, social mission, intellectual cul¬ture, curriculum, and educational goals ofthis University.”Of course, the last thing the adminis¬tration wants is for us to have a large, self-confident, politically left student movementthat doesn’t do what it is told. It is asclear to them as it is to us that isolatedstudents can say what they want and theUniversity will continue to do preciselywhat it pleases. Collective action is theonly meaningful method students have forenforcing whatever demands they make,especially political ones.It’s not that the disciplinary committeedoesn’t want to lend us the dignity of amovement, but that it wants to break downthe movement that has developed. The be¬havior of the committee (and the Univer¬sity as a whole) should have made it clearto everyone that differential punish¬ments—ones based on the individual’s poli¬tics-will be imposed. They will probablyrange from suspended suspensions to out¬right expulsions. Hopefully no one is so na¬ive as to believe this will be in an effort togive each person “full and fair consid¬eration.” And if we are to act politically asa movement then we must act together indefending ourselves as well as in con¬fronting the University. The first step inpreserving and maintaining our movementis, therefore, to continue to demand a col¬lective defense and refuse to appear beforethe committee in any other way. Otherwisewe would merely be doing them the favorof splitting ourselves up and opening theway for selective suspensions and ex¬pulsions. The disciplinary committee un¬derstands this and professes concern forthe individual as a cover for its actions. Ifthey were so concerned for our individualwelfare they would readily cede to our de¬fending ourselves the way we choose andnot the way they prefer. There is only onemore argument to be dealt with and that isthe committee’s desire not to become a po¬litical agency. What they neglect to say isthat the disciplinary committee is a politi¬cal agency but for their own purposes ofseparating us and imposing sentences inthe way they feel most effectively destroysthe left on campus. At least we arestraight forward about our politics anddon’t try to hide behind seventy-five yearsof accumulated rhetoric about the pure lifeof the mind. The ethereal mists and thepure reasonableness evaporate quickly themoment someone does something sothreatening as be a radical professor orbuild a movement to prevent the same pro¬fessor’s firing. After all the life of themind must remain undisturbed so that itcan rationally rationalize the displacementof 25,000 people from their homes, the hun¬gry race for government funds, the pre¬servation of a pure image that keeps themoney rolling in, and the wining and din¬ing of McGeorge Bundy and Mayor Daleywho are famous seekers after pure truthand knowledge.Well. . .the University of Chicago needsa student movement and we will continue tofight for the right of collective defense as abasic right of all political movements. Theonly reasoning that could support our go¬ing individually is that which says ourstruggle is over, that we have settled ourdifferences with the University, and areready to do their bidding again. None ofour demands have been met, let alone oneswe may raise in the future and to give upnow would be to give up when we havehardly begun. And we all know who wouldlike that best.OF THELONG DISTANCERUNNERSun., Feb. 23, COBB HALL, 7 & 9 PM, $1, CEF HYDE PARKSTARTS FRt. FEB. 21THEATRE Held over 3rd. MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganOne of the 10 bestmentioned for theAcademy Award NomineeA bittersweet love storythat touches the heart.CLIFF ROBERTSONCURE BLOOM11 CHARLYStudent rate everyday BUT Saturday$1.50 with I.D. CardTONIGHTand SaturdayThe Electric Theatre Co. presents atTHE KINETIC PLAYGROUND4812 NORTH CLARKBLOOD, SWEAT and TEARSSAVOY BROWN AORTADoors open 7:30—tickets at the doorNEXT WEEKFeb. 28 March 1Paul Butterfield Paul ButterfieldB. B. King Albert KingAlbert King Lumpy GravyTickets: Marshall Field's, Ticket Central,Crawfords, at the dooror call 784-1700 Did you know that MUSiCR-AFT sells usedamplifiers, tuners & turntables with 90 day parts &labor guarantees?48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95thOn Campus Call Bob Tabor 324-3005=A\ ThclAgTSIAGE “One of the best directing jobs I've ever seen, thoroughly worthyperformances, you should see." Clenna Syse, Sun-Times“Unqualified approval, excellent." Carole Edwards, Tribune% SLOW DAnCEON THEKILLING GROUNDby William HanleyAT THE HARPER THEATER5238 S. Horp«r—Res. BU 8-1717Admission $3.00. STUDENTS $1.75 (Fri. & Son.) 7; /Ingmar Bergman’sTHROUGH AGLASS DARKLYSAT., FEB. 22, COBB HALL, 7 & 9 PM, $1, CEFASSASSINATIONa special series of four lectures atThe University of ChicagobyDr. Lawrence Z. Freedman8:30 P.M. Law School AuditoriumFebruary 24Profile of an AssassinMarch 3Personal and Social PathologyMarch 10Assassination and Democracy$10 for the series, $3 each lectureFaculty & Staff—half price/STUDENTS FREEFor information coll Ext. 3139 PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 e. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVER eyeshr thenew soundLusdm 97.9 fmDiscountArt Materials• school, office &filing supplies• grafting materials• mounting - matting -• framingDuncan’s1305 E 53rd HY 3-41 I I smack dab in the middle of your fm dialSTERF.0 COMPONENTS ai MUSICRAF^SAVE YOU MONEY. A.R.. DYNA, SCOTT.KISH-ER48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95th StOn Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.February 21, 1969/Tbe Chicago Maroon/11—X.l‘l'■tk‘ 'mi%?M ..V,;4'fc ■(» <‘£,91//.f/.*9'UKU\,r « yw/?. DeYOUNG:atciiifTDear Mr. DeYoung:"Is Business Bluffing Ethical?" is a recentarticle which appears in the HarvardBusiness Review (January-February 1968).In that article the author, Albert Z. Carr,raises some difficult questions about thenature of competition among businessorganizations and about the relationshipof a person's ethical and moral standardsto the conduct of daily business. Severalexamples of conflicts between ethics and"business sense" were cited. Let'sconsider a concrete example.Tom was a sales executive with a Southernfirm. He told of an instance when he hadlunch with one of his most importantcustomers, a Mr. Colby. At the time oftheir meeting, the state was having a veryheated political campaign over whichTom and Colby were of differentpersuasions. Colby mentioned that he wastreasurer of the citizens' committeesupporting the candidate Tom opposed.Before the two men got down to business,Colby asked if he could count on Tom fora $100 contribution to the Lang campaignfund. Tom's reaction was the following:"Well, there I was. I was opposed toLang, but I knew Colby. If he withdrewhis business I could be in a bad spot.So I just smiled and wrote the checkthen and there."Upon discussing the matter with his wife,Tom found that she was bitterlydisillusioned with the business worldbecause it could put such pressures on aperson to go against his own values.Tom's perception of the incident was that"it was an either/or situation. I had to doit or risk losing the business."Mr. Carr suggests that such situations arepart of the "game" which governs thebusiness world. He goes on to compareethical standards of business organizationstoday with the ground rules of a pokergame. "That most businessmen are notindifferent to ethics in their private lives,everyone will agree. My point is that intheir office lives they cease to be privatecitizens; they become game players whomust be guided by a somewhat differentset of ethical standards."Finally, Carr cites a Midwestern executiveas saying "So long as a businessmancomplies with the laws of the land andavoids telling malicious lies, he's ethical.There is no obligation on him to stop andconsider who is going to be hurt. If thelaw says he can do it, that's all thejustification he needs. There is nothingunethical about that. It's just plainbusiness sense."Mr. DeYoung, the student whom businesswants for its management ranks is notinterested in playing games where hemust maintain two identities and two setsof ethical values—one as a private citizenand one as a businessman. I would beinterested to know how you personallyreconcile the conflicts between yourethical beliefs and your "business sense."Sincerely yours.David G. ClarkGraduate Studies, Stanford0 C&Oudt12/The Chicago Maroon/February 21, 1969 Dear Mr. Clark:Indeed there are some men of the calibreyou cite in business; probably in greaternumber than most responsibleexecutives know.I suspect also that there are manyinstances where a man like your salesexecutive, Tom, compromises his personal"ethics" to make a sale. But wasn't hetrapped by his own supposition? Didn't hewrite-off his own company's integrity,along with the history of the customer'ssatisfaction with their product line andservice backup, when he wrote the check?It strikes me that a little intestinalfortitude, and a tactful remark about hisown political convictions, would havebrought the issue to a proper test:business based on quality products andservice versus "bought" business.If the man won't make the test, then heought not to make business a whippingboy because he chose to compromise hisown standards. If his employer won'tstand the test, then his choice is obvious:quit, and join a company whose standardsmeasure up to his own. In the long run hewill have done himself a favor because anethical man, who is competent, always isin high demand. A posture aligned withhigh standards will gain more respect ofsignificance than any setbacks sustainedthrough loss of a few sales.As for the Midwestern executive whoequates business' ethical standards simplyto compliance with the law—it beingimplied that this falls short of whatsociety would expect—I question both hisawareness of the law's comprehensiveness,and his insight into most businessmen'smotivations.Responsible executives don't makedecisions on the basis of legalpermissiveness; of seeing what they canget away with at the risk of courtingpunitive actions at law, or the public'sdispleasure. Those are negative yardsticks,and the thrust of business thinking thatinvolves moral judgments is affirmative.Check product specifications, for example,and see how many exceed standardsestablished by regulation. Results: a betterBUSINESSMEN DO.Three chief executive officers— The Goodyear Tire &Rubber Company's Chairman, Russell DeYoung,The Dow Chemical Company's President,H. D. Doan, and Motorola's Chairman, RobertW. Galvin—are responding to serious questionsand viewpoints posed by students aboutbusiness and its role in our changing society . . .and from their perspective as heads of majorcorporations are exchanging views throughmeans of a campus !corporate Dialogue Programon specific issues raised by leadingstudent spokesmen.Here, David G. Clark, a Liberal Arts graduatestudent at Stanford, is exploring a question withMr. DeYoung. Administrative activities in Greeceand Austria, along with broadening experience• » • i i \f( rff.,fi'i ft' f \Cf'C( • quality product, greater performance,longer life expectancy.Take re training and re-assignment ofemployees to better-paying jobs requiringgreater skills when automation phases outvarious work slots. Results: morehighly-skilled employees, better-earningpotential, greater job security.Consider the direct personal involvement ofmore executives, and the application oftheir company resources, in efforts to dealeffectively with such urban crises asghetto unemployment. Results: more localemployment, a step toward self-help, abroadening base for stability.None of these actions are compelled bylaw . .. they are taken voluntarily bybusinessmen acting under the compulsionof their personal ethics. It is the beliefsunderlying such actions that I regard asthe criteria for responsible businessmen'sethics. Critics may question this criteria asself-interest. I'll buy that. It is. But it isenlightened self-interest which is simplygood "business sense," and reflects theethical standards that broadly prevailin our free society.The point is that in business, ethicalstandards encompass not only questionsof personal conduct and integrity, but thewhole range of business' activities withthe public as a whole. Yet in the finalanalysis it is always the individual whomust make the decision; a decision thatwill reflect the influences of one's familylife, religion, principles gleaned fromeducation, the views of others, and one'sown inherent traits of character. It is thesefactors that show up in a man's businessdecisions, not the other way around.The mari, therefore, who maintains his ownconvictions and sense of moral values willbe a better businessman, and will find thatthere really is little problem in developinga business career without fearof compromise.Sincerely,—isno. Chairman. vRussell DeYoung, Chairman,The Goodyear Tire 8t Rubber CompanyWHO CARES ABOUT STUDENT OPINION? in university administration, already have claimedMr. Clark's attention and auger well a careerin international affairs.In the course of the entire Dialogue Program,Mark Bookspan, a Chemistry major at OhioState, also will exchange viewpoints with Mr.DeYoung: as will David M. Butler, in ElectricalEngineering at Michigan State, and Stan Chess,Journalism, Cornell, with Mr. Doan; andsimilarly, Arthur M. Klebanoff, in Liberal Arts atYale, and Arnold Shelby, Latin American Studiesat Tulane, with Mr. Galvin.All of these Dialogues will appear in thispublication, and other campus newspapers acrossthe country, throughout this academic year.Campus comments are invited, and should beforwarded to Mr. DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron,Ohio: Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical, Midland,Michigan: or Mr. Galvin, Motorola, FranklinPark, Illinois, as appropriate.—4* mCULTURE VULTUREThe ominous shadows of the end of thequarter are fast approaching and so natu¬rally the cultural life of this campus islikewise darkening, shriveling and dying aseveryone suddenly remembers how muchwork is to be done. Therefore only culturefreaks and geniuses (aren’t we all?) readon.Tonight in Cobb Hall, Doc Filmspresents Mamie by “Olfrred Itchcoke”.The plot of the movie concerns a girl whoseems to have a lot of problems: she’s acompulsive thief, she can’t stand men, shehas terrible fantasy dreams, and her moth¬er is a neurotic possessive old woman.Saturday Contemporary European Filmsis showing Ingmar Bergman’s Through AGlass Darkly which true to all Bergmansis sure to spur a discussion twice as longas the movie.Sunday is The Loneliness of the Long Dis¬tance Runner which deals in the spirit ofSaturday Night and Sunday Morning withworking-class England. If this doesn’t fur¬ther a worker-student alliance, I don’tknow what will.Contemporary European films presentson Wednesday David and Lisa a love storyof two “mixed-up kids” brought togetherby the comforting father figure of HowardDa Silva.Political suppression reared its uglyhead in the days of Joe McCarthy whichforced Abraham Polonsky to end his ca¬reer after Force of Evil. See what he saidbefore the ax fell on Thursday in Cobb.Almost forgotten about because of thesit-in (everyone is using that as a scape¬goat) or more likely bad publicity is Uni¬versity Theater’s production of Goldoni’sServant of Two Masters which will appearin Mandel hall Friday, Saturday and Sun¬day at 8:30. It is described as Commediadell’arte a term vague enough to have de¬ scribed everything from Soupy Sales tosomething you’d read in Hum class.All you eager Thespians, dying to getyour hands on a juicy script, here’s yourchance to survey the theatrical scene anddive into the play of your choice. Two ofthe four productions which are going to beproduced next quarter are holding jointtry-outs next week. One is Ferenc Molnar’sLiliom (corrupted by Rodgers and Ham-merstein to make Carousel) directed byAnnette Fern (who usually stars in the re¬search section of Harper Library). Theother is John Dekker’s Shoemaker’s Holi¬day (a hilarious Elizabethan comedy deal¬ing with draft resistance and shoemakers and featuring Queen Elizabeth I) directedby Tom Busch (Grey City Journal criticfor theatrical matters). The try-outs are inReynolds Club, Saturday, 2-5.If your theatrical interests run in a“RRRusshhhin” or musical bend, Black-friars is holding tryouts Monday and Tues¬day on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hallfrom 7-10 for their new musical for nextquarter, Charge of the Numidian Cavalry.Believe it or not it is based on the life ofLeo Tolstoy (Leo Tolstoy??). Susan Spectorwho is holding an acting workshop is di¬recting it.Did you know that UC has a sculptor-in-regidence (what a practicing artist on campus!) and no less that he has a show?The University talent scouts traveled allthe way to Italy to find Virginio Ferrari sothe least you can do is to travel to theGalleria Roma, 155 E Ontario St to seehis work.Talk about practicing artists, MauriceEnglish, Senior Editor at the UC Press isgoing to give a reading of his “The ManWho Fell Out of the Sky” and other of hispoetry tonight in Cobb Basement at 8:30.Judging from the posters by the inimitableVirgil Burnett, the title poem deals withDaedalus and Icarus — that wild inventorand his son who has interested so manywriters.SDS ColloquiumSDS will sponsor a two-day colloquiumon “What Can be Done to Fight Racism”Friday and Saturday.The Ida Noyes hall workshops, debates,discussion, and films will be the SDS re¬sponse to the Beardsley Ruml colloquiumon “What Can Be Done to End White Rac¬ism.”The Ruml colloquium was postponed in¬definitely several days after leaflets dis¬tributed by “the worker-student alliancepeople in SDS” denounced it and called fordisruption of what is called the racist collo¬quium.SDS said in a leaflet distributed Wednes¬day that the postponement showed “theUniversity did not want to confront aserious challenge to its racist practices.”The colloquium proposes to investigateracism in UC education, admissions, em¬ployee practices, and community destruc- engaged in an expanded program of re-tion and “manipulation.”Programs are scheduled for Friday, 3-6pm and 7:30 pm-midnight; and Saturday,11 am-6pm.Hecht ResignsDr Hans Hecht has resigned as chairmanof the department of medicine of the Uni¬versity’s Pritzker School of Medicine to de¬vote himself exclusively to cardiology re¬search, patient care, and training of stu¬dents, clinicians, and investigators.Acting chairman of the department ofmedicine will be Dr Alvin Tarlov, associ¬ate professor of medicine.Dr Hecht will continue to serve as chair¬man of the cardiology section of the de¬partment of medicine. The section is nowsearch and graduate training in the cardio¬vascular surgical area. Likins NamedDr Robert C Likins has been named di¬rector of the Walter G Zoller MemorialDental Clinic.Dr Likins, 47, holds both B A andD D S degrees from Kansas City Univer¬sity. He had been with the National In¬stitute of Dental Research of the NationalInstitutes of Health for 22 years.Known both as an administrator and re¬search investigator in mineral metabolismand the crystal chemistry of calcified tis¬sues, Dr Likins says he plans to:• Expand the basic and clinical sciencesresearch program of the Clinic.• Expand the graduate research train¬ing program in the Clinic.• Launch graduate programs in pedo-dontics, periodontics and maxillofacialprosthodontics.Did you likebeer the first timeyou tasted it?likeA lot of people say no. They saybeer is one of those good thingsyou cultivate a taste forolives, or scotch, orkumquats.Maybe. But wethink it makes a dif¬ference which brand ofbeer we’re talkingabout.We think Budweiseris an exception to this “you’vegotta get used to it” rule. It’sso smooth. (You see, no other beer is Beechwood Aged; it’sa costly way to brew beer, andit takes more time. But itworks.)So whether you’reone of the few whohas never tried beer,or a beer drinker whosuddenly feels theurge to find out whyso many people enjoyBudweiser, we think you’lllike it.From the very first taste.Budweiser, is the King of Beers,(But you know that.)ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS . NEWARK . LOS ANGELES . TAMPA . HOUSTON . COLUMBUS first class hotels—most meals—professional multilingual tour escorts—comprehensive sight¬seeing—porterage—transfers—transportation by regularly scheduled airlines (all prices per person sharingtwin bedroom)28-DAY ENCHANTING ORIENT TOURJapan including Inland Sea cruise—Taipei — Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom (Cambodia)Singapore—Bangkok —Hong Kong Honolulu.Departure July 6- from CHICAGO all inclusive $1,495.00Return August 2-30-DAY SOUTH PACIFIC TOURTahiti-New Zealand-Australia-Fiji IslandsDeparture July 5- from CHICAGO all inclusive $1,595.00Return August 4-28-DAY GRAND EUROPE TOURHolland-Germany-Austria-1 talv-S wit zerland-France-FnglandDeparture June 29- from CHIC AGO all inclusive $945.0028-DAY SCANDINAVIA AND BRITISH ISLESDenmark-Sweden-Norway-Scotland-lreland-FnglandDeparture June 28 from CHICAGO all inclusive $1,095.00Return July 25-27-DAY YUGOSLAVIA-ISRAEL-GREECEincld. 7-day Greek Island CruiseDubrov nik-Israel-At hens-Crete-Rhodes-Fphesos-Istanbul-Delos-MykonosDeparture June 30- from CHICAGO all inclusive $1,785.00Return July 26-27-DAY SPAIN-NORTH AFRICA-PORTUGALPalma di Mai lorca-Barcelona-Malaga-Tet uan-Tangier-Se ville-Lisbon-Mad ridDeparture June 29- from CH ICAGO all inclusiv e $950.00Return July 26-28-DAY EASTERN EUROPEBerlin-W arsaw-Moscow-Lenin Grad-Kiev-Prague-Budapest-\ ienna-Amsterdam.Departure June 29- from CHICAGO all inclusive $1,195.00Return July 26-Write to: or phone 726-1824 (area code 312)UNITOURS INC.55 East Washington St.,Chicago, Illinois 60602PLEASE MAIL DETAILED ITINERARY FOR TOUR DETACH AND MAILDEPARTURE DATEFULL NAME (please print).Address:City and State: Zipcode.February 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/13Academic FreedomOne of the most serious violations in thelife of a university is the denial of the aca¬demic freedom of students. The commu¬nity of scholars can no longer exist whenany student is unjustly stripped of his free¬dom to learn. The University disciplinarycommittee, chaired by Dallin Oaks, in itsactions concerning the administrationbuilding sit-in has seriously abridged basicrights and freedoms of students in this in¬stitution. Even if certain students acted ir¬responsibly (and this is a matter of somedebate), there is absolutely no excuse forinjustice in dealing with their cases. Yetthe present disciplinary committee in itscomposition and its actions is injust and hassullied the good name of this University.The American Association of UniversityProfessors (in conjunction with such orga¬nizations as the Association of American Colleges, the National Student Association,and the National Association of StudentPersonnel Administrators) has drafted a“Statement on the Academic Freedom ofStudents” (AAUP Bulletin, March 1965)which describes essential procedural stan¬dards necessary in disciplinary proceedingwhere serious penalties may be involved.These standards have not even been min¬imally met by the University DisciplinaryCommittee.The administration, despite the requestof summoned students and the President ofthe Joint Student Councils, has repeatedlydenied student membership — apart fromstudent “observers” — on the disciplinarycommittee in its hearings. The AAUPstatement requires: “The hearing com¬mittee should include faculty members or,if regularly included or requested by theaccused, both faculty and student mem¬bers.” (Emphasis added).Markin's Role Not ProbedContinued from Page Ninether Markin or Franklin could be reachedto answer the charges.“There is no question that Markin knewwhat his cousin was doing,” Flacks said.“The question is whether he thought hewas working for the police.”Sid I.-ens who investigated Markin hadonly circumstantial evidence that he wasAdministration IsTo Return SoonAdministrators are expressing optimismthat they can move back into the ad build¬ing Monday.Charles O’Connell, dean of students, hassaid that his office is being painted andshould be ready Friday.Michael Claffey, director of devel¬opment, is also hopeful of returning to hisfifth-floor office Monday.Reports persist, however, that some ad¬ministrators will not move back when thebuilding is again ready for occupancy.President Levi proposed to the faculty lastfall decentralizing of administration of¬fices. In particular, he recommended mov¬ing the deans’ offices to buildings housingother offices of their divisions. The facultycouncil rejected the idea then, but it is re¬ported that it is being re-considered sincethe sit-in. an agent, Dr Young said. Lens was unavail¬able for comment.No one in the University has investigatedto find out whether Markin was workingfor the Red Squad. Flacks stated that suchan investigation is necessary to provethere was no political 'discriminationagainst Franklin and that the Franklincase did not influence the University’s de¬cision not to rehire Mrs Dixon.Dean Johnson said that he still does notknow all the facts in the Markin case.“I knew something about it,” he said.“But I never, even since then, tried to findout what the truth is.” He said he did notthink the Markin case influenced his viewof Mrs Dixon’s reappointment.Marlene Dixon said, “What troubles mefar more than my own case is this: whatwill the University do the next time a stu¬dent is used to help spy on a professor?”John Valkenberg, described as a RedSquad agent by both the Chicago Journal¬ism Review and Richard Flacks, workedas a security policeman for the Universityof Chicago.“He’s on the rolls, but not currentlyworking,” said Captain Michael J Delaney,chief of campus security. Valkenbergmoonlighted here from his regular policejob during the Fall.“He wasn’t doing any special work here,as far as we’re concerned,” Delaney said.“He was no different than any other moon¬lighter, just doing routine work.”Are you agood student?Are you acareful driver?If you are tired ofpaying a high premiumfor your car insurance itwill pay you toinvestigate Sentry'sgood student discount.This is in addition toSentry's discount fordriver education. Callyour Sentry man for fastfacts.Jim Crane238-0971 Bookof theDeadMarch 9THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75I ISENTRY XTINSURANCE' T4/The Chiwg61 •'vr/.rrl'j nr.* ' ,!£ \“ejrJ‘ri In a prepared statement (Feb 2, 1969)Dean Charles O’Connell stated: “The com¬mittee (the university disciplinary com¬mittee) also submitted an interim action,unanimously deciding and recommendingthat, until their cases are resolved by theuniversity disciplinary committee, sixty-one persons be suspended, effective imme-d i a t e 1 y . ” Students “temporarily sus¬pended” are being excluded from class¬rooms and university housing. The AAUPstatement: “Pending (final) action on thecharges, the status of a student should notbe altered, or his right to be present oncampus and to attend classes suspended,except for reasons relating to his physicalor emotional safety and well being, or forreasons related to the safety of students,faculty or university property.”Suspensions have been given studentswho had not received summonses. Studentswho were summoned were given only onehour to report to Eckhart hall for appoint¬ment, with several actual hearings takingplace within the week. The AAUP state¬ ment: “The student should be informed, inwriting, of the reasons for the proposeddisciplinary action with sufficient particu¬larity, and in sufficient time, to ensure opportunity to prepare for the hearing.”Students were suspended for regulationswhich they had virtually no participationin forming. The AAUP “Joint Statement onRights and Freedoms of Students”, August1967: “Disciplinary proceedings should beinstituted only for violations of standardsof conduct formulated with significant stu¬dent participation and published in ad¬vance through such means as a studenthandbook or a generally available body ofinstitutional regulations.”Despite Dean James Vice’s argumentthat “the disciplinary committee is not acourt, but a committee of men of goodwill,” that committee, nevertheless, mustbe fair. The administration should be a-ware that these failures of due process anddenial of academic freedom by the Univer¬sity Disciplinary Committee make the Uni¬versity liable to sanction by the AmericanContinued on Page 15CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY TH ECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 l. 41st STREETDid you know that MllStcHAIPT hasFRFFDELIVERY for University people? For STEREOCOMPONENTS at DISCOUNTS call Koga Gift Shopistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orient48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95th St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005 and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856MOVEMENTCOLLOQUIUMWHAT CAN BE DONETO FIGHT RACISM?FEB 21-22, FRI and SAT at IDA NOYES HALL, UNIV. OF CHICAGO1212 E. 59th, bet. Woodlawn & KimbarkSPEAKERS, PANELS, WORKSHOPS, DEBATES, DISCUSSIONS, FILMSSpeakers from the City, the community, the MovementPROGRAM:-FRI 3:00-6:00 RACISM AND EDUCATION- in the City of Chicago- in the classrooms and research of theUniversity of Chicago-FRI 7:30-12:00 RACISM IN UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO POLICIES-Racism of UC Employment Practices-Racism of UC Control of Community Schools-speakers from UC Hospitals and Hyde Park High-workshops and discussion groups-Speakers on the Black Liberation MovementFilms about the Black Panthers-SAT 11 =00 THE HISTORICAL AND CLASS BASIS OF RACISM-Panel and Discussion-SAT 1:00-6:00 RACISM AND THE POWER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO]N CHICAGO-Racism and the Trustees-UC's Urban Renewal Program and the ColonialAdministration of Southeast ChicagoDEMANDS ON THE UNIVERSITY-Presentation, Workshops-Black Admissions-End of racist urban renewal programs-Free day care center for children of employees,students, and faculty-Dept to study oppressed people-working class,black, women's studiesFeb 21st is the anniversary of the assassination of Malcolm X.Everyone Welcomemmj mi wn. iPM i m ,mContinued from Page 14LEnERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONDAMAGE?: Workman cleans up ad building after fifteen day sit-in.Association of University Professors. It isimperative that responsible professors andstudents enjoin the action of the presentdisciplinary committee. The injustice ofthe University Disciplinary Committeemust not continue; so long as it does thecommittee merits only our contempt.Marlin GilbertDamageYour story on the ad building damagewas dishonest and irresponsible journalismof the worst sort—your reporter seems tohave visited a different ad building than Idid. The “several telephones” that “ap¬peared to have been damaged in¬tentionally” were about ten phones thatwere ripped out. How do you cut telephonecords unintentionally? In addition to thefile cabinet that had been broken open tofind a “bomb,” another on the same floor(a donor file) had been opened and all fourdrawers, with contents, removed—from thebuilding. In addition to Daly’s pictures,showing him with Kennedys, some lucklessadministrator’s picture of a (racist?) sail¬boat had been ripped off its hinges.You say that there was not “inordinatedamage.” This is, perhaps, ordinate dam¬age?David FriedmanGraduate StudentDepartment of PhysicsDamage?On the Sunday following the sit-in wewere invited to participate in a tourthrough the administration building. Everyschool and department within the Univer¬sity was invited to come to one of thesetours. Our tour was guided by Dean D.Gale Johnson, and it covered every floor ofthe building. Both students and facultytook part in the tours. It was made clearto us that the building-was left untouchedsince the end of the sit-in.The administration building was dirty.With the exception of the sixth floor, thefloors were muddy and there were randomcollections of cigarette butts and positionpapers on the desks and floors. Variouswalls had graffiti markings, made withcrayons, felt pens, and washable ink. Inthe occupied rooms chairs and desks werein general disarray. In some of the privateoffices the furniture had been moved intothe corridors (but not harmed). On thefirst and second floors a number of tele¬phone receiver cords had been cut, but oth¬erwise the equipment was not damaged.Although Mr. Johnson claimed that a fewoffice doors had been forced open, thelocks were intact. In general the tour didnot demonstrate any harm to furniture orequipment in any way which would war¬rant replacement. There are two ex¬ceptions to this: a few typewriters on thefirst floor had their IBM ball-types re¬moved, apparently, as Mr. Johnsoa re¬marked, for defense during the fight withthe Minute Men. In one other office catsuphad been poured into a typewriter and dic¬tator. The other exception was one file onthe third floor which dealt with “Gift Ack¬nowledgements.” The lock was broken andthe drawer was bent. The only theft of per¬sonal property was a few photographsfrom the wall of Charles U. Daly’s office.Mr. Johnson explained that the photo¬graphs showed Mr. Daly sailing a boat.What was the purpose of this tour? Onthe one hand, it was an attempt to show tothe University community the actual condi¬tions of the building after the sit-in. At thesame time the tour sought to demonstratephysical destruction of the administrationbuilding by the sit-in. This second aspect isthe most important, since it is open to in¬terpretation. The examples of destructionwere, in fact, limited to a few random andisolated instances. Only one drawer of onefiling cabinet was broken into; only asmall number of typewriters were dam¬aged. In no way was there a systematicattempt to destroy the building or anythingin it. It seems to us that the purpose of thetour was to solidify University opinionagainst the sit-in. Dean Johnson amplydemonstrated that the building was dirty.But is dirt on the floor and graffiti on thewalls a sign of general destruction? Nofiles, with the exception noted above, wereopened. No furniture was broken. No win¬dows, doors, or fixtures were harmed. Car¬pets were dirty but in no way damaged.With the exception of Charles U. Daley’ssailing photographs, no photographs or pic¬tures were harmed. As noted above, therewas some damage to particular telephones.But except for those few cut cords, tele¬phone equipment was left unharmed.But why is it so important at this pointfor the administration to solidify opinionagainst the sit-in? We feel the real aim ofthe tours was to legitimize the functions ofthe disciplinary committee. We denouncethis method of legitimizing the past andpresent activities of the committee. If thedisciplinary committee must punish at all,let them form a bucket and mop brigade toclean the administration building com¬posed of those persons found guilty of par¬ticipating in the sit-in. Any other punish¬ment handed down by the disciplinarycommittee would be unjust and illegiti¬mate.Chuck StrozierLouis RohlicekGraduate StudentsDepartment of HistoryDivinity PowerNumerous questions concerning studentparticipation in the divinity school havecome from faculty and students m otherparts of the University. Erroneous opinionsabound. Student power has a long historyin the school dating back to the early 50’s.There has been an elected council and offi¬cers since then, they have planned con-erences and lectures, published a regularjournal, and earned an independent budg¬et. Several years ago the school embarkedon a search for ways to institutionalize re¬sponsible student participation in the deci¬sion making processes of the school. As ofthe third week in January, the studentsand faculty entered into a six-months’ ex¬periment to determine how best to achievesuch participation. Much progress hasbeen made, many problems remain.The form of this experiment is in no sense a model for the rest of the Univer¬sity. The form was determined by the his¬tory and the specific structures of the deci¬sion making process in the divinity school.It is our judgment that this form is in fullagreement with and a particular ex¬emplification of the deans’ letter publishedby President Levi on Jan. 29. That letterprovides the general University frameworkwithin which specific parts of the Univer¬sity are encouraged to work.The problems with which the divinityschool students and faculty are wrestlingare these: What are the stages in the deci¬sion making process where student judg¬ment is most meaningful and appropriate?Are the present committee structures ade¬quate to permit or encourage such partici¬pation? Are the respective roles and re¬sponsibilities of students and faculty deli-niated and protected?The divinity school has not found finalanswers for these and other questions. It isworking on them through a form appro¬priate to itself and in no way contradictoryto the statutes of- the University or theguidelines announced in the dean’s letter.Our concern is not with legalistic formula¬tions, it is with genuine student-facultycommunication and the interchange ofideas. We are committed fully to two basicprinciples: increased student voting parti¬cipation in the decision-making processesof the divinity school; the faculty’s soleultimate control over the fundamental aca¬demic policy of the school.It follows that rumors to the effect thatstudents have equal or final voting poweron curriculum and faculty appointmentsare unfounded. We are not dealing withabstractions, rather we are experimentingwith each of our four standing committeesto determine how best to concretize these two principles. This takes patience, time,mutual trust, and great skill. It cannot bedone through coercion or intimidation oneither side.Faculty Members of theAcademic Policy CommitteeJerald C BrauerDon BrowningB A GerrishLangdon B GilkeyCharles H LongJoseph SittlerJay A WilcoxenDivinity FacultyA completely false impression was leftby the February 18 Maroon story entitled“Divinity Faculty Asks Student Dis¬ciplinary Vote.”The impression is that on Thursday lastthe divinity school took special action onthe question of student participation on theUniversity’s disciplinary committee. Thatis incorrect. On Tuesday, February 11, thefaculty unanimously adopted a strong let¬ter of support praising President Levi andthe committee of the council for their han¬dling of the sit-in. It also went on recordopposing amnesty.Further, in that same letter the facultyreaffirmed its position adopted May 26,1968, concerning student participation ondisciplinary committees, due process, anda number of other matters.This letter makes clear that the facultyposition of 1968 remains unchanged. Therehas been no occasion to change it as thequestion has not yet been reopened for dis¬cussion. Last May the faculty hoped that“its statement of principle and intent”channeled to the Kalven committee, wouldbe discussed fully apart from the pressuresof a sit-in or other violent action. Unfortu¬nately, that moment passed.The faculty stated Feb 11, that it hoped“this question will, in due course, be re¬opened by the council.” The divinity schooldoes not have the right and does not intendto act unilaterally on these matters. Itdoes have the right to stand for a point ofview in this community, and it intends toexercise fully these rights in the give-andtake of discussion. Though the faculty in¬tends to press its point with vigor, it will,as always, abide by the majority decisionof its colleagues.Finally, it should be made clear that thedean will intercede for divinity school stu¬dents only if he is convinced that they havebeen penalized unfairly or treated unjustly.The basis for that judgment will be found¬ed on the actual treatment of a student bythe disciplinary committee as now estab¬lished by the council of the senate. In¬cidentally, we did intercede in 1967 for ourstudent Carl Bangs because his sentencewould have worked an extraordinary aca¬demic hardship beyond that experiencedby fellow students. The dean of studentsheard the appeal and mitigated the sen¬tence. He did not reverse it.Jtr»kl C BrauerDean, Divinity School(The divinity schools Feb 11 letter is“special action” when viewed against thecomplacencies of some other UC facultiesregarding the disciplinary committee. Itis unfortunate if the divinity school doesnot pride itself on its liberal attitudes.Continued On Page 17f 1CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $10used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERY ^V<<*$ PizzaHY 3-8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd.February 21, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/15Decisi0r)Some decisions are relatively unimportant.Where you put your engineeringtalent to work is not.As you contemplate one of the most important decisions of your life, we invite you to consider acareer at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Here, you will find wide-open opportunities for professional growthwith a company that enjoys an enviable record of stability in the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.We select our engineers and scientists carefully. Motivate them well. Give them the equipment andfacilities only a leader can provide. Offer them company-paid, graduate-education opportunities.Encourage them to push into fields that have not been explored before. Keep them reaching for alittle bit more responsibility than they can manage. Reward them well when they do manage it.And your decision is made easier, thanks to the wide range of talents required. Your degree can be aB.S., M.S., or Ph.D. in: MECHANICAL • AERONAUTICAL • ELECTRICAL • CHEMICAL • CIVIL •MARINE • INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING • PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY • METALLURGY • MATERIALSSCIENCE • CERAMICS • MATHEMATICS • STATISTICS • COMPUTER SCIENCE • ENGINEERINGSCIENCE • ENGINEERING MECHANICS.Consult your college placement officer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, Engineering Department,Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108.11 ■ r rmim .1 11 > i i 'i1111 1 ■"1 1 fry---uhh 1 »■ * • - (yi(] k n o J tf$ tbit 4 ^ ~s*1 lVyouSTEREO COMPONENTS at discounts?18 E. Oak St. 2085 W. 95thOn Campus Call Bob Tabor324-3005Pratt & Whitney AircraftEAST HARTFORD AND MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUTWEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA u> AIRC9ADIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATIONAn Equal Opportunity Employor This investmentstarts paying dividendsin three years.Most cars last ahimt as limp as the loans that payfor them: three years.In Sweden, where it's tough Ireing a car. Volvolasts an average of 11 years.Ami while we don't guarantee that a Volvo willlast 11 years in America, we do know that over95'" of all the Yolvos registered here in the last11 years are still on the road.So if you liny a Volvo from us now. it'll still lieworth owning three years from now when you getit paid for. You'll lie aide to stop making car pay¬ments and start making pay ments to vourself. Andinstead of paving interest to the hank, you'll heaide to have the hank pay interest to you.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1-3800UNFAIT ... Plus de trois millions de polices etde certificats d'assurance collectiveSun Life sont en vigueur et plus desdeux tiers des paiements de policesont effectu6s maintenant & des d6-tenteurs de police et & des rentiers,de leur vivant.En tant que repr^sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADAJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTH-FIFTH & WOODLAWNWtizie’i Jtower Shop“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREETAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V/s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards Did vou know that there are OVEK ONE HI VDRED SATISFIED MtSlCRAFT CIS-TOV1ERS on CAMPUS. For STEREO COM¬PONENTS at SAN INCS call48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95th St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005authorized BMC5424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinots 60615 mi 3-3113£5foreign car hospital & clinic, inc. EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 Be Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “ Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-4744.JMA-.WA-AK:..--.16/The Chicago Maroon/February 21, 1969Continued From Pago 15letters to the editors of the maroonIn an interview Monday Dean Brauerdid use the words “reversal of decision onthe part of the dean of students” whendescribing the Carl Banks case. The exactnature of the “reversal” should have beenclarified.)ProsYour editorial suggests that expulsionwould simply make Hobson, Machtinger etai professional agitators. As the man re¬plied when is wife complained that he wasdriving her crazy: “That’s not a drive—itsa short putt!”Karl BemesderferRemarkableI would like to disagree with the state¬ment by Dr Bessie Louise Pierce that herexperience as a woman member of the UCfaculty was not unique.Dr Pierce is very unique. She is the onlywoman ever to hold the rank of full profes¬sor in the history department since thisUniversity was founded.This remarkable achievement should notbe belittled.Jo FreemanGraduate StudentDepartment of Political ScienceBarbarism?The recent cancellation of the Beardsley-Ruml colloguium indicates both the fascistnature of the students who threatened todisrupt the colloquium and the organizedcowardice of the university officials whocancelled it.Recent silencing of speakers throughoutthe country may have dulled our sense ofoutrage at the action of forbidding a manto speak to those who wish to hear. Yet this tactic is a great threat to free thoughtand expression, just as much as the mostMcCarthyite speaker ban.The administration’s action in cancellingthe colloquium is perhaps even more rep¬rehensible than the threats of the students.After all, many threats made have notbeen carried out. But for the university tocapitulate (to “avoid provoking the stu¬dents,” I am told) to such threats is in¬credible. The university would stand, andhas stood, bravely against state and right-wing pressures to cancel distasteful speak¬ers. To yield now is to admit that freelicense for suppression is being given tothe left.What kind of shit is this?!If the university will cancel speeches byFriedman and Janowitz because of threatsof disruption, will it do the same for theircourses, or their books in the library?In the 1920’s a high Nazi leader said that“the Weimar government will fall becausenot one deputy will die on the steps of theReichstag to defend it.” If this universitycannot show even the minimal courage re¬quired to carry on a long-planned activityin the face of barbaric threats, then it toomay well be destroyed for lack of people todefend it.Danny J BoggsBigelow Teaching FellowLaw SchoolPolitical FiringOn Feb 18 I received a letter from theDirector of the James Franck Institute tothe effect that my research assistantshiphad been terminated immediately as a re¬sult of my suspension for having takenpart in the recent sit-in in the adminis¬tration building. The disciplinary com¬mittee has not yet judged my case.We are presumably expected to take se¬ riously a litigation procedure in which thejury contains not one of our peers and isidentical with the judges and prosecutors,in which we are presumed guilty untilproven innocent, in which the definition ofthe crime is totally in the hands of theprosecution, in which the possible justifia¬bility of an act in certain contexts is anexcluded category, and in which sentenceis passed and punishment meted out beforethe trial takes place.I need only add that I was turned in byProfessor Peter Dembowsky, one of mycolleagues on the student life committee,to give the human touch to this picture ofone aspect of the traditional respect andtrust that should hearten us as to the pros¬pects of progressive change through nor¬mal channels.Stuart A NewmanDepartment of ChemistryDisagreementAs research assistants in the BubbleChamber Group of the Fermi Institute westrongly disagree with a directive receivedtoday ordering the termination of employ¬ment of Roger Wechsler, an undergraduateemployee of our group, because of his sus¬pension from the University for failing toappear before the faculty disciplinary com¬mittee following the issuance of a sum¬mons arising out of the recent adminis¬tration building demonstration.In most cases (and certainly in thepresent instance) the political beliefs andactions of an employee in no way affect hisor her performance on the job. It is, afterall, the task of the immediate superiors todetermine the suitability or capacity of aperson in an experimental team. We spenda considerable amount of time and effort to train our workers. Forcing the termin-tion of employees for their political beliefsand actions hinders our experiment. Thisis especially true in the case of Mr. Wech¬sler who is an extremely competent mem¬ber of our staff.The University condemns the demonstra¬tors for not utilizing existing channels todeal with their complaints. How logical isit then for the administration of a “com¬munity of scholars” to punish some of itsmembers through means outside of theexisting channels of discipline? A studentis subject to the discipline meted out bythe faculty disciplinary committee. Sub¬jecting some members of the academiccommunity to further censure by terminat¬ing their employment is, we feel, grosslyunfair. Should a student employed by theUniversity be subject to greater punish¬ment than one employed elsewhere? (Re¬lated questions arise concerning the Uni¬versity’s implied promise of confidentialityin all disciplinary procedings.) Mr. Wech-sler’s academic suspension was recom¬mended by the disciplinary committee.Such a recommendation should in no casebe used for any purpose other than to de¬termine a student’s academic status andthen only under fair and understandableprocedures.We urge you to reconsider your presentpolicy—a policy which was not known to usand which was not publicized before thedemonstration. Mr. Wechsler should be im¬mediately reinstated.Peter C LearyHarvey G LehtmanFrances V MoserAndrew A SeidlJoseph WolfsonThomas LasinskiPOLITICALSCIENCEPOLITICALSCIENCEPOLITICSClEhlip50 Jodisc on nt z z zsroooouuuuuUl 111 Ul 111 111THE BOOKSTORE58th & ELLISuu„... • • •f If’I 14'fUffifl&Jlli tUlli! Is111 .ill; V\sill*> ihi illmllllli®m■NO ONE HAS ASKED YET?Philco-FordAn Equal Opportunity Employer We are dedicated to making a major contri¬bution to many of the unresolved problemsfacing mankind. We pia. ng projects nowthat will affect the world ;n year 2000. Ifyou have a searchin curior . an intensedesire to become involved in the world . . .and the determination to be the best — thenone of our 11 Divisions has a spot for you.Come and talk to us about your future ... orwrite to College Relations, Philco-Ford Corpo¬ration, C & Tioga Sts., Philadelphia Pa. 19134.PHILCO-FORD WILL BE HERE ONThursday, Feb. 27DIVISIONS: Aeronutronic • Appliance • Com¬munications & Electronics • Consumer Elec¬tronics • Education and Technical Services •International • Lansdale • Microelectronics •Sales & Distribution • Space & Re-entry• Western Development Laboratories.TC, Ternary rr, Twrro* chimm tAsrocn/Y?,1V yitvuMUocia.Y trfT(The Marcon Classified Ads)THE TIBETAN BOOK OF THE DEAD IS COMINGRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION;Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.RELIGIOUS MUSICRmmte wntd. Own rm. 955-1242.Fern Ige rm in 5-rm apt. exc. loc.Call 324-4626.Own bedrm Ig 6-rm apt spring q.5319 Woodlawn #3. 955-4036, 70/mo.Unmarried students: existentialphilosophy student has 6 roomapartment for rent in South Shore.Discriminatory requirements: youmust be living. Contact Joe Lulich,BU 8-6011.Own room $33/month. 493-3938.FOR RENT2 rm., take over lease from March1 to Sept. 1, $115/m. 5541 Kimbark,Tel 667-2156.SUBLET apt. spring and summer-option to renew lease in Oct., 55thand Cornell. Ml 3-8065.V/7 rm turn $115/mo utilities incl54 8. Woodlawn; call 324-8169; hurry.Room for girl in private home.$40/month. MU 4-5076, 5-9 P.M.Spotless S. Shore 2 bedrm apt newfloors, kitchen, carpets bath, etc.< min. from campus. For you$127.50/mo. Avail June 8 for fullyear or summer sublet. Call 493-0726evenings.BRENT APTS.—2Vj rm turn, or un-furn., near transp. $100. 1030 E.47th, 427-4821.WANTED TO RENTLANDLORD THROWING YOU OUTMay 1? We'll take your lease May1 8, sublet back to you. Leavewhen convenient in June, July orAug. Couple seeks 1-2 bdrm apt.near campus. 955-1283.WEE furnished efficiency apt., nearI.C., Jeremy Pender, 922-8194.FOR SALEGood used TVs reconditioned.$24.95 8i up. American Radio 1300E. 53rd, 53 Kimbark Plaza.Bell bottoms, Edwardian 8> double-breasted sport coats; reduced pric¬es—John's Mens Wear.Antique fur coats for sale. Somereal beauts. James Schultz Clean¬ers, 1363 E. 53rd St. 753-6933.1966 Chevy—Belair. Full power,good condition. 875. Call 651-8006after 6:00 P.M.Tibetan Tankas 373-6618. SKI CLUB MEETINGFilm, Mar. 2 trip. All welcome.Feb. 25, Ida Noyes, 3 fl. 8 P.M.PERSONALSMusic of the spheres: The EddiePerkins Jazz Trio again at theReynolds Club Thursday. "C" Shop,8-11 P.M.LOST How is UC racist? Count the waysat Colloquium to Fight Racism.Feb. 21-22, Ida Noyes.Do YOU want theatre on this cam¬pus to survive? SUPPORT IT!THE GOLDEN BOUGH: MILE¬STONE, MODEL, OR IDOL? Prof.Jonathan Z. Smith (Phil. 8, Histof Religions, NCD & DivinitySchool), at Hillel House, tonight,8:30.THE TIBETAN BOOK OF THEDEAD. Multi-media ballet choreo¬graphed and directed by Kim OnWong with visual effects by NewVista. JOSEPH JARMAN COM¬PANY will provide the music.March 9, Mandel Hall, students$1.50, others $2.50. Tickets atMaroon Business Office, room 304,Ida Noyes Hall, or at the door.English setter dog, male white withbrown markings. Reward. Call 667-5272 anytime.ROOMMATES WANTED4th rmmate for quiet, friendly E.Hyde Park Apt. $52.00/mo. 684-3942after 4:30.2 fern roommates wanted. Ownroom each. 56th 8. Univ. Av. spr.qtr. 643-6494.We have the LED ZEPEUN albumfor only $3.19, r/h — Student Co-opBell AM/FM receiver $55. Grundigtape rec. $50. Mike 955-1028.Electric guitar (harmony) $155.Amplifier (Fender) $75. Call Ted752-9655, after 6.PEOPLE FOR SALEAll leatherware — artistically. 955-7429.May I do your typing? 363-1104.PEOPLE WANTEDDESK CLERK (male), 3 nites aweek, midnite until 1:00 A.M. Noexperience necessary. $1.75 pertour. Please do not apply unlessyou plan to stay thru summer. TheQuadrangle Club, 1155 E. 57th.Black cows to populate the bleaknight of the Sit-in.Persons (2) to sit in Mandel HallIn shifts (or pants) and sell ticketsto THE TIBETAN BOOK OF THEDEAD, a multi-media extravaganza.Working hours the week of March3rd are: 10-1; 1-4. $1.50 per hour.Not bad for getting paid to study.Call Ken at Ext. 3266.i| 3< Cafe Mapitom returns to celebratePurim Sun. March 2nd at 6:00P.M. Featuring the Habonim Is¬raeli dance group and other excitingentertainment. Price for best Ha-man costume. Felafel, humus,hamentashen etc. Costumes encour¬aged, not required. 3rd floor IdaNoyes $1.25. Presented by Studentsfor Israel.Joe Kelly Blues Band comes toHyde Park—at the Blue Gargoyle.Welcome back, fans.SAM LAY — Saturday — 9 to 1.Cloister Club. A WP presentation.Happy birthday, George. Only $1.00.WHILE LOOKING for a new uni¬versity, listen to a new stereo.Discounts at MUSICRAFT on A.R.,Scott, Dyna. On campus Bob Tabor,324-3005.The ressurection of the divine: TheEddie Perkins Jazz Trio again atReynolds Club Thursday "C" Shop,8-11 P.M.Learn the Dirt on Racist policiesof UC trustees. Colloq. to FightRacism. Fri-Sat, Feb. 21-22, IdaNoyes.POETRY WORKSHOP: Blue Gar¬goyle, every Thurs. 8:30.Speaking of the Blue Gargoyle, willthe girl I saw eating there onTuesday, and then said hello toin the bookstore shortly thereafter,please ....TOURS! U.S. AND FOREIGNNSA TRAVEL CENTER 306 INHPaul Morris drums tonight at theBlue Gargoyle with Joe Kelly.Speaking of the Blue Gargoyle ....She had on a bright purple-typescarf.and a smileBUY a ticket and sit in MandelHall this weekend only. . . forLAUGHS!Racism in Courses and Researchat UC. Colloquium to Fight Racism.That sounds like the lead-in to anAhmad's plug. It is. Go there.I'm hip.I'm so hip it hurts.The kingdom of God is at hand:Eddie Perkins Trio.Danny Kaye on film—ME ANDTHE COLONEL, at Hillel, Sundayat 7:30. 7S€.TRYOUTS FOR BLACKFRIARS;FEB. 24, 25, 7-10 P.M. 3rd floorINH.Why does Ed Chikofsky play theThird Movement of Chopin's "Funer¬al March" Sonata for the Philoso¬phy Department? Come and hear—May 2—F.O.T.A.I!Don't let Purim pass by by. Cometo Cafe Mapitom!There's to be a birthday party SATNITE, 9-1 at IDA NOYES. EVERY¬ONE'S INVITED. SAM LAY willbe there, even. And you can dance,even. And EVERYTHING, even!!WOW IE ZOWIE!WOW IE ZOWIE! indeed.Blues at the Blue Gargoyle.Take a break! and ENJOY I Gold¬oni's 18th century farce master¬piece. . . THE SERVANT OF TWOMASTERS.YOGA. Exercise, quiet nerves,meditate. Sri Nerode, DO 3-0155'^•/Tho Chicago M#r9*n/M>ru*ry 21,19*9V. V.:.. .-.V JUttw'' j.fi'WiVt fi' V Mother Philosophy is trying toC3tch the fly son Wittgenstein letout of the flybottle.Try Square & Round Dancing. IdaNoyes. Mondays 7:00-9:30.You should see the people whocome to that—almost as weird asthe SF's.Why did UC expel 25000 peoplefrom Hyde Park? Colloquium toFight Racism.WRITERS' WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.TONIGHT. 9 P.M.-1 A.M. at theBlue Gargoyle: JOE KELLY BluesBand and Norman Nakama's A-lChamp Light Show. $1.25.Sunday Supper at Hillel, this week,$1.00.The Tibetan Book of the Dead iscoming.What a coincidence.SAM LAY/HAS A WAY/OF MAK-IN' THE EVENIN' PASS. HISSTUFF'S REAL SOLID, ANDFLOWS LIKE HONEY. HELL!IT'S GONNA BE A GAS!Yup, U of C materal, alright.What is UC's role in Hyde ParkHigh, all about? Colloq. to FightRacism, Fri-Sat, Feb. 21-22, IdaNoyes.Wednesday evening folk sings atthe Blue Gargoyle. Conversational Spanish French Ger¬man—Brush up courses, translationsall languages. Universal Interpret¬ers, 35 E. Wacker #334. Tel:372-2860.Marco Polo is the place to gowhen you want to go someplace.326-4422.SAM LAY will marry IDA NOYESat 9 and will screw around TILL1; He'd never make it CLOISTER(CLUB) for $1.cloister club? is that plain ortoasted? "The potentialities inherent in thestation of man, the full measure ofhis destiny on earth, the innateexcellence of his reality, must allbe manifested in this promisedDay of God"BAH'U'LLAHInterested in attending health clubwith all the trimmings? Call Kenat 3266.That wasn't me, I swear they paidfor it. The Medici Glll^7~a^ C0ffMhouse. . . the quiet one. M'The WASH PROM BAND is~nn>sented by the SAM LAY COMAmTEE; now let's give 'em 'REEEELLY BIG . . m aAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRgghhimPWANT TO MAKE THE DANCFSAT. at IDA NOYES INTERESTING? COME AS YOU'RE motONLY A BUCK N0TOh, Hell! I give up.If you've ever tried to special-order a record anywhere else,you'll know just how special our3-day service is. r/h—Student Co-op.Bruno Beetlebrain where are you?Blues at the Blue Gargoyle: JoeKelly Blues Band.LONNIE MCALLISTER. . . returnsto the stage!Hew do employees get worked overat UC? Colloq. to Fight Racism.Joseph Jarman Company, backingup Kim On Wong in the TIBETANBOOK OF THE DEAD. March 9.Wish you could afford to spendPurim in Israel? Come to CafeMapitom instead—it's only $1.25.Will you take $1.10?Divine vibrations: The Eddie Perk¬ins Jazz Trio."The Famous Transvestite"—ANNEASHCROFT! (wow!). . . doingher thing!TONIGHT. 9-1 at the Blue Gargoyle.JOE KELLY Blues Band and Norm¬an Nakama's A-l Champ LightShow. $1.25.Corned beef and pastrami—Sunday,5:30. Hillel House.For years the Medici has boastedthe finest hamburger in Hyde Park.Now we've added 17 flavors. Medici,you've done it again.Letter to the Editor:"hay you moron writers and picher-makers—whats all dat mother-fathersister brother — chicken -- wordsand pichers in your high classcollege neewspaper about?I know nobody in your family orcollege ever luved you so now datyou got a intlectchul news paperto wipe your — on you kin say any— thing you wanna widout gettingthrone out on your —.and I kin take — an — and —and — cause I was brung up inskid row where dats nacheralbut I started to wash dishes andcars and went on releeef to go toschool and dere I found out datpeople — and — like on skid rowbut dat dey diden do it in horehousesor on the floor and walls where deyalso drawed pichers of — and —and wanted to — them and evengave phone numbersbut little by little I also learnedthat — can be done in nice cleanrooms and — in clean privatebathrooms and that it dont haveto be lust the same — word —all the time but that when some¬body really likes or loves you youdont like to use the same — skidrow word — and — but that inschool I leraned other words likefornicating or mating or even ifyou have and mean it and itsthe same thing but IS better andso sounds better when you sayeven a cornier word that alnt stillcorny like - — that I now like tocall lust playn making love sowhat the — hells the matter withyou cats and babes in a fancycollege like Chicago still talkingabout mother — and chicken-shitting? Was your mother a whorelike mine on skid row and hatedall of you because she was poorand drunk and couldn't even readthat you college writers and picturemakers want to — your mothersand fathers and teachers—because— doesnt only mean — or forni¬cating but — -you, and you mix uplove and hate in one or two —words that dont mean anythingany longer except that maybe yourheads are skrewed up and youhavent learned anything dec end inschool and haven't the guts to quitit or be real militant like Rat Brownor a communist because yourchickenshitters* and will take yourfolks and school money and hangaround and use a high class collegenewspaper — off and shlpe your— in, which I get hold of once ina while to hope I could be at theUofC and then see the kind of stuffin skid row. Sure most of the —try stinks and a lot of the oldfogey teachers and your familymust have given you a lousy time,but If I wont learn at least a bettervocabularly there I may as wellstop greasing cars to get a educa¬tion and be a longshoreman or goback to skid row. And sure, fightthe deadheads in school but do itclean so maybe they'll respect youmore than you respect them.From one |ag to anodder.Russian Instruments (balalaika,conertina) or mandolin, accordlan,to be played In an original musical.Intriguing isn't It. Dave Zwerow.493-3410. tj I* i<•.» 8 .•.*.».» Piece de resistance—Omega stickers25« at the Blue Gargoyle.The Medici's barbecue burgerwould put LBJ to shame.Edward Levi Howie MachtingerMorris Janowitz Richard FlacksGale Johnson WRAP Wayne BoothDisciplinary Committee Sit inSteering Committee are invited totest their capacity for rationalthought at the Chess SimultaneousExhibition Sun. Feb. 23, 3 P.M.Ida Noyes Theatre.WHAT EVER HAPPENEDTO BEARDSLEY RUML?Bible Study—Interested in startinga bible study 8, discussion grouphere on campus? Jim X8381 or924-6145.Sublimate your libido. Come folk¬dancing. Ida Noyes Sun at 7:30.UC called off its BR conference onwhite racism, using the specter ofviolence to avoid a challenge toits own racism. THE MOVEMENTCOLLOQUIUM TO FIGHT RACISMwill not pe abstract talk by whiteracists "experts" about whiteracism. The investigations of thisColloquium will be used to launchour fight against the racism of theUniv. FRI-SAT, Feb. 21-22, IdaNoyes. Everyone Invited.Blow YourselfUp ToPOSTER SIZE2 ft. i 3 ft.Sm4 my $lad mi White «. C«W fteteZS* • Ita* te 11 16. W. wi .i ft. > > ft. tio-ur .. . pteiKt roe amrosTit.JSL *3.50Sx4Fi.BW.Lp $7.50A44 Me to —at. 6 h4U. f ACH. No C.OJ).AffMWila8—4 Qinh «r ftty OrAor teiHMN POSTER, he.2JO E. )M St, Dtpl <BINew YmO. N. V. 10010 WHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION PRESENTS ANINE-AND-A-HALF HOURMARATHON PROGRAMRUNNING THE GAMUT OFTHE MUSICAL AND SPOKENARTS EVERY SATURDAY,BEGINNING AT NOON?BLACKFRIARS* AnnouncesTRYOUTS„“ Charge «f theNuntidian Cavalry**An original musical drama based on the life of LeoTolstoy, directed bv Susan Specter.To be produced Spring QuarterVIondav, February 24; Tuesday, February 257- 10 P.M.Ida Noyes Theatre (3rd fl. INH), — ~ - r » M■' **' * * ‘14 ‘ * m • i u * *ij i fiMsmwi. i's. t, miimi tsifisis -sm $1 r t rt n.i t ■ < . *. ■We of SSA urge you to join with us insupporting the Chicago WelfareRights Organization in their attemptto obtain adequate food and clothingallowances. Send your contributionand/or volunteer your time to:CWRO, 3346 W. Roosevelt, Chicago60624. Phone 826-0427Liz AronicaWilliam PateFremont WilliamsAnn MelzerDanny ThompsonWalter L. WalkerDaniel J. VorwallerCari SchoreHarold HayesRuth E. CharlesDiane LevyLou Jeanne WaltonJames M. JamesJanice WongHia RubensteinVernon R. HansonVivian GolanArthur SchwartzRuth F. Fer.nesseyMarian W. TillotsonMyron W. Brigman Kathryn QuatrelloJaris StandleyCarol IronsBetty VosJane MagrumRonald MelanconMary Louise SomersDaniel AlberGary L. ShafferSusan KaplanElizabeth H. ChapmanMargaret StrozierChristine HindsHelena OrlinskyAnn AnticolFeme DezenhouseJerry KileyCarol FeldsherRalph SmithJim TaylorKay E. RiddleMargaret Rosenheim Dan MacleanSandra FiglerJudith Lynn GreenbergSheldon S. TobinJacqueline CrawfordNeil O'TooleJoan PechanecBette Jo RowJoey SylvesterJoan SkirnickIrma ManewitzJan BridgesRuth G. FergusonToni ParksSusan BealePam ZumwaltFrank HandelmanPeter BarnettEdward WascoJohn HackmanAlfreda ShapereDouglas VeitDid you know that iffl/SfCHAJPT sells usedamplifiers, tuners & turntables with 90 day parts &labor guarantees?48 K. Oak St. 2035 W. 95thOn Campus Call Bob Tabor 324-3005Y>ur (acuityadvisor asks you(or advice?Think it over, over coffee.TheThink Drink.f c» >our o*n Th nb D'nk Mug. s*"d 75C *nd you' add^SS t0‘Th,n‘’ Of .Oh Mug. Dept. N. P 0 Bo*559. New York. NY. 10046. Th* |r»t-*mat o"ai Coffee Organ, zaf.on. May we have ameeting ofminds?What’s happening in YOUR field of interestat Wolf Research and Development Corporation?You’re invited to probe the mind of the manfrom Wolf during his forthcoming visitto the campus. He’ll be happy to tell you aboutthe advanced nature of our work in diverseareas of the explosively expanding Informationand Data Systems Science.Ask about the unique professional climate and challenge available— how Wolf scientists and engineers work years ahead of thestate-of-the-art in concept and analysis problems that would con¬fuse the ordinary mind . .. and you’ll hear about the benefits —exceptional salary and advancement policy, educational continua¬tion, professional publishing and many other attractive tidbits.Question our representative about our involvement in programslike Space Physics, Numerical Analysis, Real Time SystemsSoftware, Time Sharing & Multiprocessing, Color Display andComputer Aided Design. Inquire about our pace-settingComputer Application Studies, Data Reduction and AnalysisPrograms and our unparalleled development facilities.We’re looking forward to the meeting . . .who knows, we may start a brainstorm.We are seeking...SCIENTIFIC and ENGINEERING—Bachelor, Masters and PhDGraduates in Applied Mathematics, Statistics, Electrical Engineering,Astronomy, Celestial Mechanics, Physics and Nuclear Engineering.BUSINESS — Bachelor and Masters Graduates who would like toapply their degree backgrounds to computerized applications.Campus InterviewsMONDAY FEB. 24Make an interview appointment now.See your campus placement office...WOLFRESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION6715 Kenilworth Avenue / Riverdale, Md. 20840An EG&G. Inc. Company / an equal opportunity employerSEWING CLINIC• Facings show?• Baggy Slacks?• Puckered Sleeves?• Short Waisted?WANT HIGH FASHION, BUT LACK $$?DOES YOUR SEWING LOOK HOME MADE?fabyar presentsIRENE THOMASSewing Clinic, Starting March 13 (Thursday) 6-8 P.M.5225 S. Harper Phone 363-2349If lessont Tayment Tn a (3 .a nee? GROUP LANGUAGE INSTITUTESPECIAL CLASS, HALF-RATES FORSTUDENTS. Starts March 4, 3:30 P.M.Review the foreign language you have taken and learn three otherrelated languages at the same time.Enroll in ROMANIC 1 (Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian)Enroll in TEUTONIC 1 (German, Dutch, Danish, Swedish)You will learn: Meticulous pronunciation, Basic vocabulary of 1,000words. Comparative grammarOne semester of 13 weeks, with two 2-hour sessions a week.Classes in Hyde ParkCall 288-0675 for full information _ .. .Wt i > .1.^1February 21, 1969/The Chicago Marooiv/19iinivfrsityOF CHICAGOJlrckivcs,SAVINGSCERTIFICATESUniversity National Bank offers you—\• Savings Certificates paying the highest rateof interest permitted by law5% per year on certificates of $1,000 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 3, 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.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?UNIVERSITY NATIONAL RANK03 1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and servicemember: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve System20/The Chicago Maroon/February 21, 1969