ANYEXPELLED?Secret new disciplinary committeeappointed Page Three 2 the University’s anti-huma-^tices, its repressive decision-estuous political ties with the: realize, of course, that not without relation to the gov-ason to let the governmentus to the political narrowness^ses. This is the radical cri-y correct.e solution to these problemsJeff Carp wounded! Students to march on Quad club today GCJ editors regurgitatePage Three Page Three Grey City JournalTHE MAROONVolume 77, Number 46 The Chicago Maroon Friday, February 28, 1969The Student ViewOf the Disciplinary Committeer.Expanding Campus ProtestingAs violence continues to rock campusesacross the country, legislators and admin¬istrators .are beginning to crack down.President Nixon stated this week that“lawless acts by a small segment of thestudent population must not be allowed tointerfere’’ with higher education for themajority of students.Nixon praised Notre Dame presidentThomas Hesbergh’s recent statement thatdisruptive students would be given 15 min¬utes to cease and desist. If they did not,they would be expelled and treated as non¬student trespassers.The National Governors Conference wasquick to pledge support for Nixon in keep¬ing the campuses safe and open for stu¬dents who want an education. CaliforniaGovernor Ronald Reagan called for a fed¬eral investigation of disorders and Wiscon¬ sin Governor Warren Knowles agreed thatthere was some sort of conspiracy in dis-rutions. Knowles said that his calling theNational Guard at Wisconsin was correct.At Berkeley, the student strike led byThird World Liberation Front entered itssecond month. Regents ordered thatwhenever Governor Reagan declares a“state of emergency” (which the strikehas already been called), the adminis¬tration should immediately suspend anystudent suspected of participating in a dis¬ruption.Berkeley Chancellor Roger Heyns de¬fended the use of police and noted thatthey were not called until after there oc¬curred “physical assaults, intimidation,threats, class disruptions, and destructionof property.”In other action, the administration wasSEWING CLINIC• Facings show?• Baggy Slacks?• Puckered Sleeves?• Short Waisted?WANT HIGH FASHION, BUT LACK $$?DOES YOUR SEWING LOOK HOME MADE?fabya presentsIRENE THOMASSewing Clinic, Starting March 13 (Thursday) 6-8 P.M.5225 S. Harper Phone 363-234*8 lessons $26.50. Payment in advance./The Chicago Maroon/February 28, 1969MUSICRAFT SPECIALThis is our portable phonograph:KLH THE MODEL ELEVEN.CIRCUITRY: All solid-state,designed and built entirely byKLH. 15 watts IHF (Institute ofHigh Fidelity) music power. 30watts peak power. Unheard-of in aportable. Low frequency powercontoured to speaker requirements.TURNTABLE: Garrard recordchanger made to KLH specifica¬tions. Very low-mass tone armresists jarring, tracks even badlywarped records. Pickering V-15magnetic pick-up with diamondstylus.CONTROLS: Bass and Treble,allowing ± 15 db correction (i.e.,plenty) at 50 cps and 10,000 cps.Balance between speakers. Volume.(Turntable shuts off system auto¬matically, whether on automatic ormanual.) SPEAKERS: Two of the astonish¬ing speakers used in the ModelTwenty-One radio. Forty feet ofcable.FLEXIBILITY: Inputs for stereotuner or tape player. Tape record¬ings may be made from the speakeroutputs. Headphones may be sub¬stituted for speakers.LIMITATIONS: No radio.ETC.: Weight: 28 pounds. Caseclosed: 241/2" W x 131/2" H x 1V%"D.Control Center: I6I/2" Wx 131/2"Dx75/8" H (with automatic spindlein place). Speaker Enclosures,each: 131/2" W x 71/8" H x 4" D.Choice of gray or pearl white vinyl“Contour-lite” case.SUGGESTED PRICE: $199.95.THE Model Eleven is stereophonic. It can fill aliving room with the kind of sound once avail¬able only from massive, expensive and decid¬edly unportable sound systems. As a matter of fact ifwe hadn’t been able to make it do that we wouldn’thave built it. You can take any portable with you; buthow many can you take seriously?ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.779-6500 ordered to summarily suspend studentsfound guilty of participating in a disruptiveact. Financial aid would also be cut.At Oberlin College in Ohio, students dem¬onstrated against a Marine recruitmentteam last week. The administration or¬dered the recruiters to leave the campus.At Mississippi Valley State College, a sixday boycott of classes which had paralyzedthe campus ended.The boycott, which gathered 90 per centsupport of the students, grew from admin¬istration refusal to grant 26 student de¬mands.Girls at the Mississippi school must signout for toilet tissue because none is kept inthe restrooms. Other demands centeredaround black history courses and sign-in attheir dormitory at 9 pm.University expansion into the west Phila¬delphia ghetto was protested by students atthe University of Pennsylvania at a sit-inwhich ended Monday after six days.The protest began over construction of abuilding for the University City ScienceCenter, a research center serving nearly adozen Philadelphia schools, and rapidlygathered support from the faculty.Sit-in participants attacked constructionon land which had been cleared by movingout residents of the area. They demanded the University pay for suitable housing thereplace that which was razed.The administration granted:• A $10 million drive for community re¬newal programs.• A commission of students, facultytrustees and community leaders in equainumbers to have veto powers over all de¬velopment plans.• The funding of the commission by theadministration.• The university replacing any housingdemolished in expansion.William Masterson, president of Hous¬ton’s Rice University, resigned Tuesday inthe wake of student-faculty protest.About 1,000 students and 200 facultymembers gathered Saturday to protest thatMasterson had been chosen without con¬sulting a nine-member recommendationcommittee on presidential selection.At the Stony Brook campus of the NewYork State University, some 150 studentsblocked the office of one of three Armyrecruiters on campus Monday, preventinghim from conducting interviews.President John Toll said that disciplinaryaction would probably be taken againstabout 12 leaders of the demonstrationwhich resulted in the recruiter leaving thecampus.are yourcontact lensesmore work thanthey’re worth?If you're tired of usingtwo or more separate so¬lutions to take care ofyour contact lenses, wehave the solution. It’sLensine the all-purposelens solution for com¬plete contact lens care-preparing, cleaning, andsoaking. ■ Just a drop ortwoof Lensine beforeyouinsert your contacts coatsand lubricates the lenssurface making it smooth¬er and non-irritating.Cleaning your contactswith Lensine retards thebuildup of foreign de¬posits on the lenses. ■Lensine is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antisep¬tic making it ideal forstorage of your lensesbetween wearing periods.And you get a removablestorage case on the bot¬tom of every bottle, a Lensine exclusive forproper lens hygiene. ■ Ithas been demonstratedthat improper storagebetween wearings mayresult in the growth ofbacteria on the lenses.This is a sure cause of eyeirritation and could seri¬ously endanger vision. Bacteria cannot grow inLensine.■ Caring for con¬tact lensescan beascon-venient as wearing themwith Lensine, from theMurine Company, Inc.Committee FormedBy Leslie StraussUniversity sources stated that at leasttwo and probably about ten of the studentswho had received telegrams instructingthem to make appointments with a specialdisciplinary committee had done so.Dean of students Charles O’Connell wasnot in his office yesterday, so the statusof those students facing expulsion is uncer¬tain at this time.At least 26 students identified as takingpart in the demonstrations Monday, at the Quadrangle club and President Levi’shome have received notice that they mustappear before a new special disciplinecommittee. The new disciplinary com¬mittee. consisting of three faculty mem¬bers and one student observer, was ap¬pointed by the committee of the council ofthe University senate. The identity of com¬mittee members will not be revealed untildean of students Charles O’Connell makesthe announcement, possibly some time to¬day. In a statement issued Wednesday, Ed¬ward Rosenheim, spokesman for the com¬mittee of the council, stated that the coun¬cil of the senate approved a recommenda¬tion from O’Connell that these peopleknown to be under suspension by the Oaksdisciplinary committee and identified asparticipating in Monday’s “disruptive ac¬tion”, should be expelled. Twenty-four ofthese people received telegrams tellingthem to apply for individual hearings be¬ fore the new disciplinary committee in aletter sent to the dean of students by regis¬tered mail, postmarked no later than 5 pmThursday.Twelve additional students received let¬ters informing them that they were also toappear before the new committee. Thesestudents have not been previously sus¬pended, and did not fall into the categoryof students appearing before the new com¬mittee to give evidence why they shouldnot be expelled from the University.Protestors Resort to Violent TacticsAbout 75 students voted to march on theQuadrangle club at noon Friday to protestagainst disciplinary procedures.Meeting as “the committee of 500-plusagainst disciplinary procedures” Thursdaynight in Kent 107, the group called for arally in front of the ad building to be fol¬lowed by a march “to and around” theQuad club.The students. 250 in number at the begin¬ning of the meeting, had signed a state¬ment last week agreeing to turn in theirnames as participants in the sit-in to thedisciplinary committee.The committee of 500-plus demands thatrecent expulsion threats be rescinded, thatall disciplinary cases be dropped and sen¬tences rescinded, that the Kalven report be"consigned to oblivion,” and that the exist¬ing disciplinary committee be dissolved.Thursday afternoon “stink bombs” wereset off in at least seven quad buildings.Persons complained of an overpowering,nauseous smell in Business East, Cobb,Classics, Eckhart, Harper Library, Swift,and the Social Sciences buildings.Most classes were resumed, windowsopened.“No one fled screaming,” said StanleyE Gwynn, associate director for servicesin department libraries.'Frankly I prefer thpm to fire bombs,”said D Gale Johnson, dean of the divisionof social sciences. He added, “I think it’sinconsistent to the rest of their actions.”Planting stink bombs was not an actiondecided upon by demonstrators in massmeetings. At a meeting of demonstratorsin Reynolds club at the time the bombswere set off, some complained that the ac¬tion drove from campus those they wereattempting to reach with the protests.Capt Michael F Delaney, chief of campus security, said that the smell prob¬ably came from some kind of a spray candevice. He said he had no definite leads tofinding who was involved.Thursday morning an attempt to use“Madison-style mobile action” against theUniversity lost momentum on the steps ofthe law school.About 100 persons had marched from an11 am rally in front of the administrationbuilding to the law school, where theywere stopped by locked doors. The marchwas aimed at Dallin H Oaks, professor oflaw and chairman of the special dis¬ciplinary committee.But when the number of actual demon¬strators dwindled to less than 50, one lead¬er said, “We don’t have the support tomake breaking in a political action.”Marchers then voted to proceed to Rey¬nolds club to consider further action. Theyplan to picket a University office involvedin Urban Renewal.At the administration building rally ear¬lier, demonstrators were split when amember of thew orker-student alliance fac¬tion of SDS seized the attention of thecrowd and spoke against mobile tactics.“We should be talking to students aboutpolitical issues,” he said. He called forcanvassing and for setting up an “informa¬tional” picket line at Cobb Hall.A proposal for the “informational “pick¬et line at Cobb Hall had been voted downthree to one Wednesday evening by a rallyof about 300 in Kent 107.The rally instead voted two to one for“mobile action to shut the Universitydown” until demands are met.Demands formulated were:• Amnesty, especially for 31 studentsthreatened with expulsion.Student Observers Resign in ProtestOf Disciplinary Committee ProcedureThree of the four Student observers onthe faculty disciplinary committee have re¬signed.The resignations went into effect at theThursday afternoon hearings of the com¬mittee. The fourth student said he did notplan to resign.The student government assembly willmeet to decide whether to appoint replace¬ments on Monday, according to SG presi¬dent Jerry Lipsch.In a joint statement issued Thursdayevening, the three students indicated theywere resigning primarily because, as ob¬servers with no voting rights on the com¬mittee, they were unable to get facultymembers to understand student views.The three students are Jonathan Dean,second year law, Michael Denneny, fifthyear graduate in social thought, and MarySue Leighton, ’69.In the long report on their four-week ex¬perience with the committee (published inlull in today’s Maroon) the students said,We have finally come to the decision thatwe can no longer justify our presence onme committee either in our terms or inmose we judge to serve the best interestsof the community.”I he lack of communication,” they con¬tinued, “has rendered meaningless ourtask as observers.”The report said that, despite the personalmtegrity of faculty disciplinary committeemembers, the unmitigated imposition of faculty views of the nature of the Univer¬sity on students made fairness impossible.The students also criticized some of thecommittee’s procedures, the severity of itspenalties and judgments against studentsfor “treason against the University.”The report indicated the students had notresigned over any specific issue but be¬cause they had become convinced theycould not improve the fairness of the com¬mittee.The fourth student, John Bremner, ’69,told the Maroon: “While I do not hold acompletely uncritical view of the proceed¬ings, I disagree with the opinions ex¬pressed by the other student observers. Ithink a student voice is still of value on thepresent committee and so I cannot in goodconscience resign.”ABM ColloquiumThe anti-ballistic missile system will bediscussed in an all-day colloquium atNorthwestern on Tuesday.The meeting is part of program “MarchForth!” which will be held on 20 othercampuses across the country Tuesday. Themeeting will be in the Technology InstituteAuditorium at 8 pm in Evanston.Participants will include Marlene Dixonand Jesse Lemisch. The UC-run ArgonneResearch Center will be closed for the dayin order to allow employees to go and par¬ticipate in discussion on the ABM. • High-standard construction of dwellingunits in Hyde Park and Woodlawn.• University facilities open to the commu¬nity.• Increased admission of black students.• Establishment of a free day care cen¬ter.The demand to rehire assistant professorMarlene Dixon was retained without vote.After the Wednesday evening rally,about 50 students marched on Woodwardcourt to harass James M Redfield, masterof the new collegiate division and associatedean of the college.When Redfield left from a sherry hour inRickert house to go to dinner at the Qua¬drangle club, he was tailed by the group,who harangued him and attempted toblock his way.When demonstrators began shoving Red¬field, two University policemen came tohis assistance.Qui Clubs Carp?Jeff Carp, ’69, was beaten up in the Qua¬drangle club on Wednesday night when twopeople, probably graduate students, saidthere were supposed to be more demon¬strations at the club, and asked him toleave the building. He refused, because her David TravisJEFF CARPOwwwwwwwas the guest of James Redfield and Hen¬ry Rago at an NCD dinner. One of thepeople then hit Jeff, who hit him back. “Itwas more than unreal,” he said. “Therewe were, fighting in the main lobby of theQuad club,”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 laipei Angkor Wat and Angkor I hom (Cambodia)Singapore Bangkok Hong Kong Honolulu.Departure July 6- from CHICAGO all inclusive $1,495.00Return August 2-3O-DAY SOUTH PACIFIC TOURTahiti-New Zealand-Australia-Fiji IslandsDepart u re July o* from CH 1C AGO all inclusive $1 #595.00Return August 4-28-DAY GRAND EUROPE TOURHolland-Germanv-Austria-ltaly-Switzerland-Prauce-EnglandDeparture June 29- from CHICAGO all inclusive$945,0028-DAY SCANDINAVIA AND BRITISH ISLESDen mark-Sweden-Norway -Scot land-1 reland-EnglandDeparture June 28 from CH ICAGO all inclusive Si#095,00Return Julv 25-27-DAY YUGOSLAVIA-ISRAEL-GREECEincld. 7-day Greek Island CruiseDubrov nik-Israel-At hens-Crete-Rhodes-Ephesos-Istanbul-Delos-\lvkonosDepart u re June 30- I rom Cl IIC AGO a 11 inclusive Si #285,00Return July 26-27-DAY SPAIN-NORTH AFRICA-PORTUGALPalma di \lallorca-Barcelona-Vlalaga-Tctuan-Tangier-Sev ille-Lisbon-MadridDeparture June 29- from Cl 11C AGO all inclusive S950.00Return July 26-28-DAY EASTERN EUROPEBerlin-W arsaw-Moscow-Lenin Grad-Kiev-Prague-Budapest A ienna-\mslerdam.Depart u re June 29- I rom Cl I ICAGO all inclusive Sl#195.00Return Julv 26-Writ* to: or phono 726-1824 (aroa cod* 312)UNITOURS INC.55 East Washington St.,Chicago, Illinois 60602PLEASE MAIL DETAILED ITINERARY FOR TOUR DETACH AND MAILDEPARTURE DATEFULL NAME (ploaso print).Addrou:.City and State: Zipcod*.February 28# 1969/The Chica90 Maroorj/3,s-.V-! t»V v VvA /CM*1* t»fif.'>ic- trt ■-University JobsReports that student employees of theUniversity who have been suspended arebeing dropped from their jobs have beenconfirmed by dean of students CharlesO’Connell.The policy is University-wide and hasbeen in force for several weeks, O’Connellsays.The original policy decision was appar¬ently made at a meeting of Universitydeans early in the sit-in.In a statement released to the MaroonWednesday O’Connell said that “a sus¬pended student is not entitled to the rightsand privileges of a University of Chicagostudent. He is not entitled to the use ofUniversity facilities. It follows from thisthat a suspended student may not be aUniversity employee.”O’Connell said that “if a student is sus¬pended for a term, he is eligible for re¬employment at the end of that term, buthe would not be eligible for back pay.”If, however, a student’s interim suspen¬sion is revoked retroactively by the facultydisciplinary committee, O’Connell said, thestudent will be compensated for work timelost due to suspension from his job.(Retroactive revocations of interim sus¬pensions have been granted by the dis¬ciplinary committee, O'Connell explained,in cases where students were able to showthat they received disciplinary summonsestoo late to report in time to avoid interimsuspensions.)The policy was approved by the com¬mittee of the council of the University sen¬ate on Wednesday, O’Connell said, but hadbeen in effect for several weeks beforethat even though no statement of the policyhad been written out or publicly issued.Asked why the policy was not made pub¬lic as soon as it was decided, O’Connellexplained that the University had had verylittle experience with suspensions prior tothe recent sit-in.O’Connell explained that, while not allUniversity jobs are held by students, some types of jobs — such as part time ones —normally are filled by students. “Most jobsstudents hold are intended to help themfinancially through school,” O’Connell con¬tinued, so that student status is in effect aprerequisite for at least most student-heldjobs.O’Connell said he did not know howmany students have been fired as a resultof suspensions, but he guessed that thenumber must be rather small.The policy is being enforced in all partsA questionnaire on University disciplineprocesses and a detailed critique of dis¬cipline have been prepared for presenta¬tion to the joint student councils Friday,according to Lowell Livezey, chairman ofthe councils.In a special memorandum to representa¬tives on the joint councils, Livezey statedthat “today the crisis of the University isfocused in the disciplinary committee” andstudent concern with its fairness.Friday, February 28LUNCH AND LECTURE: Terrence Hallinan, chief civil¬ian counsel for 27 men being tried by the Army in the"mutiny" cast at the Presidio of California, discussesthe measures necessary to protect Gl's persecuted fortrying to exercise their constitutional rights. BismarkHotel, Randolph and Wells, 3rd floor, noon.FILM: "Bridge on the River Kwai", Cobb Hall, 7 and9:30 pm.PROGRAM ON AFRICA: featuring music and dance ofBiafra and Ghana and a discussion on n.eo-colonialismin black Africa. Sponsored by the Woodlawn RegionalLibrary, 6247 S Kimbard, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "An Evening of Hasidic and Zen Stories",Mr Reuven Gold, Hillel, 8:30 pm.RECRUITING VISIT: Time, Inc. Subscription service di¬vision, Chicago. Supervisory training program forwomen. Reynolds club 200.CONCERT: Mandel, 8:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: Intermediate and advanced, IdaNoyes, 7:30 pm.COLLEGE FORUM: Cobb, 3:30 p.m. of the University, O’Connell said, by thepersonnel office which has a list of all em¬ployees.Students who lost University jobs as aresult of suspension for participating in thesit-in are demanding re-instatement on thegrounds that there is no University rulethat forbids the hiring of non-students.Students are given preference, but thereis no distinction made between studentsand non-students in the type of work theymay do. Hence, claim the jobless students,The memorandum adds that while “therole of the joint student councils is difficultto define,” its members, “as elected repre¬sentatives have access to the adminis¬tration and the committee of the council.Therefore, a great responsibility is upon usin a time of crisis.”Both the questionnaire and the workingreport on discipline were prepared by thejoint councils’ committee on discipline dur¬ing the past week.Saturday, March 1FILM AND LECTURE: Dr Allan Cohen will speak onAvatar Meher Baba, and films of Baba will be shown.Ida Noyes Cloister club, 7:30 pm.CONCERT: Spanish Music. Bond, 8 30 pm.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "DANGER:Bridge Out!" Reverend E Spencer Parsons, Dean ofthe Chapel. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 am.CONCERT: Spanish Music, Bond, 8:30 pm.FILM: "Black Orpheus,"Cobb, 7 and 9 pm.FOLK DANCING: International, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Monday, March 3RECRUITING VISIT: Computer Technology Inc, Chi¬cago and Dallas, BS and MS in information sciences,mathematics, or statistics. Reynolds club 200.PURIM: Megillah Reading, Hamantaschem, Hillel. Or¬thodox, 6:30 pm.Conservative-reform, 7:30 pm.MEETING: International Language Society will meet at7 pm in the social sciences lounge. Topic will be "Reli¬gion and the Orient."DANCING: Square and round dancing, Ida Noyes, 7-9:30 pm. the firing is a form of political suppressionand a breach of First Amendment rights.During the sit-in, administrators sent adirective to personnel and deans — every,one connected with students — informingthem of their decision to fire suspendedstudents.Petitions in support of re-instatement arecirculating. Those who have lost Universityjobs because of suspension and want toparticipate in the protest should call Ext2425.Livezey said the questionnaire will besubmitted to the joint councils for consid¬eration as a University-wide student refer¬endum on disciplinary matters.The working report and a synopis of itwill be submitted for discussion and pos¬sible action by the joint councils, he saidLivezey stressed that the report is still inthe “working” stage and is subject to revi¬sion by the joint councils and following dis¬cussions with faculty and administrators.According to the synopis, the working re¬port’s main thrust is that “the recommen¬dations of the Kalven committee and thenecessarily ad hoc procedures of the Oakscommittee are simply inadequate to re¬solve campus-wide disciplinary problemsin a manner sufficiently clear, pre-definedand fair so that students being judged andothers concerned with discipline can haveany real confidence in University dis¬ciplinary procedures.”The report recommends establishment ofan appeal board, better defined due pro¬cess. less severe penalties and greater stu¬dent participation in disciplinary proce¬dures, according to the synopsis. It alsoquestions the apparently political basis ofquestions put by the Oaks committee tostudents and the influence of faculty politi¬cal views in making final judgments onstudents.Discipline Critique To Be Presented To Student CouncilsBULLETIN OF EVENTSJANISJOPLINat Northwestern's McGaw Hall in EvanstonFriday, March 7, 8:00 P.M. Tickets $3.50 available atthe Chicago Maroon Business Officeroom 304 Ida Noyes Hall.4/The Chicago Maroon/February 28, 1969- - —- •- HYDE PARKSTARTS FRI., FEB. 28"A MILESTONE,charming;Judith Crist NBC TV Today Show"FILLED WITHDELIGHTFUL HUMOR.”Hollis Alpert, Saturday ReviewTHE STORY OFAO DAY PASS"i« ■ i • i ~-a ‘ — a •.ANDf I 'W-Mtnrt-iiig ,ESSYI’KRSSON("J, A Woman") mason sUNDE* 18CAN NOT 8EADMITTEDNow thru Morch 15Shakespeare's "black'' corned/Measure forMeasureStarring Donald Harronand Clayton CorzatteGoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus' DriveCE 6 2337 PM ONE Zi^aoc-oi% omas $nl eriOr,UfetA'.sls in V,ome frOff iceft*SALES MANAGER - %ll fd.rjbur,T>|toffSSionjflL DKRPfS - "Rutb JohnsonHOME CONSULTANTS -3.il TVi.-nis S<*cK.*US&CIX South CeLLa^e GroveFebruary 28Mercouri/PerkinsPHAEDRAu6M9k*March 1Robords HarrisA THOUSAND CLOWNSMarch 7Chnrlton Heston"Best Western"WILL PENNYvffleSVMarch 8Samantha EggarTerence StampTHE COLLECTOR March 14Alan BatesKING OF HEARTSMarch 15Marlon BrandoREFLECTIONSIN A GOLDEN EYEPLUS:ACCLAIMEDSHORT FEATURESWITH EVERYPERFORMANCETICKETS *1playboy!vTHEATER [ 58,.I.'04 N. DEARBORN • PMOMf 944 )1(4 March 21Ingmar Bergman sPERSONA•AMSVMarch 22Alan AldaPAPER LIONMarch 28James Jo/ce sULYSSES•AtmSkfMarch 29Stanley Donen sBEDAZZLEDI I AM < Al I Ml I I \l I3 PERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURE ClarkIhfdlrpenjoy ourspecial studentrate75C at alltimesfor 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 2-28431Held over 3rd. MonthCINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDNOMINEEBEST ACTORA bittersweet love storythat touches the heartCLIFF ROBERTSONCLAIRE BLOOMCHARLYStudent rate everyday BUT Saturdaywith I.D. Card i1Y II50Most complete pholoand hobby store onthe South SideM00EL CAMERAI 342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student Discounts^FullThree of the four student observers onthe faculty disciplinary committee resign¬ed Thursday afternoon after serving fourweeks with the committee as non-votingparticipants.The three are Jonathan Dean. MichaelDenneny and Mary Sue Leighton.Their statement of resignation was deliv¬ered to faculty members of the committeeThursday afternoon, and to the MaroonThursday evening.Miss Leighton. 21, a fourth year studentm sociology, was appointed to the com¬mittee on the recommendation of studentgovernment president Jerry Lipsch, andhas been on the committee since it beganmeetings the first day of the sit-in. She was previously a student observer on thecollege disciplinary committee, to whichshe was appointed last spring quarter. Sheis managing editor of the Chicago LiteraryReview.Dean and Denneny were both appointedby Lipsch to replace two student memberswho quit in protest the first evening of thesit-in. They joined the committee Friday.Dean. 24, is a second year law studentand a Harvard graduate in medieval his¬tory. He is an SG representative from thelaw school.Denneny, 25. is a fifth year graduate stu¬dent in the committee on social thought.He graduated from the College with a his¬tory major. Four weeks ago at the recommendationof the president of student government wewere appointed student observers to theUniversity disciplinary committee. At thattime we had reservations about the legi¬timacy of the committee. We felt these tobe formal objections, however, and havingregistered our formal complaints, wethought there might still remain some sub¬stantial possibilities to work for a creative,decent and sensible response to thecampus crisis. We were not very optimis¬tic.Our views differed then—and stilldo—from the faculty’s views of the situ¬ation and of the responsibility of each sidein failing to solve the problems less dis-Absurd Hearing Concludes Thursday'sDisciplinary Committee ProceedingsThe disciplinary hearing of Leonard Car¬rel Thursday bordered on the absurd.Before the hearing began, Leonard Car¬rel. a former student, wrote a note to Dal-lin Oaks, chairman of the committee, stat¬ing that he would not have a hearing un¬less he would be allowed to take picturesof it. Oaks answered that the committeewould uphold its former ruling that nocameras or tape recorders be allowed inthe hearing room, and reminded Leonardthat if he did not want to have a hearingwithout cameras, he could make the pointby not having a hearing at all.Fight minutes later Leonard decided tohave his hearing and entered the hearingroom followed by faculty, curious students,reporters, and friends.I'm not a student, but I was suspendedfor non-response to a summons,” Leonard began. “I was an employee of the chem¬istry department, but I’ve been fired. Thewhole reason I’m going through this is Ilike to be the center of attention. I wasthrown out of here for the devastatingstate of my academic affairs, and the Uni¬versity has no intention of ever re-enrollingme.”Leonard then asked if anyone had anyquestions. When no one on the disciplinarycommittee responded right away, he calledon one of the students observing. Oaksruled the student out of order as he beganto ask a question.After several questions by the com¬mittee, Oaks said that he would declarethe hearings adjourned unless Leonard hadanything he wanted to say. Leonard thenbegan to ask the committee, “How can theUniversity suspend me if I’m not a stu¬ dent? And by what right did deanO'Connell tell anyone but me of my sus¬pension?”Oaks answered that the committee hadalready answered that question. Leonardanswered that he had forgotten the an¬swer, and would like to hear it again.Looking up, he noticed that the committeestenographer was not taking notes, andasked Oaks if the stenographer could makea complete transcript of his hearing, sincehe had not been allowed to bring a taperecorder into the room.“If you have anything relevant to say tothe committee, the stenographers will takenotes,” Oaks answered.Leonard then shouted, “I’m not interestedin what the committee defines as rele¬vant!”Oaks declared the hearing adjourned. ruptively. Nevertheless, hoping that ouractions might be productive, we have will¬ingly and openly participated in endless“rational discussions”, sought out informa¬tion from all sides to gain proper per¬spective, and tried to prevent mis¬interpretation of the committee’s work.Above all, we have tried to present studentviews and to have them taken seriously inthe committee’s deliberation.As you know, during this period we havebeen troubled by the conflicts between ournotion of fairness and the attitude, struc¬ture, and procedures of the committee. Wehave finally come to the decision that wecan no longer justify our presence on thecommittee either in our terms or in thosewe judge to serve the best interests of thecommunity.This is in no way a personal indictmentof you or any of the members of the com¬mittee; we value highly our experiencewith each of you in the past weeks. It israther a strong condemnation of thepresent relation between students and fac¬ulty and of a system that makes poor useof us all.In leaving the committee, we wish tocomment on some of the major problemswhich confront it and which have led toour withdrawing, in the hope that our ob¬servations may be of some value to youand to the community.The CommitteeDuring the course of the last four weeks,we gradually found that we have not beengetting through to you. We have used ev¬ery intellectual, moral and personal re¬source in an attempt to break through thebarrier between us. Nothing worked. Likemany of the students, you are so convincedthat you are right that, while you listen,you simply do not heed differing points ofview.Please believe that we do not make thisContinued on Page NineThe CHICAGO MAROONpresents"THE TIBETAN BOOK OFTHE DEAD”A multi —media ballet directed byKim On Wong with music by Joseph JarmanSUNDAY, MARCH 9, 8:00 p.mat the University of Chicago’sMANDEL HALL57th and UniversityTickets $2.50 (students $1.50)available atCHICAGO MAROONbusiness office, 1212 E. 59th St.Mandel Hall,or at the door40% OFFON Tubes for TV, Radio, Stereo-All Kinds of TubesEasy credit terms for service workTEL*A*SAVE Specializing in repair of stereocomponent systems - tape recorders- amplifiers - tunersOpen 11 AM to 7 PM, Monday - Friday; 10 AM to 6 PM, SaturdayTR 3-6600 8638 S. 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SizesS,M,L,XL. $8.50IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsFebruary 28, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5....EDITORIALJudgmentIn a carefully non-political, non-protest act, three of the fourstudent observers on the University disciplinary committee with¬drew from the committee Thursday.The nature of the act, the quality of the three people involved,and the careful reasoning of their resignation statement shouldgive the entire University cause for some deep rethinking ofpresent disciplinary procedures and of the nature and purpose ofthe University which underlie those procedures.The students’ statement and action make clear in a way noother public action could have the nearly unbridgeable gap thatexists at this University between students and faculty.The nine faculty members of the Oaks committee appear tohave been chosen for their moderation and openmindedness to stu¬dents and student-raised issues. In any case, with some exceptions,the great majority of the faculty members exemplify those attitudes.The three student members who resigned appear to have beenequally carefully chosen by student government for their liberal,not radical views, their intellectual abilities, openmindedness, andrestraint. Two of them are graduate students, aged 25 and 24,one a senior aged 21. Together they have spent a total of thirteenyears at the University.These thirteen people labored together for four weeks, meetingnearly every day during that period. Often they worked as manyas twelve hours a day, seldom less than four hours on days whenthey met. They ate together, drove home together, “willingly andopenly participated in endless ‘rational discussions’ ” together. Aconsiderable degree of personal affection developed between stu¬dents and many of the faculty, as the students comment in theirstatement.Yet despite the seemingly ideal qualifications and circum¬stances for faculty-student communication, and the general goodwill of committee members on both sides, communication ran intoan apparently insurmountable obstacle: its subject was the natureand mission of the University as defined by faculty versus students.It is important that the student observers did not ask facultymembers to agree with them, according to their statement; theyasked only that faculty understand and respect their views insteadof merely listening and tolerating. And the students left the com¬mittee yesterday because they were finally convinced the facultymembers could not or would not understand their views.This insurmountable problem led the students to state that“the lack of communication that has rendered meaningless our taskas observers makes the composition of the disciplinary committeean honest issue. Without debating political legitimacy, we think thedecisive question is whether students can be created fairly by thepresent committee. We don’t believe it.”That is a harsh judgment from three of the thirteen individualson this campus who know more than anybody else can ever knowabout the current disciplinary processes, and who have dedicatedmost of their waking hours for one month to trying to make theUniversity discipline fair according to their standards.That particular judgment, like many of the other criticismsof the student observers, suggests some formal solutions to theproblems of faculty-student communication.But underlying any formal solution, if they are really to work,must be a constant and genuine exchange of views between facultyand students. That such exchange is not possible now at this Uni¬versity would seem an inescapable conclusion from the experienceof the student observers is perhaps the deepest lesson as well asthe cause of the recent sit-in.Given the quality of the students making it and their experi¬ence, it is a most sad indictment of this University that they can say:“This (resignation) is in no way a personal indictment of youor any of the members of the committee; we value highly ourI experience with each of you in the past weeks. It is rather a strongcondemnation of the present relation between students and facultyand of a system that makes poor use of us all.” ItI|jiiiif LETTERS TO THE EDITORQuatrains for Instant Knights (and Minute Men)When in the coils of grassy dreams ye linger,Spin out the tale of our new knights and lords,Crudd and sapience, Redjug and Mighty-finger,Sweetblum, Choice-hobson, and the Tender Broads.King Arthur Lax did neither spin nor weave:He was exemplum, ’twas his role to shine,T’illuminate the clumps where they should cleave,The earth’s infections, the knots in knotty pine.Our knights assembled a vast multitude,And roused them ’gainst the world’s ferocious grain,Led them toward the Dark Unpulchritude,Umbrellaed them throughout two weeks of rain.When sun ’gan to emerge, the host did seeA certain springtime cleaning of the dark,Turned for their homes, while Lax cried, “WeHave not crusaded here to salt a lark.“Do they not know, these cream-of-wheat-brain chicks,The antique blood congealed within these knots?Think they will wash out clean in twenty licks?Ha’ they not heard of Sharpeville and of Watts?”Into the dark his words dispatched Sweetblum,Armed Mighty-Eff with hatchet, and Redjug,Axed they mean pine and sapling cruel as plum,Trampled fierce leaves, and spat brave at fire-plug.Yea, glory is theirs, gloried their enterprise,Knights of Bright Lax, they lanced the pustuled girth.Extol them, crown them, set them in fanon-skies.Their cleansing, gentle force did cure the earth.George, Lord AnonThanks a LotI would like to borrow the space of yourcolumns to express an indebtedness tothose I cannot otherwise thank. Early inthe process of the mob attack to which Iwas subjected Wednesday several studentscame to my assistance.This intervention took place before thearrival of any security personnel on thescene; the students in question simplywalked into the center of the mob and of¬fered me their aid.In the confusion I failed to get theirnames, and I cannot even be Certain howmany there were — two or three. I thinkthey showed considerable personal cour¬age, and I wish to convey to them my ad¬miration and gratitude.James Redfield, MasterNew Collegiate DivisionMissionWe now have the words of the Kalvencommittee to add to those of Mr. Levi andthe Committee of the Council, to wit: aca¬demic freedom is the freedom to teachwhat you wish, not to be taught what youI I III ( lilt A(i() MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothNews Board:Undergraduates: Wendy GlocknerGraduate Students: Rob CooleySpecial Effects: Mitch BobkinDisciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussThe Community: Bruce Nortonj News Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Con Hitchcock, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Contributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, Barabara Hurst, Robert Hardman.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Rob¬ert Swift. (Zowie.)Si nshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of .the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Ha!!, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. wish, to teach whom you wish, not to betaught by whom you wish. The mission ofthe University has been elucidated beyondquestion. I sincerely hope that students re¬alize. in its deepest significance, what hasbeen said by the faculty/administrationcomplex since the sit-in ended. Let us nowswear our fealty to these tenured stewardsof the kingdom.As a pseudo-postscript, I offer my con¬gratulations to you on your Tuesday edito¬rial. The editor’s vocation is one of criti¬cism and. for the first time in some weeks.I noted a confidence in your criticism thathas been lacking. Again, con¬gratulations. . .and thanks.Paul M BrinichCommittee on Human DevelopmentInquiryIn the Maroon editorial of Feb. 25. the“mission of the University” was treated asif it were the creed of some mystical reli¬gious sect. It is not a creed. The mission ofthe University is the common purpose andcommitment of a group of men and wom¬en. That purpose is the pursuit of in¬tellectual excellence through the “constantinquiry” which the Maroon editor praisedbut misunderstoodIt is one thing to question everything butanother to ask questions about everythingTo question everything is to doubt as amatter of principle the validity of all prop¬ositions and the legitimacy of all in¬situations. If men follow the maxim“doubt all” conscientiously, they soonreach a state of intellectual and moral pa¬ralysis, for systematic doubt destroys exist¬ing systems of meaning and order withoutproviding a principle from which newstructures can be built. Faced with the re¬sulting state of inarticulateness and chaos,men are driven fervently to adopt anyprinciples which can give their lives mean¬ing. They start by doubting everything, butthey finish believing something, anything.To ask questions about something is toformulate questions in and about a particu¬lar context. Such inquiry takes place with¬in a culture which the inquirer articulatesand changes by asking his questions. Theculture consists of previous questions andanswers which the inquirer does not accept“because they are written” but which hedoes not reject “because they are outdatedproducts of a dead era.” Instead he probesfor answers to his questions and he leavesthose answers and questions for the nextgeneration of inquirers to aid them in then-search. He is not likely to have found theanswer to the question, but neither is helikely to have discovered no answers at allWhile he who questions everything be-C'ontinued on Page Seven6/The Chicago Maroon/February 28, 1969'"'m « * * • *' ** ITTf h >* i »i i’ -! hiii, ifEDITORIALSanityThe decision of some students to try “guerilla action” to en¬force demands where a sit-in could not is more a sign of desperationthan evidence of strength. Kicking in windows, spitting on people,and setting off stink bombs won’t win anyone over.These tactics only aggravate the faculty and annoy the restof the students. They tend to confirm the suspicion of the outsideworld that radicals are raving lunatics.The reaction of the administration has been explicit. They areready to expel anyone in sight (and have).The thing is, the band of mock terrorists is pretty tiny. IfCharles O’Connell hadn’t gotten up tight over at the president’shouse Monday night and amplified his patronizing dean of studentscharm, the mob might have become less frenzied. The famousJamie Redfield incident was hardly an incident at all. The stinkbombs were smelly, but how, in an hour one person can go aroundand plant enough stink bombs to smell up the whole south end ofChicago (what doesn’t smell already).So the message to the administration is: be calm. Most stu¬dents aren’t with the lunatic fringe. But get excited, call the cops,and the majority sanity on this old campus will evaporate over¬night.The Electric Theatre Co. presents atTHE KINETIC PLAYGROUND4812 NORTH CLARKTONIGHTPAUL BUTTERFIELDB.B. KINGALBERT KING SATURDAYPAUL BUTTERFIELDALBERT KINGLUMPY GRAVYDoors open 7:30—tickets at the doorNEXT WEEKJohn MayallRichie HavensTickets: Marshall Field's, Ticket Central,Crawfords, at the dooror call 784-1700T TlKl.wmVjK “Noteworthy, uell-crafted production, performancesof merit ” Christiansen, Daily News“Best directing, thoroughly worthy performances”Clenna Syse, Sun-Times“I nqualified approval, excellent. ” Carole Edwards, Tribuneslow danceON THE yg.- <.. . V 'KILLING GROUND /-> k.by William HanleyAT THE HARPER THEATER5238 S. Harper —Res BU 8 1717Admission S3 00 STUDENTS Si 75 (Fri. & Sun.)FINAL WEEKEND!!' LETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from Page Sixgins in utter doubt and ends in utter cer¬tainty, he who asks questions begins andends in curiosity. The Maroon editor andthose students who he thinks lead the full“life of the inquiring mind” have followedthe first pattern. They profess to questioneverything, but they assert dogmaticallythat “the entire concept of the infallibleacademic mission just doesn’t exist.” Theydoubt all, but in their hearts they “recog¬nize the legitimacy of student participationin all disciplinary matters.”Some faculty members (and some stu¬dents) fit the second pattern. Like the Kal-ven committee they consider the prece¬dents and examples, they ask what theUniversity is for and they suggest answers,they propose changes in past practices, butthey affirm many of the principles uponwhich those practices were based, theyclarify the problem, and they leave itsnext articulation to the next group of in¬quirers. They spend a year engaged intheir inquiry, but the Maroon editor, whobelieved what he believes a year ago, whostill believes it, and who (God forbid!)may always believe it, simply asserts thatthey are “dead wrong.” He attributes theirconclusions to a dogmatic ecstasy which isapparently the only kind of thinking he un¬derstands.Staff MeetingThere will be a full staff meeting at5:30 pm Monday in Ida Noyes 303 inaccordance with the Maroon Consti¬tution for the purpose of election ofthe Editor for a one year term begin¬ning spring quarter. Zap. I am glad that the faculty runs this Uni¬versity in a spirit of inquiry and contin¬uous reevaluation. I am even happier thatthe editor of the Maroon does not run theUniversity in the spirit of questioning ev--erything. Were he and his fellow question¬ers to follow their positions consistently,the highest offense against this institutionwould be not treason but heresy.Don BialostoskyExpulsion VotedThe following was adopted unanimouslyby the Senate Council Tuesday:The Council is compelled to take note of continuingacts directed against the privacy and safety of membersof the University and against the University's properconduct of its mission. These acts have included an as¬sault upon the president's house and upon the persons oftwo members of the University, as well as the invasionof the Quadrangle Club — all of which occurred on Feb.24, 1969. Moreover, those participating in these acts in¬cluded a number of persons who had previously beensuspended by the University's disciplinary committee.It is increasingly likely that the security of the Univer¬sity can be re-established only by invoking civil author¬ity — a course that is particularly suitable when, as hasoccurred, the University's own disciplinary proceduresare defied. It is a course which is always open and isentirely appropriate as long as the University lies underthe threat of violence and coercion. Before resorting tothe civit authorities, the University will seek once againto deal with present disorders through disciplinarymeans lying in its own jurisdiction. It must be recog¬nized, however, that circumstances — including the re¬fusal of persons concerned to submit to University dis¬ciplinary action — may at any time make civil actionnecessary, and the council reluctantly accepts this ne¬cessity.In the light of the foregoing facts, the council of thesenate joins with the committee of the council in thefollowing recommendation to the dean of students. Thebehavior of those persons, known to be under suspensionby the disciplinary committee now sitting, and identifiedas having participated in the disruptive events of Febru¬ary 24, appropriately calls for immediate expulsion. Ac¬cordingly, these persons should be summoned to appearbefore a university disciplinary committee, to be ap¬pointed by the committee of the council, and there toshow cause why they should not be expelled forthwith.Summonses to this action should be issued immediately.Recipients of these summonses should be required toapply for an individual hearing before the disciplinarycommittee, this application to be in writing, sent byregistered mail to the dean of students of the University.Such responses must be postmarked no later than 5 pm,Thursday, Feb. 27, 1969. Failure so to respond withinthe time specified should automatically result in expul¬sion.SDS presents:BRIDGE on the RIVER KWAI• *2t - ■ 1 M ' C; ' ‘ « 1 ‘ - - ’ V.. • J-Cobb Holt, Tonight, 7:00 & 9:3O, 75‘ASSASSINATIONa special series of four lectures atThe University of ChicagobyDr. Lawrence Z. Freedman8:30 P.M. Law School AuditoriumMarch 3Profile of an AssassinMarch 10Personal and Social PathologyMarch 17Personal Violence and Political Violence$10 for the series, $3 each lectureSTUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFFFREEFor information cal! Ext. 3139THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBERPLAYERS OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY • Music DirectorandSEVERINO GAZZELLONIinternationally known flutistworks by Berio • Castiglioni • Chou Wen-Chung • WeinbergFRIDAY • FEBRUARY 28 • 8:30 P.M.MAN DEL HALLAdmission is free but with ticket.Available at Department of MusicConcert Office, 5835 University Ave.February 28, 1969/.The- Chicago Maroon/7•w* » WINNER AND STILL CHAMPIONFrom Consumer Reports February 1969:"In November 1966 CR rated the Craig 212 battery operated taperecorder a check-rated Best Buy. We've just tested a current sampleof the 212 and found that it's still high in quality; it's price, $39.95,has remained the same."See the Craig 212 and newer cassette models atTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREEllis at 58thWdk puun Shop,!^^amaro/69BRAND NEW‘69 CHEVYNOVA COUPEFully Fact. Equipped$1995 Cum LaudeSPECIAL SERVICEDISCOUNTS TO ALLUNIV. OF CHICAGOSTUDENTS & FACULTY[ Just Show Proper I.D.)72nd & STONY ISLANDOPENSUNDAYSMU 4-0400OPEN DAILY 9-9 - SAT. 9-5Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.WHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION LOVESEACH AND EVERYONE OFITS LISTENERS?whok f m 88.3 COUNTRY HOUSEREST4UR4NTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842Blow YourselfUp POSTER SIZE1 2 ft. x 3 ft.S#»d any IIdcI o*4 Whit* or Color Photokoo IS* ■ 2h* to I a 10. Wu will Mnd you o2 ft i 1 ft. ILO-UP . . . p*rf*ct POP ARTPOSTER.n *3.503x4FlBio-lip $7.50AM Sfe for post ft Mis. EACH. Na C O D.AM Weal iala. InSaM Utrcfc ar Nwy OMer to:PHOTO POSTER, Ik.210 E. 23rd St., Dept. C221New York, N. Y. 100108/The Chicago Maroon/February 28, 1969 I ft t a t ft (H f ill ftTHE UNIVERSITYHOUSE SYSTEMannouncesThe acceptance of applications for positions on its staff inUniversity Houses for the coming academic year.Positions include Resident Headships and Assistant Head¬ships. Resident Heads are provided furnished suites andmeals. In addition, some Headships provide a quarterlystipend. Compensation for Assistants ranges fromroom-and-partial-board, to room-and-board.Appointments are open to students working for advanceddegrees in the University or to members of its faculties.Undergraduates over twenly years of age will be consideredfor Assistantships.All persons interested in applying for staff positions mayobtain further information from the office of the Director,Administration 201,5801 Ellis Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Apersonal interview is required. Interviews will be held duringthe Winter Quarter and the first two weeks of the SpringQuarter. Early applications are encouraged. Applicationsshould be made on or before the deadline which is March 31.presents...Handmade, refillable Candleswith a soft, inner glowNew Danish Chessboardsin rosewood and teakMEXICANCRYSTALBEER MUGS ILGoblets & Stemware53rd & Lake Park667-4040 OPENSUNDAYStudent Observe;Continued from Page Fivestatement lightly. We know the distinctionbetween disagreement and lack of realconsideration of another’s views. Our opin¬ions have not been taken seriously and thishas naturally galled and outraged us, butwe have controlled ourselves to the best ofour ability (sometimes we think we are theonly people being disciplined in this wholerigamarole).We hope you will not interpret our dis¬satisfaction as sour grapes: we never de¬manded that you agree with us. But whena person seriously gives thought to a dif¬ferent opinion, the phenomenon is quite dis¬tinguishable from the polite tolerancewhich does indeed “keep channels open.”The lack of communication that has ren¬dered meaningless our task as observersmakes the composition of the disciplinarycommittee an honest issue. Without debat¬ing political legitimacy, we think the deci¬sive question is whether a student can betreated fairly by the present committee.We don’t believe it.When we retire to discuss a case, it oftenseems to us—as it must to you—that thestudents and the faculty heard two differ¬ent people defending themselves. We havebeen astonished by some of your reactionsland although habituation has set in oflate, acquiescence has not—we are simplyexhausted).We admit and would attest to your sub¬jective integrity, high-mindedness, andconscientiousness. But as the disciplinarycommittee is presently constituted, one in¬terested party is passing judgment uponanother—which is not an exercise of rea¬son or authority but of power. We havebeen forced to conclude that in order toprotect students from the immediate im¬pact of the faculty’s prejudices, opinionsand principles, a disciplinary committeeneeds an equal number of students withvoting rights.There is, for instance, more than onereasonable view of the appropriateness ofpurely theatrical guerilla” tactics. Theonly way such legitimately divergent opin¬ions can be effective within the deliber¬ations of the committee is if their propo¬nents have votes. The merely advisory ca¬pacity of observers has proved ineffectivein representing such views. This has be¬come evident to us through the com¬mittee’s proceedings.We obviously believe that student viewsare relevant because we think students areintegral members of the University com¬munity. We are aware, however, that somefaculty and administrators express doubtsabout the advisability of having students inthe University at all.If the founders, trustees, faculty, andPresident intended this institution to beonly a research center, it logically followsthat student views need not be taken intoaccount, for the students remain here onsuffrance, as guests of the institution andnot members of the community.If, on the other hand, students are mem¬bers of the University, they clearly havethe right to participate in the decisions af¬fecting the life of the community. Indeed,they have the responsibility to contributeto its maintenance, to defend and clarifyand, if necessary, amend its goals. Leaving to the powers that be the proofof the expendability of students, we ob¬jected from the first to the constitution ofthe committee. We stand corrected now onthe statutory legality. On the more impor¬tant question of the representation of allmembers of the University community onthe disciplinary committee, we remainunanswered.ProcedureWe have given considerable thought tothe concept of academic due process andthe value of the informal procedures thecommittee has adopted. We recognize theneed for a discipline apparatus designed tobe compatible with the ends of an educa¬tional institution. It seems, though, that thekind of apparatus you have adoptedthrough pressure of inappropriate traditionand of various groups on campus is notstructured with sufficient care and thro-oughness to guarantee fairness.A major procedural problem has been,for example, the failure to establish anydiscernible and consistent basis for theseverity of discipline recommended, beforeor after preliminary hearings. Congruentwith the faculty's characteristic attitudetoward the place of the student in the Uni¬versity, the enormous amount of energyexpended on due process has seemed to usto affect only the manner and not the sub¬stance of the proceedings. The committeecontinues to arrogate to itself the privi¬leges of paternalism.It appears that you sometimes judge notonly the act, but the principles behind itand the person who committed it.The intention of the act is clearly rele¬vant, but it is not relevant to search afterand be influenced by the underlying politi¬cal, even moral, principles. That this is sooften the case is established by many ofthe questions the Committee raises at pub¬lic hearings. This practice can only lead topolitical discrimination or, to be crude,witch-hunting. It is intolerable that a uni¬versity should judge the basic principles orpolitical opinions of its members.As far as judging the total person, ratherthan the act is concerned, it would seemequally evident that this is the privilege ofGod and any punishment based on who aperson is instead of what he does is pre-sumptous.This whole state of affairs is summed upin the real charge the students face beforethe disciplinary committee, correctly de¬fined by the Kalven committee report as“treason against the mission of the Univer¬sity”. The University offers itself as ahaven for the plurality of opinions, but thistolerance stops abruptly, for the com¬mittee, when it come to the “mission ofthe University”.Here shall be only one opinion, theseemingly unanimous opinion of the facul¬ty, which body is thereby the “legitimate”defender of this mission. The idea that aplurality of opinions shall be welcomed onall issues except the one that might makea concrete difference to our own commu¬nity is a bit staggering. Such a sharp dis¬tinction between theory and practice neces¬authorized BMC service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, Illinois f>0615foreign car hospital & clinic, inc. (0^ 2MCAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREET sarily and reasonably puts into questionthe intellectual honesty of the faculty.Different opinions about the nature andmission of the University have beenbrought to the attention of the facultythrough discussion and through active pro¬test. Whenever pushed hard, the faculty’sreaction has been, “If you don’t like it, youcan leave” (quoting Mr Beadle’s statementof some years back). They treat the Uni¬versity as if it were their personal posses¬sion and forget that the University and themaintenance of its ideals have only beenentrusted to them.In this instance, we believe that the fac¬ulty, as well as the students, have by theiractions betrayed this trust and thereby themission of the University. In order to en¬force acceptance of their opinion about themission of the University, the faculty havesubstituted power (the power to suspendand expel) for authority (the ability tocommand respect). The substitution is notobscured by refusal to call in external po¬lice; the police remain the ultimate basisof power.PunishmentUnder the best of circumstances—that is,an acceptance of the definition of the of¬fense, the disciplinary body, and the na¬ture of discipline—the most compelling ar¬guments against expulsion and suspensionis, in the words of a student defendant,that they emasculate the University com¬munity by eliminating differing viewpoints.Beyond this, in the case of a male stu¬dent, suspension or expulsion can meanbeing drafted into the military. Expulsionfor anyone is likely to mean an end to pro¬fessional ambitions requiring further edu¬cations, inasmuch as other institutions willbe reluctant to admit some judged to be“discipline problems”.The grave doubts about the fairness ofthe constitution and proceedings of the dis¬ciplinary committee bring into question thepropriety of the severity of punishments atits disposal. Further, it is contrary to thefundamental idea of a pluralistic commu¬nity for one group to have absolute controlover another. The problem is complex and we fell it has not been adequately resolved.This brings us to our reasons for makingthis letter public. We are convinced thatsome of the issues raised by this crisishave not been seriously thought out by theUniversity community and we would liketo share our perspective. In spite of theeternal preoccupation with the nature ofthe University and our recently urgent con¬cern with the problems of authority, orderand discipline, no one seems to consider,for instance, the possibility that disciplineis not to be equated totally with punish¬ment.Nor, in the rush to avoid the use of theexternal police and judicial system, doesanyone seem to have considered the impli¬cations of creating our own internal policeand semi-judicial system. The mindless re¬sponse of all sides to the present crisis isreally alarming.Finally, we want to disengage ourselvesemphatically from all groups and actionsin the current turmoil. We are acting byourselves and for reasons that seem to ussensible. This act isn’t meant to condemnor endorse anyone. We may be making amistake in having waited so long or inleaving now, but if we must hang, weprefer to hang alone.For these reasons, all of which we havediscussed with you at great length sincewe first began sitting with the committee,we are convinced that we can no longerparticipate in the business of this com¬mittee. We will, of course, continue to re¬spect the confidentiality of the matters wehave deliberated with you and the privatecases we have heard.We regret that we feel compelled to leaveunder these—circumstances; we hope youunderstand our position.Thank you for your patience. We urgeyou to consider seriously our objectionseven now in our absence. You have helpedimmeasurably in our coming to terms withmany aspects of this controversy and wewould hope to leave you the small gift ofour own peculiar insight.Jonathan DeanMichael DennenyMary Sue LeightonFOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYJVWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVYAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9c/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 Bookof theDeadMarch 9Je... more than three million Sun Lifepolicies and group certificates are inforce and over two-thirds of Sun Life'spolicy payments are now being madeto living policyholders and annuitants.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph j. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chgo. 60607FR 2-2390 — 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COM I’ANA’ OF CANADA actical!uyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St.. February 28,. 1.969/The Chicago Maroon/9X * « * . i Hi <..•>» f,.r 1 <; V, .tit - ry I \ k(The Maroon Classified Ads) Til.’":JANIS JOPLIN - TICKETS AT BUSINESS OFFICERATES: 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. 3 rm apt., $155, April 15, new bldg.,52 & Everett, (air-condit.) 363-1293(P.M.s)FILMMAKERS'.STUDENT FILMMAKERS! DocFilms will be running a series ofexperimental and student filmsnext quarter. If you have made, orknow of, a film that you'd like usto screen, contact Doc Films at 309Cobb Hall, extension 2898.RELIGIOUS MUSICMUSIC OF THE SPHERES:The Eddie Perkins Jazz Trio againat Reynolds Club Thursday. "C'Shop 8-11 P.M.FOR SALEBLACK IS BEAUTIFUL bumper 8.door stickers. 2 for $1.00. Send cashto STICKERS 5317 S. Cornell, Chi¬cago 60615. Immediate free delivery.1963 VW Sunroof (roof rack, if de¬sired). One owner, 67,000 mi. 3 newtires, 4th excellent, spare good.$495. Call 667-3107.Antique fur coats for sale. Somereal beauts. James Schultz Clean¬ers, 1363 E. 53rd St. 752-6933.Tibetan tankas 373-6618.MOVING SALEDEMONSTRATORS*'TRADESTV's, Recorders, Amplifiers, Tun¬ers, Changers, Speakers. Every¬thing must go. No Reasonable Of¬fer Refused.Schwartz Bros. HiFi1215 E. 63 St. FA 4-8400Nikon SP with 50mm 1.4, 28mm3.5, 135mm 3.5 8. accessories. Allin excellent conditoin. $250 firm.324-9358 evenings.59 VW Excellent 400 Ken 363-6297.Royal Typewriters c/case, almostnew, $40; Zenith 21" rem. controlTV, $50; 28-2411.New vac. cleaner $25. 338-4828.Air conditioners, used only 1 mo;10,000 BTU $175; 6500 BTU $125.Phone 955-8180.Squirrel Monkey, with food andcage, $25. 955-1824.Good used TVs reconditioned. $24.95& up. American Radio 1300 E.53rd, 53 Kimbark Plaza.Mustang '67 GT350 Fastbk. Low mi,air, extrs, $2095 955-1028.NEW COURSE OFFEREDAnthropology 241-Music 288. "Eth-nomusicology: Introduction to the 2'2 rm. apt. $95, April 1, new bldg.,51 8. Woodlawn, 363-1293 (P.M.s).Best of both Apt. 8. dorms! Pvt,turn., inexepensive rm. Board, laun¬dry facilities, etc. Available imme¬diately 5555 Woodlawn, 955-0305.Rooms for rent. D. U. PL2-9647.Good, 5 room apt. available forsummer and next year. 5339 S. El¬lis. But lease needs resigning be¬fore May. Call 955-2693 for details.ROOMMATES WANTEDRoommate wanted for spring quar¬ter. Woodlawn apartment. Call 493-7698.I unnerstan your gingoleader is planning an-nothor trip to our con-tree...Female roommate wanted HydePark Blvd. and 55th. Call 667-8487.Fern, rmmte 5410 Univ. 667-7911.Third man for townhouse apt.; 1372E. 58th. $80/mo. 288-2411.Sociable, quiet male to share 1bdrm apt. with same, 2 beds, BU 8-1100, Apt. A, 4:30-11.Female own room clean spaciousSouth Shore Apt. on I.C. 324-4177.Roommate for corner double inWoodward, spring quarter, 1307Wallace, BU 8-6610.LOSTBlack female Labrador, 1 yr. Ifthis dog followed you home lastTuesday or Wednesday please call324-9358. We really miss her.(-omtff florist «£• 64S L sstbSlRfifl A:hiCAGO, ILL. 60615$Phone: FA 4zl651personalsSwitched-on Bach — only *3.79from r/h at the Student Co-opINFILTRATE THE PIGSIThe University of Chicago SecurityPolice are looking for new recruits—now is the time to get some realpeople (non-pigs) on the inside. Con¬tact the Personnel Office Ml 3-0800,X4445.Study of Folk, Primitive, and AsianArt. Musics in Culture." T, Th. 10-11:30, Lexington 4.TYPINGMay I do your typing? 363-1104.PEOPLE WANTEDMarch 11 through 30. House man¬ager Harper Theater Dance Festi¬val. Evenings: Tues., Fri., Sat.,and Sun. afternoon. 9:45 A.M. to2:30 P.M. Wed. and Thur. 924-1530Female assist, to journalist to type8i research on manuscript. Socialscience bkg. prefer. PL 2-4277.Part-time next 4 weeks. Box officeHarper Theater. Afternoons or eve¬nings. Prefer someone who canwork 5 or 6 days each week. 924-1530.Spend summer in Mich, resort areaas companion to 2 lovely children.Excellent working conditions. Forinfo. BU 8-6610 ex. 2405x after3/2/69.Room and board offered in ex¬change for evening baby sittingand help with dinner dishes. Maleor female. Starting spring quarter.Call Cohn 324-8486.Volunteers (particularly women)who are interested in politicallyworking to repeal Illinois' abortionlaw Contact: I.C.M.C.A. $838 S.Woodlawn, 667-4943.Tutor needed for college Math,chemistry 8i/or Biology—NEED U.Fro. Apr. '69 to Oct. '69. SMALLFEE—752-3393.FOR RENT52 & Kenwood, 3Va rms., $127.50.May 1st sublet w/option to renewSept. 1. Phone 752-7492 eves. &weekends. Missed the Hunt? Had no time tokill? Get vicarious thrills with 10THVICTIM Saturday.The Resurrection of the Divine: TheEddie Perkins Jazz Trio again atReynolds Club Thursday "C' Shop.8-11 P.M.HASIDIC AND ZEN STORIES, toldby Mr. Reuvan Gold at Hillel to¬night. 8:30.Zo, Morrie, was iss los mit dissatori?Bypass registration bureaucracyChose courses for next quarter.DARKNESS descends — March 15th8, 16.February: the month of great fig¬ures in history — Lincoln, Wash¬ington, Bandersnatch. . .SEX! VIOLENCE! GRIPPING CLI¬MAX! See Tenth Victim. Saturday7:15, 9:15 Mandel.The minutes of the meeting re¬vealed over two weeks ago betweenthe administration and the policecomprise the most incredible pieceof brutal cynicism and uisregardfor issues that has appeared inyears. The administration consist¬ently acted in bad faith, reneged,and destroyed any credibility itmight have as a body interested injustice. It deserves trust no longer.The cards were played, one for one.The game ended in no victory. Itwas apocalytic to all involved.Therein lies the tragedy.Jeff Howard's mother strikes again—ABC TV 'Girltalk' March 4th.(Check local papers for time ofday.)Cafe Mapitom returns to celebratePurim Sun. March 2nd at 6:00 P M.Featuring the Habonim Israelidance group and other exciting en¬tertainment. Prize for best Haman costume. Felafel, humus, hamen-tashen etc. Costumes encouraged,not required. 3rd floor Ida Noyes,$1.25. Presented by Students forIsrael.What's YOUR excuse? Get anyrecord at lower prices (most $3.19)from r/h — Student Co-op.And always wear a seat belt.WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.Disregard academic processPersuade, provoke, or fascinate pro¬fessors into entering course workevaluations in my record or send¬ing letters of evaluation to gradu¬ate schools and future employersand seek a future where this is nohasle.Wednesday evening folk sings atthe Blue Gargoyle.Bible Study — Interested in startinga bible study 8, discussion grouphere on campus? Jim X8381 or924-6145.The Kingdom of God is at hand:Eddie Perkins Trio.Tibetan Book of the Dead — ticketsnow available at Maroon BusinessOffice — room 304 Ida Noyes Hall,or 10-4 daily next week in MandelHall corridor. $1.50 for students,$2.50 others.BOOK OF THE DEAD features avery freaky light show as well asgreat dancing and far-out music.What I'm trying to say is that it'sgood.So you're wondering what 'Mapi¬tom" means? Come Sun. March2nd and we'll tell youWanted: liberal woman in need offunds in exchange for occasionalliaisons with discreet executive. BoxM, Maroon.Why did she disappear?....DARKNESSIf you are interested in auditioningfor the student-faculty recital to begiven May 4 during the Festivalof the Arts please call Katie Tolies955-8571. Auditions will be held dur¬ing first week of Spring Quarter.JANIS JOPLIN ! ! ! ! !Tickets $3.50 at Maroon BusinessOffice.A Happening at Bonhoffer Housetonight. 8:30. Lutheran undergradsand friends come participate. 5554Woodlawn Ave.Be there to see the vorpal swordsnicker into the BS's second birth¬day cake Friday, 9:30 — free cakeand ice cream.See Andress, Mastrolanni in theTENTH VICTIM Sat. March 1, 7:15,9:15 P.M. Mandel Hall.Neglect presidents, deans, function¬aries With empathic faculty andstudents build a mutual support co¬operative.Flip Wilson, guest-hosting the To¬night Show, took a healthy swig ofVicks cough medicine on camera.And the NBC sales department,thought the sky would fall down.It seems that until quite recentlyNegroes were never allowed totouch a product in a commercial,much less use it. You might haveseen black faces scattered acrosstelevision pitchland, but they didn'tactually handle the precious pro¬duct.According to Variety, it was a mile¬stone in TV race relations that theVicks Company didn't complainabout Wilson's mouthing their sy¬rup.What I would give for 1 night withA.2 nights with B?2 girls need ride to NYC or Flaspring break—share expns. Wdwrdct. 3409, 3427 leave message.Cease existence as antithesis Be¬gin Disestablishment by disregardRedress by reconstitution and Pro¬gress by regeneration.Jug band to help celebrate theBander's birthday (empty jugs on¬ly) — tonite.Consider the men in blue. . .theself important men sporting shoul¬der badges that proclaim them tobe 'university police.*'Is the unemployment situation sobad that such useless vestiges haveto clutter the university commu¬nity?They perform no function exceptthat of a nuisance.They don't act as security guardsto any extent that might be acredit to them. Any freshman couldoutwit and outmaneuver a rent-a-cop any day of the week.Putting uniforms on men doesn'tmake them efficient or useful. Allit does is give them an overblownsense of their own importance.Watch them (when you've got timeto waste) and see what each littleman accomplishes on his dailystint.Knock the props from under theirsnug little sinecure. Ignore them. Then it's only a matter of timeuntil these anachronisms disappearfrom the campus.I was incarcerated in a Kalamazoomunicipal iail.SEXUAL FREEDOM LEAGUE,INC. Chicago Area. For informa¬tion write SFL, P. O. Box 9252Chicago, Illinois 60609.Burble with the Bandersnatch — atleast there's something to celebratethis weekend. Tonight 9:30."The Baha'i Faith recognizes theunity of God and of His Prophets,upholds the principle of an unfet¬tered search after truth, condemnsall forms of superstition and prej¬udice, teaches that the fundamentalpurpose of religion is to promoteconcord and harmony, that it mustgo hand-in-hand with science, andthat it constitutes the sole and ul¬timate basis of a peaceful, an or¬dered, and progressive society. Itinculcates the principle of equalopportunity, rights and privilegesfor both sexes, advocates compul¬sory education. . .and provides thenecessary agencies for the estab¬lishment and safeguarding of a per¬manent and universal peace."Sublimate your libido. Come folk¬dancing. Ida Noyes Sun. at 7:30.Shades hide his eyes from theworld — and the world from him.DARKNESS March 15, 16.Yoga—exercise, quiet nerves, med¬itate. Sri Nerode, DO 3-0155.Add a little oriental flavor to yourlife — try our felafel at Cafe Ma¬pitom.Divine vibrations: The Eddie Per¬kins Jazz Trio.Purim humor, stories, Megilahreadings, hamantaschen — at HillelMonday Night.Beamish boys et. al. invited to jointhe Bandersnatch for birthday cake,etc. — tonight 9:30 — FREE!Will Marcello Mastroianni be Ursu¬la Andress' Tenth Victim?KUKU is what you try and whatyou're not, when you go to Ah¬mad's.She ran to hide only to find adeeper trap. DARKNESS March 15thru the 18th.Bander, it seems like only yester¬day that you were but knee-highto a borogove. Hapy Birthday, ba¬by — an old friend.Sounds like a plant. 'The friend?''No. the borogove. Remember the letter with all thedashes that was on these exaltedpages? You'll never guess who theA. Nonnie Mouse was that sent itin. I just found out.Poetry Workshop: Blue Gargoyle,every Thursday. 8:30.Marco Polo—to the furthest wastes.326-4422.Think you'd made a wicked Ham¬an? Come to Cafe Mapitom.Isn't it about time to get seriousabout your music? Stereo compo¬nents at discounts. Free deliveryfor Students at MUSICRAFT oncampus Bob Tabor 324-3005.Interested in attending health clubwith all the trimmings? Call Kenat 3266.Letter to the Editor of the Maroon:"Levi, et al, may be Fascist pigs,and Machtinger, Blum, et al, maybe Communist rats, but it doesn'tmatter at all one way or the other.What does matter is that the par¬ties on both sides of this campusruckus are Jews.If this presages a major crackin the historical solidarity of youJews, it is the greatest news weblacks have had since the Emaci-pation (sic) Proclamation!Oh, the joy of watching you Jewspreparing to tear each other apart!You Jews who have forever had astranglehold upon the entire econo¬my of most of the world; you Jewswho are almost all of the slumlandlords; you Jews who are thegyp merchants, the crooked usedcar dealers, the gouging financiers;you Jews who control the radio andtelevision networks and most of thenewspapers, and who use these me¬dia to perpetuate the poison prop¬aganda that no Jew ever wrongedanyone; you Jews who have ex¬ploited us poor blacks for centuriesand now pretend to be our friends;you Jews who always have stucktogether as though held by Elmer'sglue; you Jews who are at thepinnacle of economic power seemabout to throw it all away in the in¬fighting.Nothing could be more desirableto us than to see that power blast¬ed to bits once and for all. Ourtime is coming soon, and if youdon't destroy each other, we'll de¬stroy all of you. Yes, we BlackMuslims will kill you kikes, andthen we'll be free at last.Most sincerely,Ahbed,6530 Kenwood"Black is beautiful?For alienated students, the basic societal problem is not so muchpolitical as aesthetic. Rejectingmiddle-class values, heads repudi-ate as well those conventional valuesand rules that deem experimenta¬tion with drugs illicit. For headsthe goal is to find a way out of the"air-conditioned nightmare" 0)American society. What matters itthe interior world, and, in the ex-ploration of that world, drugs playa major role.But even among heads, drug usedoes not invariably constitute thedeeply psychopathological and self,destructive phenomenon it is some¬times said invariably to be Manysuch students have sufficientstrength of character (and perhapsof physiology) to endure regularexperimentation with marihuana(and even with more powerful hal¬lucinogens or amphetamines) without suffering any enduring personaldisorganization. Many students whouse marihuana routinely do NOTexperience the ominous personaldeterioration, the "bad trips" orthe loss of motivation that is sometimes thought to accompany evencasual drug experimentation To besure, one of the intended effectsof drug use is to produce a TRANSI ENT alteration of experience andconsciousness; and to those whoview this alteration from the outside, it may appear deplorable. Yeta majority of students who haveused the hallucinogens reports thatthe experience was enlightening, en¬joyable or meaningful.Over the past two decades, themovement toward "intellectuality''in American colleges has beensteady and marked. . .There ismuch to be said for these pres¬sures for intellectual performance. . . Today's college students at se¬lective institutions are an unusuallyserious, well-informed, honest andmoraly concerned group. . .Yet indescribing the self-generated andeducationally-generated pressuresupon them, I have used the word"performance" advisedly. "Perfor¬mance" suggest alien activity, act¬ing on a stage in order to impressothers, a role played for the bene¬fit of the audience. And to grow¬ing numbers of such students, in¬tellectual performance is increas¬ingly seen as a kind of "role-play¬ing" of the worst sort.JOPLIN Tickets at the BusinessOffice.)0/Tho Chicago Maroon/February 28, 1869viT */.'»/>» /,8C v' NEWSHIPMENTThe IncomparableCombistar-Relax ChairRock it or lock it in 5 positionswith matching adjustable ^ ~1stool, from Westnofa, Norway only ^covered in the miracle fabric “ski” ooScandinavianImportOystem 53rd &Lake ParkOpenEvery Day667-4040Also on sale in our new shop inPalos Shopping Center,127th & Harlem, Cl 8-9090qj niversi ry TheatrepresentsCains Company inCUCHULAINan adaptationoj three plays by'iVilliaw 'butler' l feats■Rockefeller Chapel•Friday. 'February 28Saturday. 'March lSunday. ‘March '2and'Friday/Match 7Saturday/ March 8Sunday. Manii y‘Fiaht thirty in the eveniny .Only one hundred places will be sold for cadiperformance. vJ 1/ tickets air two dollars and canbe purchased at the'Fcryman ifallcry or atthe 'Rockefeller Chapel Office. T l'n i-lfevi-V.•:,:«{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 thatsomeone -$=>(cfetoicfe, Eft.7104 SO.JEFFERY AVEIN SOUTH SHOREPhone DO 3-2700Open Daily 9:30 A M. • 6:00 P.MmmUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE 3AR3ERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor TAKCAM-Y&NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY|U»T*MlI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outBU^M^is^63rc^J2U4jJ^IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.day, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. —I 1Here’s one cardfrom the establishmentthat no studentwill ever burn.TWA 50/50 CLUB YOUTH PARE CAROFOR AGES 1? THRU 31This identification card entities member to purchase transpor¬tation for self only, subject tq conditions on inverse side.CityMa;e [jj/ferraie □ Hair Color^yi y Eye Color __£>L$2 t3..1.Ct Sttr 1 U (22$ Bfrj^day)Sisnetyr^ card Hoidor •/" 'rVVliJ^.It'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'll do to make you happy.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 “WHEN ONE SEES how pervasivenegations are in the Americanculture one perceives the truemeaning of 'trust no one over30.’ Perhaps an imprisoned deanwill provide some definition,some resistance. Alas, there isonly emptiness: the permissivesmile. The tolerant liberal cul¬ture defines itself as 'open’ —that is, value-less. The studentunderstands the ■ for o free copy o?pun: the liberalM Wm. F. Bucklty'tculture is worth- ■ N A TIO N A l BEculture is uorrn m y|EW wri„. D.p,less. ■ o. 150 E. 33 Street,N. Y. 10016.The Carpet BarnA division of Cortland CarpetWe have an enormous selection ofnew and used wall-to-wall 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 - 3.1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)HUS-1M0 243-2271 HY 3-8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd. AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-911- TE'LEFUNKEN & 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 cardsiair.f\\Je welcome lotift jio^aniel <2^ouchetWen V Mair Cutting and Styling1552 (£. Siftg-tjliirJ P(2-9255appoin ImtnliFebruary 28, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11‘‘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.John earned his MBA in 1986. 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¬ 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.‘‘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’sMarketing is only one of several areas forMBA'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 mainly in industrial engineering and manufacturingWhatever area you choose, we think you'llagree with John: ‘‘Getting my MBA wasworth the extra effort.”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.An Equal Opportunity EmployerIBM ONCAMPUSMAR.5,6mmUNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO^Archives MBA's at IBM“Believe me,it was worththe extra effort!’12/The Chicago Maroon/February 28, 1969THE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number 14 February 28,1969A FUNNY THING HAPPENED two weeks ago on thebanks of the river Styx. The Myth of the Benign, Knowl¬edge-Loving, Value-Free University floated regretfullyover the falls to join the myth of the Banjo-StrummingNigger and the Democratic Aspirations of Joseph Stalin.In case any one still believed the public relations rhetoric,the current student movement has demonstrated beyondall doubt that despite the academic excellence of ouruniversity there can be no justification for its corporatecorruption.It is not that we have found Plato and Shakespeareeither irrelevant or ill-taught. We have found Chicago’sintellectual atmosphere to be, if not perfect, at least asgood as can be found in this unbecoming world of becom-ing.But this can never excuse the University’s anti-huma¬nitarian urbarT renewal practices, its repressive decision¬making structure, or its incestuous political ties with thedefense establishment. (We realize, of course, that noprivate University can exist without relation to the gov¬ernment—but that’s no reason to let the governmentscrew us.) Nor can it blind us to the political narrownessof our faculty and our courses. This is the radical cri¬tique and we find it generally correct.We do not feel that the solution to these problemscan come in a movement to close the University. Suchan action cannot be constructive because it is uncon¬trollable. Besides, it will not prevent scientists fromworking for the Defense Department or stop the racistpolicies of the University. Rather it will destroy whatgood there is in the University, leaving the corrupt as¬pects untouched. It is no wonder, then, that althoughmany students are talking about such action, it is theadministration that is actually carrying it out.Charles O’Connell has said that the most critical ques¬tion we currently face is whether this university cangovern itself. However, the willingness to abdicate thisresponsibility to “civil authority’’ as expressed by Ed¬ward Rosenheim on Wednesday has shown that therereally is no question at all. The administration has al¬ready decided to abandon the principles of the Universityas we know it. This decision is made the more cruelsince civil authority is little more than a euphemism forthe Chicago cops—the pigs who bashed our heads in lastAugust at another famous abdication, and who daily ter¬rorize the black population in the city around us.Lest anyone think that the university is playing withidle threats, the recent purge of 31 left-wing studentsshould show that the crunch is indeed on. Whatever onethinks of the propriety or wisdom of invading the saco-sanct Quad Club (where all roast beef comes from sa¬cred cows), the decision to expel the “offenders” is soout of keeping with the nature of the action that the onlyway to avoid the charge of political suppression would beto find a good synonym.Or v'.»uvvvJ\noo.f»V »-r.oirtD 3>J.The EditorsMarcel Camus'BLACK ORPHEUS(in color)SUNDAY, MARCH 2, COBB HALL, 7 & 9 P.M., $1, CEFIn the splendor of 7Omni WIDE SCREEN,Lusdnri97,lmsmack dab in the middle of your fm dialLAST WEEK!ROGER 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.Storrinq EVA RAS. RUZICA SOKIS. SLOBODAN ALIGRUDICDirected by Duton Mokoveiev A Brandon Film* reUon-HUGH GRIFFITH'MARTHA SCOTTCATHY ODONNELL'SAM JAFFESTARRINGCHARITON HESTON-JACK HAWKINS • haya harareet - Stephen boydOR BY MAILNOW PLAYINGySCHEDULE OF PRICES AND PERFORMANCESMATS. WED., SAT & SUN. at 2:00 ».M. *■>-Orch M&rz BaleWednesday and Saturday $2.50 $2.50 $1 80Sundays & Holidays $2 90 $2.90 $2 50EVES. MONDAY THRU SAT. AT 1:00 P.M.SUNDAYS AT 7:30 P.M.Sunday thru Thurs. Eves. $2 90 $2 90 $2 50Fri.. Sat.. 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Carson MeCullers’ searching and sensitive story ofinnocence lost that has become an “enduring masterpiece.c£lancfttfciiL<0SecHeart is a'Tonehj cHunteT‘technicolorscFrOmcW^rfierBr5s.-§even cAnsSi*Aw.p.i,tKlHOMA<,C R»AN ProOuiPdOvfHOMAt. R.ANj'jMAW, Mf * IF, . 0 .p. |.M t* «O0f (11 »S M,l > * 8 WWPLAYBOYTHE ATE R.1204 N DEARBORN • PHONE 944 3434_2 The Grey City Journal/February 28. 1969—’ —TheaterMaster Actors In ‘Servant’CARLO GOLDONI’S SERVANT OF TWO MASTERS, theUniversity Theater’s major production this quarter, is ashow which requires very little except the services ofabout sixteen superlative actors and enough time forthem to combine into a smooth working ensemble. At themoment this campus is extraordinarily well endowedwith the former commodity; the lack of the latterformed the major deficiency in what was on the whole aperfectly delightful evening.The play itself, which is an early example of Goldoni’seffort to infuse some life into the moribund comedy ofthe 18th century by injecting into the stagnating corn-media a collection of naturalistic characters from Vene¬tian life of the time, might almost be titled “A FarceWith Two Heroes,” and this production was graced witha couple of remarkably capable people in the two keyroles. Gerald Fisher as the Servant himself, the classicwily Truffaldino from Bergamo (pronounced in this pro¬duction, for some reason, Ber-GA-mo), gave an un-flaggingly energetic and entertaining performance, punc¬tuated with flashes of genius which made me regret evenmore that he hadn’t had time to polish the whole rolelike the comic gem it is. His performance of the lazzo ofthe folding and sealing of the letter was masterful,though his manipulation of the serving of the two din¬ners, the comic climax of the show, was weakened by hishaving to cross the arid wastes of the Mandel Hall stageto get from door to door (we'don’t really have a suitablestage for this kind of thing; Mandel is too big, but noth¬ing else has the technical resources).The trousers of the second hero, Beatrice, were mostelegantly filled by Anne Ashcraft, an actress who canprobably write her own ticket around here from now on,as far as roles are concerned. The part is historicallyeven more important than the traditional commediatypes which fill the rest of the cast; Goldoni later be¬came famous for his women, and Beatrice is a particu¬larly interesting version. She is a hero, not a heroine — she plays the whole show in lien’s clothes, fights a duel,invents plots just to see how they will come out, takesher fate into her own hands, becomes (briefly) engagedto the ingenue, and generally manipulates the situationto suit herself. It’s a plum of a role, and Miss Ashcraft iswell up to its demands. She is splendid to look at, has anenormous baritone voice, and, like all good actors, seemsto be able to read almost anything as though it werewritten in the language she speaks every day. Her per¬formance of the cabaletta aria which closes the firstscene of the third act was glorious; her revelation of hertrue sex (beyond all doubt) to the ingenue was hilarious;her despair at the reported death of her lover and sub¬sequent rapture at the discovery of the falseness of thereport (ably supported at this point by the lanky charmof her Florindo, Jack Sharpless) were delicious.The rest of the cast is similarly well chosen; it wouldbe tedious to report the delightful things that kept onhappening, but it’s hard to resist just one or two — thePantalone, for instance, performed by an actor whochooses to be listed in the program as ‘‘Frank Barber,”looking like a Callot drawing come to life, and actingwith flawless style; and David Pichette as Brighella,wiping his hands on his apron and extolling his trifle to adubious Truffaldino; and Smeraldina, the servant girl(Lonnie McAllister, playing her fifty-fourth servant girl— won’t somebody give that girl a chance?) injecting amuch-needed note of good sense into the romanticagonies of her mistress, and casting a well-bred leerfrom time to time in the direction of “that little darkfellow” Truffaldino, who casts it right back with interest.The lovers, Clarice and Silvio (Deborah Rozman andRobert Hopkins) were about what one would expect —adequate, in parts generally thought to be rather thank¬less. I am sorry that they were conceived in the samefarce style as the rest of the commedia grotesques; theyare part of the original stock cast of characters, butthere is evidence that even in the 16th century they wereof a slightly different style. In this play, a lighter and more romantic reading of the two roles would have giventhe actors more scope, and might have made an inter¬esting bridge from the farce of the grotesques to theheroic comedy of Beatrice and Florindo. The streetscenes were prettily handled, and included a dandy run-ning gag involving porters pinching fruit vendors in vari¬ous combinations and eventually (offstage) Smeraldina;it didn’t quite work, but it would have, eventually.The production itself was very handsome; it’s remark¬able what you can do with a couple of drops and a setpiece or two, especially if you’re doing a show set inVenice and have access to an old set from The Gondo¬liers. The music was eclectic but fun — it spanned aboutsix centuries, but it was pleasant to listen to, and servedadmirably to keep things moving. Costumes (by varioushands) and masks (by Louise Erlich) were based ontraditional commedia designs, and did what they wereintended to do — told you right away who and whateverybody was supposed to be.All right, here’s a famous play, being performed bythe cream of UT’s acting stock, and where was every¬body? Despite its deficiencies, Servant was a very goodproduction — maybe UT’s best this year — which playedfor three nights in Mandel Hall to pitifully small houses.It’s a play which improves with a good audience; indeed,it’s nearly impossible to play this kind of thing withoutconstant feedback from a warm, enthusiastic crowd.Those of us who saw it did our best, but it wasn’tenough. University Theater is in danger of being phasedout as superfluous; if it can’t draw with a play like this,where will it get a chance to do new plays, or old plays,or plays that nobody has ever heard of, or that nobodybelieves will work — the real stuff of a theater in auniversity like ours? If you didn’t see Servant of TwoMasters, I’m sorry; you missed a good show, and youdid your bit to contribute to the decline of an institutionprecarious at best and now more than ever in need of allthe help it can get. •Annette FernThey Leave So Much UnansweredWHEN THE INQUIRING NUNS, who are the centralfocus as well as the title of the latest film by GeraldTemaner and Gordan Quinn, two UC graduates who havebeen making documentaries in Hyde Park, come to theCoop Shopping center they come upon a woman carryinga package of groceries. They ask her, as they ask all theothers in the picture, “Are you happy?” The womanlooks at them (and us, for in this instance the camera isbehind the nuns) and says that she is a worker at theNational Opinion Research Center and is happy to reportthat their happiness study has revealed that most peoplerespond to that question in the affirmative.The audience in Quantrell Monday night when the filmreceived its first semi-public showing, roared apprecia¬tively at the response. Living in an academic communityhas many horrors, not the least of which is sociologistswho, when asked whether or not they are happy, respondwith clinical data. It was a moment of truth suddenlythrust upon us, a moment for more incisive (and I be¬lieve important) that the sociologically interesting truththat the responses given the nuns in the film almostentirely bear out the responses apparently gathered bythe NORC interviewers.It is during these instances that The Inquiring Nunshas its greatest success. There is no attempt made tomake this film a sociological study of happiness; ratherit is a study of encounters between nuns and people. TheTHE GREY CITYJOURNALHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.HI the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky.grey grey grey. T. S. EliotMurder in the CathedralEditorMichael SorkinManaging EditorJessica SiegelStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxJhe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall. choice was a wise one. Despite several attempts the ci¬nema has never been successful as sociology. Chroniqued’un Ete, the film by Jean Rouch and Edgar Morin fromwhich the question asked in the Kartemquin film wastaken, is cinematically successful more because of thedeep character revealment and the artistic integrity ofJean Rouch than the sociological mind of M Morin.Chronique d’un Ete’ is indeed the chronicle of a summer,but it is very specifically the summer of a certain groupof people, interviewers and interviewed, who live out thespecific period of time interacting with each other.In much the same manner The Inquiring Nuns is asmuch about the two nuns who ask the questions as it isabout the people in Chicago whom they ask. As such it isnot, unfortunately, successful. The film fails, stronglyenough, because of its simplicity. At a time when we arefaced with a windfall of needlessly complicated vacuumssuch as Johanna any film that tries to be simple shouldbe hailed and held dear. The problem here is that thedirectors have held their simplicity only to the level ofcharacter involvement and depth of questioning and notto visual style.Gordon Quinn’s camera has an unpleasant habit of al¬ways zooming in and out or going in and out of focus. Astheir films have progressed the two filmmakers havetried to put themselves in a more prominent and obviousposition and I believe that Mr Quinn’s changeable cam¬era is an attempt to remind the audience that as thesubject was aware of the camera so they should be too.Unfortunately, the result in this film is that the audiencehas the impression that Mr Quinn does not trust hissense of composition, which is indeed formidable. (I es¬pecially like the sequences in the Art Institute which intheir gratuitous treatment of the paintings make it atrue encountering ground rather than a cultural tomb.When the two inquirers, dressed in white livery, encoun¬ter a third nun in black, the meaning of the triangle theyform becomes obvious not because of its parallel in apainting but because the environment has already beenestablished and no painting is necessary in the frame.This camera style also hurts the film in that certainvital information is withheld from the viewer. There isan extremely moving scene in the Art Institute where aman beginning middle age very tentatively declares hisneed for his younger companion. We become awareabout three-quarters through the scene that this is eithera very shaky marriage which may fall apart any mo¬ment or an early attempt to change an affair intomarriage. We look for a wedding ring, but the left handsof the couple are not in the picture. Had the informationbeen there the scene would have been beautiful. Becauseit is not our feelings are incomplete. Where the filmfinally plunges into something more than a superficialgrooving with people we are kept out of the full under¬standing we desire.Apart from the visual style the film is flawed in that itlacks the dramatic element that is necessary. Not all films have plots, of course, but in the experimental workof abstract filmmakers dramatic tension is maintainedby the consideration of the relationship between line andshape, light and dark, close shot and full view. In ci¬nema verite we need a tension between interviewer andsubject, and between either or both of those and thefilmmaker. Although the nuns of the picture become ob¬viously more adept at interviewing they are never ableto reveal themselves and the glimpses which we get ofthem are not sufficiently incisive to make this fact avirtue.The Inquiring Nuns raises for me some very importantproblems about the nature of documentary filmmaking.Almost all the faults I have referred to above stem, inone way or another, from the fact that the filmmakerswere not working with pre-arranged material but ratherwith highly unpredictable situations. This is most pain¬fully obvious in the two sequences that take place in amoving car which frame the film. During both rides thecar reaches a stoplight and comes to rest. The result is adramatic tension; we expect what is said to be of great¬er importance here than elsewhere. Unfortunately, thetwo nuns were not aware of this tension (after all if youride a car in Chicago you expect to come to a stopsomewhere) and the expectations are dissolved.Godard has moved from having his actors improvise tohaving them act as if they are improvising. This tendan-cy to use the feel of the documentary, of the immediate,but to keep control in the hands of the director has beenincreasing not only with Godard but with Rouch andMarker as well. However, for Temaner and Quinn tohave used this approach the integrity of their workwould have been lost.The chief charge against. Hollywood is that the studiesas represented by the producers and the front office takecontrol of the film away from the director. I am afraid,however, that opening up the cinema to chance, the waythat Temaner and Quinn have done (and that in a muchless sophisticated way Norman Mailer has attempted todo) shall not cure the evils of Hollywood. In fact, I amnot at all sure that no having complete control over thesituation is not an equally harmful tryanny.T C FoxThe People in Heroic Struggle have valiantly van¬quished the upstart Running Dog Revisionists—DeceitfulGreat Leapers Backwards—who have thought to defyour Glorious Traditions and Immaculate Leadership.Michael Sorkin has returned from Prodigous 200 MileYangtze Swim to drown child—like Kruschevite Apolog¬ists in own Radiant Beatitude but has inscrutably letThousand Flowers Blossom with sparing of worthless,worm low lives.TrH> 'krfI -f« *V* • 6!$ T. ..s*> .TJ i-■ ••/r-*v? !*>nr! . *v,<?**. •?*.•f * ** V-iji. 1 f*; JWL/• *B ■■4 4. ,.«$‘ /•*‘ N‘.\i* /.. 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