Feeling of Peace Changes to Fear in MarchBy Steve CookI dreamed the world had all agreed to putan end to war,” sang Tom Paxton Saturdayafternoon at the huge anti-war rally on themall in Washington. Several hours later,helmeted police were teargassing thou¬sands of demonstrators in front of the Jus¬tice Department, four blocks away. ThusNovember 15, a day of peace and good feel¬ing, turned into a night of fear and tensionin the nation’s capitol.Some 500,000 people, mostly college stu¬dents, braved the 32 degree cold to partici¬pate in the New Mobilization Committee-sponsored mass march to the White Houseand rally afterwards, making it the largestpeace demonstration in history.There were so many participants in themarch Saturday morning that by 12:40,when the march permit expired, some 40,-000 people had not yet marched, and weredirected to the rally in front of the Wash¬ington Monument by marshalls.Several hundred University of Chicagostudents, brought to Washington on sevenChicago Peace Council buses, and privatecars, and jets, participated in the anti-warprotest.From 11 am until 1 pm, there was a solidthrong of marchers down PennsylvaniaAvenue, around the White House, and in front of the Monument. Led by a line ofcoffins containing the names of Americanskilled in Vietnam, the marchers chanted“Peace Now”. Some 6,000 marshalls keptthe march orderly as it passed near theWhite House, which was cordoned off bybusses.The afternoon rally in front of the Wash¬ington Monument was a combination ofrock festival and political demonstration.Speakers included Senator EugeneMcCarthy, (D-Minn), Corretta King, Sena¬tor George McGovern, (D-SD), Dr Ben¬jamin Spock, Senator Charles Goodell (R-NY), and Conspiracy defendants DavidDellinger, Abbie Hoffman, and Jerry Ru¬bin.- Alternating with the speakers weresingers Tom Paxton, Pete Seeger, Peter,Paul and Mary, Richie Havens, Arlo Guth¬rie, and the Broadway cast of “Hair”.Hundreds of thousands of people, spreadthickly over a three square block area,sang and danced with the entertainers.During speeches, many moved about on theoutskirts of the crowd, selling buttons, buy¬ing food, and looking for friends, Guerillatheater groups put on impromptu skitswhile many huddled under blankets oraround fires to keep warm. From 2 pm on,Continued on Page Three Steve AokiPEACE: Students march to end the war in Vietnam in Washington Nov. 15.THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 22 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 18, 1969Barnett Resigns PostAs President of SGDavid TravisRESIGNATION: Barnett resigns to devote more time to research.14 To Be Brought beforeFourteen students identified as partici¬pants in a “disruptive demonstration”have been summoned to report by Tuesdayto Rosenwald 101 in order to make appoint¬ments for preliminary disciplinary hear¬ings with disciplinary committee chairmanJo Desha Lucas, professor of law.The students are facing disciplinary ac¬tions for participating in a militant boycottof the C-shop and Hutchinson Commons lastWednesday. The demonstration was held insupport for the demand that the Universitygrant a free meal to every shift of cafeteriaworkers. The summoned students werewarned by James Vice, assistant dean ofstudents, who was present at the picket linethat they were subject to possible dis¬ciplinary action.According to Charles O’Connell, dean ofstudents, the preliminary hearing will in¬clude a detailed statement of chargesagainst the student, a statement of the portunity for the student to choose either apublic or private hearing, and the opportun¬ity for him to arrange a time for his hear¬ing.The students’ procedural rights in thiscase are identical with those which formedthe basis of last year’s disciplinary hear¬ings. They include the right to prepare apresentation, request a continuance, have ahearing (public or private, at his ownchoice), present a spokesman and anynumber of witnesses, testify before a stu¬dent observer, and appeal the disciplinarydecision to the dean of students.Students who participated in the boycottallegedly physically prevented people fromentering die restaurants. It was reportedthat one person who tried to enter waskicked in the stomach.The summons letters, which were sentFriday by James Vice, assistant dean ofstudents, stated that “you have been identi¬fied as one of a group of people who tookdisruptive demonstration ... By Peter GoodsellMichael Barnett, president of studentgovernment (SG) announced yesterday hisintention of resigning effective immediate¬ly. Mike Fowler, SG vice-president, willserve as acting president until a successoris chosen to succeed Barnett at the nextmeeting of the SG assembly at 8 p.m. thisSunday night. The SG constitution has noprovision for appointing a successor.In his resignation statement, Barnett out¬lined his reasons for stepping down and dis¬cussed the directions that he feels SGshould take in the future.“Since I am a fourth-year graduate stu¬dent in physics, I should be spending moretime in research,” Barnett said. “I had tochoose between research and political ac¬tivities.” He noted that political work wastaking 95 percent of his time. His statementalso spoke of the Council of the UniversityCommitteewhich involved the use of physical force toprevent students, faculty and staff from en¬tering the C-shop and Hutchinson Com¬mons.”Before submitting his resignation, formerstudent government president Mike Barnettofficially refused to appoint a student ob¬server to the special three man faculty dis¬ciplinary committee appointed by the Com¬mittee of the Council Wednesday. FollowingBarnett’s resignation, however, O’Conellldid not know whether a student observerwould be appointed.The two members of the disciplinarycommittee besides Lucas are Herbert An¬derson, professor of physics, and BernardWeinberg, professor of romance languagesand literature.According to Anderson, students will bedisciplined according to the present dis¬ciplinary rules, since the Wegener com¬mittee report on disciplinary procedureshas not yet come out. The report is sched-Continued on Page Four Senate’s refusal, without consulting withSG, of SG’s request for student observerson the Council. He also discussed his workon the local moratorium committee, whichhas been extensive. The statement calls forthe resignation of University officials, in¬cluding the president.Barnett gave his recommendations forthe moratorium program. “Before decidingon new directions, mass meetings should becalled for all moratorium suppor¬ters. . . Although the moratorium growsby one day each month, I think reality re¬quires focusing on a single day each monthwith additional days devoted to smaller ac¬tivities.”Speaking of his own participation in themoratorium, he said, “Although I spent alarge amount of time in helping to organizeit, I have never worn a moratorium button.It has been a silent protest over the nar¬rowness of concern of the moratorium.”Indicating the type of work that SGshould continue, Barnett singled out severalindividuals. “Much of the moratorium or¬ganization that has happened in SG hasbeen led by Mike Fowler . . . MeanwhileFrank Day has begun the organization oftenant union support projects. Anothercommittee led by Rosemarie Gillespie hasbeen investigating means of helping thepeople of Woodlawn in dealing with theproblem of hunger and the need of child¬care centers ... In another area CORSO,led by Connie Maravell is investigating thecreation of a student activities fee. Toomany students have spent too much timebegging administrators for funds for ac¬tivities such as the Festival of the Arts(FOTA).He also spoke of SG efforts to increasethe amount of student responsibility at theUniversity and deplored what he consid¬ered administration unresponsiveness. “SGdeclared appointment of students to com¬mittees must be made by students. In pur¬suing this end, SG has refused to make rec¬ommendations to committees, but has sim¬ply announced appointments. . . To seekchanges in the decision-making structure ofthe University, Larry Lambert has led SGContinued on Page Twoprocedural rights ’©f the students, the op- * part* in aPresident of SG To Be Chosen at MeetingContinued from Page Oneefforts to determine at what level we weremost likely to succeed. SG concluded thatwe would indicate our desire to take moreresponsibility by seeking to have three ob¬servers placed on the 51 member Council ofthe University Senate. But the Council re¬jected our request without the courage toask us to explain our request. One Councilmember even suggested that he was betterable to explain students positions than stu¬dents.Barnett also told the Maroon that SG willnot appoint students to the current dis¬ciplinary committee, and will recommendto the student body that students refiainfrom joining it. “I think it is clear that SGwill refuse to appoint student observers orin any other way to cooperate with the dis¬ciplines,” he said in his resignation. “Ican only humbly suggest that there is aneed for some men (and I include the Uni¬versity president) to follow my example, toresign.”Michael Barnett, graduate student inphysics, has resigned his post as presidentof student government. The full text of hisstatement of resignation follows.I am resigning as president of studentgovernment (SG), and I am withdrawingfrom the Vietnam moratorium committeeand all other political activities. I reachedthis decision several weeks ago, but felt Ishould fulfill certain commitments first.In this letter I would like to explain theseactions and discuss the current and futuredirections of the moratorium and of studentgovernment.One should not take on the position ofpresident of student government or any po¬sition or responsibility in political organiza¬tions unless he has realistically assessedthe demands of the position and his abilityto integrate them into other aspects of hislife. I made an assessment last spring. Ihave found it was net realistic. Since I am a fourth-year graduate stu¬dent in physics, I should be spending mostof my time in research. During the initialmonths in SG, political activities took, 20 to30 percent of my time. During the last fewweeks, it has risen to 95 percent. I hadhoped to do both the research and the polit¬ical activities. I found I would have tochoose one or the other.Those who know me well, know that thischoice is one which for me requires littledeliberation.In both physics and politics, one can iden¬tify two approaches based on very differentmotivations. In politics the distinctionseems clearer. There are those who protestthe policies of those in power. And thereare those who seek power to create policy.In any conceivable world there will be pol¬icies that are wrong, so the need for protestwill always exist. Those seeking power in¬clude those who think current policies arewrong and want to change them, but it iscrucial to recognize that their actions arenot ac tions of protest (although it is possi¬ble tli at the actions of their supportersare).By taking on the title of president, onechanges the way students, faculty, and ad¬ministrators react to his statements and ac¬tions. Obviously there were many things Iwanted to do that I couldn’t. But there werethings I could do that few without the titleand position of president could. There area number of different types of examples,but one such example is the influence I hadon the direction the moratorium took. Thatinfluence simply was not based primarilyon the force of the ideas I presented, but onthe position I held.I had strong ideas about the direction thesecond moratorium should take. If thoseideas had prevailed, the moratorium wouldhave been significantly less successful.That in itself is not necessarily bad. But itmeans I could have forced a direction thatwas not the one desired by moratorium sup¬porters. And I might have had my way if it hadn’t been for some very vocal and per¬sistent protest which finally woke me upand changed my mind. But there I was, thesubject of correct protest, not the protestor.It was a sobering experience. The fact thatthe incident occurred out of public sight isonly more disturbing. The position of SGpresident is not very important, but the na¬ture of power relations is the same on asmall scale as it is elsewhere.Leadership or Manipulation?It is essential for the president to exertsome leadership or nothing may be accom¬plished, but the difference between lead¬ership and manipulation is very narrow. Itis reason for considerable hesitation beforetaking a position whose power comes withthe position.I said that there were also two motiva¬tions in physics (and perhaps others that Iwon’t discuss here). For many there is alove of the beauty, the symmetry, the or¬der, and the essential simplicity of thefoundations of physics. For them researchin physics is in a sense an act of faith and asearch for God. For others there is a re¬spect and security that come with evenmodest success in physics which are inthemselves motivation. The latter is mani¬fested in a number of ways such as by thecreation of a system of tenure at univer¬sities whereby a certain level of “proficien¬cy” in research in the first few years as¬sures the person of his position for the nextforty years despite his later research orteaching abilities.Too many physicists claim that the con¬sideration of the social implications of theirresearch and their knowledge conflicts withthe first motivation. I disagree. I believe itis the second motivation with which it con¬flicts. No one restricts his thought by con¬sideration of social implications, but hemay restrict the application of his thought.A physicist who takes excessive fundswhich otherwise might go to help the pooror who fails to consider the social implica¬ tions of his research while he is pursuing itand publishing the results is exploitive.Most research does not lead to atomicbombs and most research is “relatively’'cheap, but then most bullets which arefired don’t kill people. Nonetheless wewatch over the use of guns carefully (al¬though not carefully enough).TTie exploitiveness and violence of warbeing more visible, anti-war movementsgrow easily. So the Vietnam moratoriumhas grown to huge proportions. Although Ispent a large- amount of time in helping toorganize it, I have never worn a morato¬rium button. It has been a silent protestover the narrowness of concern of the mo¬ratorium. But as a movement which calledfor active concern on the part of manywhose concern previously had been pas¬sive, it was clearly worth the effort.The question now becomes what directionshould it take? How is the momentum to bemaintained and how are the goals to beaccomplished? It is essential to recognizethat the moratorium belongs to the peoplewho support it, not to those who organizedit. Before deciding on new directions, massmeetings should be called for all morato¬rium supporters. That will probably be inearly January since on this campus we willbe on vacation during the December mora¬torium; but students should work in theirhome communities to build the morato¬rium.The moratorium is a personal experienceas well as a group experience. It involvesindividual commitment. But for mostmiddle-class, white students and facultythis commitment is still a small one. Al¬though the moratorium grows by one dayeach month, I think reality requires focus¬ing on a single day each month with theadditional days devoted to smaller activi¬ties: seminars, films, plays, vigils, etc. Afinal comment on the moratorium and thewar: the war was not a mistake; it was aContinued on Page SevenBLACK STUDENTSINTERESTED IN BUSINESSTHE HARVARD UNIVERSITYGRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATIONinvites you to meet with Herbert Wilkins and Lenal Anderson who are second year blackstudents in the MBA Program, to discuss your interests in attending the Harvard BusinessSchool.The MBA Program at Harvard is based on the experience-oriented case method to developthe practical, analytical, and decision-making capacities that are the key to managerialeffectiveness. Requirements for admission to the two-year course leading to a degree ofMaster in Business Administration (MBA) include a college degree in any field ofconcentration. Generous financial aid makes it possible for any student admitted to attendregardless of his financial resources.Mr. Wilkins and Mr. Anderson will be at U of Chicago on November 20 to interview allinterested seniors. Interviews can be arranged by contacting the Placement Office.2/The Chicago Maroon/November 18, 1969 \ ^McLuhan Attacks Technology7 >*'V •*** *.• >•••*■ *'***>-.• . - * ?vJanowitz Urges National Volunteer SystemMorris Janowitz, chairman of the so¬ciology department, testified in Washing¬ton Thursday, urging an ideal system ofvoluntary national service “selecting thetype of service he prefers./”Janowitz spoke before the governmentaloperations subcommittee on draft reformchaired by Sen Edward Kennedy (D-Mass).He proposed a system which would givethe system flexibility over the next decaderegardless of the type of draft reformadapted He noted that “the country is nowmoving towards a national lottery,” and ifthis system is approved, his proposalswould bii able to handle it.Under the voluntary national service sys¬tem, a person could volunteer to serve inthe armed forces or another non-military service such as the Peace Corps or VISTA.Said Janowitz, “I don’t see any problemswith getting people for this system. Nor doI see the armed forces, which I thinkshould be much smaller, becoming over¬balanced with many blacks.” Both of thesehave been common criticisms of the volun¬teer system.Janowitz also favors limitation of defer¬ments, especially student deferments, in theinterest of securing more equality in theservice, which he feels sure would be ac¬complished either with a volunteer serviceor a lottery.He also favors a civilian director of theselective service system, making the localclerk a regular civil service appointee, whoinsures that each registrant is fully in¬ formed of his rights and obligations, andthe moving of the service headquarters tomore central headquarters.One of Janowitz’s key proposals is thetransfer of the selective service systemfrom the format of an independent agencyto an integral part of the labor department.Janowitz feels that this would facilitate theintegration of the recruitment of militarymanpower with other facilities of coun¬seling and employment, training and place¬ment.He feels that many new services could beprovided if the national volunteer serviceprogram is adapted. In addition to thepresent organizations such as the PeaceCorps and VISTA, he envisions new organi¬zations, not necessarily governmental, tofight pollution, for conservation, a healthCrowd Teargassed at Justice BuildingContinued from Page Onelarge numbers of the demonstrators left therally to sightsee in Washington.Around four in the afternoon, members ofthe Revolutionary Youth Movement (RYM)began snake dancing through the crowd,advertising the march on the Departmentof Justice to protest the jailing of BobbySeale in the Chicago Conspiracy trial. TheJustice Department march was sponsoredby RYM and the Youth International Party(Yippies).The Yippies, carrying aloft paper machecaricatures of Judge Julies Hoffman, VicePresident Agnew, and Attorney GeneralMitchell led twenty thousand peace march¬ers away from the rally down ConstitutionAvenue. Right behind the Yippies came themassed Viet Cong flags of RYM.As the Justice department marchersthronged down the street, they chanted“Free Bobby Seale” and “Stop the Trial”.Mobe marshalls stopped many of the two thousand spectators on the sidewalks,warning of violence and declaring that NewMobe was not responsible for the march.The marchers jammed the street in frontof the Justice Department building for sev¬eral blocks. About 50 charged up the stepsand tried to force open the doors. Thenrocks, bottles and red paint were thrown atthe building, breaking some windows. Bothflags in front of the building were hauleddown and one was replaced by a Viet Congflag.Some twenty minutes after the crowd ar¬rived at the building, a bright red cloud ofgas went off in the midst of the crowd. Twomore canisters of the red gas followed, thenpolice began lobbing tear gas at the jam ofdemonstrators, forcing them to scatter.When the gassing momentarily stopped, thecrowd returned, jamming the street for anhour. Policemen were hit by rocks and bot¬tles thrown by the crowd. An undeterminednumber of demonstrators were injuredwhen hit by tear gas canisters. By 5:30 pm, cordons of police had forcedthe crowd onto the mall, gassing the areaaround the National Museum of History.The wind blew most of the gas back at thepolice.Once on the mall, the demonstratorswere in earshot of a rock band which wasstill playing at the rally site. Some 3,000persons, still on the mall after the rally,had built fires for warmth. As the policebegan lobbing gas canisters across Con¬stitution Avenue onto the mall, the flyingcanisters and scattered bonfires made aneerie scene in the dark.Hundreds of police gathered in front ofthe National Museum, then marched downConstitution Avenue, lobbing gas canistersonto the mall the whole time.A spotlight mounted oh a truck pickedout groups of the demonstrators.By 8 pm, only a couple of thousand dem¬onstrators were left on the mall, huddlingaround the fires of burning trash. Mar¬shalls told people around the fires to leavethe mall area, because the police had an¬nounced they would gas and clear the areashortly. corps, and a legal aid corps. He empha¬sized that such a system would be purelyvoluntary, and that there would not be arequirement to join when eighteen, or afterschool, but once could serve wheneverconvenient or desired.Janowitz cited as reasons for his sugges¬tions on draft reform the desire of a major¬ity of Americans for an end to the Vietnamwar, the “unequal impact” of the presentsystem, the bureaucracy which has grownin the system, and the blaming of thearmed forces for the injustices and in¬efficiencies of the selective service system.His proposals were based on the desire tomake the system a “genuine civilian agen¬cy,” a “responsible and legitimate endea¬vor” in the eyes of young people and theflexibility to adapt to the changing require¬ments.The subcommittee is presently consid¬ering President Nixon’s proposal to estab¬lish a national lottery based on birthdaysselected at random. The present draft lawexpires on July 1, 1971. It is rumored thatNixon’s proposals will be adapted to takeeffect early next year and then have exten¬sive review of the draft next year withmore permanent reforms to take effect in1971.Janowitz is the author of The Profes¬sional Soldier and The Role of the Militaryin Underdeveloped Nations. In addition hehas contributed to a book of essays, TheDraft, edited by Sol Tax, professor of an¬thropology.“Electronic technology has bypassed ourschool system. Western man is elec¬tronically ‘stoned’ on TV, rock and speed.Youth and school drop-outs are trying totune in exploring a world they didn’tmake.” Marshall McLuhan delivered thismessage on campus Sunday evening as oneof the participants of a three day confer¬ence on “Reappraisal of the EducationalTechnology Industry” sponsored by the Ur¬ban Research Corporation.The conference brought business andschool executives and officials of the USOffice of Education together with some ofthe most outspoken critics of contemporaryschool policies. Sunday’s speakers includedMarshall McLuhan of the University of To¬ronto; Jonathan Kozol, author of Death atan Early Age; Frances Kappel, PresidentGeneral Learning Corporation; Ralph W.Tyler, President of the National Academyof Education; and Harold Haizlip, Directorof New Lincoln School in New York.“Today a three year old knows more ihanhis grandfather,” McLuhan said, “I thinkthe kids are miles ahead of us. I don’t knowwhat uses we have for the spaces andbricks and mortar we call schools.”“I would be amazed if even one percentof the education of the young occurs in theclassroom,” McLuhan said and that most learning comes from “the tribal encyclo¬pedia” where knowledge occurs all at onceand depends on “patterned recognition”rather than systematized course sequences.Conversation continued in a seminarfashion and ranged from questions “Wheredo we go from here?” to discussion of mar¬keting problems of industries involved ineducational supplies and hardware. HaroldHaizlip noted that in a conference on educa¬tional technology, McLuhan “effectivelydismissed industry, the school classroom,and technological hardware.” Haizlip re¬marked, “I feel the conversation very dis¬turbing because I feel we are not speakingto each other.”Jonathan Kozol described schools asplaces where black and Chicano childrentypically face “hypocrisy, manipulation,thought control and sexual repression.”Educational materials provide teacherswith “manipulative devices” which tell“What the child will think and how to makehim think it.” Kozol stated that “tech¬nology, rather than liberating the child,does the opposite.” Kozol in a summarystatement said that for the poor “the learn¬ing process is a frantic matter of lifestruggle” which we approach with “com¬fortable seminars on misery.”November 18, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3Many then started looking for their busesin the confusion. Some lost their way in thedark and did not find the right bus. Thepeople due to leave Washington Saturdaynight who had not been on the mall earlierdid not even know of the gassing andcould not find them as they returned tothe buses in the Jefferson Memorial area,several blocks from the Mall. Phil LathropMORRIS JANOWITZ:Testifies on draft reformDEMONSTRATORS: The peace march proceeds by the Capitol. Steve Aoki /,Coffin Talks of Trial, Draft During SermonWilliam Sloane Coffin Jr., chaplain ofYale University, delivered an accusation of“violence” at the major institutions of oursociety in a sermon Sunday at RockefellerChapel.Coffin, one of the defendants chargedalong with Dr. Benjamin Spock of con¬spiring to aid draft evaders, reminiscedbriefly of his first visit, when draft cardswere put into the collection baskets. Rev.Coffin recalled returning to Yale and tellingthe President that draft card burning wasno great deal, “They do it as part of the 11o’clock service at Rockefeller Chapel.”Rev. Coffin, who came directly to Chi¬cago from the moratorium march in Wash¬ington, where he marched as an officer ofthe Emergency Committee of Clergy,called for a redefinition of violence andnonviolence by the people of America.“Nonviolence must not only be a refusal todo harm but a refusal to violate the in¬tegrity of another human being.“Put on that basis,” Coffin said, “most ofus come out pretty violent.” Coffin put the blame of much of theworld’s violence on forms of representa¬tion, especially personal repression. He re¬minded the congregation that the mind hasno digestive system. “Everything that goesdown must come up.”Because of repression and a lack of open¬ness and understanding, he pointed out, so¬cial structures could be outwardly orderly,but inwardly violent.Coffin condemned as violent any struc¬ture that restricted human beings to a lessthan human existence. He sited low costhousing projects, built without a sense ofcommunity as a major example.“We need to recognize the essence of vio¬lence is exploitation. Violence in its cru¬dest form is not by blue-collar workers, orno collar workers, but by while collar work¬ers.” Coffin branded the exploiters as or¬derly, efficient and impersonal. “Mostexecutives never see blood unless theirsecretaries have a nosebleed,” he said.Coffin went further in defining the ex¬ ploiters, calling production the destroyer ofman’s environment, the consumer of his re¬ligion and the mangier of his spirit.Coffin said the nonviolent must not onlyhave a compassion for the exploited, but adetermination to help those they had com¬passion for. “Poverty is no longer inevi¬table, so it is intolerable,” he said, citingthe richness of the American economy.“Poverty is no longer a personal tradgedybut a form of public violence.” Coffin said the solution to the problems ofviolence did lie in a course of non-violence,not as a passive state of mind, but a resis¬tive force. “We must be twice as militant,and twice as non-violent, or twice as toughand twice as tender.”He said the chief danger to progress wasto acquiesce to demands when confrontedby the existing power structure. This wasCoffin’s second sermon in the Chapel. Helast spoke there two years ago.Rugby Parties, Gives Up GameFijis Beat Tuft North, 12-6Discipline Hearings Begin This WeekContinued from Page Oneuled to come out this week. Anderson saidthat they would discuss the report if it ap¬peared in time, but he did not know if anyaction would be taken.Anderson stated that “presumably, onewould be inclined to discipline” studentswho did not report to Rosenwald by tomor¬row to make appointments.According to one member of Students fora Democratic Society (SDS), students whohave received summonses have not yet de¬cided what action they will take.Student reaction to the demonstrationand the disciplinary procedures as mea¬sured in Maroon interviews varies.Several students interviewed believe that“the University would have been better offBLOW YOUR BLUESMINDTHE GOOD BROTHERS* * PRESENT * *LUTHERALLISONAND HIS BLUES BANDSUNDAY- NOV. 30— 1969 —STARTING 8:00 PM.NORTH PARK HOTEL1936 NORTH CLARKADVANCE TICKETS $2.00 - AT DOC* $2 JOADVANCE TICKETS AT■MSANITY SOUTH, 51ST AND KARKR if it hadn’t done anything,” ‘ From a purelypragmatic point of view,” said one politicalscience undergraduate, “the University isonly going to hurt itself, and completelypolarize the students.”One student, who did not see any good inthe disciplinary committee, claimed, never¬theless, to understand the rationale behindit. “The University was faced with a situ¬ation where students and faculty werephysically blocked from entering the cafe¬teria, and based on past University policy,they knew that they had to do somethingabout it.” Another student said that “in¬vestigations should be made. If people werereally beating one another up, then maybea mild form of discipline is in order. Butthings should be investigated.” Saturday marked the end of a unde¬feated rugby season. The team, scheduledto play‘Wisconsin, who cancelled, acceptedan invitation to play Palmer College, Dav¬enport, Iowa in a United Airlines promo¬tional match.The Palmer team is composed mainly ofplayers from the British Commonwealthbrought in by rugby scholarships. Theyplay only selected teams from the midwest,traveling from coast to coast to find teamsof sufficient quality.Saturday morning when the team met onthe Midway in the blowing snow in 28 de¬gree weather, they thought better of the af¬fair and according to club president JackCaolo “retired to a warm apartment andpartied the afternoon away.”The rugby team ended the year with a9-0-1 record scoring 171 points to their oppo¬nent’s 23.More than a few teams were surprisedthat University team was able to stay onthe field with them, Caolo said. Before thegame started many at Notre Dame com¬mented that the only question was howmany points the Irish would have time toscore.The spring season will begin in March with a tour to the east. It will probablyinclude a trip to Washington D.C. and theUniversity of Virginia.Somehow they always wait for the nas¬tiest weather to hold championship footballgames. Friday’s college champ game be¬tween Phi Gam and Tufts North was noexception.On that blistery, frigid November after¬noon, the varsity grid men prevailed over apreviously unbeaten and untied Tufts team.12-6. Frozen fingers fumbled touchdownsaway and in one series of six plays the ballchanged hands four times.The Fiji’s scored early in the first halfwith quarterback Mike Koch-Weser, ’70,running around left end for about 7 yardsand the touchdown. The score was set upby a long bomb from Koch-Weser togeophysical sciences grad student TedTerpstra. The second Phi Gam score camein the second half: a pass, Koch-Weser toBill Ellet, ’70. The lone Tufts score cameas the result of an interception. RickSpringwater, a first year defensive half¬back, intercepted a Koch-Wiser pass twoyards deep in his own end zone and ran theball the entire length of the field for theTD.j PIZZAPLATTERj Pizza, Fried Chickenj Italian FoodsI Compare the Price!I11460 E. 53rd 643-2800I WE DELIVERSTUDENTS!STUDENT'S WIVES!If You Have OfficeExperience and NeedTemporary WorkWE NEED YOU!Top pay rates on interesting, localassignments are available. Reg¬ister now with Chicago's prestigetempo-ary office service.FREE GIFTTO FIRST 100 HIREESiSTIVERSLIFESAVERS, INC.1525 E. Hyde Park Blvd.VILLAGE CENTER OFFICE BLDG.10 A.M. to 2 PM., Mon. - Fri.Rom 203 - Phone 955-4505 "I know the way homewith my eyes dosed.”Then you know the way too well.Because driving an old familiar route can make youdrowsy, even if you've had plenty of sleep.If that happens on your way homefor Thanksgiving, pull over, take a breakarid take two NoDoz*. It'll help you drive homewith your eyes open,NoDoz. No car should be without it.(£>1969 Bristol-Myers Co.4/The Chicago Maroon/ftoyevn her 18,.1969 DLAybcr’S all-ni£ht showPERFORMANCE FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOUOWING IASI RIGUIAR FlATURtNov. 14 Not. ISDwHUi'i vMb fvNiw'sOLIVER TWIST LA STRAPANov. 21 Not. 22Bob Dyiov eJBNGm Antonioni'sDON'T LOOK IACK iiairsiNvv.21 Nw. 29TRUFFAUTS 4NRN> FELLINI'SSTOLEN KISSES SPIRITS OF THE DEADDm. 5 Dm. 4IN THE HEAT THE GOOO, THEOF THE NIGHT BAD A THE UGLYDm. 12 Dm. 13Ok* Efitwnd N-*f J|( ufBf jWBfSNANG'EM NIGH HOVE YOUALICE B.T0KLAS| TICKETS $1.50nBLACK COLONY PRESENTSTOBACCOROADDIRECTED By JOHN FORDTHURSDAY, NOV. 20Cobb Hall- $1.00IS Rallies, ProtestsASI at Robie House !»!»>•Sue LothPAHLAVI BUILDING: Members of International Socialists (IS) demonstrated Fri¬day, calling for construction of a day care center on the site. Sixty people participated in a rally Fri¬day in front of Robie House attacking thepolicies of the Adlai StevSnson Institute(ASI) and the proposed Pahlavi study cen¬ter.The rally, sponsored by the InternationalSocialists (IS), a faction of Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS), was called topoint out the alleged imperialistic ten¬dencies of Institute and the anti-thirdworld policies of the Shah of Iran who do¬nated $3 million for the new Pahlavi build¬ing, which is named for the Shah’s family.Chris Hobson, an expelled graduate stu¬dent in political science, spoke at the rallyfrom atop the brick wall surrounding RobieHouse. Richard E. Rubenstein, assistant di¬rector of the Institute, leafletted the crowdinviting them to discuss “what is reallyhappening at Robie House.”Hobson said he would take up the offerand added that he “hoped to get free accessto the ASI books to find out more aboutwhere the financing comes from and whereHyde Park ACLU Will Hold MeetingThe Hyde Park chapter of the ACLU willsponsor a community meeting on “Loveand Order” Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Lu¬theran School of Theology, 1100 E. 55th St.Guest speakers will include Renault Robin¬son, president of the Afro-American Patrol¬man’s League, and Warded Haywood,southside area director of Youth Action.The event marks the beginning of a large-scale effort by the newly formed chapter togenerate community awareness of viola¬tions of civil liberties, especially in HydePark, and to stimulate participation in pro¬grams organized to combat such violationsat the local level.• 'I ' •The idea of a local chapter sprang partlyfrom the fact that there are over 1500ACLU members now living in Hyde Park,more than 'exist in many state-widebranches. But the main incentive was in¬creased recognition of the need to cope withcivil liberties violations outside the lawcourts.“The downtown branch is now so over¬loaded with cases that they can accept onlya small percentage of those they would liketo,” says Phil Hablutzel, local attorney,and Chairman of the Ways and MeansCommittee of the new chapter. “And thecases they do accept issue in long litiga¬tions aimed mainly at changing the laws.The result is unfortunately very little in theSG Needs MoneyFor Stranded 40The local moratorium committee has is¬sued an urgent appeal for funds in the af¬termath of expenses for November morato¬rium activities and an emergency loan in¬curred while trying to help Chicagoansstranded in Washington after this week¬end’s march.Approximately 40 University students didnot board their assigned buses Saturday inWashington. Teargassing at Saturday’sdemonstration in front of the Justice De¬partment resulted in mass confusion; sevenpeople were unable to board the properbuses. Later, buses designated for the tripback to Chicago were used by anothergroup of demonstrators.Michael Fowler, student government(SG) vice-president, contacted SG presi¬dent Mike Barnett from Washington. Bar¬nett succeeded in raising $800 Sunday,which he wired to Washington for food,lodging and transportation back for strand-ed students.Persons wishing to help the moratoriumcommittee can send donations in care ofStudent Government, Ida Noyes Hall. way of immediate relief to communitiesfaced with serious civil liberties problems.”The local chapter intends to fill this gapby stimulating the formation of a strongcommunity pressure group that will nego¬tiate changes and settlements without liti¬gation and, hopefully, prevent violations bymaking its presence felt. Hablutzel ex¬plains, “We need lines of communication,publicity, planned methods of investigatingcases, and investigators who know the areathey are dealing with and the people in¬volved.” A nucleus of about 30 people hasstructured committees around issues ofconcern in Hyde Park, mainly the schoolsand the police.“In particular, we have been confrontedover the summer with the issue of in¬creased police harrassment of individvds,especially young people of high schoolage,” reports Edie Glick, police committeechairman. “These kids have no place oftheir own to congregate and are apparentlynot welcome in many public places, leavingthem only the sidewalks as a meetingplace. We have been periodically informedthroughout the summer of a program of un¬warranted dispersement and arrest towhich they have been regularly subjected.They have often been denied basic rightswhen arrested and occasionally spentnights in jail for no other crime than stand¬ing on a corner. Almost all their cases aredismissed for lack of sufficient charges, yetthese kids continue to undergo repeated ha¬rassment and to have their recordssmeared. What we have done so far, asidefrom structuring a program for observationand recording of such incidents, is to backthefn in organizing their own group, collec¬ting a bail fund, having reliable numbers tocall when arrested, and perhaps even get¬ting legal aid.”The chapter hopes eventually to collectsufficient data and arouse sufficient publicanger to confront the cops directly. Evenone such case of community pressurewould provide a precedent, a lever for ne¬gotiation in other areas where complaintsmight be received. “One of our long-termgoals is community education,” says Lil¬lian Cohen, publicity chairman. “We wantthis to be a service organization for HydePark, not merely a local club for peoplewho belong to ACLU. We must have theinterest and support of the community if weare to represent it, and to achieve this wemust wake people up to the ways in whicheven legal rights, let alone human rights,are violated every day, to what their rightsare, to the kinds of unconstitutional laws,such as the McCarren Act, that now rest onour books allowing people to be victimizedunder a facade of legitimacy. And most ofall we want to educate people to the possi¬bilities of action by community pressure, to the fact that it has worked in the past, andcan work for them. If we begin to succeedin Hyde Park, perhaps we can provide anexample to other communities, even extendour services to include neighboring areassuch as Woodlawn and Kenwood, who needthis kind of protection even more than wedo.” it goes.” Rubenstein said such records areopen to the public.Hobson argued that while it may be truethat some of the studies conducted by fel¬lows of the institute are solely interested inhelping the ‘third world’ countries; theyoften “serve to take the edge off stuff thatactively supports imperialism and the mili¬tary-industrial complex.”Steve Kindred, a member of IS, alsospoke at the rally. He attacked the Vietnamanti-war moratorium’s leadership and plat¬form as not confronting the real issue. “Iwonder,” Kindred said, “if they see anyenemies at all in what they are protesting.To them (the majority of politicians sup¬porting the moratorium), wars like Vietnamare a mistake only in the sense that theywould rather not have the people fightback.”The crowd was asked to nominate andelect three names to attach to effegies pre¬pared for the demonstration. James Vice,assistant dean of students, the Shah of Iran,and the three faculty members of the newdisciplinary committee, were elected bywide margins. University President Ed¬ward Levi received only one or two votesas did Pice-President Agnew.The dummies-shirts, pants and a paperbag head — were then dragged to the Pah¬lavi building site and burned. A sign wasattached to a tree on the land which read“Notice is served: the Pahlavi Palace willnot be built here ... or anywhere.”Following the burning, the crowd quicklydispersed in the 20 degree weather.Women Hearings Begin This WeekPublic hearings in what should be doneabout the situation of women in the aca¬demic community will be held by the com¬mittee on University women this week. Thecommittee, created last May by the Com¬mittee of the Council of the University Sen¬ate, was charged with investigating the sit¬uation and opportunities “presently enjoyedby women in the University community.”A spokesman announced that the com¬mittee was primarily interested in hearingwhat changes should be made in the Uni¬versity to improve the situation of women.Hearings will be held in Ida Noyes libraryWednesday from 2 to 5 pm and Thursdayfrom 1 to 3 p.m. Interested parties shouldcontact the committee’s secretary, Mrs.Bernice Spivek, at Judd room 448, exten¬sion 3861, to arrange for a time to testify.Jo Freeman, graduate student in political science and student co-chairman of a sub¬committee of the committee, said “We al¬ready know a problem exists — we nowwant to hear specific recommendations forchange.” Rosemarie Gillespie, graduatestudent in social science and member of thecommittee, hopes the hearings will reveal“how to eliminate the present inequities be¬tween men and women in the University.”Mrs. Bernice Neugarten, professor of hu¬man development and chairman of thecommittee stated “The committee is nowengaged in relating the various sets of datathat have been gathered over the past sixmonths. It is not yet clear whether or notinequitable treatment of women can be saidto exist on this campus. While formulatingrecommendations regarding other types ofproblems, the committee invites the state¬ments of persons or groups (both femaleand male) who have suggestions to make.”Drop Language RequirementThe division of the physical sciences ofthe University has eliminated all divisionallanguage requirements for advanced de¬gree programs.The decision, following a recommenda¬tion in the spring by a joint student-facultycommittee, leaves the establishment of lan¬guage requirement entirely up to individualdepartments, according to A Adrian Albert,dean of the division and the distinguishedservice professor of mathematics studentsin the division.“Many graduate students have alreadyhad significant language training as under¬graduates,” Albert said. “In addition, theacademic need for language varies greatlywithin disciplines in the division. Impos¬ing the same criteria upon all graduate stu¬dents in all departments has ceased to beacademically sound.”One department, astronomy and as¬trophysics, has completely abolished all re¬quirements for foreign language, effectiveimmediately, following a vote by the de¬partmental faculty.Two departments, chemistry and math¬ematics, have decided to retain completely the language requirements the division hadtraditionally maintained. Thus, every MScandidate in these departments must dem¬onstrate proficiency in one foreign lang¬uage, and every PhD candidate must dem¬onstrate proficiency in two languages.Normal choices to fulfill the requirementare French, German, or Russian. Adminis¬tration of the language requirement inmathematics is still handled by the Univer¬sity’s foreign language testing service us¬ing translation material supplied by the de¬partment.In the Department of geophysical scien¬ces, following a faculty vote, the languagerequirement for the MS degree wasdropped. However, the department didleave with the student’s faculty sponsor theright to require a MS degree candidate todemonstrate proficiency in one modem for¬eign language.In that same department, the PhD re¬quirement may be met by the candidateachieving a “low pass” grade in two lan¬guages or a “high pass” grade plus satis¬factory translation of an assigned paper inanother language. Languages for both al¬ternatives are generally taken from Ger¬man, Russian and French.November 18, ?969/The ’ Chicago Maroon/5FrustrationThe president of student government submitted his resigna*tion yesterday. A student active in University committees and ac¬ademic groups resigned all his official posts some weeks ago.Students everywhere on campus are abandoning politics andactivism of all sorts for studying. What is happening on ourcampus, and, we suspect, on campuses elsewhere? We get theunpleasant feeling that if things continue as they have begun thisyear, we will have the misfortune to witness a repeat of thephenomenon of the universities of the ’50’s: silent, hard-workingstudents, excelling according to prescription, misbehaving onlyenough to be sometimes interesting, not enough to be worrisometo the implacable institutions they inhabit.University administrators will probably laugh at the above.For them, the prevailing movement is still fear of students’ po¬tential for destruction, and over-ready defense of existing stand¬ards. For them, the campus is still volatile, as seen by theirexcessive reaction to the offenses of SDS militant boycotts.But we, as students, and particularly as students who workfor the campus newspaper, see a different side. We see that four¬teen people have received summonses — an action that we regardwith great seriousness, and we would hope would be so regardedby people of all opinions — and very few people seem to care. Thefew letters to the editor we have received are printed in today’sissue.What does it mean, these resignations, these refusals to be¬come involved? The easy answer is to say “apathy,” to blame it onsomeone else and feel self righteous because we work for theMaroon, after all, and so can’t be apathetic ourselves. But “apathy”is not the right answer; it comfortably puts the blame on the peoplewho won’t defend themselves anyway.A student government president doesn’t resign out of apathy.He resigns from a conviction that we think is distressingly preval¬ent among those students who try to do something around thiscampus: the conviction that it can’t be done, or worse, that it’s notworth it.We would be foolish to “demand,” or even to believe, that theUniversity is in the financial position to implement all the projects,even all the worthy ones, that students are interested in. We wouldalso be foolish to believe that power of the University is directedin some anti-student, anti-social conspiracy of malice. We do getthe impression, however, that the people who run this Universityhave not yet really listened to students, really entertained theirrequest for added responsibility in an open spirit. An example ofthis is the refusal by the Council of the University Senate of a re¬quest by student government to have student observers presentat Council meetings, a refusal made without having student govern¬ment present its own case to the Council, and without discussionbetween the Council and student government.The cycle is discouraging. Students are not granted positionsof responsibility, and they become disheartened, bitter and ceaseto seek it. It is entirely tnie that responsibility must be earned, butit is equally true that expectations beget results. We believe thatif this University would encourage greater student responsibility,by treating students with more respect, by assuring them a moreequitable position in the University community, then studentswould respond with greater responsibility. •The appointment of a disciplinary committee at this time,the denial, without consultation, of SG’s request for student ob¬servers at Council meetings, and the resignation of SG’s presidenthave focused this question sharply for us. We are particularlyeager to see the imminent report of the Wegener committee ondiscipline which is to appear soon. We realize that no such reportis more than a recommendation. We hope, however, that it willintroduce a tone of receptivity between student requests and facul¬ty consideration that we feel is needed. Such a new tone wouldnot only re-establish an essential trust between the two groups,which are needlessly and harmfully distrustful of each other, itcould also ultimately only benefit all members of the University. aLETTERS TO THE EDITORS #* * ** * !•>PersuasionYour editorial of November 14 asks, “Areactivities vital to the University disruptedby having two cafeterias closed?” They arenot. Indeed I remember not so many yearsago when “the University” closed them onits own hook; and we survived.Why did you not ask, “Are activities vitalto the University disrupted when a mild-mannered secretary gets kicked in thestomach by a student depriving her of herright to eat in peace in a public place?” Ithappened, and she has black-and-blue spotsto remind her of it. Or don’t you care aboutsuch things? Or do you choose not to be¬lieve they happened?I am sure that if the SDS people and theirfriends had been able to close the two cafe¬terias by persuading enough customers tostay away, nothing would have been saidabout discipline. But there is a differencebetween persuasion and a kick in the stom¬ach, and there is also a difference betweenpersuasion and force in other forms.“Who is breaking the peace now?” Youask. Are you joking? What is peaceful aboutforce?Warner WickProfessor of philosophyWorkers and SDSSeveral people have questions about SDS’demand for free meals for cafeteria work¬ers and the boycott we called of Hutch andthe C-Shop. Why does SDS call this an anti¬racist campaign? How do the workers feelabout the demand and boycott?SDS feels that this demand is primarilyanti-racist. It is therefore important to ex¬plain what we mean by racism and how itis involved in this struggle. We think thatracism has two basic aspects. One is ideolo¬gical and comprises a whole group of atti¬tudes affecting nearly every person in thiscountry; ideas that black (brown) peopleare inferior, or that they are different and don’t really mind low wages, difficult jobs,ghetto housing or poor schools. Most stu¬dents realize that the ideology of racismexist and that it hurts people. SDS feels thisway too, but we also think that this ideolo¬gical underspending is incomplete.We feel that ideas like race hatred do notexist without reason. They did not simplyfall from the sky, nor are they inherent orgenetic. The racist ideas in this culturewere created and perpetuated for a definitematerial reason. — profits. Historically,black people in this country have been su¬per-exploited. First as slaves in the South,later in northern factories. Blacks have al¬ways been worked hard for low pay. Theyalways received the worst jobs and have tbeen the last to be hired and first fired. Allthe while employers have used racist ideasto split workers, to make white and blackworkers fear each other instead of uniting.Bosses have used the idea that blacks weredifferent and used to low wages and badconditions in order to justify those wagesand conditions.University of Chicago cafeteria workersare a good example of this super-ex¬ploitation. Many students in SDS are em¬ployed in cafeterias on campus. We haveseen that fellow workers put in extra hoursto make up for the low pay. We have alsonoticed the role of supervisors, how they dotheir best to squeeze more work out of ev¬eryone, and how they use the threat of fir¬ing to intimidate the workers. We haveseen this at Woodward and B-J where thesupervisors laid off some employees, andthen forced the remaining workers to domore work for the same low pay. Mostworkers get from $2 to $2.30 per hour. Thiswage is hardly enough to support a singleworker, but in most cases both parents areworking, (by necessity) and the childrenare left uncared for.1It is no accident that most food serviceworkers throughout Chicago are black. This.is a result of the general lack of job op- *portunities open to black people in this *Continued on Page NineBULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, November 18MEETING: to plan ongoing anti-war, anti-imperialist ac¬tivities, Reynolds Club South Lounge, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Dr. Susumu Ito, department of anatomy,Harvard Medical School, Anatomy 105, 4:30 pm.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch DbkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editors: Phil Lathrop, Steve AokiFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondeiikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGood sell, Stan Goumas, Susan Left, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, EllenSazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, David Steele,John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Jerry Levy,David Rosenbush, Paul Stelter.Founded 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 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. ILECTURE: "The Music of the Northern Coast of thePersian Gulf," Dr. Homoz Farhat, Center for MiddleEastern Studies and department of Music, BreastedHall, 4:30 pm.ECC SEMINAR: library, the Blue Gargoyle, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: "After Three Wars — Is There a realisticand Acceptable Solution to the Israeli-Arab Conflict,"Sabi Shabtai, the department of political science, Polit¬ical Science Association, Middle East Center StudentAssociation and Youth Committee for Peace and Democracy in the Middle East, Soc. Sci. 122 7 pm.FLICK: "Some Came Running," Doc films, 8 pm.CON FERENCE: "Reappraising Educational Tech¬nology," a review of the progress and problems in thedevelopment of effective teaching machines. Center forContinuing Education, open to the public.Wednesday, November 19LECTURE: "Religious Experience and 'Social Efferves¬cence'," Charles Long, UC divinity school, School Sci¬ence 121, Kent 107, 11:30 am.LECTURE-RECITAL: "Alois Haba and his Micro tonalMusic," George Whitman, violinist and lecturer MorleyCollege, London, Lexington Studio, 1:30 pm.MEETING: Baha'i Fellowship, Ida Noyes East Lounge,3:30 pm.TRYOUTS: University Theatre production of "Don Car¬los," Reynolds Club, 4 pm.MEETING: to discuss the New Party's grass movementwith Verne Culberson, '71, Illinois NP rep., WoodwardCourt, 7 pm.FLICKS: "Flying Leathernecks and "Bigger than Life,"Doc Films, Cobb Hall, 7 pm.LECTURE: "The Excavation of an Excavation," arch¬eology club. Oriental Institute, 8 pm.ORCHESTRA: dress rehearsal, Prokofieff 7 pm, Webern— 8:30 pm, Haydn — 9:15 pm.Thursday, November 20MEETING: pre-Med club, C.F. Kittle, chief of section onthoracic and cardiovascular surgery, will speak, Bnlings, 7 pm.OPEN FORUM: free meals for cafeteria workers, SDS,Reynolds Club South, 1 pm.GREGORIAN CHANT: Allegro Conspirito, 5540 S. Wood-lawn, 7 pm.MEETING: Elizabeth Cam, advisor to the state for theyouth and college division, NAACP, Ida Noyes Han, j7:30 pm.MEETING: Students for Capitalism and Freedom, IdaNoyes, 7:30 pm.MEETING: Ukrainian Club, 5747 S. University, 7:30 pmPOETRY READING: the Blue Gargoyle library, 8 pmLECTURE: "Youth: Problems and Potential for Social ,Change," Michael Harrington, Mandel Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: "Man the Paranoid Primate," AnthonyStorr, psychiatrist and author, the division of theHumanities, Breasted Hall, 8 pm.6/The Chicago Maroon/November 18, 1969, p »»»»»*»>»* Ui< < iiUjt 4 UiiAtt i i Uli i t UtU i4,i\t44'"Barnett Feels He Can Accomplish NothingI Continued from Page Twoj deliberate policy with conscious goals. TheI ends were immoral; the means were im-I moral. As Rev William Sloane Coffin saidI in his sermon Sunday morning: “The es-8 sence of violence is exploitation.”I * *We are this University”The focus of student government hasI been more diverse. Much of the morato-9 rium organization has happened in SG ledI by Mike Fowler and others. MeanwhileI Frank Day has begun the organization ofI the tenant union support project. The power9 of landlords is clearly exploitive. The pres-I ence of large numbers of students and fac-I ulty here allow the landlords to raise rentsI and let building conditions deteriorate. TheI poor in the community are squeezed out.I One must question the University’s “apa-I thy” to these conditions. Doing nothing isI exploitive, and yes, violent. As Rev CoffinI also said, a person who dies due to any of■ the variety of conditions which surroundI poverty is just as dead as someone shotI with a gun. The problem of housing hasI common concerns between students and the8 poor in the community. But do we limit ourattention to areas of common concern? Wedon’t think so, and another committee ledby Rosemarie Gillespie has been in¬vestigating means of helping the people ofWoodlawn in dealing with the problem ofhunger and the need of child-care centers.The discussions are long because many inthe community have learned not to trustthe University.But what do we mean by “the Univer¬sity”? Too many students and faculty meansomeone else when they say “the Univer¬sity.” We are this University. We are re¬sponsible for what it is.Students must begin to take this responsi¬bility or they too are simply exploitive. Stu¬dent government this year has initiated thefirst steps toward increasing responsibility.One of these small steps was its declarationthat the appointment of students to com¬mittees must be made by students. In Mark IsraelMIKE BARNETTResigns as SG Presidentpursuing this end, SG has refused to makerecommendations to committees, but hassimply announced appointments. In anotherarea CORSO led by Connie Maravell is in¬vestigating the creation of a student activi¬ties fee. Too many students have spent toomuch time begging administrators forfunds for activities such as the Festival ofthe Arts. Students should be encouragednot discouraged in the pursuit of their in¬terests.But these small steps really don’t cometo grips with the real problem. The growthof responsibility requires the growth ofpower. After half a year in student govern¬ment dealing with “the University,” I canonly conclude that this University is gov¬erned by the President, the Vice-presidents,and the Committee of the Council, and sec¬ondarily by the Council of the UniversitySenate. This is not to say, of course, thatindividual departments (etc.) don’t havethe power to make decisions which don’t directly affect the rest of the University.For President Levi and others to disclaim“power,” would be equivalent to my dis¬claiming power as SG president which Idiscussed earlier and which is applicablehere. But there is not virtue of complainingof powerlessness and in assigning faultelsewhere.To seek changes in the decision-makingstructure of the University, Larry Lamberthas led SG efforts to determine at whatlevel we were most likely to succeed. SGconcluded that we should indicate our de¬sire to take more responsibility by seekingto have three student observers placed onthe 51-member Council of the UniversitySenate. We petitioned the Council for thisright. But the Council rejected our requestwithout the courage to ask us to explain ourrequest. One Council member even sug¬gested that he was better able to explainstudent positions than students.We cannot continue to tolerate decision¬making in secret, closed meetings. It iswrong in any community. It is an abomina¬tion in an academic community. It can onlylead to a sterile, decaying institution.It is ironic that exploitation ( ... vio¬lence) leads to sterility. But it is sad thatsterility leads to violence. Now pgain weare about to witness a repeat of the dis¬cipline from which this student governmentThe Illinois Constitutional Convention(Con-Con) elections will be held today, No¬vember 18. Polling places will be open 6 amto 6 pm in the Hyde Park, Kenwood andWoodlawn coimmunities.Four candidates are running from this24th state senatorial district. The Indepen¬dents are A1 Raby, political action chair¬man of Operation Breadbasket and a for¬mer University graduate student and MikeShakman, attorney.The Democratic party candidates are was bom. Last year’s discipliners weresmart. They went easy on those who would(unhappily) tolerate illegitimate proce¬dures; they expelled those who would nottolerate them. The SG committee led byDave Bensman which considered means toretract last year’s discipline found that thefrustration of powerlessness crippled them.But now that we are faced again with ille¬gitimate discipline we must resist. Thosewho fail to resist violence, are violent. Ithink it is clear that SG will refuse to ap¬point student observers or in any other wayto cooperate with the discipliners. I hope itwill cooperate with the victims of this ille¬gitimate discipline whether they are rightor wrong, innocent or guilty.But how do we deal with those who refuseto allow students more responsibility in de¬termining the policies of this University? Irecommend to the SG assembly that theyappoint three observers to the Council anddirect them to attend meetings of the Coun¬cil with or without its approval.But we must find ways to open this Uni¬versity, to reverse the growth of sterility.We have tried to shake things up at thebottom, to open it up from the bottom. Thetop needs to be shaken up too. I can onlyhumbly suggest that there is a need forsome men (and I include the UniversityPresident) to follow my example, to resign.Attye Belle McGee, wife of Universitytrustee Frank McGee, and Odas Nicholson.Two of these candidates will be elected togo to Con-Con.Con-Con will convene in December, withtwo delegates from each of Illinois’ 58 sena¬torial districts. They will rewrite the 100year old Illinois constitution.In the Democratic primary last Septem¬ber 23, these four candidates qualified fortoday’s runoff.Con-Con Elections Held Today■V l"2i j't Vjrw it iL»"J*< Vn: \-in! i ru ‘♦fqooq /(ruJri r-f r-sq/THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5 802 ELLIS AVENUE • CHICAGO • ILLINOIS 6063 7TEXTBOOKS • GENERAL BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY • ‘TYPEWRITERS*TAPB RECORDERS • *PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES • ‘GIFTS • ‘At main store only.The University of Chicago Bookstores personnel are making every effort to obtaina sufficient number of copies of all required and recommended texts for everycourse offered during the winter quarter, despite current difficulties.Information forms (Forms #57) requesting information for winter quarter text¬books were delivered to all departments on October 3 along with a memorandumrequesting that the completed forms be returned by October 17. To date, theBookstore has received the necessary textbook information for less than 50% ofthe courses which will be offered during the winter quarter.No textbook department records were lost in the fire, and all books listed onthe forms received are in stock, or have been ordered. As in the past, the date wereceived the information, and the date the books were ordered, will be listed onthe shelf card for each title.The later we receive the required and recommended information, and thereforethe later we place our orders, the greater the chance that we will not be able tosupply the texts to students on the day classes begin. In fact, it is doubtful thatbooks ordered today will arrive before January 5.This is an appeal to all those deciding on titles to be used, and those in positionsto forward that information to the bookstore to do so ;ust as soon as possible.Thank you.Harlan DavidsonGeneral ManagerNovember 18, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7iMriHCheckerTaxiHASIMMEDIATE OPENINGS• EXCELLENT EARNINGS• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS PER WEEK FROM 2to 6 DAYS• DAYS or NIGHTSWoHt doss to homo or schoot-MALE or FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 W WASHINGTON8:00 AM to 4:30 PM: DAILY8:00 AM to 11:00 AM: SAT.CALL 421-1314Protest!-Heritageof the Pilgrims?Snipers hold our police at hay.Sit-ins make authority a farce.Violence shakes cities as the cry‘Protest!” becomes a-shout. Theattitude grows: If you think thelaw is wrong—break it!What’s your stand? Our coun¬try was founded on rebellion—on the right to protest. But canopen defiance be defended? Isthis a “right”. . . or a nationaloutrage?Many dissenters justify theirstands on the issue of personalcreed. “The Vietnam war is immoral!” is their cry. This dualloyalty to state and convictionslias been a dilemma for centuries.But how often are men governedby emotion orhuman opinion —instead of spiritual fucts?What are these facts? Ourbooklet “The Christian and HisCountry” discusses the currentFerment from a Christian pointof view. It offers yardsticks formeasuring unquestioned loyalty—and valid dissent. It remindscitizens in this Thanksgivingseason that to keep our freedoms,our very right to protest—theyMUST act to create laws withinwhich thev can live. Send for it!LUTHERAN LAYMEN S LEAGUE. Dept 372185 Hampton Avenue. St. Louis. Missouri63139Please send —without cost or obligation—a copy of the booklet: THE CHRISTIANAND HIS COUNTRY.NAMEADDRESS _CITYSTATE ZIPWe're the people who broadcastThe Lutheran hour—each SundayMuter publication ot tbc above message made possibleIbrough the fraternal benevolence program otAid Association for Lutherans. Appleton. Wisconsin *»*«■» irm*»nv v • ?*’ tttmi»*ttwt»h»i» wttfmtntt»ttyt?*»MICHAEL HARRINGTONAUTHOR : The OTHER AMERICAThe Accidental CenturyTowards a Democratic LeftColumnist : Chicago Sun TimesChairman : Socialist Party Leaguefor Industrial DemocracyNever : A Candidatefor U.S. CongressMandel Hall 8 P.M. November 20Admission $,1,50* with U. of C. I.D.Sponsored by the YoungPeople's Socialist LeagueTREAT YOUR FAMILY TOTHANKSGIVING DINNER AT(?i%cUA HrfUHvde Park's After tfae theatreRESTAURANT AND LOUNGEPolynesian American dinners and snacksKitchen odrii til 3 A (VI.1612 East 53rd Street^' MU 4-1221THE ALHAMBRABOUTIQUE INTERNATIONAL10% STUDENT DISCOUNT1453 E. HYDE PARKPHONE: 363-9215SAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAV1NGS SAVINGSS<John's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd.Turtlenecks, Boots,& BellsThis Coupon Worth EUROPEIt s the lowest round-trip airfare . . . and it goes right toLuxembourg in the heart ofEurope. Daily departures.No group restrictions. Justspend 22 days or more inEurope and return by May15. Call your travel agentNOW.To ICELANDIC AIRLINES630 Fifth Ave (Rockefeller Center).NY 10020 • PL 7 8585Please send descriptive Folder CN.N.V’if*$10.. • _ Purchase .Limit one per customerExpiration Nov. 28AVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSS C.ty_State .ZipMy Travel Anent is.ICELANDIC airlinisv LurnsjuinSTILLLOWESTAIR FARESTO EUROPEof any scheduled airline.8/The Chicago, Maroon/November 16y ^69, Hold upyour local gasstation.If you’ve got a bit of larceny inyour heart, you’ll love theRenault 10.You see, it gets 35 miles to thegallon.And as far as gas stations areconcerned, that’s highway robbery.So don’t be too harsh when theboys at your local gas station acta little grumpy.In fact, you can soften the blow.Just tell them how little it coststo buy a Renault 10.($1725 poe)Then suggest they get one torthemselves.After all, they might have a bit“BMIB2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th S».363-7644ARHOOLIE LP 2001/2COUNTRY BLUES • CITY BLUESGOSPEL • JAZZ • CAJUN • FOLKA 2 LP Anthology—31 SongsHear: Big Mama Thornton, Lightning Hopkins.Clifton, Chenier, Mance Lipscofhb, BukkaWhite, Fred McDowell, Johnny Young, Big JoeWilliams, Lowell Fulson, Juke Boy Bonner,Jesse Fuller, J. E. Mainer, Nathan Abshire,Oel McCoury, Rev. Overstreet, Kid Thomasand many more.Special: Only $S post paid with a copy ofthis ad or 25C brings you our catalog of over100 blues, Jaw, & Folk LPs, including newreleases by Earl Hooker, John Littlejohn,Sonny Simmons, etc.Or ask at your superior record shops!"Blues LP of the month” (Melody Maker)5 stars ***** <Down Beal)"Arhoolie has offered us a delicious sliceof real American folk music with deservedemphasis on black blues—an excellent col¬lection." (Jazz & Pop)Mooik BOX 9195BERKELEYRECORDS CA 94719119*\ LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONDavid TravisContinued from Page Sixsociety. To a degree, blacks and especiallyblack women are a captive working forcefor these low paying jobs. This allows em¬ployers, including the University to pay lowwages, intimidate workers, and not evenprovide meals for the people who prepareand serve the food. The University clearlytakes advantage of this society’s raciststructure. The fact that the abuses existelsewhere does not excuse the University.This racism must be fought everywhere,but this campus is where we (students whooppose racism) can and should fight it. Thepersonnel director’s leaflet claims thatwages of University of Chicago cafeteriaworkers compare favorably with wagespaid for similar positions in this city. Whatthese wages don’t compare favorably withare the bills for food, clothing, taxes andrent. Bjorling’s mathematical gimmicktries to get students to accept the ex¬ploitation of workers. It assumes we agreethat “unskilled” black women deserve nomore than what the University pays.Proper channelsMany people have asked why the workersdo not use proper channels, in this case theunion. The reason workers don’t use theunion is that its “leaders” do not reflect thewishes of the rank and file. This union situ¬ation is exemplified by the fact that whilethe union leaders dropped the free mealsdemand when bargaining with the adminis¬tration, the majority of the workers supportthe demand. The food service workers havesigned the petition and so have many otherUniversity employees. In several places thecafeteria workers themselves passedaround the petition, and on Thursday theC-Shop workers refused to serve peoplewho vent through the voluntary boycott.It may seen that SDS brings up the issueof racism constantly. This is not becauseSDS likes to talk about it more than any¬thing else, but because this society and thisUniversity are so highly racist. If studentsare tired of hearing about racism, theyshould work to end the system of ex¬ploitation of Black people, and not de¬nounce SDS for talking about what we seeabout us in society, and especially here atthe University.Students for a Democratic SocietyUniversity of ChicagoChase SpeaksI have noticed that there has been an at¬tempt to categorize me and my philosophy.This will be difficult to accomplish, for Iam very much an individual, but I mustnote that certain misconceptions have aris¬en as a result of the aforementionedattempt. Because it would seem that theMaroon would have an innate desire tomaintain objectivity, I want to help yournewspaper correct some errors which ap¬peared in the article entitled “MoratoriumProduces Empty Classes” on page five of the November 14 issue.First, it was stated that I had been in theArmy. I served with the United States AirForce. Second, the quote was of words nev¬er issued from my mouth in such sequentialorder. The quote would cause one to thinkmy Chinese class had been cancelled,which has never occurred, nor have I eversaid so.The portion of the quote, “ ‘and I don’tthink they should be cancelled withoutsome compensation.’ ” has .never been saidby me, and further, it is gross mis¬representation of my stand. As for mystand, although it is true that I disagreewith those who protest the war, I certainlydefend their right to have a view differentfrom mine. What I do think indefensible isthat those, in their zealous desire to utilizetheir freedoms, overlooked mine by forcingan appearance of my tacit approval of themoratorium by cancelling my class. The is¬sue that arises is that of academic free¬dom, and mine was abrogated by the irres¬ponsible actions of the professor of one ofmy core requirement classes, not my Chi¬nese class.Knowing that the Maroon’s desire fortruth should be every bit as fervent asmine, I think this should be printed in order to bring some errant facts back into thefold.Charles V ChaseSCAF and SDSI v1A statement SDS is distributing oncampus implies that Students for Capital¬ism and Freedom (SCAF) is some sort ofNazi goon squad whose principal activity isassaulting SDS pickets. The statement saidthat some who supported SDS “are not yetwilling to fight SCAF” and spoke of “thepeople who attacked us yesterday.”The facts are these: last Wednesdayabout five members of SCAF came to lunchat Hutch. They attempted to enter, andwere forcibly prevented from doing so by agroup of “pickets” who were blocking thedoor. Two SCAF members tried to shovetheir way through the doorway, and werepushed away. One member, who happenedto be carrying a pen and pad of paper, wasassaulted by a few particularly paranoidpickets, and his (racist?) pen was de¬stroyed. Subsequently some of the SCAFmembers involved were able to gain entryto the cafeteria via an unguarded rear ser¬vice entrance. A number of cafeteria work¬ers expressed to us their total lack of sym¬ pathy or approval for the activities of theiralleged “defenders” out front.Thursday, two SCAF members who cameto lunch were spat upon by a picket.The undersigned, who were among theSCAF members involved in the incident,believe that students who support the SDSdemands have every right to boycottHutch, and to try to persuade others bypicketing and leafletting. We do not believethey have the right to prevent those whodisagree with them from eating at Hutch.Leo Alves Joseph A. MorrisChris Barnekof Peter PranisDavid Friedman David SheldonSpencer HarrisDiscipline IssueThe editorial of November 14, whichspoke against disciplinary action in thewake of the ‘militant boycott’ of Universityrefectories, correctly focused on a perhapsunjustified over-reaction to a rather patent¬ly unjustified provocation. As this sort ofdisequilibrium has been evidenced withincreasing frequency in recent socialhistory, it is disappointing that theMaroon could not elevate itself to a moresynthetical stance. Granting, as the edito¬rial seems to have done, that indictable ac¬tions did occur, then a disposition of ‘nodiscipline’ is no more valid on conclusivethan one of ‘discipline.’ Could not the Ma¬roon be sufficiently astute and dis¬passionate to raise objection to a formaldisciplinary proceeding with its grave con¬notations, and yet propose a thoughtful al¬ternative which would fully hold any mis¬creants to account?In particular, the editorial’s penultimateparagraph was only a few notches moreappealing than nihilism. Of course dis¬cipline implies judgement! Discipline alsoimplies a fait accompli; wouldn’t a recom¬mendation that a person “judge himselfdispassionatelly” and “weigh his actions”(out of reason, fear, or whatever — it’s hischoice) in advance of an act, be more rele-want?Your apparent advocacy of exonerationseems to rest partially on degree of of¬fense; the nebulous citation of previouswinkings at offenses hardly contributes tothis spurious argument. Normal adult com-monsense, and indeed your editorial, wouldseem to have fulfilled a grand jury functionand returned an indictment. The questionof degree should only reappear if, and af¬ter, guilt were established — the purposethen being to assign severity of punish-distinct from Discipline).In a world where compromise reigns su¬preme, at least post facto, it would be re¬freshing to find someone willing to call aspade a spade, rather than trying to con¬vince everybody that it’s either a club or adiamond but not wanting to be pressed tosay which.Ronald B MooreGraduate school of business22ND CENTURY PRESENTSNOVEMBER 21 • 8:30 P.M. • AUDITORIUMTXBMTicket Prices: $6.50. $5.50, $4.50, $3.50Special attention given to mail orders at 22nd Century, 70 W.Hubbard, Chicago, Illinois 60610. Enclose a self-addressedstamped envelope.Tickets now available at Ticket Central, Montgomery Wards,Marshall Fields and other Ticketron Outlets.mathSn T0 wcfl for LATEST 22H0 CENTURY concert infor-ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS*620 E. 53rd St. BL-8-2900 WANTKI)CAMPUSREPRESENTATIVES4 dlRLSNEEDED$4 25 7 50 per hourBecome a demonstrator olpersonal and home careproducts. Everyone needs them,why not sell them?Flexible hours to lit aroundyour class schedule. Work inyour own area. All trainingfurnished.H A ST IN (,S A SSOCIA T E S17\ STATE SI .. ( IIK \(,(). It 1 INOISf or interview, call 246 0.124SEND HOME A SUB UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRAEugene Normour, conductorFall ConcertSATURDAY, NOV. 228:30 PM, MANDELHALLADMISSION FREEHAYDNWEBERNPROKOFIEVTHE ISRAEL SHOPIMPORTSfor your gift needs1541 EAST HYDE PARK BLVD.955-0177'Appropriately Unique' CINEMATIC EXPLORATIONSNOT SUGGESTED TOR IMMATURI AUDIENCES16 NEW EXPERIMENTAL FILMSTHURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY FINNEGANAUDITORIUM-LOYOLA UNIV.700 & 9:30 EACH NIGHTNovember It, 1969/Thfe ' Chicago Maroon/9Harrington SpeaksMichale Harrington, author of the OtherAmerica, chairman of the Socialist Party ofthe United States, and chairman of theLeague for Industrial Democracy, willspeak on “Ending the War: Towards aDemocratic Left” Thursday at 8 in MandelHall. Harrington is a critic of the Nixonadministration and the war in Viet Nam.Knights ConquerThe Loop College “A” Team put up astiff fight against the University ChessTeam Friday before succumbing 5 to 0.Chicago players had several lost positionsbut managed to outwit their opponents.Harry Ploss, graduate student in physics;Harold Winston, graduate student in his¬tory; Robert Kirk, 73; Steve Pollack, ’70;and James Strittmatter, graduate studentin physics, all won their games.This victory gives the Maroon Knightssole possession of first place in the ChicagoIntercollegiate Chess League, half a gamepoint ahead of Northwestern and HT.Journalist AssociatesFive journalists have been appointed as¬sociates of the center for policy study of theUniversity of Chicago. The associates pro¬gram is designed to help working journal¬ists broaden their knowledge of urban prob¬lems.Eddie N. Williams, the University’s vice-president for public affairs and director ofthe center, announced the names of the newassociates. They are:• Roger T. Flaherty, urban affairs report¬er for the Lemer newspapers, Chicago • John D. Harlow, news editor of the Asso¬ciated Press bureau in New York City• Ladley K. Pearson, reporter for THENEWARK NEWS, Newark, New Jersey« Whittier Sengstacke, Jr., associate editorof the TRI-STATE DEFENDER, Memphis,Tennessee• Mrs. Betty Washington, feature writerand reporter for the CHICAGO DAILYNEWS, Chicago, IllinoisThey will come to the campus January 5,and remain until June 13 for a 24-week peri¬od of study.The associates will work closely with fac¬ulty members doing research and teachingin the urban field. They will audit coursesdealing with urban problems and attendweekly seminars on urban affairs with spe¬cialists from the faculty and from outsidethe University. They also will work withsuch community action programs as theWoodlawn mental health clinic, the Wood-lawn child health center, the urban educa¬tion project, and the Mandel legal aid clin¬ic. In addition, they will participate inconferences sponsored by the Center forPolicy Study and projects sponsored bythe University’s Cento* for Urban Studies.AppointmentsEight new appointments to the faculty ofthe University of Chicago have been an¬nounced by John T. Wilson, provost of theUniversity.The new staff members will be in thedepartments of physics, geophysical scien¬ces, and mathematics and the Enrico Fer¬mi and James Franc* Institutes. They are:• John P. Schiffer, 39, professor in the de¬partment of physics and in the Enrico Fer¬mi InstituteCORRECTIONTHE BANDERSNATCHDOES HAVEKOSHER PASTRAMI # Cornell Dtorisl *# 1645 E. 55th STREET *CHICAGO, ILL 60615Rhone: FA 4-1651SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewTHE BANDNOVEMBER 21 • 8:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRETHREE BOH HI6HTTURTLESNOVEMBER 22 • 7 00 & 10 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREJAMS JOPLINNOVEMBER 23 • 7:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRECHICAGO (CIA)NOVEMBER 27 • 7 30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREMOODY BLUESNOVEMBER 30 • 7:30 PMAUDITORIUM THEATREBLOOD, SWEAT& TEARSDECEMBER 9 • 8:00 PMAUDITORIUM THEATRE Office space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Orive^Jlcutcr ~~}ir.\t orfioruletlpresentsTHE VISITBizarre Drama by Frederick DuerremattFascinating, Suspenseful Epic of Revenge andGreed Nov. 21,22, 23: Nov. 28, 29, 30: Dec. 5,6, 7 Fri. and Sat., 8:30; Sun, 7:30 p.m.STUDENT DISCOUNT ADMISSION WITH ID$1.25(Regular Admission, $2.00)AT THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport - 643-3099Ticket Prices $6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50Special attention fiven to mail orders at22nd Century, 70 W. Hubbard, ChicafoIllinois 60810. Encleoe a solf-addressedstamped envelope.Tickets now available at Ticket CentralMontgomery Wards, Marshall Fields andother Ticketron Outlets.LISTEN TO WCFl FOR LATEST 22ND CENTURY CONCERT INFORMATION10/The Chicago Maroon / b ovemter 'l8, 1969FUNNY YOURE AML..ONCER MONTH YOU FEEL LIKE AYou’re not as mini as usual? It’s only temporary,you know. A monthly problem. But who cares whenyou have that puffy, bloated, "Oh, I’m so fat feeling”?TRENDAR, that’s who. TRENDAR’LL help keep youslim as you are all month long. Its modern diuretic(water-reducing) action controls temporary pre-men-strual weight gain. (That can be up to 7 pounds!) Starttaking TRENDAR 4 to 7 days before that time. It’ll helpmake you look better and feel better.TRENtm.tTMAKES YOU GLAD YDUhEA GIRL1. • Malcolm H. Macfarlane, 36, professor inthe department of physics and in the En¬rico Fermi Institute• Stuart A. Solin, 27, assistant professor inthe department of physics and in the JamesFranck Institute• Klau W. Schwarz, 31, assistant profes¬sor in the department of physics and in theJames Franck Institute• Ragahvan Narasimhan, 32, professor ofmathematics• Ramesh C. Srivastava, 36, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of geophysical sci¬ences• Thomas J. M. Schopf, 30, assistant pro¬fessor of geophysical sciences• Robert G. Knollenberg, 30, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of geophysical sci¬encesSchiffer and Macfarlane will hold theirnew positions part-time while keeping theirpresent, full-time positions as scientists atArgonne National Laboratory.Solin served as a research physicist,working in laser research and devel¬opment, at Electro mechanical research,Sarasota, Florida, and as a summer re¬search scientist in solid state physics withthe Aerospace Corporation in El Segundo,California.Schwarz received the Harvard ClubScholarship and General Electric, Shell,and Hertz Fellowships while at The Univer¬sity of Chicago. He has been a researchassociate in the James Franck Institutesince 1967.Narasimhan comes to the University ofChicago from his position as a professor ofmathematics at the Universite de Geneve.Narasimhan was a member of the Institutefor Advanced Study in 1966-67 and in theTata Institute of Fundamental Researchfrom 1957 to 1966.Srivastava was a lecturer in physics andthe Agricultural Institute, Allahbad, India,and a research fellow at McGill Universityfrom 1962 to 1964. He worked from 1966 to1967 in the Institute of tropical mete¬orology, Poona, India, before coming to theUniversity of Chicago as research associ¬ate.Schopf currently is an assistant professorin the department of geological sciences atLehigh University, as well as an associateeditor of Biological Abstracts. Knollenberg first came to the University Ias a committee on cooperation fellow in1964 to study cloud physics and has been anassistant professor at the Universities ofWisconsin and New Mexico.Also recently appointed were JosephBrisben as assistant director of public in¬formation and Robert Ward as associateprofessor in the graduate school of educa- ■tion.Brisben will be in charge of copy forpress releases and other publications andthe administration of their reproductionand distribution. Brisben, a college gradu¬ate, has been a staff writer in the officesince 1967.Ward, a graduate of Amherst College,has been appointed effective September 1to the University by Wilson. Ward receivedhis MA and PhD from Harvard.UCTVPresidents, football and law will be dis- ]cussed this week on “Perspectives,” theUniversity television show presented dailyat 6:30 am on WLS-TV Channel 7.Tuesday, Joe McGinniss, journalist andauthor of The Selling of the President 1968;Milton Rosenberg, professor of psychologyand Kenneth Prewitt, associate professor ofpolitical science, will discuss “Public Opin¬ion and Presidential Campaigns.”Wednesday, Walter Haas, chairman ofthe physical education department; PeterLester, professor of government at Colum¬bia College, Chicago; and Bill Frink,sportscaster with WLS-TV will discuss“The Real Monsters of the Midway.”V * * Yf.“The Role of Law Students in Current So¬cial Problems” will be discussed Thursdayby Edmund Kitch, associate professor oflaw; Peter Lauriat, chairman of the Uni¬versity chapter of the law students civilrights research council; and G. Flint Tay¬lor, chairman of the Northwestern Univer¬sity chapter of the law students civil rightsresearch council.UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAEugene Narmour, ConductorFAU CONCERTHAYDN: Symphony No. 82 (L'Ours)WEBERN: Six Pieces, Op 6PROKOFIEV: Suite No. 1, Remeo and JulietSATURDAY, NOV 22 8:30 PM, MANDEL HALLADMISSION FREEAFTER 3 WARSIS THERE A REALISTIC AND ACCEPTABLE SOLUTIONTO THE ARAB-ISRALEI CONFRONTATION?SABI H. SHABTAIDept, of Political ScienceCOME AND HEAR WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE MOSTPROVOCATIVE TALK OF THE YEAR.4-n” 4.■ jlO .. < -.'O' 1 1 t‘i 1 n >. *_Political Science Student Association .,A.,ri.nrn iQMiddle East Center Student Association TU ESD AY, NOVEMBER 1 ®Youth Comm. For PEACE & DEMOCRACY SOC. SCI. 12?in the MIDDLE EAST 'i >i; i- m l f 1 I ( t f , t * ■ 1 » T S *(THE MAROONWORDS? CUT UP AND THROW THEM BACK.SCENES SUPER EVENTConference: WHAT'S HAPPENINGTO THE DRAFT? Nixon's Draft Re¬forms Draft Repeal Movement. AllWelcome. Sat 11/1?: 1-5- RooseveltU , Altgeld Hall (2 fl). Sponsor: AMFriends Service Committee Tel 427-5024. VW '66 Low mileage. Very good con¬dition New Tires 955-6607Lester's Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum. Replete withSex, pretty girls, and Zero Mostel.See! Behold! Deluxe whorehouse,horsesweat love potions, MS Bed¬ford! Set. Nov. 22 at 7:00 and 9:15at Quantrell Auditorium. 2 arm chairs, bureau, round endtable, desk and chair, twin-size mat¬tress, box spring, and bed frame.All items in excellent condition. Call684-2084 after 6 PM ask for Sue. HYDE PARK TOWNHOUSE, DE¬LUXE 3 BDRM 2Vi BATH LargeRms. Yard. Many extras. High 80's.493-9037Richard Lester, Zero Mostel, PhilSilvers, 4C0 Pretty Girls, 183 Funnyjokes A Funny Thing Happened onthe Way to the Forum. This Sat. atCobb Hail, 7 and 9:15. GO CLUB Xerox Copies 9c, 7c, 5c 8, 7c, 5c, 3c$10 runs. 10 percent Discount on9c7c5c rate.SENSITIVITY GROUP (T-GROUP)AT UC: group experience with profgroup leader (NTL 8, Esalentrained.) Group rates. Call Rich(955-4972) or Jim (924-9838). UC Go. Club is alive. First meeting;Ida Noyes Thur Nov 20 at 7:30 PM. MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: 829-0248ROOMMATES WANTEDCafe Mapitom returns Sun. Nov. 237 30-11 34d floor Ida Noyes *1.50Come see internationally acclaimedHabonim Singers and dancers. Fela-tel too. Students for Israel. Fern student to share apt w-2 others$60 a month. 5338 S. Harper Callevengs: 324-9463. STERBO COMPONENTS AT LOW¬EST PRICES AR, KLH, DUAL,GARRARD, DYNA. ALL AT MUSI-CRAFT. CAMPUS REP BOB TA¬BOR 363-4555. PEOPLE FOR SALE4th Fern wanted to share apt. 47 &Dorch own Room. Tel 684-6883. Set of Great Books Exc. Cond. Mustsee to appreciate $275. 955-6389 "May We Do Your Typing?"1104.Poetry readings on Nov. 21p.m. at the Gargoyle. at 6 Fern Student for Apt. 1400 E 57.Own room, $65 mo incs utilts. Avail¬able Jan. 1 493-8845.Don't let the Howdy Doodies of newpolitics get away wit hit — send atelegram from the Maroon Office. Older Grad or Younger Faculty toshare 6-Room Hyde Park Apt; Pri¬vate Bedroom 363-7387.BANDERSNATCH DANCENov. 21 9:00JEFF CARP BAND$1.C0Ida Noyes Hall Own Room in Furn. Apt. 2 Blks.from Campus. 33-mo. 643-8210.Fern Student to share apt. with 2others $60 own room 5338 HarperCall 324-9463.PEOPLE WANTEDThe country is shocked. Nov. 21, IdaNoyes, $1.00 ...Sequester the coun¬try. Practitioners of Witchcraft 8> TheOccult Wanted for Magazine Article.Call 752-4780 SURP.PRE MED CLUB MEETING 7 p.m.Thurs, Nov. 20, Bllgs M137 Prof. C.F. Kittle, M.D., Thoracic & Cardio-v a s c u I a r Surgery. On ArtificialHeart. Wanted: Theater Manager for HydePark Theater. Experience not neces¬sary. Call 726-9293Completely Improvised Shows, Gui-tarsits, Folksingers — Harper The¬ater Coffee House, Fri. and Sat. 9and 11. $1.00 Improv. WorkshopsSat., 2:00. Earn Extra Money for Christmas orSchool Expenses. Contact MichaelLiton 769-1717.Delicious food. Beautiful atmos¬phere. Plus minus 20 per cent. OnTuesday nights. Effendi nine fivefive five one five one. Ukrainians: Interested in a Ukr.Club? Social cultural, etc. Open toall meeting Thur Nov 20, 7:30, 5747S. Univ. Av. OR call B. Oleksluk:PL 2-9718."Faust." Goethe. Marlowe. PeterCook and Dudley Moore. B>ED-DAZZLED is guaranteed to be thefunniest, if not the best, treatmentof a very classic theme.' DOC Films. Part Time Person wanted Approx.10-15 hours week-afternoons $2.25 hr.UC Charter Flight Program X3598,3272.Fight Abortion Law, Court-LegisVolunteers Needed. Also Money Call667-4943 (Day) BU 8-2007 (Eve)Interested in Meeting the PeopleWho Support This University? WhyNot Join the FOTA DevelopmentStaff? Maybe You Will Get Electedto the Orchestra Board. Choice wayto Become a Prominent SocialiteYourself. Call Doug Kissell 324-5617Now. FOTA Needs Several People ToWork on our Fund-Raising Com¬mittee. Meet the High Society ofChicago. In this worthwhile contribu¬tion to FOTA '70. Call Doug Kissell324 5617.FOR SALEBlue Snobs Jeff Carp 8> his band,Ida Noyes Nov. 21, $1.00. KITTENS — LITTER TRAINEDFREE! 978-1243 Lovable Study part¬ners.MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59fth St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free. qORDONSRESTAURANTSUBSCRIBETHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, Illinois 60637Maroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6 YearbookIssue from last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends.NAMEADDRESS ZIP.□ 1 year subscription $8.00□ Yearbook Issue $1.00 LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueCompleteSchoolSuppliesThe Card Nook9:30-6 P.M. 1456 E. 53rdMon.-Sot. 955-2510 SKI VAIL AT XMASFord Fairlane '62 32,000 Miles. Goodcond., power steering, radio, 6 cyl.,$395. Phone DO 58724. >KI CLUB WINTER TRIP — ONFWEEK VAIL, COLORADO BY AIRLeave Dec. 13 —• Return Dec. 20.Reasonable cost! — Marty 324-8930 GRADUATE STUDENTSLOCATING TEACHINGJOBSLOST: 55 American paratroopers.CIRCUMSTANCES: Each onetraded for 12.6 NVA's. Place: Ham¬burger Hill, now abandoned. Surviv¬ing buddies seek explanation of"gallant victory" In their LettersFrom Hamburger Hill ... in thismonth's HARPER'S MAGAZINE,America's First Monthly. On salenow. BE A NADER'S RAIDERTHIS SUMMER, INVESTIGATEFED, STATE OR CITY AGENCIES.ALL DISCIPLINES, PREF GRADS.,APPLICATIONS IN REYNOLDS 203MUST BE COMPLETED BY DEC10 Revolutionary approach. Directoriesof Positions to Candidates, Candi¬dates to schools. Inexpensive Dead¬line Dec. 1, '69. Applications write:Intercept, Box 317, Harvard Sq. P.O.Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138AUTHENTICCHINESE COOKINGWANTED FOTA PEOPLE Taught in a Chinese Home. Tuitionand Materials $35. Begin Jan. 8Limit 7 per class. 324-8070FOTA Needs Several People ToWork on our Fund-Raising Com¬mittee. Meet the High Society ofChicago in this worthwhile contribu¬tion to FOTA '70. DRAFT INFORMATIONKNOW YOUR RIGHTS! Hyde ParkDraft Info Center. Tu, W, Th:7-10 Fr: 2:30-5; 363-1248FOR RENT PERSONALSouth Shore at its best — 3-bed-room, IV2 bath, Gerogian brick. Fullbasement, attached garage, largefenced yard, firelace. 324-1728 eve¬nings. Come to Cafe Mapitom — It'sCUTE.FOR RENT 3 Vi very nice apart¬ment. 5120 S. Harper 955-6607 I Want to Buy or Borrow Data'sTranslations of Mojumdar Call Jonat 324-3060 Evenings.Exceptionally Light, Airy 6 rm apt.Avail Dec. 1 to Faculty, Staff, Grad,students, 3 Bdrms, 2 Baths. $180Lease 288-4004 Will the person who carried mysack of food, books, etc. in the DCMarch while I was holding a UCBanner Please Call FA4-9500, Rm.1908. Leave name 8, number if I'mnot in.ROOMS — Availab'e for WinterQuarter or Immediately Board Con¬tract Included. 5555 S. Woodlawn.PL 2-9704 Send a telegram to the great fanta¬sy factory.Pvt. Room in Bur-Judson Grad atfor Win-Spr Eves. 667-2904. The press is critical . . . Jeff CarpBand, Nov. 21, 9:00, $1:00, IdaNoyes Hall ... impound the press.WRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377).Want to Sublet Your apt over Xmasstarting Dec. 13 Call Sue BU 8-6610Rm 1408 Leave Message. Renowded theologian (and hisdaughter) says: "Come to CafeMopitom."BUSINESS STUDENTSATTENTIONWant to Meet and Discuss YourIdeas with the leading businessmenof Chicago? Fund-raising for FOTAwill give you the opportunity Call324-5617 Now! Some Sound Advice! MUSICRAFTCares Enough to have a CampusRep, Lowest Prices — Free Deliv.on all stereo components. Call BobTabor 363-4555 for price quotes.JEFF CARP straight from a bitwith Fathers and Sons in Ida Noyes,Nov. 21 Blues.LOVE AND ORDER Trip Out on a UC Charter Flight toEurope. From $189. Ext 3598 or 3272.Renault Robinson 8> Wardell Hay¬ward Speak at Nov 20 ACLU meet¬ing 8 PM Lutheran School of Theo¬logy. 1100 E. 55th. Deceit, image-making, publicity —pass judgment with a Maroon tele¬gram.RIDESRIDE OFFERED NYC-LI Sat. Nov.22. Phone 667-7086THANKSGIVING Ride Needed for 2to St. Louis; Share expenses CallEnio 752-2454 PERSONAL: You are cordially in¬vited to celebrate 40th Anniversaryof Great Crash. But economist J.K.Galbraith forsees not party ... onlydisturbing similarities in today'smarket that invite unhappy returnsof the day. RSVP this month's HAR¬PER'S MAGAZINE, America's FirstMonthly. On sale now.How do youfeel about thoseflags on cars? %If it angers you to see the super-patriots andlove-it-or-leave-it guys taking over the Ameri¬can Flag—STRIKE BACK!Display these “peace” and “equalitydecals on car and apartment windows .bumpers, doors, book jackets.EQUALITY DECAL PEACE DECALAPPftOX. * ACTUAL SIZCTHE PEACE FLAG DECAL CO.ROOM 24,3 E. ONTARIO, CHICAGO, ILL.Peace Decals: window styloEquality Decals: window styta bumpar stylobumpsr stylo75* for one decal 50* each additional decal.Add 25* per order for postage and handling.Add sales tax whart applicableTotal amt. enclose J Cash, chock, or monay order,no stampsI name (plea'.*. *>ri it)I| address ,^r~i*y ?ip jRICHARD LISTER SA FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUMNov. 22, CobbHall, 7:0049:15$1.00 ;November !$, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11—MUSICRAFT SPECIALGARRARD AUTOMATIC TURNTABLESAVE $35 onGARRARD 60 MKIIWITH POWERMATIC BASEDUSTCOVERPICKERING V-l 5 CARTRIDGEREG. »94» ONLY $5995This totally reliable machine has earned its merit rating over the years through the enthusiasm ofsatisfied owners and the experienced judgement of independent experts. Now, with many newrefinements, it promises to remain a mainstay of fine music systems in the popular budget range,providing all the features required for quality record reproduction using the most advanced pickups. Itis a sophisticated machine with a low-mass tubular aluminum tonearm, dynamically balanced withadjustable counterweight, to permit very light tracking and tripping.ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR - 363-455548 E. Oak St.-0E 7-4150\1 MiuiOvaftr 2035 W. 95tn St. -779-650012/The Chicago Maroon/November 18, .1969 • % ♦ 9 I - II f | We havenew Headsfor everybody.This year Head hasall new skis for ev¬erybody. And we'vegot all the newHeads. From the hotnew fiberglass rac¬ing skis withJean-ClaudeKilly's nameon them right)down to thenew JR60 forthe kids.SKI RENTALMS,SKI SHOP104 North Marion StreetEU 6-5100 Oak Park, Illinois Revitalization PresentsRick ChapmanJourney Beyond Trips--Inside the American Resolutionin ConsciousnessSocial Science 122 7:30 - 10:00Friday November 21stAttention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.S2S.0001.1. and P.D. $1.000 Madical Payand Uninsured Motornh ProtactionSingle Male i256°°Age 21-23- Per YearMarried Mala $14 0Age 21-25 00Per Year Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY. ITiNSURANCEWITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNTSEND ATELEGRAMAT THE MAROON SAV"! LOVE YOUwith a diamond froiSbllhm^kfINf ifWflfRS 8 59 TEARS119 N. Wabash at WashinftonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZA£1980 x9^Mbs#>:|! eilTABU^JiBM Non-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931