- • aq*n • «-*cw r * '«r ■ ‘ muti ; •* Jtfv; * X**THE MAROONTuesday, May 27, 1969 MKWKM-SG Will Repeat Presidential ElectionSuspension of By-laws Ruled Illegal;President, CORSO Head, and AllTied Elections Must Be Re-votedMIKE BARNETT JEFF SCHNITZER Members of student government (SG)will re-ballot for president and possiblymembers of CORSO (committee on recog¬nized student organizations) because of ir¬regularities which occurred in a meetinglast week.In addition SG will break ties for fourseats.This action was referred back to the in¬dividual constituencies by a suspension ofthe rules of SG’s by-laws last week. OnlyRobert’s rules can be suspended, and it isillegal to suspend rules of a group. It hasbeen speculated that if the ties had beenbroken, the outcome of the presidentialUC Begins 1969 Spring GrowthConstruction BeginsWith InternationalStudies BuildingBy Wendy GlocknerAn International Studies Building for thedepartment of social sciences is under con¬struction at 57th and University, next to theWalker Museum.Plans are also under way for constructionof the $3 million Pahlavi Building, at 58thand Woodlawn, to house a middle easternstudies program for the social department.The International Studies Building isbeing funded by a $1,000,000 grant from theFord Foundation. According to NaphtaliKnox, director of physical planning, thebuilding will be completed by summer of1971. It was designed by Ralph Rapson ofMinneapolis.The new building will tentatively hold of¬fices for the departments of political sci¬ence and anthropology, the center for inter¬national studies, and the committees for Af¬rican, Soviet, Slavic, and comparative newnations studies.The mid-East center is the subject ofrecently circulated unsigned broadsides en¬titled “The King and I: The Romance Be¬tween the University and the Shah of Iran,”which charge that Shah Mohammed Pah-levi, who contributed $3 million to the cen¬ter, stole the money from the poor people ofIran for international studies, and the com¬mittees for African, Soviet, Slavic, andcomparative new nations studies.Norton Ginsburg, associate dean of thedivision of social sciences, said the five-sto¬ry building will hold both faculty and stu¬dent offices, two “sizeable classrooms”, astudent-faculty lounge, and several seminarrooms. It will cover 48,220 gross square feetand 26,200 net square feet.Although the building will be of moderndesign, Ginsburg said that vertical lineswhich characterize the rest of the buildingson the quads will “be accentuated in thebuilding,” and therefore will fit in.The International Studies Building willextend directly into Beecher. A bridge willalso be constructed between the new build¬ing and the Walker Museum. Ginsburg saidplans are being made to reconstruct theWalker Museum and use the building forsocial science offices, but funds are not yetavailable.The Pahlavi Building, funded by the ShahMohammed Pahlavi of Iran, will be built to“promote American studies in Persian lit¬erature and art”, according to WilliamPolk, director of the center for middle east¬ern studies and of the Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute. The building has not yet been constructedbecause the University has not received allthe funds. However, once they are re¬ceived, three senior faculty and three ju¬nior faculty positions will be created. Thebuilding will also hold the offices from theAdlai Stevenson Institute.Designed by Walter Netsch, of Skidmore,Owings. and Merrill, the building will be located where the music building and Chap¬el House now stand. Although plans are notcompleted, it is anticipated that it will cov¬er 35,000 gross square feet, and 22,000 netsquare feet.Plans for future use of Robie House,which now houses the Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute, have not been made.Fire Puts Out DraftSupport activities are continuing for theChicago 15, the group of anti-war, anti¬draft activists that burned draft files at thelocal board offices at 63d and WesternSunday morning.A rally was held Monday night nearCook County Jail, where the group wasbeing held. About 100 supporters gatheredto hear informal speeches and sing suchsongs as “We Shall Overcome and “Amaz¬ing Grace.”The 15, many of whom are Catholicradicals, Quaker pacifists, or Resistancemovement workers, struck around dawnSunday. They dragged out sacks of files from the offices, doused them in gasoline,and set them afire.Firemen, who responded to the call say¬ing there was a rubbish fire, alerted police.The 15 were arrested, as were three news¬men from Milwaukee who had accompaniedsome of the incendiarists. The newsmenwere bailed out Sunday.Bond for the 15 was originally set at$10,000, but was reduced at a hearing Mon¬day at $5,400.Fund raising and support activity arebeing coordinated by Chicago Area DraftResisters, 664-6895, and by Mary Sachs,642-4537. election would have been different.The irregularity was protested by GaryGillum and Devlin had intended to file astudents in social sciences. Devlin was de¬feated in his bid for president, and Gillumis one of four students who tied for oneposition on SG from the social sciences di¬vision.Gillum and Devlin had intended to tile acomplaint through the faculty studentcourt calling for SG to re-vote for all posi¬tions. An agreement was worked out be¬tween them and SG, however, that only theposts of president, CORSO, and those leftunfilled because ties were not broken atthe meeting would be voted on again.The ties which must be broken are fortwo seats from the social sciences division,one vacant because of a tie, the second onebeing vacated because John Foley, electedto SG, is not a registered student. Ninemedical students are competing for one po¬sition from that body, and one person fromTufts House must be elected from the ninerunners-up. This action will be first on theagenda Tuesday night, and people who tiedare urged to be present.In addition the meeting will hear the re¬ports of the various committees and placeresolutions before the body on subjectssuch as a student activities fee.Election of the president requires a ma¬jority of the votes, graduates having twovotes and undergraduates one. Barnett re¬ceived one vote over 50% in the electionTuesday. On the CORSO question, the mat¬ter will be placed before the body as “willthe five elected members remain as mem¬bers?” If this motion receives a % ma¬jority, the elected members will remain. Ifnot, the assembly will elect CORSO mem¬bers in accordance with the (SG) by-laws.In addition any other elections held atthe Thursday meeting may be challenged.Following is the text of the agreementreached between Barnett and those filingthe suit.Upon the passage of the following agreed-upon motion,which shall be presented by Mike Barnett as the firstorder of business at the SG meeting of May 27th, thefollowing procedures shall be in effect tor that meeting:See "SG," Page ThreeUNDER CONSTRUCTION: A new building for international studies is being built on the south-west quadrangles.AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYTheater MajorThe committee on general studies in thehumanities has announced officially thecreation of Theatre-Film major within itsprogram. This program had already beeninformally discussed within the committeebut no precise requirements had been pre¬viously announced.- 1Students wishing to participate in the pro¬gram will be required to take an in¬troductory course in their second year, adesign course their thirH year, and a semi¬nar dealing with acting and production intheir final year.The final BA paper may be either a criti¬cal-historical study or a discussion of pro¬duction work the student has been involvedin at the University. The latter kind of pa¬per is preferred and is the closest any stu¬dent can come to receiving credit for pro¬duction work. Such practical work is ex¬pected of all students within the major, andin fact was the impetus for the program’sdevelopment.“It’s a good start,” said Jeanne Wikler(70), one of the theater film majors, “butthis University still has to get over its fearof the practical.“There is a great deal to be learnt, evenin an academic atmosphere, from the di¬rect study of theater as an art. Even withthis program, we as students will still behampered until we have the money and thefacilities to do productions. The program isnot a theater department and our produc¬tions will remain hampered until theaterlooses its second-rate status here.”Course EvaluationsA group of College students is now gath¬ering information for an evaluation ofcourses to be published in September.The students intend to poll faculty andstudents in a cross-departmental surveywhich would help students in choosing theircourses and instructors next year.The group will have no connection withthe administration. It was formed after theconcluding session of the Liberal Arts Con¬ference to formulate student opinion on Col¬lege courses.“We feel a student is more likely to an¬swer a questionnaire which is not associ¬ated with the administration. Our resultswill not be screened by any faculty mem¬bers,” said Eric Jacobson, 70, one of thefounders of the group. Wegener CommitteeCharles Wegener, chairman of the newcommittee to study discipline, expects thecommittee to begin its work next week.To date nine students have been nomi¬nated for the three positions on the com¬mittee. Five academic student councilshave refused to send nominees. WegenerCHARLES WEGENERreports there are one or two councils whohave yet to report to him on whether theywill send nominees.Wegener also said that he will meet withthe nominees Wednesday to discuss mat¬ters such as method of selection of studentsto the committee.Afro-American MusicAn evening of music and discussion on“Afro-American Music: A Nitty-Gritty Nar¬rative” will be presented in Mandel Hall at8:30 pm Tuesday as part of the University’sseries of lectures and other events in thearea of African and black American huma¬nities. Admission is free and without ticket.Summer JobsThe University personnel office in In-gleside Hall (956 E. 56) will begin acceptingstudent applications for summer jobs onJune 2.Fred J. Burling, director of personnel re¬ports that there will be fewer summer jobsopen to students this year The shortage ofjobs is the result of tight departmentalbudgets and the University’s commitmentto employees in the dormitories who will belaid off this summer.The personnel office suggests studentsstart searching for jobs as soon as possibleand explore off-campus opportunities.Career counseling and placement main¬ tains a listing of summer job opportunitiesin Reynolds Club, rooom 202.Biological ChemistsThe American Society of BiologicalChemists, which includes some 3,000 scien¬tists, has voted to cancel its plans to meetin Chicago in 1971 protesting “the brutalaction of police during the convention dis¬orders last August.”A letter signed by Martin B. Mathews,professor of biochemistry, said “Manymembers of the society in favor of this ac¬tion, including thirteen members of theUniversity of Chicago faculty, felt that theprime responsibility for the supression ofthe rights of free speech and assembly laywith the Chicago city administration.”The society will select another site fortheir convention.HonorsTwenty-six juniors and sophomores in theCollege have been named to the MaroonKey honor society. .. .Alton Linford, deanof the school of social service adminis¬tration was guest of honor at dinner inHutch Friday. .. .Physics professor Eu¬gene Parker has been honored for his re¬search by the National Academy of Scien¬ces. .. .Stuart A. Rice, Louis Block profes¬sor of physical sciences has been named tothe editorial board of the Journal of Physi¬cal Chemistry.. ..George Beadle, Wrather distinguishedservice professor and former president,and Saunders Mac Lane, Max Mason dis¬tinguished service professor of mathemat¬ics, have been elected councilors of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences....The UC Press has received five “top hon¬or” book awards (out of a total of 60)from the Chicago Book Clinic, more thanany other publisher in the exhibit. One ofthe winning titles, A Manual of Style, isalso a winning entry in the American As¬sociation of University Presses bookshow. .. .SpeakersRevitalization, sponsor of dances andconcerts, is starting a speakers programnext year featuring such luminaries asDick Gregory and Allard Lowenstein.They’re also planning to bring Donovan tocampus next fall — for a concert in Rock¬efeller Chapel. .. .College GrantsTwenty-eight members of the faculty ofthe college have been awarded research grants for the coming academic year.The major grant, the Inland Steel Facul¬ty fellowship, was awarded to William Car¬penter, assistant professor of English, whowill spend the autumn quarter studyingWilliam Butler Yeat’s concept of “Unity inBeing.” 'The awards, announced by Wayne C.Booth, dean of the college, also includedfive Inland Steel fourth quarter fellowshipsto Keith Baker, assistant professor of his¬tory; Kostas Kasasis, assistant professor ollinguistics; William McGrath, assistantprofessor of history; Allan Pasco, assistantatures; and Marguerite Volini, assistantprofessor of biology and biochemistry.The other 22 faculty members receivedfaculty research grants of varying amountsfor research ranging from a study of Greekiconography to one of cold war diplomacy.Funds for the faculty fellowships wereprovided by a grant from the Inland Steel-Ryerson foundation.DoublesThe Inter-House Council has submitted arequest for the development of a coeduca¬tional dormitory system to director of stu¬dent housing Edward Turkington.Turkington said the request is being stud¬ied by Charles O’Connell dean of students,and President Levi.The administration must consider whatchanges in housing policy would be impliedby such a change, even if on an ex¬perimental level, as well as practical ques¬tions, Turkington said.Turkington also said he expected that themajority of rooms in Pierce Tower andWoodward Court would be converted fromdoubles to singles next year.Stevenson InstitutePeter Diamondopoulos, dean of the facul¬ty at Brandeis University professor of phi¬losophy and chairman of the department,has been named director of studies at thetwo-year old Adlai Stevenson Institute ofInternational Affairs.The institute undertakes research inproblems and action programs dealing withsocial change and the development processin the international and national scene.Diamondopoulos’ duties will be to “refinethe program of the Institute, to assure themost appropriate expenditure of time andresources, to assist in the identification anddefinition of areas of studies, and to helpselect fellowship candidates,” said WilliamPolk, director of the institute.Select an Original Printfrom our extensive collectionfor that “Special” Graduation GiftChagall — Miro — LovejoyGaletan — AmenPriced from $10The Waller Gallery5300 So. Dorchester DO 3-7446 GIFT IDEASFROMMODEL CAMERAATTENTION AllADVERTISERS:The Deadline for our special year - end issue (June 6)is Tuesday, June 3. This applies to both display andclassified ads.2/The Chicago Maroon/May 27,. 1969 . THEBOOKNOOK CRAIG 212TAPE RECORDERtop-rated by consumerseverywhere.SALE PRICED AT 3495'BAUER MINI S Super 8Movie Camera f 1.8 Schnie-der lens, fully automatic ex¬posure controllists at 6995 SALE 39°5MOST COMPLETEPHOTO SHOPON THE SOUTH SIDESpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discounti540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75I HY 3-9259 1342 E. 55th FUU-TIMESUMMER POSITIONSPromotional sales field. Work withother students in our local office.Win cash scholarships and trips toLondon. If money and excitementmotivate you, call for personalinterview.Loop 346-6108Aurora 892-6961COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 Sp. tote* 364-9842 KEEP KOOLIN JOHN’S.SPRING WEAR'FOOT LOCKERS,SLEEPING BAGS,AND BLANKETSGet ready forthe SummerBell-boftomsJOHN'SMENS WEAR.1459 E. 53rd.Kiiiiiiiiiiiini'gEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza120C East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372i t f i « i o r’C et?l • * 1 • . ’Women Finally To Get Their (W)rapsSix Students Selectedto Sub-Committee byCommittee on WomenSelection of six student members for asub-committee at the committee on Univer¬sity women has been completed.The sub-committee will be chaired by Jane Overton, associate professor of biolo¬gy and Jo Freeman, graduate student inpolitical science.The six student representatives, electedat a meeting Thursday, May 22 by assem¬bled student representatives of the academ¬ic student councils, student governmentand the student life committee (FSACCSL)were Miss Freeman; Rosemarie Gillespie,graduate student in social sciences; Cassie Schwartz, ’70; Barbara Waugh, graduatestudent in the divinity school; BarbaraBuggert, ’71; and Mary Johns, graduatestudent in education.The three faculty representatives on thesub-committee are Mrs. Overton, SusanneRudolph, associate professor of politicalscience and Norman Bradbum, professor inthe business school. The alternates chosen are CatherineHam, assistant professor of english; Mar¬garet Huyck, graduate student in humandevelopment; Donna Rankin, graduate stu¬dent in law; and Judy Cherniaek, new col¬legiate division.However, Miss Schwartz, in a letter pub¬lished in this Maroon, has announced herresignation from the sub-committee. Mrs.,Bernice Neugarten chairman of the com-’mittee said “This bothers me because Cas¬sie got herself elected; she went throughthe whole procedure. I find that verystrange.”Jews and Arabs Battle in Ida Noyes"They've been fightingfor centuries, They'renot going to stop now."Fistfights broke out between Jewish andArab students during a weekend sym¬posium on the Palistinian Revolution.Fred Lazin, a graduate student in politi¬cal science, said he stood up at the IdaNoyes Hall meeting and raised objectionsto the discussion. He was ruled out of orderby the moderator and then called the two Jews on the panel, Rita Freed and RogerBuch, “Jewish Uncle Toms”.He said that at that point several Arabstudents attacked him, hitting him in theface. Some 20 students joined in a melee.Campus police then entered the room andrestored order. Lazin later recognized theArab student who hit him. He notified thepolice that he wanted to press charges, andthe Arab was apprehended. Later, Lazindecided to drop charges.Biafran and Jewish students were picket¬ing the meeting before the fight erupted.They were protesting actions by Arabstates in the Biafran war and the MiddleEast crisis.Honor Men Who Died for NothingA group of University of Chicago studentsplan to mark the Memorial Day holidaythis week by staging a reading of thenames of the American soldiers who havedied in Vietnam since the beginning of thewar.The reading, possibly accompanied bysome guerrilla theater action, will be heldin and around Rockefeller Chapel fromnoon to 10 pm Thursday and 8 am to 10 pmFriday. At the start of the reading Thurs¬day will be a special service in the chapel.Susan Phillips, ’69, one of the organizersof the program, said one of the reasons forstaging it was to honor the war dead. “Weowe it to these men, who have given theirlives for nothing as far as I can see, to atleast read their names.”She said she also hopes to “make somemore people aware of the impact of thewar. You don’t really realize how manyhave died until you see or hear theirnames.”SG Continued from Page OneAgreementThe Assembly shall immediately proceed to break the,ies existing for two seats in Social Sciences, One seat inMedicine and one seat in Tufts House, in accordancewith the applicable sections of the SG By-Laws. JerryLipsch shall preside over this procedure.The Assembly shall then proceed immediately to elect,without debate, its President. Jerry Lipsch shall presideover this procedure. The newly elected President willthen take the chair.The question shall then be put, "Shall Jeff Schnitzer,Connie Maravell, Palmer Blakely, Jim Kerwin, & PeteDouglas stand as the members of CORSO?" If the mo-n°n receives a % majority, the above-named personsshall be elected to CORSO. If the motion does not re¬ceive a % majority, the Assembly shall proceed imme¬diately to elect, without debate, the Committee on Rec¬ognized Student Organizations, in accordance with theapplicable sections of the SG Constitution and By-Laws.During this meeting only, a motion may be made thatany election held on May 20th be re-opened. If such■notion receives a majority vote, that election shall beheld again. Part of the chapel service, according toMiss Phillips, will deal with violence inAmerican society, as a tribute to Roy Gut-tman, a UC student who was shot and killedat 56th and Kimbark last year. Guttmanhad filed an application for recognition as aconscientious objector to war.Miss Phillips also said she and other stu¬dents felt some sort of program was calledfor this year, because no one has so far puttogether a special anti-war convocationsimilar to that held last year.Persons interested in working on thereading are invited to call Miss Phillips at288-4910, or Paul Brown at 288-7106.Ideas for other anti-war and anti-draftaction between now and graduation will bediscussed at a meeting Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in Quaker House, 5615 S. Woodlawn.Rob Skeist, expelled ’70, has asked thosewith interest in such activity to come to themeeting, or to get in touch with him at288-1609.The approximately 38,000 names will beread from a list inserted in the Congres¬sional Record by Rep. Paul Findley of NewYork.Similar readings are planned in othercities across the country. Fellowship of Re¬conciliation has scheduled a reading in Lin¬coln Park Thursday and Friday.Those who come to the Chapel duringthe reading of the names- are requestedto bring with them letters addressed andstamped to be mailed to the President, thetwo Illinois Senators and one other Senatoror Congressman. There will also be facili¬ties provided to write letters in the Chapelduring the reading.The letters will be placed on the altarand mailed after the service Sunday,June 1.DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC and COUNCIL ON THE ARTSpresentf HICAiiO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAIRW IN HOFFMAN •ConductorSoloists: Donald Peck, flute; Victor Aitay, violinWorks by: Bach, Beethoven, Kilar, StravinskyTUESDAY MANDELHALLJUNE 3,1969 8:30 P.M.Admission: $2.50 and $ 1.50 (Stf discount to students) All sente reservedTickets at Concert Office, 5835 University;MI 3-0800 ext. 2612. After the fight, Moh Hassan, an Arab stu¬dent from the University of Illinois, saidthat he tried to quiet Lazin after he was outof order. “It is time the American peopleheard our side of the story, instead of theZionists,” Hassan said.Shabtai, who suffered a torn sweater,said that the Arabs were off-campus“toughies”.“At least I kept my cool and tried toavoid a big fight,” Shabtai said.Sergeant John Brennan of campus secur¬ity commented on the affair, “They’ve beenfighting for centuries. They’re not going tostop now.” The sub-committee met for the first timethis morning and Mrs. Overton said Mon¬day afternoon that they might considerreplacing Miss Schwartz at that time.The sub-committee is requesting informa¬tion from all members of the University,especially students, communicating theirideas and experiences concerning women inthe University to the sub-committee. All in¬formation can be given to any member ofthe sub-committee.The elected student representatives werenominated by FSACCSL, the divinityschool, public affairs department and twoby Student Government. One had no officialbacking.COMPLETE STEREO MUSIC SYSTEMWas $319.95 KLH’s • Twenty-Four” sounds like twice its sizeplays stereo FM broadcasts and stereo records asfew consoles or component systems can. Ultra¬modern solid-state design provides 35 watts musicpower. Fine Garrard record changer with Pickeringcartridge made to KLH’s specifications. Inputs forheadphone, tape recorder. Speaker systems have allrequirements for excellent performance. With dustcover. In oi'*d walnut.Save $20. Model 24 plus AM. Was $349.95 $329.95MuAiCkaftON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500MUSICRAFT SPECIALKLH Model 24 PRICE REDUCTIONMay 27, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3GADFLYReply to Reply to ReplyBy Ralph Underhill and Bob RichardThe amorphous issue of “due process” and “political suppression” in the doingsof the Oaks and Shireman committees refuses to die peacefully. The continuingdebate involves not only questions about the propriety of disciplinary actions but alsoquestions of fact about what the committees actually did. In our view the area fordebate on the facts was substantially narrowed by the publication by a group ofsocial science graduate students associated with the Committee of 500-plus of“Discipline and Political Suppression: An Empirical Analysis,” Spartacus II.We were struck in particular by two findings of this study: first, the lack of anyrelationship between amount of participation in the sit-in and amount of punishment,and second, the strong correlation between participants’ political ideology and theamount of punishment they received. That political attitudes played a role in the Oakscommittee’s determinations seemed to us to have been empirically established.A group of statistics students, however, have criticized the Spartacus study ona variety of methodological grounds and have asserted that the study was so poorlydone that “the criteria for punishment stated in the Oaks Committee report are notcontradicted” (Straf, et. al., A Closer Look at Spartacus).Now in our view the crucial question is not whether the authors of Spartacusare technical virtuosos in the art of survey design and analysis, but whether the studywas done sufficiently well for its data to sustain the major conclusions cited above.We think the Spartacus study, while not without flaws, passes muster. The points ofcriticism leveled against it are not such as to undermine the major conclusions.Before dealing with the important points of criticism, we should make two generalremarks. First, the critics enumerated a number of possible sources of bias in theprocedures, such as the use of interviewers to elicit information, the possibility ofdistorted memory, non-objective question-wording, and so on. Such problems are notunique to the Spartacus study; rather, they are common to all sample surveys. Ouracquaintance with the procedures used by the authors of Spartacus leads us to believethey were no less successful in controlling bias than most professional surveys.Second, with regard to many of the criticisms, the critics fail to show whatimplications, if any, the specific criticism had for the results of the study. A goodexample is the reference to telephone interviewing. In NORC’s experience, thetelephone introduces no known bias. A methodological critic should spell out therelevance of his remarks to the outcome of the study.But let us get to the major issue. We would like to comment on whether there wasa correlation between amount of participation in the sit-in and amount of punishment,and the relationships among political attitudes, delay in responding to the summons,and punishment.• Participation and punishment. Table 1 of the Spartacus study shows norelation between amount of participation and amount of punishment among those whowho had participated at all. We do not understand how the critics could read even a“weak” association into that table (gamma = .02). Perhaps the critics felt that non¬participants (people who showed that they were in the administration building forother reasons) should be included in the computations, thus introducing someassociation. We do not agree. The problem is how many non-participants to include;you might put the entire student body in the non-participant, non-punishment celland get a high association. But this is nonsense.Actually the more serious point — not adequately dealt with by the critics — isthat the Spartacus definition of evidence differed from the Oaks committee definition.The principal difference is that the Oaks committee purportedly used delay inresponding to the summons and standing mute to questions as bases for inferringcontinued participation, while the authors of Spartacus used only physical evidenceand the student’s report of his testimony before the committee. The implication hereis that by'the Oaks committee’s definition, there would be a correlation between“participation” and punishment, even though there was no correlation by theSpartacus definition.This point seems to us substantially correct. We invite the reader, however, toshare the dilemma faced by the authors of Spartacus. The Oaks committee did notreveal that delay in response was a basis for inferring participation (although theyhad acknowledged standing mute as a basis) until after the preliminary version of theSpartacus study was published on April 23. It is even conceivable that the Council ofthe Senate released the second Oaks committee report, containing this information,because of the Spartacus study. In any case, it is clear from the data that thecommittee did not base its judgement only on physical evidence or testimony as toamount of participation but relied as well on inferences made from delay of responseor other information in fixing punishments.• Ideology, delay of response, and punishment. The strongest single predictorof punishment in the Spartacus study is political ideology. Radicals were punishedmore harshly than moderates. The critics have rightly noted, however, that delayof response is strongly correlated with ideology. This raises an issue referrred to inthe trade as “multicollinearity,” which means you can't tell which variable is doingthe work. This is a subtle point and one, we grant, not fully appreciated by theauthors of Spartacus. If delay and ideology were perfectly correlated, there would beno way to assess their separate effects on punishment. They are not perfectlycorrelated, however, and we know that ideology is more strongly correlated withpunishment than is delay. It follows from this that ideology must have had somerelation to punishment that is completey independent of delay. In fact, this relationis portrayed in Table 2 of Spartacus but we know from the pattern of associates thatit must be there.This is however, a conservative estimate of the effect of ideology on punishment.The total effect of ideology involves not only a component independent of delay butalso a component that cannot be separated from delay. This joint component should notbe construed as meaning that the committee did use delay as a criterion in addition toideology but simply that we cannot tell from the data whether the committee useddelay as well as ideology.In a short space we cannot deal with all the methodological issues raised bySpartacus and by its critics. On balance we feel the Spartacus study survives thecriticisms that have been put forth, and establishes emphirically that students werepunished by the Oaks committee not only for the extent of their participation in thesit-in but at least in part for their political attitudes.Underhill is senior study director of the National Opinion Research Center (NORC)and an assistant professor in the graduate school of business. Richard is a suspendedgraduate student in sociology.4/The Chicago Maroon/May 27, 1969 LETTER TO THE EDITORSResignationI was elected last Thursday night toserve on the Neugarten committee to in¬vestigate the conditions of women in theUniversity. The committee will sit for therest of this quarter, over the summer, anduntil Dec. 1, 1969, when it will issue a re¬port on its findings. In this letter I wouldlike to give my reasons for withdrawingfrom that committee:• The Neugarten Committee was chargedwith finding out about its female facultyand students. In the charge there was nomention of investigating the conditions ofthe rest of the women in the Universitycommunity, and there are a lot of womenwho work, in non-academic jobs, whoselives are in much worse condition thanthose of academic women. Specifically,women employees at Billings Hospital getas little as $1.60 per hour, and are forced topay babysitters to watch their children.Question one that the committee could ad¬dress itself to is the obvious immediateneed for a child care center at the Univer¬sity.• Question two that the committee could ad¬dress itself to is that of the conditions of thefood service workers who will be again laidoff for three months from their dorm jobswhen the University closes its dorms forthe summer. They could find out what hap¬pens to those sub-professional workerswhen the University cannot get them othersummer jobs, and they could take the in¬itiative to find out where all those womencan get other adequate jobs for the summermonths.• The committee could then investigate theconditions of the University’s non-academicprofessional women employees. One pos¬sible direction that this research could takewould be creating the opportunity for thosewomen to take free courses in the Univer¬sity if they want to. These women have astake in University community, and theykeep it going as much as professors andadministrators do.• A fourth question that the committeemight investigate would be the creation ofa Woman’s division within the college, withcourses taught by women, about women,and for women, and not only should thecommittee research the question, it shouldTHE MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch BobkinProduction. Chief: Mitch KahnNews Board:Leslie Strauss, Wendy Glockner, Con Hitch¬cock, Rob CooleyNews Staff: Jim Haefemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Bruce Norton, Steve Cook, Gerard Leval,Richard Paroutaud, Alfred Ryan, FriedaMurray, Debby Dobish, Blair Kilpatrick,Leonard Zax, Chris Fraula, Greg FergusonPhotography Siaff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert, Mark IsraelSenior Editor: Jeff KutaContributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, John RechtSunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. D’stributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. act on their researches by creating a cur¬riculum and hiring some new women facul¬ty to staff the division.We all know that woman graduate stu¬dents and faculty get a bad deal here. Theyget a bad deal everywhere, in and out ofUniversity communities. For God’s sake!we don’t need statistics to show us that.Nonetheless, the Neugarten committee hasbeen charged with the task of providing itsoverseers with statistics to concretize theoppression of a select number of women inthis University, when we already know thatoppression exists, and have the statistics toprove it.I refuse the position offered to me on theNeugarten committee because I refuse tobetray my sisters, all my sisters in the Uni¬versity community (including the ones out¬side the protecting walls of academia) byshamelessly focusing all my efforts on thekinds of problems that arise from our privi¬leged, tiny existence in the academicworld. Sure academic women have a baddeal but they should realize that most ofthe University’s women don’t even get in onthe deal.The Neugarten committee should be ableto study whatever questions its members,and all the other people in the University,deem important. If the students on the sub¬committee agree in their guts that theyshouldn’t allow a group of seven men todefine their problem area for them, thenthey too should refuse to accept the chargeof the committee of the council.We were told in a Friday meeting of thewhole committee that we should all make alist of what problems we wanted to in¬vestigate. Today there is a list of the mem¬bers of the sub-committee to whom thecommunity at large should address itself tomake their suggestions about what shouldbe studied. But the committee of the coun¬cil has issued a charge — that the Neugar¬ten committee investigate the conditions ofwomen faculty members and students -and as of now, the committee has acceptedthe charge. To me, this means that even ifthe members of the sub-committee are de¬luged by suggestions of differently rankedpriorities, and areas of concern, and thateven if they themselves agree that the pri¬orities should be reranked, the committeecannot and will not amend its agenda.This letter is a shortened statement ofwhy I cannot devote 15-20 hours a week ofmy unpaidfor time to the Neugarten com¬mittee as it is now going into operation.Cassie Schwartz, 70The ConspiracyEight of the protesters at the Demo¬cratic convention last summer areunder federal indictment for criminalconspiracy.They are the first people to beprosecuted under Title 18 of theCivil Rights Act of 1968, which makesit a crime “to travel in interstatecommerce . . . with the intent toincite, organize, promote, encourage,participate in and carry on a riot.Dave Dellinger, Rennie Davis, TomHayden, Jerry Rubin, Abbie Hoff¬man, Bobby Seale, Lee Weiner andJohn Froins now face ten years inprison and $10,000 in fines.The trial, in Chicago, has been setfor Sept. 24. They have called forvolunteers to help with researchnecessary for the defense (they aretrying to reconstruct all the conven¬tion demonstrations), office work,leafleting, and fund raising. “TheConspiracy’s” office is at 28 EastJackson (427-7773).GADFLY LETTER TO THE EDITORSDURBy Roger Wechsler and Ann CordiliaIn March 1969 the University published a pamphlet, ‘ ‘ University-CommunityRelations” which attempted to show the “reality” of the University’s and! theDepartment of Urban Renewal’s practices in the neighborhood, particularly in thesouth campus area, and to answer the “myths” presented by critics. A groupof people who found some of this “reality” hard to believe got together and has donesome canvassing of the people living in the south campus area (between StonyIsland & Cottage Grove; 60th and 61st Streets.) With the results we have obtainedso far, we have seen that the University’s claims about urban renewal are deceptions.Here we will counter the myth of the University’s claims with the reality of some ofthe people we have met. All the information and quotes are from “University -Community Relations.”.. rehabilitation and conservation were not feasible in south campus and... clearance and renewal were the only possible remedies.”Originally, large scale demolition was not to occur until the 221d3 housing onCottage Grove had been built. (The 221d3 housing is federally subsidized, middleincome housing to be built at 60th and Cottage — “rent supplements will be madeavailable to low income families living there ... “The Woodlawn Organization(TWO) claims that half of the 540 units will be occupied by families eligible forpublic housing.) “Only in response to emergency conditions, ... the city is proceedingwith some demolition in the eastern South Campus area, with the understanding thatrelocation services are offered immediately to all tenants in all properties designatedfor acquisition.”Mrs. JM and her four children used to live at 60th and Stony. She had lived inthe building for five years and was very happy with it.Mrs. JM lived in the building for about a year after the Department of UrbanRenewal (DUR) bought it. By the time she was moved, she was very happy to move;the DUR had let the building deteriorate unbearably — no hot water, no heat, nojanitor.Due to the shortage of low income housing (exacerbated by urban renewal), theDUR moved her into another building in the South Campus urban renewal area. Shewas very happy with it, but after a few months the DUR let it deteriorate. Shereceived no heat during the winter. She told someone from the DUR about thisproblem, and he figured out what was wrong, but did not send anyone to fix it.Wind broke a window tour or five months ago. It has not been repaired. There is abad insect problem; the DUR hasn’t sent the exterminator for months. They haven’tgiven janitorial service. She has had to clean the stairways herself.Mrs. JM is now afraid she will be moved any day as the building is deterioratingso much. At no time during her two removals has anyone ever mentioned relocationin 221d3 housing.Mrs. MQ and her five children also lived at 60th and Stony. It was a good building,she said, but the DUR had let it run down so that it was in bad condition. The DURcame along one day and said they had a place for them to move to and moved themout the same day.Was she satisfied with her new apartment? It was OK, she said, before it randown. The DUR doesn’t do anything. They used to come around and do nothing. Nowthey don’t even come around.There’s no lock on the back door of her apartment. The basement opens from theoutside, so anyone can come in that way. There is brbken glass in the front door andstripped, vacant, boarded up apartments.At no time during her two removals has anyone ever mentioned relocation in221d3 housing.Mr. and Mrs. LP and their children used to live at 63rd and Dorchester. By thetime the DUR moved them out, the building was very run down. There was no lightin the halls and, according to Mr. LP, who had to walk up three flights, “youcouldn’t even see your hand in front of your face.” The plumbing was bad and thewater was flooding. He had to do all the repairs himself.Did the DUR help them move? Yes. They moved them out on one hour notice.Were they satisfied with their new apartment? Yes, it was in good conditionuntil a few months ago. Since then the DUR has done virtually nothing.Mr. LP has asked the DUR to make repairs several times, but they haven’t. Hehad a stopped up toilet and a stopped up kitchen sink. The hallways are dark unlessthe tenants replace the bulbs. He does all repairs himself, but of course does notthrow money away by putting it into a building that will be tom down. Hedid paint it himself this past winter.He said most of the damage was caused by the DUR. While moving fixtures out,they broke the glass in the front door and never replaced it. When the DUR vacatedthe apartment above them, they stripped the plumbing and this caused it to leak downon his first floor apartment. Because of this they do not use a large part of theirapartment. One morning, water began pouring into a bedroom and bathroom of theused portion. Mr. LP had to break into the upstairs apartment and repair the leakas best he could. One bathroom still has a leak he cannot locate, so the floor beneaththe leak is always wet.At no time has anyone mentioned relocation in 221d3 housing.The myths the University has published clearly contradicted by the reality of thesituation of the people in Woodlawn.The DUR and the University declare that all buildings in the South Campus areawere deteriorating and had to be destroyed — that is, all buildings except those ownedby the University. However, the tenants felt satisfied with the housing until the DURstopped providing maintenance and the buildings were allowed to run down.Deterioration, or in their terms, “emergency conditions”, are used as theexcuse to move people into “properties designated for acquisiton”, that is, apartmentswhich will soon be renewed. This, of course, means the tenants will have to move asecond time.Of the low income families we have interviewed so far, none of them have beentold they could move into 221d3 housing.We who have started this project would like to make a complete study of the southcampus area; for this we need a great deal of manpower in the next couple of weeksand over the summer. We need people who are willing to canvass, do libraryresearch, telephoning, and clerical work. Come to our meeting Monday at 4 pmln Reynolds Club South; or call Roger Wechsler at 363-3768 or Ann Cordilia at493-3896.Ann Cordilia is a graduate student in sociology. Roger Wechsler, suspended ’70,is a psychology undergraduate. "' • GynieThe article on student health gynecologyin last Friday’s Maroon stated that one girlcomplained that she was questioned abouther religion and her relationship with herboyfriend.This is only the beginning of the questionsyou can expect to be asked when you de¬cide to obtain the Pill. Then come the ques¬tions about parents’ religion, your parents’use of contraception, and your boyfriend’sprevious relationships with other women.As though answering these questions isnot bad enough, you can expect your doctorto frankly question the validity of youranswers. After this has failed to deter you, yourdoctor may resort to the scare technique,telling you that the Pill will definitely makeyou sick. This did not happen to me or toanyone else I know.The great interest shown during the mor¬ality questioning rapidly declines when youask about related medical problems. Ques¬tions on procedures of taking the Pill gounanswered on the grounds that he does notwant to confuse you.Can a UC student have so low an in¬telligence level that she can’t understandthe simplest of procedures? Go to studenthealth only if you have an empty pocketand nerves of steel.SocSci Students Get Official VoiceThe social sciences collegiate division hasdevised a system for getting official studentadvice on divisional decisions.The system resulted from meetings ofstudents and faculty in response to issuesraised during the sit-in winter quarter.The new system was announced to stu¬dents and faculty of the division by masterArcadius Kahan.The student council of the division will bestructured along the same lines as the fac¬ulty governing board. The advice of the stu¬dent council will be taken into account onall major issues concerning the division, in¬cluding faculty reappointments and tenuredecisions and curriculum changes, accord¬ing to Kahan.For the formulation of student advice, two standing subcommittees have been setup, one dealing with reappointments andthe other with curriculum. In addition, adhoc committees can be set up by the stu¬dent council at its discretion.The governing board and the studentcouncil will meet together once each quar¬ter. When they meet in separate session,the minutes of the two bodies will be madeavailable to each other.During the review of assistant professorRichard Flacks for tenure in the division,the new system was in effect for the firsttime. The student committee of reappoint¬ments has submitted its recommendation tothe faculty committee. (Their recommen¬dation has not been made public.)BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, May 27WESTERN CIV; the special comprehensive exam in His¬tory of Western Civilization for graduating seniors onlywill be given on Thursday, 29 May. Admission ticketsand other material will be mailed. Students intendingto take the exam who have not received this materialby Monday, 26 May, should apply to Gates-Blake 206as soon as possible.LECTURE: "Language and Matalanguate," A van Wiin-gaarden, University of Amsterdam. Research In¬stitutes C-117, 4 pm.COLLOQUIUM: "Electrons in Disordered Alloys", Bed-rich Velicky, Harvard University. Research Institutes480, 4:15 pm.LECTURE: "Heresy in a Rural Environment: The Caseof Medieval Bosnia, 12-15th Centuries", John V. Fine,Harvard. Foster Hall Lounge, 4:30 pm.S.G: Student government meeting, Business East 103,7:30 pm.LECTURE: "The Structure of Art: Art and Science",Michael Polanyi, Oxford. Kent 107, 8 pm.FOLK SONG WORKSHOP: Hillel House, 8 pm.FOLK AND SQUARE DANCING: . International Houseassembly hall, 8 pm.MEETING: Bridge Club, C-shop, 8 pm.LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION: "Afro-American Music:A Nitty Gritty Narrative", William Quinn, musi¬cologist. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. in Computer-Assisted Instruction", Patrick Suppes. Re¬search Institutes 480, 4 pm.SEMINAR: "The Foundation of Cyclopean Psychology",Bela Julesz, Bell Telephone Laboratories, New Jersey.Experimental Biology Building 117, 4 pm.FOLK DANCE: British and Scandinavian Country Danc¬ers, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.CONCERT: Anthony Braxton Trio playing two exercisein space. Ida Noyes Library, 8 pm. Admission $1.50.FILM: "Ashes and Diamonds", Cobb Hall, 7 pm, and"Point of Order", 9 pm.SEMINAR: Series on Computers and Society. Partici¬pants: George Dawso.i, Philip Hauser, Paul Meier,Warner Wick, Jack Sawyer, D.B. Simmons, "Comput¬ers, Data Banks, Privacy and Confidentiality", Re¬search Institutes, 480, 1 pm.Thursday, May 29READING: Beginning at _noon and continuing until 10pm, and again at 8 am Friday, the names of the morethan 5,000 Vietnam War dead will be read aloud in theChancel by students, faculty members and members ofthe community as an act of mourning and protestagainst the war and the escalation of the arms raceby the American employment of Anti-Ballistic Missilesites.LECTURE: "The Regulation of DNA Synthesis in EColi", K. Lark, Kansas State University, Ricketts 1, 4Wednesday, May 28LECTURE: "Four Phases in Modern Turkish Liter¬ature", Fahir Iz, Director of the Turkish brand of theRegional Cooperation of Development Cultural In¬stitute. Cobb 201, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: "Socium Activated Amino Acid Transport:Allosterisn in Biological Carriers?", Stanley G. Scholtz,University of Pittsburg. Abbott 101, 4 pm.LECTURE: "Use of Mathematical Models of Learning pm.LECTURE: "Muonic Atoms", Herbert L. Anderson, En¬rico Fermi Institute, Eckhart 133, 4:30 pm.CONCERT: Motet Choir and Solo Ensemble, Englishmusic of the Renaissance, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.DANCE: Otis Rush and his Blues Band. Ida Noyes Hall,9 pm. Admission $1.Friday, May 30MEMORIAL DAY-UNIVERSITY HOLIDAY[SATURDAY MAY 31, 8:30 pm IDA NOYES HALLAlso Hie world premiere of 'STILL LIFE* 1May 27, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5fit • o*i tMaroon Classified Ads lDANCE! LODESTONE BLUES BAND! SATURDAY!RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline. For non-Univerity clientele:For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perline each additional insertion.Count 30 typewriter pscaes perline.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.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.RIDER WANTED Special on hardshell guitar casesfor classic guitars $25 — the FretShop, Harper Court.STEREO amp-preamp, changerw/cartridge, 2 speakers, $100 or of¬fer FA 4-9895 days; 667-1644 eves.62 VW, '69 rebuilt eng. Exc. cond.Best offer. 734-6364 eves.WRANGLER JEANS $4.98, bell-bot¬toms, tennis sneakers, sandals andsummer wear all reduced. JohnsMens Wear, 1459 E. 53rd.1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tires,call BU 8-9106 after 7.SONY 4 track stereo tape deck, 2Roberts microphones, headphonescall 324-1426 evenings.Super 8mm projector 1 year old per¬fect $35 or offer MU 4-7838.Rider wanted to Boston, May 30share expenses — drive 955-4682.Rider to N.Y.C. Iv 6/6. 493-8863.CONVOCATION TICKETSDesperately need extra convocationtickets. Would you believe 3 par¬ents? Will pay. HY 3-9670.Tickets wanted for Commencement.Will pay. 288-6567.6-14 convocation. Will pay. Ken Sim¬onson 955-3790.Tickets for June 13 Convocationneeded. Call 477-7675. NEW! Model 26 KLH phonograph$249.95The Fret Shop 5210 S. Harper'63 Chevy 11 Nova, $450, call OR6-3229.WANTED TO BUYGirl's bike, 24 inches; boy's bike 26inches. Call 324-0439.Lady's bike call Olander, x8227,days.CAMPING EQUIPMENTCamping equipment FOR RENT:\k's\\r "CLOUDS"JONI MITCHEL'Snew album only $3.29at the Student Co-OpReynolds Club Basement \STicket(s) wanted for 6-14 com¬mencement. Will pay. HY 3-9426. tents, sleeping bags, stoves, lan¬terns, etc. Contact HICKORY atExt. 2381 or 324-1499.LAST NEW MUSIC PEOPLE WANTEDLast new music concert here thisyear! Wed. 5-25 — Anthony Braxton,"Leo Smith, Leroy Jenkins play TwoExercises in Space. Sun. 6-1 — JoelBrandon Ensemble. Both at 8:00P.M., Ida Noyes Hall, admission$1.50.FEMALE CHAUVINISMYes, Men, you lose on this fantasticdeal. What is needed is FEMALEroommates (one, maybe two) forHyde Park's best summer apt.This beautiful six room apt. com¬bines student price rent with a bet¬ter than student quality apt. Viblock from the 1C, a leisurely tree-lined walk to campus, a boulder'sthrow from Lake Michigan, youcan't afford to pass up this deal.Spend the summer in the luxury oftwo bathrooms, French windows,your own bedroom, big closets, andthe choice company of one of theMaroon's star personages. To get inon this amazing offer, call 3269, or752-0095, or 667-8811.FOUNDJacket, windbreaker type. CollegeDean's Office, Gates Blake 132,sometime during fall quarter. Ext.2821.FOR SALE'62 VW. It runs. $25. 667-6543. WAITRESS — steady 8. capable,9:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Exc. Inc.Gordon's Restaurant, 1321 E. 57thSt., PL 2-9251.U. of III. fac fam desires responsiblefemale stud to exchange baby careand light h.w. for room and board538-0708.STUDENTSINSTRUCTORSDo You Have SomeOffice Skill and Experience?WORK PART OR ALL SUMMERFor TOP RATES and BONUS—Desirable TEMPORARY Assign¬ments.Become an"Osborne Associate"welcomed in every office.For Appointment Please CallFi 6-3915OSBORNE ASSOCIATES6 E. Monroe Suite 1308The small GOOD temporary serviceTeachers and students are neededfor co-op school in South Shore, thisfall. Call 768-5983.Wanted — Piano Player to play 1 or2 nights per week with Banjo Bandat the Red Garter night club. CallChuck Hillstrom afternoons 944-2630.Faculty family wants girl to live inhouse starting summer quarter orsooner. Room and board in ex¬change . . .548-2397.'66 VALIANT 2-dr Deluxe Spec Lomi. No. 1300. 721-5302 after 5.Bdrm furniture — Call 375-8238.Great Books Set — like new — $300955-6389 after six p.m.Chev. 63 convert $650 call Joe 9A.M. — 5 P.M. MU 4-6100 ex. 5234,5235.BMW—simson 250cc motorcycle $300call 288-6598 6-7 P.M.Furn: 2 dres, 2 s. beds, 2 arm chrs.,1 Ig desk, 1 Ig. wall mirror, 2lamps, 2 wood stools, 1 iron bd„rug, typwtr 731-0680 P.M.Sacrifice — Chinese red leatherladies' coat (very warmly lined)trimmed in black fur. Size 7. Fulllength. $75 MU 4-7838.Double bed $30. Desk $10. Bureau$10. 667-6543.6/The Chicago Maroon/May PEOPLE FOR SALEMay I do your typing? 363-1104.Minette's Custom Salon. Dressmak¬ing, alterations, sleeve shortening.493-9713. 17UV2 E. 55th St.ROOMMATES WANTEDFern, roommate. Modern, spacious,air cond. apt. 6/15 - 9/1. $65/mo.57th 8< Dorchester. 493-3284.Male roommate for summer — ownlarge room — 53 8< Kenwood — $55mo. — available June 2. 684-3744.Male grad student or professionalperson, pref. 25-30, to share 6 roomapt. with one other man. Completelyfurnished convenient to shopping 8itransp. Your rent — 71.25 mo. CallJames Miller HY 3-5100 days or FA4-8975 eves. 5-8. 5335 Kimbark 3rdfloor.Need 1 for 3 man apt in Hy Pk50 m call 1-2 5-8 684-3644.1 male, 6-1 - 10-1, large apt 53 &Woodlawn $55, 955-4682.Two male grad students want 2 oth¬ers to share large South Shore apt.Summer and v r next year.48.75 mo. 324-2671.27, 1969 Male for nice Hyde Park appt. nearcampus. Sum & nt yr. $46 mo. CallPhil, 324-0277.2male grad stds to share Irg SouthShore apt. with 2 others $55 mo.Summer and or next year 2B8-3427or BU 8-1100 x 1209 eve.Own bdrm in 7Vi rm. apt. Summersublet w-option for next year. Wash¬er 8, dryer, dishwasher, 2 phoneNos. 2 garage spaces, opt to buy rmair cond cheap. 6750 Chappel (1 blkE. of Jeffrey) $55-mo. Call Dave,493-8863.Need roommate to share large 6 rmapt for sum $50-mo Greenwood nr47th 624-1282 or X8307.Summer sublet w-option for nextyear. 53 & Kenwood. Own largeroom. Over 20 & female. 324-7672.Fern, roommate wanted June-Sept.$44 month. Own furnished room,close to campus. Entire apt avail¬able next year. 684-8165.2 or 3 rmmtes for summer, ownrms. $43-57 5410 Univ 667-7911.FOR RENTS shore 2Vi rm suny wXw cpt $85near bus optn in fall 493-7513.Pt. furn. 3 bdrm apt. carp., so.shore, 175 mo. SO 8-2305.Lg 3 rm apt. in East Hyde Pk. $130a mo. 667-7590 aft. 5 & weekends.Room — private bath $10 nearcampus DO 3-2521.6900 South Crandon Ave. Deluxehighrise 1 bdrm apts. From $125;parquet floor. See Mrs. Haley MU4-7964.Furnished Rm. 493-3328.Apt. available now. 4 rm 8, l'/j rmeff. Call Bill Stoll DO 3-6200; SteveFA 4-0342.56 8, Drexel. 3 private bedrooms,large living room and dining room.Front and back porches. Large apt.excellent location. Rent $158 permonth. 324-6718 bet 6 & 11.HOUSE FOR SALETOWNHOUSE — very near campus.4 bedrooms, 2’/2 baths, full base¬ment. Air-conditioned. Mod. appli¬ances, carpets, etc. Low mortgageinterest resumable. Avail. July orAug. MkMO's. 752-3776.WANTED TO RENTWNTD 4 rm apt beg. Sept or Oct$100 reward call Kathy 324-6389.Prof needs 3-4 bedrm apt Sept-June,furnished if possible. Write: R. Tan-nehill, 3 Mason Ct„ Deleware, O.43015.SUMMER SUBLETSublet lVi rm. apt. 54th & Harper,June-Sept. Call 643-6772.2 room sum. sub. in Hyde Park.Furn w-TV 324-8339.Smr sblt for 2 nr campus air condfrom 6-14 BU 8-6610 rm 2214.55th University. Spacious for 3 or 4.Backyard 288-3576.June-Sept spac. attrac newly decor,apt in clean quiet big, courtyd. 3bdrs, Ig liv & dng rms, 1'/2 baths.Fully furn. stereo, TV. Negotiable567-4054.Cool breezy rm in 2 man apt nearcoop. 955-8078.Sublet July 1-Sept. 1 beautiful 4room apartment, 1 bedroom, frontporch, $125-mth, 5407 S. University,1st fir. 752-1335.Smr. rcoms for male students, $12-wk, 5747 Univ. kitchen, lounge, TV,pvt parking. PL 2-9718.1 bdr. apt. furn., available June 14-Aug. 30, off street parking, $124 permonth. Contact: Ziegler, 955-1719.NEAT SUMMER PAD 850 E. 57th 3bdrm. furn. $150 mo. Call 752-4229after 6.3bdrm 54th 8. Univ $170 667-7911.Sum. apt., 3 bdrm furn., 2 blkscampus; cut 95-mo. 643-8210.SV2 rooms, $130 a month, 5341 Kim¬bark, 324-4043.Furn. TV util. $125 was $156! 363-4300 ext. 610 60th 8. Stony.Apart. 6V2 rms 58 8, Kenwood subletJun 15-Sept call 684-6689.Ellis-54th 6 rm. furn. darkroom.June 15-Aug. 20. 955-5542.Share commodious 4-rm apt. with 1other person. 54th PI 8. Ellis, $50-mo. Call 752-1456 morn or eves.3'/2 rm So Shore furn. on campusbus rte. nr. 1C., stores, etc. Jn 9thru Sepr 768-4336.• Alpha Bridge Cealer PteseatoCollege Night OfferingSPECIAL FEATURE DUPLICATEBRIDCEwith Rcdaewl Entry FeesCAMES EVERY MON. at 7:30 P.M.AND A SPECIAL Q A A FORUMAT 7:00 P.M. FOR BRUSH UP3450 W. PETERSON CO 7-OS95 4bedroom apt. 5345 Woodlawn June15-Sept 15. $147.50-mth. Call 493-7038or BU 8-6610 X1425.Cheap nearby pleasant 10-roomhouse; 7 bedrooms will rent to indi¬viduals at $43 mo. or entire house at$300 mo. 5604 S. Maryland 667-5012.PERSONALSJustice Harlan reviewed the Govern¬ment's evidence that as much as 90per cent of the marijuana that isseized by Government agents in thiscountry is imported from Mexico.Although marijuana grows in manyareas in the United States it is ofinferior quality, he said.How do you know that, Harlan?Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Moun¬tain Boys play fine music — firstgeneration bluegrass. Friday —Cobb Hall. 8:15 P.M.OTIS RUSH returns Thurs. — 9P.M.Young kid wants to get appreciated;call 667-7394 leave message, Paul. End the quarter in style — DANCEto music of OTIS RUSH BLUESBAND Thurs. May 29.An Englishman in Africa kept acharging rhino at bay by stuffing hiscopy of Aristotle down its throat.I STILL don't get it, Roger.WRITERS' WORKSHOP PL 2-8377.Even Plato Jones is coming to hearLODESTONE!Friday's a good day for SouthernComfort and hearing some good olecountry love ballads and gospeltunes. Good for the soul. RalphStanley in Cobb Hall.Beat the Memorial Day Rush,Dance to OTIS RUSH BLUES BANDThurs. night at Ida Noyes.Why did FOTA have to spend $46for a V* page ad publicly thankingthe many contributors to FOTA? Itseems the "Letter to the Editor" un¬der which form this ad was sub- Exercises in Space tomorrow «8:00, Ida Noyes, Joel Brandon Ensemble Sunday.All kinds of insane Fathers Davgifts at Insanity South, 51st nearHarper.Shapiro rental pictures due June 2 6Student Activities Office, 209 m*Noyes Hall.OTIS RUSH - 5-29, 9 P.M. to 1A.M.BLOND VENUS, With MarleneDietrich, by Josef von Sternberg 9P.M. Wed at the Bandersnatch. freeDylan, the Byrds, BuffaloSpringfield, even the Stones and theBeatles are now playing countrymusic in one form or another. Theroots of their music can be traced tothe kind that Ralph Stanley wMIplay this Friday night in Cobb.Did the Maroon do FOTA justice inFriday's issue? The lab school thirdgraders said more about the fire¬works display at Rockefeller. Youwould never know that the largestdance In U C history was held inBartlett Gymnasium Saturday. Thisis great reporting. FOTA'S com¬pliments to Roger Blackguard andJessica Shingle.Reaction of a Hyde Park old-timerto LODESTONE . .. "Man, they'rebetter than Butterfield was when heplayed at UC twist parties!"SENATE OF MARYLAND, no. 596.Senators Dean, Wineland and Mai-kus — Finance. Entitled: AN ACTto add new Section 90A to Article 77of the Annotated Code of Maryland(1965 Replacement Volume), title"Public Education," subtitle "Chap¬ter 7. Schools," to follow immediate¬ly after Section 90 thereof, to pro¬vide for an optional course to betaught in our public high schoolsconcerning "Americanism versusCommunism"; to provide what thecourse shall entail; to provide tortextbooks and relating generally tothe teaching of a course concerning"Americanism versus Communism"in our public high schools.WHEREAS, The successful ex¬ploitation and manipulation of youthand student groups throughout theworld today are a major challehgewhich the free world forces mustmeet and defeat;90AThe public high schools shall eachteach a complete course of not lessthan thirty hours, optional to all stu¬dents enrolled in the public highschools entitled "Americanism versus Communism." The course shallprovide adequate instruction in thehistory, doctrines, objectives andtechniques of communism and shallbe for the primary purpose of in¬stilling in the minds of the studentsa greater appreciation of democraticprocesses, freedom under law, andthe will to preserve that freedomThe course shall lay particular em¬phasis upon the dangers of com¬munism, the ways to fight com¬munism, the evils of communism,the fallacies of communism, andthe false doctrines of communism... No teacher or textual materialsassigned to this course shall presentcommunism as preferable to thesystem of constitutional governmentand the free-enterprise-competitiveeconomy indigenous to the UnitedStates. SEC. 2. And be It furtherenacted. That this Act shall take ef¬fect July 1, 1969.Hate your father? Buy him a super¬wide tie at Insanity South, 51st nearHarper.***SOME SOUND ADVICE***ADC 303A speakers again for only$77.77. Scott, Kenwood, Dyna, AR,save 15% to 25+.MUSICRAFT, campus rep Bob Ta¬bor 324-3005.OTIS RUSH and HIS BAND at IdaNoyes Hall this Thurs., 9 P.M. forfinal Revitalization DANCE of thequarter. Admission $1.LODESTONELODESTONELODES-TONELODESTONELODESTONEFOTA had 24,500 people at ail of itsevents. The Maroon gave us a lotless coverage than Sammy Dawg re¬ceived. Outstanding priority system,Roger. Let's make Roger King ofthe Dogs.The Editor Replies: "Ralph!"There aren't that many seats, so ifyou want to see BLOND VENUSwith M. Dietrich for nothing (beingshown at 9 P.M. at the Band¬ersnatch Wed.) you'd better planahead, if you know what I mean.Quite frankly, I don't.You better not mean something dir¬ty, cause our printers won't standfor that. They've got their house inorder, and they're working on oursnow.THURS. — OTIS RUSH and BLUESBAND.Ida Noyes 1212 E. 59th 9 PM to 1AM; $1.The Anthony Braxton Trio is leavingfor Paris soon, so their concert heretomorrow will be the last chance tohear them.CANCELLED! Folk song workshopwill not meet at Hillel tomorrow.gosh darn the dash-blasted blanketyheck!Talk about censorship!RIDER WANTED to Boston, May 30share expenses 8. drive, 955-4682. mitted to the Maroon was too long(no longer than the letter on JeffSchnitzer) and not political enoughfor the EDITOR to print.Young kid wants to get cultured;call 667-7394 leave message, Paul.Love your father? Buy him a super¬wide tie at Insanity South, 51st nearHarper.OTIS RUSH — Thurs., May 29.Marlene Dietrich in BLONDVENUS, by Josef von Sternberg,free. Wed. at 9 P.M. at Bana-dersnatch. yes, the whole thing.Trip out with Marco Polo. 326-4422.To quote Jessica Seigel on May 22:"The Grey City Journal of May 23will be almost entirely devoted toFOTA." Did anybody notice the pic¬tures of Butterfield's dance, the out¬door Jazz Concerts, the art exhibit,and all of the other events which theMaroon photographed? Nice Job.What a story the GCJ did on theGala Performance — nonexistent.But I know Jezabel's sordid heartwas in the "right" place.Nasty, Nasty! (but true)LODESTONE needs no fireworks.May 31 8 P.M. loa Noyes.Memorial Day Eve — dance to OTISRUSH BLUES BAND at Ida Noyes. LodeStone LOdesToneloDestOnelodE-stoNelodeStonE.31 MayA.D.19698P.M.-IdaNoyesiDanOyesWE GET LETTERS, ETC."Dear Sir.I have been beared about your Chi¬cago University so many times formour teachers since my high schooldays. I saw the badge of your uni¬versity very often, when I looked upmay English book, so I know aboutChicago University known the worldover very well. I like your C.U. somuch, but It is ashamed and regret¬ful for me to say that I don't knowany a friend who attends such a fa¬mous university until today.I shall be very very happy and hon¬orable if I have a very good friendthere that I may hear about youruniversity often, and that I also maylearn their good American mannersin contacting. I hope that you canmake me fortunate in having anamiable, sociable, magnanimous andkind-hearted girl student as a goodfriend, who takes an Interest inAmerican literature for I am eagerto consult that way of study.Looking forward to hear from yourstudents, I am, with great, deep andhigh respect.Sincerely yoursJeon YunyeyAgin dong 4710 Tong 3 BanGony rezu.THERE WLL BE A MAROONTHIS FRIDAY (Memorial Day)Regular advertising deadlines apply)=--- -irnMAY28, COBB, A CEF DOUBLE FEAnlRE FOR $1,7 &9 PMAT 7 PM“ASHESANDDIAMONDS” ftL STARRING ZBIGNIEW CYBULSKI A DOCUMENTARY OF THE 1954ARMY-McCARTHY HEARINGS(PLUS A FILM SHORT "THE BIRD")FREE DOUBLE FEATURE - JUNE 5 - "CITIZEN KANE" & "THE AFRICAN QUEEN"Simca - SunbeamAuthorized Soles & ServiceNew & Used CarsExpert Body & Fender WorkComplete ForeignCar ServiceHyde Park Auto ImportsMOO S. Cottage Grove 4434100 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERS1363 E. 53rd Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student DiscountAT 9 PM“POINTORDER” $andalshortshirtsSALEBell-Bottom SpecialJOHNSMENS WEAR1459 E. 53rd. r“ v -nO o 50£ 35 p 32 Z m> m ors ■< —2 i SJP-- = I752-6933I SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveExpert Shoe & Leather Repair1 day serviceTHE TOWN COBBLERWe carry quality leather goods458 E. 53rd St. 9-6 DailyPLANTS ALIVE!HARPER COURTTHIS IS IT!WILUAM QUINN"Afro-American Music:A Nitty-Gritty Narrative"plus"Black and Tan Medley"withJoe Boyce Jimmy EllisJames Hairston John WhitfieldTuesday, May 27 8:30 P.M. Mandel HallFREE THE130 MPH TIREFor people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursstraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It’ll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It’s less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Easy.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We’re tubeless.Other radiais use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it’s tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us. InrellnFRONT ENDSERVICEBRAKE & MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-76441IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC- University -“ Chamber Orchestra IZ Spring Concert Z^Concerto Grosso Corelli™W Serenade Dvorak""Prague Symphony MozartJ* Tuesday, May 27 £- ft 30 P.M. ±Z Lexington Studio Z■ 5835 University ■iiiiimiiiiimimimrtPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd MI3-2&00WE DELIVERYou 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“ON MONDAY, a reporter asks aknowing New Yorker why Nor¬man Mailer's running, and gets theanswer that he wants material fora new book. On Tuesday, Mailerhotly denies he has any intentionof writing a book about his cam¬paign. On Wednesday, a publish¬er reports casually at lunch that aweek earlier Mailer's agent called,asking for a bid on Mailer’s may¬oralty book. Mail-M for a free copy ofer’s campaign slogan is NO MOREBULL. . : oni Wm. F. Bucklcy'tNATIONAL RE¬VIEW. writ*: DoptJ. 150 E. 35 Sfreot,N. Y. 10016.STUDENTSSUMMER JOBHIRING THIS WEEK ONLYRequirements:Must have neat appearance,18 year* of age or older. Publicrelation*Call: 892-6961 Aurora nm<OMay 27, 1969/The Chicago ttatto'nf/7> •} s ! 4 . « MM A Vi Oil /i ffIi ^1 i:», 1 \! ’ It*^ Jb: fvJ si1 y NAMES OF VETNAMWAR DEADwill be read by students and faculty inROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELBeginning Thursday 12 noon through 10 P.M.MEMORIAL DAY 8 A.M. through 10 P.M.Protest letters to the President and Congress to be broughtand placed on the altar. They will be mailed after theSunday Service June 11. Sermon: "Things That Make forPeace," Preacher: E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the Chapel.Let us all join in mourning and protest against the continuingwar in Vietnam and the escalation of the arms race by theAmerican employment of Antiballistic Missle sites.Please notify the Chapel Officeor John McLees, Hitchcock 61,if you are willing to read. Are you agood student?Are you acareful driver?If you are tired ofpaying a high premiumfor your car insurance itwill pay you toinvestigate Sentry'sgood student discount.This is in addition toSentry's discount fordriver education. Callyour Sentry man for fastfacts.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY IfINSURANCE MALE 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.Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW's encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanics havejoined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oil change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393Non - Profit Oig.U. S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, Illinoi*Permit No. 7931MAROON DRAFT SUPPLEMENTWhat will youdo aboutTHEDRAFT? SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEMORDER TO REPORT FOR INDUCTION Approv*! Not Roquirsd.The President of the United States,To Elite College GraduateUniversity of CJiici£0Chicago, Illinois Hyde Park Anti Draft Union5615 S. Woodlawn Avenue(Quaker House)Phone: 363-1248(Local Board Staisoon.joon*8ELECTIVE SERVICE NO.28 II 48II 47 II 342Greeting:You are hereby ordered for induction into the Armed Forces of the United States, and to reportat AFEeS 615 W. San 3uren Gt.Chicago^ Illinoisday of reckoning at 6:30 __ amfor forwarding to an Armed Forces Induction Station.important notice(Read Each Paragraph Carefully)IF YOU HAVE HAD PREVIOUS MILITARY SERVICE, OR ARE NOW A MEMBER OF THE NATIONALGUARD OR A RESERVE COMPONENT OF THE ARMED FORCES, BRING EVIDENCE WITH YOU. IF YOUWEAR GLASSES, BRiNG THEM. IF MARRIED. BRING PROOF OF YOUR MARRIAGE. IF YOU HAVE ANYPHYSICAL OR MENTAL CONDITION WHICH, IN YOUR OPINION, MAY DISQUALIFY YOU FOR SERVICE INTHE ARMED FORCES, BRING A PHYSICIAN'S CERTIFICATE DESCRIBING THAT CONDITION, IF NOTALREADY FURNISHED TO YOUR LOCAL BOARDValid documents are required to substantiate dependency claims in order to receive basic allowance for quarters Besure to take the following with you when reporting to the induction station. The documents will be returned to you (a)hOR LAWFUL WIFE OR LEGITIMATE CHILD lTNDER 21 YEARS OF AGE—original, certified copy or photostat of acertified copy of marriage certificate, child's birth certificate, or a public or church record of marriage issued over the sig¬nature and seal of the custodian of the church or public records; (6) FOR LEGALLY ADOPTED CHILD—certified courtorder of adoption; <c) FOR CHILD OF DIVORCED SERVICE MEMBER (Child in custody of person other than claim¬ant)—(1) Certified or photostatic copies of receipts from custodian of child evidencing servicoman's contributions for sup¬port, and (2) Divorce decree, court support order or separation order; (d) FOR DEPENDENT PARENT—affidavitsestablishing that dependency.Bring your Social Security Account Number Card. If you do not have one, apply at nearest Social Security Adminis¬tration Office. If you have life insurance, bring a record of the insurance company’s address and your policy number.Bring enough clean clothes for 3 days. Bring enough money to last 1 month for .personal purchases.This Local Board will furnish transportation, and meals and lodging when necessary, from the place of reporting tothe induction station where you will be examined. If found qualified, you will be inducted into the Armed Forces. Iffound not qualified, return transportation and meals and lodging when necessary, will be tarnished to the place of reporting.You may be found not qualified for induction. Keep this in mind in arranging your affairs, to prevent any undue hard¬ship if you are not inducted. If employed, inform your employer of this possibility. Your employer can then be preparedto continue your employment if you are not inducted. To protect your right to return to your job if you are not inducted,you must report for work as soon as possible after the completion of your induction examination. You may jeopardize yourreemployment rights if you do not report for work at the beginning of your next regularly scheduled working period afteryou have returned to your place of employment.Willful failure to report at the place and hour of the day named in this Order subjects the violator to fine and impris¬onment. Bring this Order with you when you report.If you are so far from your own local board that reporting in compliance with this Order will be a serious hardship,go immediately to any local board and make written request for transfer of >our delivery for induction, taking this Orderwith you.> 252 (Reviled 4-28-45)June is coming.Graduating men at the University of Chi¬cago will join others in the country in won¬dering what to do about the draft.If you’re in that situation, there is a limit¬ed number of alternatives open to you —only five, in fact. They are:• Trying to find and keep some defer¬ment or exemption.• Obtaining conscientious objector stat¬us, and spending a couple of years doingalternative service.• Going to Canada for the rest of yourlife.• Confronting the draft with a resistanceposition.• Going into the Army.In many ways, none of these alternativesis a good alternative. But different peoplehave different ideas about which alterna¬tive may be at least offensive.The best way to decide for yourself whichalternative is best — or least bad — foryou, the best thing to do is to discuss yoursituation with a trained draft counselor.Handiest counseling center to the Univer¬sity is Hyde Park Draft Information Centerin Quaker House, 5615 S. Woodlawn. It’sopen Monday through Thursday from 7 to 9pm, and on Friday and Saturday from 1 to5 pm. Counseling is also available at Chi¬cago Area Draft Resisters (CADRE), 519W. North, phone 664-6895 or 664-6967.Good, detailed description of each al¬ternative are contained in Guide to theDraft by Arlo Tatum and Joseph S. Tuch-insky. Published by Beacon Press, it’s available for $1.95 at most bookstores anddraft counseling centers.Here’s a brief rundown on what’s in¬volved in each alternative:• Deferments and exemptions. There arequite a few of these, set up to allow menwho are doing some sort of “patriotic dutyto the Nation” to stay out of the Army. Thephrase just quoted and a complete descrip¬tion of the function of deferments as viewedby the Selective Service System itself, arecontained in a document titled “Chan¬neling,” available at counseling centers.If you’ve been in college lately, you’veprobably had a II-S student deferment. Youcan also get a II-S if you’re a medicalschool student. But if you’re going intograduate school next year in any field otherthan medicine, you won’t be allowed tohave a II-S. That’s what Congress decidedwhen it passed the 1967 Selective ServiceAct.If you do start graduate school, becauseyour board is slow in reclassifying you, andif Nixon’s proposal is accepted, to allowgraduate students to receive an inductionorder during a school year to complete theyear, then it’s likely that you will be able tocomplete one year of graduate school.There’s no guarantee that that will work inevery case, however.Also popular among the deferments is theII-A occupational deferment. Although eachlocal board has discretion about what sortsof jobs qualify for this, many boards arewilling to accept such things as PeaceCorps, VISTA, and public school teaching. The better you can convince your boardthat your job meets some local communityneed, and that you are vital to your em¬ployer’s operations, the more likely theboard will be to grant you a II-A.Proper documentation of a physical orpsychological condition which the Armysays makes you “unacceptable” can getyou a I-Y or IV-F. The latter is for moreserious or permanent conditions.If you’re supporting a kid who’s living inyour home in a “bona fide family relation¬ship,” you can get a III-A fatherhood defer¬ment — UNLESS you’ve had a II-S in thelast two years, since July 1, 1967. That’sanother little twist that Congress wrote intothe Selective Service Act, to prevent menfrom piling a fatherhood deferment on topof a student deferment and sliding throughwithout ever being touched.To find out whether you may be eligiblefor one of the deferments not mentionedhere consult the Tatum-Tuchinsky book, ora counselor.• Conscientious objector status. You’resupposed to be able to get this if you meetthese criteria:1. You oppose your own participation inwar in any form;2. This opposition arises from some set ofprinciples which hold a central place inyour life, by which you try to guide yourlife;3. You are sincere in these beliefs.There’s no requirement saying you haveto be a member of any church (althoughsome local boards may think there is).To obtain CO status, you fill out Selective Service Form 150, which asks questionsprobing your beliefs. You should havepeople who know you, preferably “respect¬able” adults, write letters of support. You’llalso have a personal appearance with yourlocal board, in all likelihood.To think through your answers to thequestions, and to adequately prepare your¬self for the process of applying, you musttalk things over with a counselor.There are two forms of service that COscan do. You can ask for the one you prefer.One is non-combatant service in the Army,usually as a medic. The more commontype, however, is alternative civilian ser¬vice. In this, you work as a regular employ¬ee for some agency recognized by the Se¬lective Service System. It’s always easy toobtain approval for a CO job in a hospital,emptying bed pans, but it’s also quite pos¬sible to obtain a job in some other sort ofsocial service or community agency.• Going to Canada to live has become away out for an uncounted number of men inthe last few years. It’s not hard if you’rewell educated and have some resources toestablish yourself. But it’s a permanentmove. You can’t expect to come back to theUnited States without being prosecuted, ifyou’ve been in Canada when you shouldhave been at an induction center in the U.S.For details about the application for land¬ed immigrant status, and about life in Ca¬nada, read the Manual for Draft-Age Immi¬grants to Canada, published by TorontoAnti-Draft Programme. It’s available for y*at counseling centers.• Resistance is discussed in another ar¬ticle in this supplement. It’s a major step,and has undeniable legal consequences, butit can be personally satisfying and political¬ly effective. If you want to know moreabout it, contact the CADRE office, or getin touch with your friendly local resister,such as David Aiken, Rob Skeist, MichaelPresser (all at 288-1609), and Chris Hanna-fan (Hitchcock Hall).• If you do go into the Army, you shouldfirst consider how you’ll respond when theytry to break down your individuality, andwhen they send you to Vietnam. Some menin the Army see themselves as organizers,taiking to other soldiers about the war and“the brass,” printing underground news¬papers, perhaps urging soldiers to refuseorders to Vietnam. This is likely to get yousent to Greenland or Vietnam, or into astockade for awhile, or a discharge. Coun¬selors at CADRE have information aboutresistance in the Army.That’s the range of choices. It’s not veryappealing. But you can make choices, andyou should consider all these alternativesbefore choosing.It’s your life, not Gen Hershey’s.XU TRYTO 5TAYIM SCHOOL.AS E0N6ASpossible.IF THEYSTILLWANT TOtake: MEILL TEELTHEMIM AHOMO¬SEXUAL. IF THEMSTILL CAUME HETRY toFLUUKmum. if rPASSTPhysicalI'LLTPY TOFLUbiKTHEIUTELEI-6EMCETESTIF THEYSENP METOVIETNAMI'LLFI6HTD.m I'liMiUieu-Mall n>imIh IF I PASSTH6 110-teuioemcbtest m1611 THEMI'M THfSOLESUPPORTOF MVDESTITUTEMOTHER..10)001106 X6XHA16IFPEVERV■mwe OFTRAPITIOIOAXPROTESTBEFOREl KIU6PAM WE.DLA1 i i >i i41“I amresigning. .By David L. AikenAiken, a member of Chicago Area DraftResisters (CADRE), was a Maroon editorwhile a student in the College at UC. Hewas a student in the graduate departmentof education until a year ago. He writes acolumn for The Sun-Times, “The DraftCounselor.”I am resigning from the Selective ServiceSystem.When I graduated from the College atthe University of Chicago three years ago,I had no intention of becoming a non-coop¬erator. At that time, in 1966. graduate stu¬dents were still eligible for student defer¬ments. I figured I would just slide intograduate school — which I did with notrouble — and not worry much about thedraft. I’d let others worry.Others are worrying now. Not just thekinds of people who have always felt thedraft most severely, the men from poorfamilies who can’t afford to buy studentdeferments. Now men graduating from col¬lege are worrying, because graduate stu¬dent deferments aren’t given any more.But I’m still not worrying about the draftgetting me. It’s not that I’m safe any more— I would have been able to retain my II-Sif I had stayed in graduate school, but Idropped out a year ago.I’ve made a decision I feel is right forme — to confront the Selective ServiceSystem in order to act according to prin¬ciples I believe in. So now I’m not anx¬iously thinking up ways to twist my life to“escape” the draft.The decision evolved over a long period,and I can’t pretend it was easy. I alsocan’t honestly say I think everybody oughtto make the exact same decision, becausedifferent people in different situations willhave different considerations. But perhapssome men who are thinking through theirown positions will want to consider thisone.For me, as for many others who haveturned to resistance, it all started withVietnam.Several years ago, I remember, I wastrying to rationalize United States in¬volvement in Vietnam. I was playing withdominoes. Before too long, however, I be¬came dissatisfied with this sort of game. Ifound it increasingly difficult to accept theState Department’s line that we entered661 decided Icould not bear armsin the military”the war to save Southeast Asia (fromwhat? itself?), and stayed to save face.It became clear that the mentality thathad given rise to Vietnam was that ofUncle Sam as cop, especially in situationswhere “stability” and the status quo arevalued more than self-determination by thepeople themselves. For with the old Diemregime as well as with the Thieu regime,we are propping up a bamboo oligarchy,riddled with corruption, which does littlefor the ordinary peasant.It became increasingly clear to me thatsuch a war could never be “won.” Wouldwe “win” when all of Southeast Asia lay inashes?The stupidity of the war became moreevident when I considered the wastage oflives — American and Vietnamese. What,in fact, was any war but senseless slaugh¬ter?So I decided I could not bear arms in-themilitary— not in Vietnam, not in any war.I told my local board about that by filing2/Maroon Draft Supplement/May 27, 1969 an application for conscientious objectorstatus.Then I came to think about the systemthat impresses young men to fight in thewar. I began to talk with other men abouttheir draft problems, as a counselor for theAmerican Friends Service Committee inChicago, and taught AFSC’s course for be¬ginning draft counselors.I learned a lot in the process, about thedraft system and how it is felt by individ¬uals.The system of deferments and ex¬emptions, for example, is felt as “chan¬neling.” In fact, this is one of the statedpurposes of the Selective Service System,which paints the image of itself as a“room which has been made uncomfortab¬ly warm” to which “several doors areopen,” all of which “lead to various formsof recognized, patriotic service to theNation.”There is, of course, the door — or escape— of college, while it lasts. There is thedoor to teaching in public schools. There isthe door to a theological seminary, per¬haps. Or to a medical deferment if you’rein bad enough shape. Or there are doors toCanada which don’t seem to lead to “ser¬vice to the Nation,” but in fact serve to getrid of men who might otherwise stayaround the United States and try to changethings here.For some, of course, teaching or schoolor theological studies or Canada or whathave you fit well into their plans. But fortoo many—including many of those I metwhile I was counseling — the channelingprocess causes them to distort their lives,to do things they would not naturally do,even to physically mutilate themselves —all to “get out of” the draft.I have seen the essentially class-biasednature of the draft, which establishes de¬ferments favorable to middle-class menwho can afford to go to college, for in¬stance, and then assigns boards with gen¬erally conservative, middle-class membersto administer the deferment system, ar¬guing that these men are merely your “lo¬cal friends and neighbors.”I have learned how mostly white boardssit in judgment on the fates of black men.I have witnessed repeatedly the essen¬tially arbitrary, capricious operation of thesystem — in which a man is more likely tobe called for induction if his local bord isin, for example, Michigan than if it is inTexas, simply because the boards in theformer are more “efficient” than those inthe latter, and therefore are given higherquotas.I see politicians talking about ways ofcleaning up some of the more outrageousof these inequities, perhaps by lettingmen “volunteer” for the Army. But then Ilook at the most obvious stated purpose ofboth the draft and the Army: to send mento kill other men in places where some¬body in power has defined somebody elseas the “enemy.”As I have discussed these matters withfriends, particularly some in CADRE, Ihave begun to see that the draft and theArmy are mere tools for carrying out for¬eign policies designed to repress peopleabroad. These tools themselves, however,have the basic effect of repressing peopleat home. They are the tools of a largersystem built on oppression — on the basicnotion that one man is better than anothersimply because he owns more, and hasmore power.I came to see that, and had to ask my¬self what I was going to do about it. I hadalready decided I was not going to fighttheir war. I had already decided that theUnited States is a place I want to live in and change, not escape and forget. The ob¬vious conclusion I could see was of saying“No” to the draft, of taking my standagainst the oppressive aspects of Americansociety at the place where it most imme¬diately rubbed me. I could also begin tosee what lay beyond that conclusion — thatI had to decide to commit myself to work¬ing to change that society.But I waited a long time before I actual¬ly reached the conclusion I had seencoming.One of the reasons was fear. I wasn’tsure whether I could take the legal con¬sequences. That’s a very natural feeling, Ithink.Eventually, however, I came to stop wor¬rying much about that fear. Part of thereason I could do that was that I camecloser into a community of like-minded66I marked my cards‘void? - prohibitedby conscience”people — CADRE — on whom I knew Icould depend for support. “A little helpfrom my friends” was important.Also, I found myself thinking very deeplyabout what I really believe in. And I foundmyself reading a passage taken from somework of John Dewey:“Any activity pursued in behalf of anideal and against an obstacle, and in spiteof threat of personal loss, because of aconviction of its general and enduring val¬ue, is religious in quality.”That rather dry definition by a philoso¬pher spoke to me. It said that, if I believein the rightness of some thing, then thatbelief would have enduring, real signifi¬cance only if I acted on it.The other reason I delayed making thefinal decision was a desire for clarityabout the political implications of the act. Iwanted to try to be sure that resistancewould somehow be “effective.”To some extent, you can never reallyforetell the effects of an action you take asa public stand. I believe, for example, thatthe resistance movement in the last twoyears has had a basically positive effect inraising and maintaining the war and thedraft as public issues, and in attracting tovarior 'orms of political action many per¬sons who might have otherwise remained secluded in their private lives. The peoplewho started" the resistance movement hadno way of predicting this effect.But, to the extent that two years of resis¬tance activity have taught us some things,I think we can say that any attempt tobuild a movement solely around turning indraft cards is not going to succeed.There are many reasons for this. Theprimary one, I think, is that the effect ofthe draft, and of court prosecution for re¬sisters, is to pick each man off singly, oneby one.Most American men, conditioned by aschool system based on competition forgrades and an economy based on com¬petition for wealth, think in terms of look¬ing out for themselves. They don’t think interms of collective action which will at alater point bring change for everyone.But, as objective conditions in Americansociety grow more outrageous — as thewar continues, as inequality and injusticegrow — a growing number of men from avariety of backgrounds decide to takesome action. For some, the act of con¬fronting the draft system becomes the firststep in redefining themselves as peoplewho do not blindly accept authority andthe status quo, and who work with othersto change the status quo.I see my act of resigning from the Selec¬tive Service System as a beginning, not anend point. It’s my step toward joining inwhat I am sure will be a long-term effortto change society. In that perspective, thequestion of spending two or three years inprison doesn’t seem the end of the world,or even the end of the struggle. It seems,in this context, a temporary interruption,an interruption made more bearable bysupport from the resistance community inand out of jail.It is in that perspective that I turn in mycards. They have become symbolic to meof a game I refuse to play — a game inwhich the losers come home in pine boxes,and the “winners” only win a meaningless,empty “victory” in which they sell theirself-respect for “protection” from thedraft, and bargain away whatever chancethey may have had to take a stand againstthe war.So, just as games of chance in news¬paper advertisements are labeled, “voidwhere prohibited by law,” I have markedmy cards in this deadly game “void” —prohibited by conscience.The wargoes onBy Rob SkeistS heist, expelled 70, was active in theHyde Park Anti-Draft Union (HPADU) atthe height of its glory. He has worked withanti-war high school students, and in Junewill move to Maywood to help start aResistance commune/work project there.Fifteen crazy, heroic people burned draftrecords at the 63rd and Western draftboard Sunday morning. I know five ofthem. They’re not crazy. They’re not he¬roic. They’re men and women who havesome understanding of our society, in¬cluding an understanding that the draft isimportant to “the twin evils of Americanmilitarism and racism.” And they’re menand women who see the need to act on theirbeliefs.I would not take the same action that theChicago 15 took, because of other work I’mdoing and because I have a different under¬standing of the effectiveness of that kind ofaction than they probably have, but thosepeople are my brothers and sisters. I sharewith them a view of the war, the draft, andother oppressive American institutions, andI share with them the determination to leada good personal life in the context of a po¬litical movement. Is any of that soremarkable? CADRE’S GI program, — you might decideto get off your ass and work for what youbelieve in.A lot of you believe that the war and thedraft are wrong, and you must realize thatyou or guys you know will soon be drafted.Yet there is almost no action on campus.Perhaps some of you heard Nixon's recentspeeches about a draft lottery and a peaceproposal. They don’t solve a thing. Perhapssome of you are trying to think of a goodaction to do in the next few weeks. I havesome suggestions.To argue that the war and the draft areas bad as ever, to fight the inertia oncampus, I’m going to explain:• What’s wrong with the draft;• Why Nixon’s “eight-point peace plan”won’t end the war; and• Why Nixon’s lottery proposal doesn’tmeet any of the basic criticisms of thedraft.Then I’ll offer some suggestions for ac¬tion in the next three weeks.What’s wrong withthe draftIf you see through the lies of Nixon, ofDaley, of Levi, and start to understand thatthere is real content to leftist cliches aboutthe system”, and if you feel it’s importantto build lives and institutions based onbrother-and sister-hood, then you will find away to move against those men and againstthat system.You might fight for the day care center,you might raise money for the Black Pan¬ther breakfast-for-children program, youoiight fight fop open admissions at UC, youtaight work part-time this summer with There is an anti-draft movement, whichincludes those who burn files, those whorefuse induction, and those who organize inworking-class communities, because we seethat the draft is involved with at least fourbasic American problems:• the war against Vietnam;• decisions based on coercion;• the class nature of our country, and• the atomization of each life from eachother. No amount of official propaganda hasconvinced Americans that we should be inVietnam. A lot of guys at the induction cen¬ter at 6:30 am don’t want to be there. Butthe draft lets the Army take as many of usas’t needs.Throughout our lives we’re taught tomake decisions on the basis of rewards andpunishments including grades, money,threats of expulsion, advancement in a pro¬fession. We’re taught to react to fear, not topositive human values. The draft tells us tostay in school because we’re afraid of theArmy, to go into the Army because we’reafraid of jail.We have some sort of class system in thiscountry, which means that if you’re bornpoor, and particularly if you’re not bornwhite, things are laid out pretty rough foryou. Your order for induction will be partlya piece of paper from your draft board,partly the lack of decent housing, schools,and jobs in the outside world.In school and in the working world, eachof us is taught to look out for himself, to getmaterial success and a sense of satisfactionby beating out the next guy. That’s essen¬tial to capitalism, but not to brotherhood.The draft, picking us off one by one, furtherseparates our lives, and makes it hard forus to see our common oppression get to¬gether, and fight.Why Nixon’s “8-pointpeace plan” won’t endthe warThe United States peace plan, as present¬ed by Nixon May 14, is a restatement of theUnited States war plan. This comes throughmost clearly in the “mutual withdrawal”demand and in the proposal for the electionof a new South Vietnamese government.Nixon argues that we are defending SouthVietnam from aggression from North Viet¬nam, and that we will stop defending whenthey stop aggressing. This ignores the factthat a great deal of the fighting is done bythe NLF, an indigenous guerrilla groupwhich is not part of the North Vietnamesearmy. It also ignores the fact that the 1954Geneva Accords, which everyone alwayswants to go back to, specifically did notestablish two separate Vietnams; had theUnited States not backed Diem and refusedto permit elections in 1956, there would beonly one Vietnam now. And, in view of ourmerciless bombing of North Vietnam, isn’tit natural that the NLF and the North Viet¬namese are brothers in the struggle againstthe United States?The war will end only when the UnitedStates meets the demand for immediateunilateral withdrawal from a country wehad no business in, a demand made by theNLF and supported by American groupsranging from SDS and CADRE to theAmerican Friends Service Committee andBusiness Executives Move for Peace inVietnam. And Nixon has vowed not to givein.That the United States isn’t really inter¬ested in “peace and an honorable settle¬ment” was driven home a little harderwhen Nixon described his proposal for elec¬tions. He agrees with the NLF that elec¬tions should be supervised by an inter¬national body. So far, so good. But wherethe NLF calls for a provisional coalitiongovernment until and during the elections,Nixon continues to recognize Thieu-Ky asthe legitimate government, and leaves uswith the assumption that Thieu-Ky andtheir army would be in power during theelections. Can anyone believe that commu¬nists or even those who favor a coalitionincluding the communists would get a fairdeal with that set-up?The form of Nixon’s election proposalguarantees that it will not be accepted. It,and his whole “peace plan” don’t bring usany closer to the end of the war. Only bythe continued fighting of the NLF and bythe growth of the anti-war movement athome will the United States be forced intoleaving Vietnam. Why Nixon’slottery proposalis a hoaxIt was big news when Nixon announcedhe was responding to criticisms of the draftwith a lottery plan. It’s a hoax.He has suggested that the order of call-upbe a little different. That’s all. If his pro¬posal is made into law, the four criticisms Imade of the draft early in this article willstill hold.First, the government will still be able todraft as many men as it wanted for what¬ever wars it wants.Second, men will still make decisions outof fear and not out of positive human val¬ues, choosing the Army instead of prison, acollege deferment instead of a year of vul¬nerability.Third, the class nature of the defermentsystem will remain, with more wealthyguys qualifying for college, medical, andother deferments, and better educated guysmore likely to obtain CO. Instituting a lot¬tery system will in fact increase the classbias of the draft. As it is now, once an eliteUC student makes it through his safe yearsas a student, he will be drafted if he can’tget a deferment. With a lottery, his chanceof getting drafted will be only as great asthat of a 19-year old, and he might neverface the necessity to choose between theArmy, Canada, and refusing induction. Sothe burden will fall all the more on thepoor and the working class.Fourth, the sense of atomization would beincreased. A guy will feel even more iso¬lated from others, even more subject tofate, under the new system. It will be veryhard to get people together to fight thedraft with each guy convinced that hischance of getting drafted is only, say, onein seven.So when the present draft is finallychanged, it won’t be replaced by anythingbetter.Some suggestionsfor action• Resistance pledge. Last year at thistime the Special Vietnam ConvocationGroup was in full swing, centered aroundmen who pledged not to go into the Armyas long as the U.S. was in Vietnam. Therewas a lot of good anti-war motion, althoughmost of the guys who signed that pledge gotdeferred jobs or C.O., and managed to putoff the confrontation for another year atleast.This year there could be a resistancepledge. For example, “I oppose the war inVietnam. I oppose the draft, an institutionof conscription, coercion, class bias, andatomization. Therefore I will no longer seekdeferments under that system. If I am clas¬sified I-A and ordered for induction, I willeither refuse induction or enter the army tojoin the anti-war, anti-brass fight there.”• Disrupt the graduation. No matterwhat else, graduating seniors should weararmbands of mourning and rebellion, andhand out a leaflet about Marlene and theexpulsions, urban renewal, the war and thedraft.Seniors should demand that Ed Levi notgive the graduation speech. Instead, theyshould invite someone such as radical orga¬nizer Clark Kissinger, one of the Ciicago15, or one of the expelled students.There is always the possibility of guer¬rilla theater or a rally across the streetfrom the graduation ceremony.• Reading the names of the war dead. Agroup of students has decided to readaloud the names of all the Americanskilled in Vietnam, this Thursday and Fri¬day, on campus. They will be read atsuch symbols of humanism as the ad build¬ing, the social science cold war ideologybuilding, the plaque for the Shah of Iran,and Rockefeller Chapel.• Meeting. There will be an open meet¬ing tomorrow (Wednesday) night at 7:30 atQuaker House, 5615 S. Woodlawn, to discussthese ideas and any new ones. There is stilltime to move!May 27, 1969/Maroon Draft Supplement/3t * \ *£IBTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5 802 ELLIS AVENUE • CHICAGO • ILLINOIS 606J7TEXTBOOKS • CENBEAL BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY • ^TYPEWRITERS•TAPE RECORDERS • ^PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES • ‘GIFTS • *At main Kore only.MEMORANDUM TO: DEPARTMENT HEADS, PROFESSORS, DEPARTMENTALSECRETARIES.This is our third appeal for information pertaining torequired and recommended textbooks for the summer quarter.To date we have received less than 30% of the needed in¬formation .It is questionable whether books ordered today will bereceived in time for the first day of classes. Every titlelisted on the information forms (#57) which we have receivedis in stock in sufficient quantity, or has been ordered.This is an urgent request to those deciding upon titles tobe used, and to those responsible for forwarding those de¬cisions to the bookstore to do so today. Thank you.Harlan DavidsonGeneral Manager mmSpecial!Style Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8DiscountArt Materials• school, office &filing supplies• drafting materials• mounting - matting -• framingDuncan’s1305 E 53rd HY 3-41 I IFast DependableServiceT.V. - Radio - Tape Re¬corder - PhonographConoll Electronics Sorvlco1635 E. 55th St. PL2-7730THE COMFORTABLE CHAIRCandles, Incense, Jewelery & nice things from nice places5 5 0 3 to Hyde Park BlvdSEMMMYCOOPERATIVE BOOKSTORE5757 University (basement)SALE20% oft on all booksSelected titles at costprice (33%-40% off)Other titles at Vi priceor $1.00, whichever islessFRIDAY, MAY 23 through THURSDAY, MAY29, ONLYTerms: cash and no rebateSALE HOURS: 11:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.4/Maroon Draft Supplement/May 27, 1969 DANCETO THE MUSIC OFOTISRUSHAND HIS BLUES BANDTHURS. 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