COLUMBIA # SPECTATOR / cxn No. 117 /vol. FOUNDED 1877 NEW YORK, N.Y., THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1968 FIVE CENTS Truman, Platt Testify Twenty Walk Oiit of Meeting Before Cox Committee In Split of Strike Committee J. •••••IMa^a^aMHaMaai Faction Quits Dispute New OverGroup Goals, States It Willin Establish Photo by Richard Howard ADMINISTRATION'S CASE: Associate Dean Alexander B. Platt discusses "neardemonstrations" before the fact-finding commission in McMillan Theatre yester- At his right is Vice President David B. Truman who also testified. By KENNETH BARRY The fact-finding commission investigating the recent upheaval at Columbia heard testimony yesterday from Vice President David B. Truman and Associate Dean for Student Affairs Alexander B. Platt— the first administration spokesmen to appear before the commission. During his hour-long testimony before the panel, Dr. Truman presented a chronology of incidents, which led up to the occupation of five University buildings by student demonstrators. In citing the incidents, many of which involved Students for a Democratic Society, the vice president stated, "It is apparent to us that throughout the academic year, one group of students—the SDS and its allies—was seeking a confrontation with the University administration." The administration, he said, sought to avoid such a confrontation in order not "to compromise our protest" and to avoid precipitating violence between SDS and opposing students. In his chronology, Vice President Truman listed what he characteracterized as "near-demonstra-' tions" inside University buildings instigated by SDS as part of their confrontation tactics. By ROBERT B. STULBERG Both Dr. Truman and DeanPlatt On May 11, New Republic, the testified that the ban on indoor liberal's guide to clear thinking and demonstrations established Sep- reasoned dialogue, carried a story tember 25 by President Grayson which maintained that the recent Kirk was interpreted very liberally upheaval at Columbia was carefully by University administrators in planned in advance by leaders of order to "give students the bene- Students for a Democratic Society. fit of the doubt." Shortly after Large groups of students gaththe New Republic NEWS ered inside Low Library and Dodge article appeared, Hall earlier in the year to protest the Associated ANALYSIS University policy and the presence Press released a of recruiters from the Dow Chemireport revealing cal Company. Dean Platt argued that Mark Rudd, SDS chairman yesterday that because the students drew up a five-part plan in Octodid not chant or bear placards in- ber, outlining a series of tactics, side the buildings, they did not culminating in an April sit-in inviolate President Kirk's ruling. side Low. Library and a general The two administrators admitted student strike. that there has been some confusion So began the Columbia •conin deciding whether a student gathering inside a building could be spiracy theory," which somehow called a demonstration. Referring attempted to explain away the to the February protest by SDS in chaotic events of April 23 as a Dodge Hall, Dean Platt said, "Once carefully-woven radical plot deagain, this is in the gray zone, signed to destroy a prestigious but a little on the darker side." university onMorningside Heights. The theory is an easy one to Earlier, he had described the first demonstration in Low Library as adopt, since it necessarily avoids any careful examination of the being "in the gray area." But it was not until March 27 nature of SDS or of the actual when over one hundred students events surrounding the recent demarched into Low Librarytopre- monstrations at Columbia. (Continued on Pane 3) The article in the New Republic was written by Craig Anderson and Dotson Rader, both Columbia Publication Notice graduate students. Rader was the With this issue, Spectator head 6T Hummitas, a now defunct ceases its regular publication campus organization which spefor the academic year. cialized in controversial and BvMARKS.JAFFB Twenty delegates to the Strike Coordinating Committee staged a walk-out protest at a meeting-last night and announced their intention of forming a new group to be called Students for a Restructured University. At the beginning of last night's meeting, John Thorns, Graduate Faculties, read a statement saying that several members of the committee felt that it was necessary to "refocus their attention from the mechanics of the boycott to the work of reconstructing the University." After reading the statement Thorns made afew informal and humorous remarks. He emphasized that all those connected with the new group still supported the strike. He then lead twenty of the more than sixty Photo by David Finck EXODUS: John Thorns (right) leads members of the Committee out of the room. The split, which had existed within the SCC since its formation twenty delegates oat of yesterday's SCC > form a new organization. after the police raid, came to a head earlier this week, when Mike Wallace, Graduate Faculties, offered several suggestions on the reconstruction of the University. | day. of Columbia. They were met with a counter proposal by Mark Rudd, chairman of SDS, emphasizing an attempt bestructure society before restructuring the University. Rudd maintained that the rebellion in the University was only a small part of a larger societal struggle. Proponents of both proposals met and. decided that instead of opening debate at an SCC meeting, those more interested in restructuring would form a new group. (Continued on Page 5) ExecutiveFacultyCommittee Outlines Plans for Summer The Executive Committee ot the , plementing reform of the UniverFaculty announced yesterday that sity. it will soon form four task forces The Executive Committee will to work this summer on plans for select a director and several a s restructuring the University. sociate directors for the studies, The task forces, which will be which are scheduled to be comcomposed of student and faculty pleted by October 15. staffs as well, as student-faculty The faculty committee outlined consultative panels, will study the in its statement yesterday a three following four areas: the govern- stage process for reform, beginmental system of the University,, ning with studies to be undertaken the policies and experiences of by the task forces. After comcertain other American univer- pletion of the studies, open hearsities, revision of the Columbia ings would be held, and finally a statutes, and mechanism for im- means of 'securing assent* to proposed changes would be implemented. In the College this week a commission was appointed by the Coman Ivy League SchooL* mittee on Instruction to suggest This assertion reflects not only changes in die structure and opa profound misstatement of the erations of the College. facts, but also a clear misunderThe commission, composed of standing of the relationship besix students and six faculty memtween local SDS chapters and the bers, will consider possible national organization. changes and reforms for-the ColAll available evidence indicates lege in much the same manner^ that the 'SDS conference in Maryas the Executive Committee's task land," to which New Republic r e forces consider changes for the fers, never occurred. TheNationUniverRttv. (Continued on Page 2) — (Continued on Page 7) Conspiracy Theory Lacks Validity sometimes sensationalist programs. In the article, Rader and Anderson state that •months before* the April demonstration, "at an SDS conference in Maryland, the decision had been reached to take physical control of a major American University this spring. Columbia was chosen because of its liberal reputation, its situation in New York and the fact that it was Professors Urge De-Escalation By PAUL STARR A small group of eminent Columbia professors, including Vice President David B. Truman, have made public two letters they sent privately to President Johnson in 1966 urging de-escalation of the war in Vietnam and have released a moderate fifty-page anti-war pamphlet which they will soon publish. Their first letter to the President, which was sent in May 1966, asked that he reject intensification of the war and indicate a willingness to negotiate with the Vietcong. President Johnson's seven-page response has not been released, but the faculty group states in the preface to its pamphlet, that the answer 'did not markedly differ from what the President was saying publicly in defense tf his policies." A second, shorter letter was sent to President Johnson in August 1966. It recognized that he had adopted t h e very course of policy whichftheyl&rgued against" and ex presed fear mat 'by so doing you (the President) not only may have risked the morale and self-confidence of the American people but also may have put in jeopardy what we still hope you most desire: an early end to the war in Vietnam." President Johnson didnotresoond. T h e members of the faculty1 group are Daniel Bell, professor *oY sociology; Alexander Dallin, Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Relations; Herbert Deane, professor of government; Wolfgang G. Friedmann, profet'sor of international law; Richard Hofstadter, DeWitt Clinton Professor of American History; William E. Leuchtenberg, professor of history; Robert K. Merton, Giddings Professor of Sociology; Henry L. Roberts, James T. Snotwell Pro- L - _ is one fessor of History; Fritz Stern, Seth Low Professor of History; of the members of the faculty who helped to draft the anti-svar pamphlet. (Continued on Page 4> Page Two COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Conspiracy Theory Lacks Validity THE CAMP OF THE CHILDREN A WRITING PROJECT IS CONDUCTING A SUMMER CAMP IN JULY THE CAMP NEEDS VOLUNTEERS 1) I after one day, turns into a gen- I began as as a a spontaneous, spontaneous , disor«™ (Continued from Page 1) al Student Association, however, eral student strike/ ganized protest, and not as a The proposal, which one AP smooth, devious maneuver. did meet in College Park, Md., toward the end of the summer of reporter suggested may have been Shortly after noon on the first 1967 to discuss various student disclosed by the FBI, seems to day of demonstrations, several issues. No members of Columbia bear little relevance to the r e speakers addressed a crowd of SDS were at the NSA conference. cent demonstrations at Columbia. almost five hundred at the sunRudd stated yesterday that he It appears that no broad SDS dial. (SDS does not have half that scheme was ever adopted as New did in fact draw up the plan toward many active members.) The group Republic contends, but even if the end of October, while he was originally planned to demonstrate the contentions were true, the na- a member of the Steering Cominside Low and then disperse, but ture of SDS would make a suc- mittee of SDS. The proposal events proceeded quite differently. | cessful, nationally-directed con- was never seriously considered When Alexander B. Platt, asspiracy highly improbable. SDS by the Steering Committee and was sociate dean for student affairs, does not have a highly organized never adopted by the organization. informed Rudd that Vice Presicentral administration and most "This wasonlyaworkingpaper," tactical decisions are made at the Rudd stated. He explained that dent Truman would speak with the crowd in McMillin Theater, Rudd local chapter level. a number of SDS officers had considered the offer. He stood on In a story released last week, drawn up position papers, but the sundial to ask for the opinion the Associated Press implied that that his was never accepted. of his audience, but before he such a local plot may have been Even if someone could prove could finish his statement, Tom planned. The AP revealed that that Rudd had planned a Low Rudd drew up a detailed position sit-in for sometime in April, the Hurwitz '69 leapt to the sundial, paper in October, calling for an events of April 23 clearly demon- shouted 'To Low,* and the chaotic April sit-in inside Low, "which strate that the recent rebellion series of events began. Turned back at the security entrance of Low, approximately three hundred of the demonstrators, led py a small band of women, marched to the gym site in Morningside Park. Rudd joined the group almost ten minutes later, desperately trying to regroup his forces. Another group left the campus to join the gym demonstration, but were met by their returning comrades at Morningisde Drive and 116ti< St. The group moved back to the sundial where Rudd proposed alternative plans of action. Suddenly, several SDS members shouted, "Let's go to Hamilton," and the group followed. No one, not even the Associated Press, knows for sure if Mark Rudd had a militant vision when he stood on the sundial on April 23. But even If he had that vision it is clear that without the timely discipline case which built broad student support prior to the demonstration and without the spontaneous chain of events which followed the sundial rally, Rudd's vision could have never been realized. How About You? for more Information Contact: 311 FERRIS BOOTH HALL TEL 280-3603 UMvanitr 4-3720 Beauh 16, 1968 on MIOUUnONAl MAW STTUST C»r. H i l l St. N M T Tarh 37, K.T. UNIVERSITY WATCH I&PAIR Formerly Angel Jewlers Now Open For Business At A New Location 2868 Bway Bet. H I & 112St. 866-4455 \ - .* . . laughing and loving in the new romantic comedy. — COSTARBING A B B E Y BEAU NAN - - . - - . • CARROLL IDG RT LINCOLN*BRIDGES-MARTIN-PETERS-OCONNOR-_ n T ™ ™ **• •• ~ ,UC»B,EDGAR;J:SCHERJCK and JAY WESTON JOSEPH COFf£Y«Us,cQUII\ICY JONES DIRECTOR OF PHI -««»« DANIEL MANN CINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATION THIS WEEK ONLY IN COLOR BESUBETOCATCH SIDNEY THIS SUMMER Dresses $10 & under reg, val. $20 - $45 tremendous selection sizes 3 - 1 5 122 U n i v e r s i t y P l a c e a t 13th S t r e e t 808 2nd Avenue at 43rd St. Phone 475-2358 RETAIL OUTLET OF WHOLESALE OR0. COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR May 16, 1968 Page Three Truman, Platt Testify (Continued bom Pige 1)_ On Tuesday, members of the Cosent a petition.to President Kirk that students violated the ban on' lumbia University Student Council indoor demonstrations, Dean Platt who testified before the commission were highly critical of the said. Anthony G. Amsterdam, profes- administration, charging there is sor of law at the University of a lack of communication between and the administration. Pennsylvania and a member of the. students r ou might just as well stand commission, asked the vicepresi-^ dent if the liberal enforcement' outside his (Dr. Truman's) office of President Kirk's memorandum with a bull-horn and it wouldn't might not "make it incomprehen- do any good," Tomec C. Smith, sible to students." Dr. Trumao president-elect of CISC, stated. Much of trie testimony Monday replied, "I think that is hypothe-. centered around President Kirk's tically clearly possible." delay in releasing the'report of But, he added, referring to the the Advisory Committee on StuSDS members, that there is "no dent Life,-which was not made real lack of clarification" for those public until March. Yesterday students involved. "We don't want Vice President Truman termed the to deny students an opportunity to delay "unfortunate" but stated that express their grievances." Djy the president has been obliged to Truman said. djBvote a major part of his time Audience reaction during the to the $200-million fund drive. testimony ranged from hissing mi Following the CUSC spokesman, laughter to applause. The great- Paul Vilardi '68, bead of the nowest nesponse came when Dr. Tru- defunct Majority Coalition, spoke man, quoting a recent issue of before the committee. He said that the SDS publication "Up Against he could provide the panel with the Wall," read from an open let- documents indicating that the ter sent to President Kirk by Mark events of the last three weeks Rudd '69, chairman of SDS. "There were planned in advance by SDS. is only one thing left to say. It Representatives of the Students may sound nihilistic to you since it is the opening snot in the war of for Columbia University and Students for a Free Campus addresliberation. I'll use the words of sed the panel yesterday morning. Leroi Jones whom I'm sure you Harold F. McGuire, vice chairdon't like a whole lot: 'Up against man of the Trustees, is scheduled •the wall, motherfucker. This is a to appear before the commission. stick up.'" Monday at 10 a.m. to discuss the The vice president's testimony, University's relations with the which at this point drew laughter community and Vice President and applause from the audience, Warren F. Goodell Jr. will testiw a s b r o a d c a s t l i v e o v e r fy on Columbia's research contracts with outside organizations. WKCR-FM. Use your Education the way you want to JOIN SEER THIS SUMMER ORIENTATION MEETING MONDAY, MAY 20 103 Ferris Booth Hall 8:00 o'clock SEER, the Student Educational Exchange Roundtable, gives you the opportunity to discuss exciting literature and meaningful issues with a small group of bright high school students. Two or three hours a week, college participants meet with students from poverty areas and/or their own neighborgoods to share ideas and experiences in a relevant learning program. If the assembly-line and T.V. aren't enoughforyou this summer, come to 103 FBH Monday at 8:00. BEFORE YOU BUY A TICKET TO AN ORDINARY MOVIE, CHECK THE BOX OFFICE AT THE DEMILLE THEATRE. We've been told that students may not have the wherewithal to plunk down the money for tickets to both Part Q] and Part H of WAR AND PEACE at the same time. So, we are making it possible for you to buy single tickets for either part. Just come to the box office at show time and show your I.D. card. This offer is good until June 15 to all performances, seven days a week, matinees and evenings. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS STATE YOUR VIEWS THURSDAY, MAY 16 THE WORLD STUDENT REVOLT Discussion led by: Sadaichtro Okajima Gonzalo Castillo Moderator: BRYAN HEADING WAR*fQf PEACE Schiff Room, Earl Hall, 1 :U0 p.m. Bring your lunch — coffee will be served "A MILESTONE! It had to be made, in just this way on the basis of just this novel, perhaps with just this director—serious, grand, respectful. Countless scenes are worth the price of admission. Everyone with a serious interest in cinema is obliged to go and see it!" Penthouse Restaurant —Renata Adler, New York Times "WORTH TWO TRIPS TO THE MOVIE HOUSE!" ATOP —Time Magazine "FINEST EPIC OF OUR TIME!" BUTLER HALL —Judith Crist, New York Magazine "ITS SPECTACLE SETS NEW STANDARDS OF SIZE. The most extraordinary casting job of all time. The movie should and probably will be seen by anyone who pretends to be educated, mostly with wonder and enjoyment!" ©OOD FOOD • ATTRACTIVELY SfRVfD MODf RATELY PRICED fcUgitific«nt View of N n York City from your T a b l . tnjey our Hoof Gardan and Cocktail Lp>n»a)« WMkdayk: Luncheon 11:30 to 2:30 P.M. (Complete Lunch SI.3S-S2.2S) Dinner 5:30 to 1:30 P.M. —Archer Winsten, New York Post (Kidl C'uurw Dinner S2.S0-S4.7S) Sunday Dinner from 12 tioon to 1:30 P.M. Draft tor • Imported Winw SPECIA?. FOR FacilitiM far Print* Parti** in our tw* Dining >»•— ' ma* tfc* " r W h * « . . " STUDENTS ONLY! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK SINGLE TICKETS 400 Was* 119th Street (88 Morningside Drive) For reservations, phone MO 6-9490 Charge Accounts invited —Christian Science Monitor 'A MASTERPIECE!' 'THE BIGGEST MOVIE PRODUCTION ON EARTH!' —Newsweek NOW AVAILABLE. -PRICE POLICYORCH. & LOGE-$3.75 FRONT BALC. -$3.25 REARBALC. -$2.75 THE A WALTER REAM MATH I 47th St. & 7th A M . CO 5 8430 Performances daily «f 2 »nd S PM. Page Four COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR May 16, 1968 Professors Advocate De-Escalation of War (Continued from Page 1) and Dr. Truman. Professor Roberts has left Columbia since 1966 and did not join in drawing up the pamphlet. The pamphlet, which Professor Stern noted yesterday was meant not "to preach to the converted* but 'to reach uncommitted moderates,* is an exposition of a wide variety of arguments against continued military involvement in Vietnam. The drafting was completed the night of March 31, but the text had to be revised after the President's peace offer that evening. The main purpose of the revised ' pamphlet, according to Professor Stern, is to convince people that a return to the original military policy, even after a breakdown in negotiations, would be a mistake. •We must end the war,* the pamphlet declares near the end. •Failing to achieve this goal promptly, we must, as afirststep, reduce its scope and our involvement in it." The pamphlet details the polij tical and economic cost of the war, j briefly recounts the history of U.S. involvement,and suggests means of arriving at a de facto settlement. Going Home Early? THEN JET THERE ON MOHAWK Special Rates and Reservations PETER RUGG 907 Lnrinpton 666-2428 Call Evening! In case you shave Olds Cutlass S The'S'stanclsfor... Sporty Suave Shapely Sassy Swift Savings Drive a \oungmobile from Oldsmobie aryourneansst Olds dealer. BRITISH STERLING So fine a gift, it's even sold in jewelry stores. After shave from $3.50. Cologne from $5.00. Page Five COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR May 16.,1968 Joint Committee Proposes That Deans Delay Discipline By ARTHUR KOKOT * The Joint Committee on Dis- this week, the committee stated ciplinary Affairs has recom- that i n the event penalties are mended that students who occupied imposed on student before the campus buildings not be disciplined question of criminal charges is by file University while criminal resolved, students may appeal to trespass charges are still pend- the committee 'even if that penalty ing in the couts. is otherwise consistent" with its Professor of Law William K. recommendations. Jones, a member of the committee The earlier statement emphasaid yesterday that the recom- sized that the committee's promendation was made to assure that cedures are designed to guarantee no demonstrator is punished by due process and that it 'will not both the courts and the Univer- uphold judgments imposed by prosity.. cedures that do not meet* Its In a statement released earlier basic standards. Group Splits From Strike Committee (Continued from Page 1) The more moderate delegates to and men act as a pressure group the SCC had acted as a minority to have them implemented. The reconstruction committee faction losing several close votes during the past two weeks, accord- is attempting to gain a broad base ing to one member of the corn- of support. I n addition to the 400 students represented by the said that those forming wenty dissenting members of the the splinter group disagreed with iCC, the new group has already the statements that had come out begun to circulate a petition that of the SCC. He remarked that these ails for the assertion of the sovstatements were a little too dog- reignty of students and their right matic and that this was a time for to participate in the restructuring the 'language of reason and un- of the University-. derstanding.' Earlier mis week, William I n response to the walk-out, Petersen, chairman of the Board HtMM said lagjt^tught that ' r e - of Trustees, responded to a restructuring is purely formal, quest by the SCC that the strikers until the Trustees have acknow- talk directly with the Trustees. ledged the right and power of stu- Mr. Petersen stated that the Trusdents by granting our demands.* s e s were not the proper body He added that the SCC is 'out to for such talks and referred the change the content not just the form students to the administration,. of the University.* The SCC is planning a mass According to Thorns the new rally Friday at 6 p.m. to demongroup will act as a 'clearing strate city-wide support for the house* for student ideas on re- strike. The rally is being costructuring. He explained that the sponsored by the Fifth' Avenue group will try to form a 'composite Parade Committee, the DuBois -view of what the students want,* Club, and other groups. APARTMENTS 113th Street, Rivet side Drive available in June thru next year Furnished, 1 Vi - 3 rooms, $150 up Call MO6-9420 (H you flunk, at least you'll be awoke.) Sure you've used NoDoz to help you stay awake the night before an exam. But have you ever thought of taking NoDoz to make yourself a little sharper during the exam itself? Well, maybe you should. Let's say you're one of those guys who doesn't have to cram like mad the night before. (Even so, you're probably not getting your usual amount of sleep.) And let's say the morning of the big exam, you find yourself heading-for class, kind of drowsy and unwound and wondering if The Great Brain has deserted you in the night. What do you do? You panic, that's what you do. Or, if you happened to read this ad, you walk coolly over to the water cooler and wash down a couple of NoDoz, the Exam Pill. And before long you're feeling more alert and with it again. You see, NoDoz helps bring you up to your usual level of alertness, so you don't just sit there in a fog; it's got what it takes to help restore your perception, your recall, and even your ability to solve problems. In fact, NoDoz contains the strongest stimulant for your mind that you can take without a prescription. Yet it's not habit forming. Okay, but what about the guy who goofs off all term and has to jam everything in the night before. Are we saying NoDoz will keep him. from flaming out? Nope. We're just saying K ^^'^^Tv he'll be alert and awake. As he flunks. "Eradicate" s.d.s. ,Quattrocchi THE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE announces the following schedule for the BOOKSTORE DIVIDEND PLAN 1. TURN I N GREEN CASH REGISTER RECEIPTS April 2 9 - M a y 17 (Final date) from 11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. in the Main Lobby - Journalism Building 2. PICK UP MERCHANDISE DIVIDEND CERTIFICATES May 1 3 - M a y 24 from 11:00 A.M.-5:0OP.M. in the Main Lobby—journalism Building May 27 - December 20 from 9:00 AJW.-5:00 PJH. in the Bookstore Accounting Office May 17 is absolutely the final ifay for I urn ing in cash register receipts A SHIPWRECKED SAILOR FROM LISLE SWAM ASHORE TO A TROPICAL ISLE BUT HE FATHERED HIS WITS AND SALVAGED SOME SCHLITZ SO HE W O N T SEND FOR HELP FOR AWHILE* COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Journalism Building • 2960 Broadway 01967 Jos. ScMn Brswnj Co. Mfcmtet ind other crow. COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Page Six May 16, 1968 Judicial Reforms Outlined byPeterson THE EXILES THE WEST END slum life in Los Angeles of "assimilated" American Indians First Prize Mannheim Film Festival BLUNDER HARBOUR remnants of tribal life on reservations INKO'S BEAUTY SALON Ethnographic Cinema No. 8 501 Schermerhorn Hall 601 WEST 115th STREET off Broadway Telephone: 663-8734 7S^withCUlD Thursday May 16th SPECIAL SHOWINGS AT 4 P.M. & 8 P.M. For Lmlips who cart' Io bv Exciting, Dixlinclire <$• livautifiil By RONA LEVINE In a letter sent yesterday to the Barnard Judicial Council and Undergraduate Association Executive Board, Barnard president Martha Peterson outlined plans for a restructured student-facuity-administration judicial council which would have the power to make binding decisions. Miss Peterson stated in the letter that "faculty members should have aplurality in the membership if penalties of suspension or expulsion are possibilities." A mechanism for appeal of any case should also be available to the student in question, said Miss Peterson. «The appeal body should sustain or reduce punishment or return a case for reconsideration to the Judielal Council." Miss Peterson added that although under the present system the president of Barnard is required to have general charge of student discipline, she is prepared to recommend to the Trustees that the statutes be changed to transfer (Continued on Page 12) ^ADVERTISEMENT) WE SUPPORT THE COLUMBIA STUDENTS undersigned Boston area university teachers We, the support these Columbia student demands: That Columbia University unequivocally scrap its plans for the construction of the new gymnasium, which constitutes an incursion by the university into the recreational area presently enjoyed by the surrounding low income community. That Columbia sever its connections with the Institute for Defense Analysis. Moreover, we deplore the actions of President Kirk in summoning the city police against his own students. The wanton police brutality and the resulting violence were clearly predictable, and are the responsibility of President Kirk and his supporters on the Board of Trustees. At some points the New York City authorities share the responsibility for this brutal behavior on the part of the police. (ADVERTISEMENT) We urge our own universities to give the most careful attention to this issue of university control and government. We can see the Columbia demonstrations as symptomatic of the fact that administrations can lose their moral leadership and the consent of those they govern. At Columbia the outside police and their clubs emphasized the fact that this tragic loss had already occurred. We urge our own universities to: Scrutinize critically their own involvement in secret defense work. Develop means to involve students effectively in a broad range of university decision making. Make themselves responsible toward the communities that surround them. BOSTON FACULTY COMMITTEE FOR SUPPORT OF COLUMBIA STUDENTS P.O. BOX 95, Belmont.Mass. 02178 Asst. Prof. Samuel S. Bowles, Harvard, Economics, Chairman Prof Wayne O'Neil, Education and Linguistics, Harvard, Secretary Additional signers and contributions toward the cost of this ad are welcomed. Institutions are listed for purposes of identification only. HARVARD FACULTY SIGNERS Barton J. Bernstein, Fellow, History Sanuel S. Bowles, Asst. Prof., Economics Courtney B. Cazden, Asst. Prof., Education Harvey G. Cox, Assoc Prof, Church & Society Charles T.W. Curie, Prof, Education Carl Gotsch, Asst Prof, Economics Stehen J. Gould, Asst Prof, Geology Chester W. Hartman, Assoc Prof, City Planning Peter Herman, Teaching Fellow, Hist & lit. John D. Herzog, Instructor, Education Albert 0 . Hirshman, Prof, Economics George Lakoff, Lecturer, linguistics Jobs C. Mellon, Research Associate, Education James P. Moffett, Research Associate, Education Richard E. Mumma. Presbyterian University Pastor Peter F. Neumeyer, Asst Prof, Education Henry F. Olds, Jr., Associate in Education Wayne A. CNeil, Prof, Education & Linguistics Davenport Plumer, Associate in Education Mark S. Ptashne, Junior Fellow, Biochemistry Hilary Putnam, Prof, Philosophy Peter O. Rees, Asst Prof, Education David N. Riggs, Jr., Teaching Fellow, English Sherman Robinson, Teaching Fellow, Economics Robert A. Rosenthal, Dir. Pathways Project Iris Rothman, Teaching Fellow, Social Relations Robert A. Rothstein, Asst Prof, Slavic Jonathan B. Rubinstein, Teaching Fellow, History Blanche L. Serwer, Lecturer, Education Florence C. Shelton, Lecturer, Education Raymond Siever, Prof, Geology Marshall S. Smith, Instructor, Education Karl van Duyn Teeter, Pro/, Linguistics George B. Thomas, Asst Dean, Education Michael V. Miller, Instructor, Humanities Lester Thurow, Asst Prof, Economics Henry A. Millon, Prof, Architecture Michael L. Walzer, Assoc Prof, Government William H. Pinson, Jr., Assoc Prof, Geology Lawrence J. White, Teaching Fellow, Economics David L. Ragozin, Instructor, Mathematics Mathew Winston, Teaching Fellow, Hist. & Lit. • John Robert Ross, Asst Prof, Linguistics John Womack, Jr. Instructor, History David L. Schalk, Asst Prof, History MIT FACULTY SJGNERS Harold Tovish, Research Fellow, Visual Studies Robert Adolph, Asst Prof, Literature John R. Watt, Asst Prof, History Adward Allen, Research Associate, Architecture Richard Wertz, Asst Prof, Humanities Warren Ambrose, Prof, Mathematics BOSTON UNIVERSITY FACULTY SIGNERS Stanford Anderson, Asst Prof, Architecture Donald Arnstine, Assoc Prof, Education Foundations Stephen M. Can, Asst prof, City Planning Diane S. Clemens, Asst Prof, History Keith R. Bentz, Instructor, Classics Charles T. Cole, Lecturer, Literature Warren L. Chernaik, Asst Prof, English Martin Diskin, Asst Prof, Anthropology Robert S. Cohen, Prof, Physics Nancy Z. Dworsky, Instructor, Literature Joseph Gifford, Prof, Theater Arts Matthew Edel, Asst Prof, Humanities Peter M. Guralnick, Instructor, Classics Robert R. Fenichel, Asst Prof, Electrical Engineering Robert L. Hobbs, Assoc Prof, Theater Arts Sidney Goldfarb, Lecturer, Humanities RE. Irving, Asst Prof,, Theater Arts Robert Goodman, Asst Prof, Architecture Theodore Kazanoff, Prof, theater Arts Allen Graubard, Instructor, Humanities Marvin G. Kline, Assoc Prof, Education Leon B. Groisser. Instructor, Architecture Richard Newman, Instructor, Human Relations Albeit R. Gurney, Jr., Assoc Prof, Literature Richard Olmstead, Asst Prof, Education Kenneth Hale, Assoc Prof, Linguistics Freda Rebelsky, Assoc Prof, Psychology Andrew Hawley, Asst Prof, Humanities BJ. Shapiro, Assoc Prof, Education Julien 0 . Hennefeld, Instructor, Mathematics Armand Siegel, Prof, Physics Arthur Kaledin, Asst Prof, History John Stachel, Prof, Physics Louis Kampf, Prof, Humanities Wilma Thompson, Asst Prof, F"ine Arts Jerome Y. Lettvin, Prof, Bio-Electric Engineering David Wheeler, Lecturer, Theater Arts John B. Lewis, Teaching Asst, Mathematics Howard Zinn, ftof, Government S.E. Lurk, Prof, Biology Kevin Lynch, Prof, City Planning John McNees, Instructor, Humanities g. Hubert Matthews, Prof, Modern Languages and Literature. May 16, .1968 Page Seven COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR ExecutiveFacultyCommittee Outlines Plans offor Summer Chemistry, Samuel I. Coleman, (Continued irom Page 1) The ultimate purpose of the Commission, according to an official college statement, is to structure the College so that the faculty will make decisions on matters that concern it, and students will determine policy in areas of student concern. The statement envisions the administration as serving the needs and interests of the faculty and students, as well as maintaining relations with the University as a whole. Included among the faculty members of the commission, which has no chairman, are Ronald Breslow, Samuel Latham Mitchill Professor Undergrad Officer Denies LeClair Case Has Been Concluded Mina Wasserman'69B,president of the Barnard Undergraduate Association, denied yesterday that Barnard President Martha Peterson has decided to expel Linda LeClair '70B. Students reported last week that Miss Peterson had stated that the decision had already been made. At a meeting yesterday with Miss Wasserman, the Barnard president indicated that she has postponed any decision on Miss LeClair's case until the end of the academic year, Miss Wasserman stated. At that time Miss Peterson will consult with the judicial council and the President's Advisory Committee before making a final decision, accordingtoMiss Wasserman. Miss Peterson's actual statement on May 8, Miss Wasserman asserted, was that if she had to made an immediate decision, it would be to expel Miss LeClair. an associate in philosophy; Samuel Devons, professor of physics; Eugene Galanter, professor of psychology; Carl F. Hovde, associate professor of English; and Graham W. Irwin, professor of history. The student members of th commission are Jeffrey Bush, William Carey, Oliver Henry, Gregory Knox, Alan Sparer, and Richard Wetzel. All are juniors. Knox explained yesterday that the commission seeks "to prevent the College.from being destroyed— by the students who can burn it down, the Trustees who can close it down, or the alumni who can bankrupt it.* Discussing the matter at ratification of the commission's recommendations, Knox said that a referendum is planned approximately three weeks after the beginning of the fall semester in September. He stated that students will vote on issues that solely concern them, f acolty on issues that solely concern them, and both groups will vote on matters of joint concern. Professor Galanter stated yesterday that included among the proposals the commission will study are the dropping of the credit system, alteration of the academic calendar, continuance of freshman orientation throughout the first semester, modification rf the grading system, and the redesigning of disciplinary codes and procedures. LAST DAY TO VOTE FOR COLLEGE REPRESENTATIVES TO THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES 9-3, WOLLMAN, FBH "the way up is the way down, the way forward is the way back. You cannot face it steadily, but this thing is sure, That time is no healer" T.S. Eliot "The Dry Salvages" this is from The 1968 Columbian. they say that we are a work of art. could be. we are Columbia CHOKE 0FO0U0R 6-FA8WC BVRSAA TELEPHONE: GRamwcy 7-0729 NOW AVAILABLE IN 206 FBH May 16, 1968 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Page Eight CU in September Since the very beginning of Columbia's now three-week-long convulsions, many members of the University community have been wandering around campus with a panicked look in their eyes» wringing their hands, hoping that all things would soon be back to the way they had been. In the higher reaches of the monarchical cabal that runs. Columbia, this hand-wringing changed to administrative" fist-waving, with results that are all too fresh in our memory It shculd, however, be clear to even the few'remaining royalists among us that the worst thing that could happen to Columbia University now would be for it to return to normal. The people who took the buildings last month unleashed a vortex of energies, demands, dissatisfactions, and proposals for change that had been building quietly for years. It took the extraordinary actions of a few to point up problems which —now that they have been made manifest—many are able to sympathize with and become angry about; problems like the relations of Columbia with Harlem and with the federal government, the shape and division of power here,the nature of the classroom experience. We at Columbia now have an opportunity unprecedented in the history of higher education. We will be able, in the coming months, to jnold the shape of one of the country's greatest universities. Samuel Johnson didn't have such an opportunity when he became Columbia's first president in 1754, for his raw material consisted only of a dozen callow young men and a royal charter. The members of the world's other great universities don't have this opportunity, for truly major changes are rarely initiated in such institutions except in times of crisis. There will be many who will prove timid in the face of such an awesome task. Terrified by the explosion which . made the University malleable and e s - 91st Year of Publication ROBERT FRIEDMAN Editor -in- Chief NICHOLAS G. GARAUFIS Business Manager MANAGING BOARD OREN ROOT JR., Executive Editor ROBERT R. MUELLER, Advertising Manager LAWRENCE D. LEVIN, Comptroller DAVID ROSEN, Features Editoi CHARLES L. SKORO, News Edi.or ANDREW CRANE, Sports Editor JERRY L. AVORN, Supplements Editor # * * DAVID FINCK, Photography Director DORIS JAMI, Production Manager NANCY OSTREICHER, Production Manager STEPHEN BODIAN, Associate for the Supplement Editorial policy is determined by a majority vote of the Editorial Managing Board. The Columbia Daily Spectator, the official newspaper uf the students of Columbia College, is published Monday through Friday, exclusive of vacation and examination periods, by the Spectator Publishing Co., Inc., a nonprofit corporation. tablished a climate for change, they are still disturbed by a smoldering strike. And there are also those who want to mold Columbia while it is still in its most volatile stage. But this too may prove unwise. The restructuring process will have to be 'a long and painstaking one of hammering,kneading^and sculpting. The bulk of the task will be in the hands of the members of the Executive Committee of the Faculty and their task forces. With high confidence in their motives and a cynicism bred by the uniform incapability shown by just about everybody in the past month, we offer the following recommendations: First, those whose honor it is to remake this University must not be cowed by a retura-to-the-womb attitude that implies that the forms and processes that obtained here before the crisis, were, by the fact of their prior existence, necessarily legitimate and worth perpetuating. Every facet of Columbia's structure must be subjected to merciless, aggressive scrutiny. Secondly, these men must have the courage and creativity to be willing to institute the unconventional at Columbia—in educational as well as administrative areas—if the restructuring is to do more than restore a patchedup old machine to serviceability. The lines along which restructure should proceed have been suggested before in these columns. Binding control over all administrative matters— especially policy planning and discipline—must be delegated to the students and faculty who are the body and soul of Columbia. How this delegation will be engineered and how far it will extend are matters which we leave to the ingenuity of the Executive Committee, to the students who will work with them, and also those who will work independently of them. Third, the new College commission appointed by the Committee on Instruction should take a hard look at the nature of the classroom experience at Columbia, with an eye toward radical revision where necessary. Areas such as coeducation, grading, examinations, course requirements, and the advisory system must be considered. Fourth, whatever proposals are finally formulated must be brought before the judgment of the faculties and student bodies of the University. And, despite the delicacy of the task, we strongly urge the Executive Committee not to dally in generating these proposals, for if nothing concrete is produced until 1971, the present impetus and the energy it has produced will be lost. The students and faculty of Columbia must not return to Morningside Heights in September only to find that some undefined work is vaguely in progress toward an as yet undetermined goal to be completed by an unspecified date. It is fitting that our last words in, these columns during this year of turmoil be words of hope. We have faith that those who will Jje working on restructuring this summer will recognize the tremendous chance they have to make Columbia the leading institution of higher learning in America. The chance is granted to very few, and will certainly never be granted to us again. NEW YORK STUDIO SCHOOL of drawing, painting and sculpture An intensely concentrated working environment created by artists and students. Faculty: Mercedes Matter, Dean of Faculty Leland Bell, Cajori, Finkelstein, Geist, Guston, Hare, McNeil, Resnick, Meyer Schapiro, Spaventa, Vicente. Visiting Faculty: Carone, Heliker, Katz, King, Poons, Rosati. Faculty Lecturers: Ashton, Morton Feldman, Leo Steinberg Many colleges give their students studio credits for work done at the Studio School Cata|og on request 8 West 8 Street New York, N.Y. 10011 IGN CAR PARTI AREN'T FOREIGN TO US From mufflers to *id« curtain*...fog Nfhts to trunk rack*...whether y o u ' * replacing a worn part or adding a touch of luxury GL O B E ' S GOT IT. BRING THIS AD FOR SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON PARTS AND SERVICES FOREIGN AUTO PARTS (ONE DAY DELIVERY SERVICE) 117-UNMtlMmBM. (IK. Church Avt.) Q (1 bk kmtol 2 ol RRTrntto) SUMMER JOBS REASONABLE PAY Sage Hill Camp in Jamaica, Vermont provides an experimental program for ghetto teenagers. There are counsellor positions which have yet to be filled. For More Information Contact Cit Council 311FBH, Ext. 3603 DOES YOUR STUDENT DEFERMENT EXPIRE IN THE NEW DRAFT LAW ^contains ISO pp. of Legal Information: -TEXT OF NEW LAW AND NEW S.S.S. REGS -DEFERMENTS AND HOW TO SEEK THEM -ARMY SHYSICAL STANDARDS -SUGGESTIONS for Registrants, parents Send S5., plus 8(* first ctassposUge to: DRAFT MANUAL BOX 673 Berkeley, Ca. 94601 An information*! service by the National Lawyers Guild (nonprofit) May 16.1968 Page Nine COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR '2001: A Space Odyssey* By MICHAEL STERN It's always easy UJ call a movie great—superlatives have a numbing impennanence for critics— but "2001: A Sfeace Odyssey" deserves lasting praise as one of the best movies ever made, with one important qualification. For science-fiction fans, *2001* is both familiar in theme and r e velatory in treatment, an epic of the classic concerns of the early years of quality s-f, expressed in Arthur C.Clarke's (he co-authored the screenplay of "2001" with Stanley Kubrick) "The Other Side of the Sky," Robert Heinlein's "The Green Hills of Earth" or "The Man Who Bought the Moon," and many other wonderful books. For the uninitiated, "A Space Odyssey" can be both confusing' and aimless. The storyline—plot would t e a little too formal—of "2001" is conventional s-f (see Clarke's ancient story, "The Sentinel"): man i s transformed by contact .with extraterrestrials. , Man-monkey, on the verge of becoming man, finds a black singing obelisk in his cave; a few eons later, man discovers another obelisk on the moon. A relay is tripped: homo sapiens has come of age, and still another obelisk (or perhaps the same one) makes the survivor of earth's Jupiter probe the first of a new, other-than-human race. The first half-hour of the film is about the monkey's reaching the threshhold of' humanity by d i s covering how to use bones a s c lubs. As an ape raises his arm to strike a fellow, Kubrick cuts to a shot of a space satellite circling the earth. The gap separating a primate's crushed skull and a rocket to Jupiter is but a flicker of time in the universe: man has defined himIBM Selectric Typing self by technology, and the real quantum jump is the crushed skull, not the rocket. Kubrick's vision of the birth of human consciousness, a raging ape killing another with an implement, is an imposing and authentic one. This prelude is somewhat unrelated to the rest of "2001" except for one thing—the monkeys', discovery of the mysterious slab. Imbedded in the floor of their cave* In a tumultuous and vivid scene, the monkey who discovers how to club touches the obelisk—man reaching for the unknown, for the stars, another classic theme of 2001" and s-f. The visual and kinetic beauty of lie main sequence of "A Space Odyssey" is discursive as well as descriptive. From the quick closeup on a space stewardess' magnetic boots (how you stick to the floor in free-fall) to the graphically-explored complications of up and down and other directions inside spaceships to a mind-boggling portraVal of spatial navigation, Clarke and Kubrick illustrate long years of interpolation and prophecy about space travel. 2001" is truly a depiction of the future as history, concrete and highly stylized feet, as well as a somewhat mysterious and diffuse TAXI DRIVERS WANTED Part time now, full time during vacation and holiday periods. We help you get your Hack license: it's easy, educational and pays well. 508 We* 55th St., N.Y.C. CI6-9424. We take gooo care 01 our girl. Independent-she runs 5 offices Popular-she knows 400 College me Fulfffled-sbe helps people help peopk Rich-she earns an enticing salary term capers - dissertations COULD YOU BE THE NEW O T COUNCIL SECRETARY? JEANETTE GOTTLIEB Call (280) 3603 HEAD FOR THE DMZ V RIVERSIDE PRODUCTIONS Present A CONTINUING POLITICAL CABARET Songs • Poetry - Comedy CONTRIBUTORS ERICBENTLEY INCLUDE ALBERT BERMEL WOLF BIERMANN ARNOLD BLACK JULES FEIFFER RICHARD PEASLEE L.L. CASE JACKGELBER TERRY SOUTHERN JEAN-CLAUDE VAN ITALLIE and many, many others Staged By ISAIAH SHEFFER At FORLiNI'S RESTAURANT Broadway at 111 thSt Tickets and Reservations: RI9-0200 TUES. thru SUN. Evgs. at 9 and 11 p.m. Tickets Sun. thro Thur. SI . 5 0 . . . Fri. and Sat. $2. Food & Drink at Reasonable Prices. No Cover, No Minimum- epic of man's apotheosis. After American exploration teams find the black alien sentinel (which is perhaps sentient itself "as well as a relay) on the moon, and an investigation team is struck down by its siren music, the rest of "2001" takes place on and outside a rocket headed for Jupiter. In 'an intricate and self-contained sub-plot, the crew of the probe battle an errant, humanly-whimsical computer, HAL 9000, or Hal. Again, the mundane facts of interplanetary travel are concretely but unobtrusively portrayed. When Hal begins to malfunction, and murders four out of five crewmen because he is afraid tbey will turn him off, Kubrick weaves another classic strand of science-fiction into "2001": man against machine in a hostile environment. Keir Dullea, who plays the sur- Why The- UNISPHERE® Is The Official Microphone Of The Association On Tour They know their microphone! are their link with their audience. They want you to hear their voices and the lyrics, naturally, without bowling feedback, without annoying close-up breath "pop", without audience sounds. Pretty tough test for a microphone . . . routine for the incomparable Shure Unisphere. Just ask the better groups. (Coim—Bd on Page 12) I Need totelax? want some spare timet Responsible, reliable 21 yr. old girl will take c a n of your kids a few hours a day, now or when school lets out. CaD Bonnie 280-3634, 3635 days. Also do ironing. 5402 WORK FOR MCCARTHY. 19th Congressional District.Ansonia d u b 72nd St. CaO David Oppenheimer of Jeff Brand 877-2074. 5882 Studio 48' by 32', grand piano, Mtch. shower in wooded section. 2U mi. G.W. Bridge. From June-Sept. $140/ mo. 201-567-5210 evenings. 5876 Wanted to Sublet: 3 bdrm. apt. now | to Sept. 1. Call Cephus colect, 203562-5942 Wanted t o Sublet: 2 bdrm., full kltch. apt. Je 1 to Sept. IS. Call Ed collect. J 203-562-5942. 5848 6 rm. apt. to share ($75/mo.) av. June 1st. Can 222-5269 ev. 5846 Summer sublet available Junl-Sept. L 6 rooms, 114th and Riverside. $220. CaU 662-3997. S844 Apt. to sublet for summer. 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath., furn. 1 block form campus. $160 mo. CaU 663-0305. 5843 Sublet July & Aug. 3 rms. furn. $145/ mo. 663-1622. Coupk pref. 5841 .summer sublet, June 1 to Sept. 2Vi rms, recently renovated bid, air-cond, ' TV, new appliances, well furnished. J120.00/mo. W. 106 St. CaU Bond or Luther, 866-5572. 5842 For rent, June 1-Oct. 1. 2*4 rms... furn. W. 113 St. $ 170/mo. 5874 Columbia Vic. Summer Sublet, dean, safe, mod, fully-fumshd. 4 rm, 2 bedroom, $150 month. 866-6104 or 6633064. 5840 Summer Sublet: furnished 2 bedroom apt., mid-June to Sept. 7, East 90s, $195,427-2650. 5873 Lost: Blue fountain pen on South Field, 5/10. Great sentimental value. Cal Mel 666-4163. Reward. 5%72 Wanted-2%-3 rm. furn. apt. for June. Call 865-1275. 5871 1 bdrm. house, Boston suburb, to trade for 1 bdrm. apt., NYC area, for 1 mo. prior t o July 3 1 . Call Ext 2221 or 873-1469. 5870 Ride for 2 by June. MEXICO or SW Share J, drive, AL, 533-8191 5869 Summer Sublet, now to end of Aug. 2 bedrooms, furn. $140. 105th mr. Riverside. 663-4867 5868 IF you're a BEARD or MUSTACHE and shaving soon, can me first at 8658153. (late evngs.) 5839 English student requires lift in car (sharing costs) or fellow hitch hiker to California about July 3. Contact Judith Walker, Westfield College, London NW 3, England. 5838 2.women desire suitable apt. for summer sublet. Contact Linda Wei die r Box 394 Haven Hall, 400 Comstock Ave. Syracuse, N*Y. 13210 5837 Need 1 or 2 male roommates to share spacious, fully furn. 5-rm. apt for summer. Low rent. Vi blk. from campus. Possible option for next year. 6638822, keep trying. 5864 J Classified The White Citroen station wagon is for sale. We see leaving for Europe. Call 666-3680. 5886 Sum. Sub. 5 furn. rms. 111th Betw. BNvay * Riv. 24 far. Drman. JuneSept. MO 6-5868. 5862 More jun in Europe. Think how having a car can help hour vacation. Call EUROPE BY CAR; 666-2318,or visit Student Agency office, 617 W 115 St. 5812 GREAT APARTMENT. Want half? Tot summer? next year? 3H, kttch, living room, 2 bedrooms, cheap! Peter 222-6124 5880 Summer part-time job on CU campus. Easy with few hours, salaried. Must be reliable. Marc 866-4831. 5849 Sublet summer(&ybr beyond) IK rms. furn. 24 hr. doorman. 112th * Riverside. $120/mo. ( g i e bid). Call after 10 PM 864-1334 5884. Summer sublet: 7 rms. ¥t block Col. 180/mo. Autil, 663-4561. 5885, Sublet:Jun-Aug. 101st. near RSD. 2<A air-cond. $135.866-7806. 5836 Summer Sublet: 6/1-9/30, HOfBway 5 rooms, 2 baths, utilities, maid service, furnished, $325/mo. 866-3356 5866 Sublet JunelO-AugSl. 3 bdrms, kitch, bath. J200/mo. 515 W. 11 lth. Call 662-7568,9-12 pm "~~ 5897 Want to rent TV for Sum. 864-5048. 5896 Sublet IVi large Ught rm. apt. June 23$100 Reward for 3 bedroom apt. w/ August 27. Only $100 incl. utU. 110th living room. Occupy June 10-Call | off RVD, can RI9-7281 eves after 8. Larry or Joe 666-1988 5293 __ 5878 Individuals with photographs of eSummer Sublet: Air-cond., garden apt. vents over the past 2 weeks of crisis Nicely furn. 3 fnu. $200. 6/16-9/1. at Columbia please contact: Gersbon TR 3-6121. 5895 FreidHn: 8 6 6 4 2 8 8 . Neal Hurwitz: WANTED: Apt. with piano for month 865-0206. David Lukaths: 228-3621. of June. Careful of furnishings. Conpi 988.-8368. An pictures taken are tact-John Sidwitz 12933 Euclid Ave., relevant. 5397 Cleveland, Ohio 44112, phone 216Exp.typing. Miss Dee 749-8613 5386 795-8455 5894 Beautiful Martin D-18; one yr. old Summer sublet/fall rental-111 S t . - 3 w/case; $190 or best btd-7992269 bedrooms, front exposure, $200, CaU 10-12 pjn. 5858 662-3422 Ron or Mike. 5401 SUBLET Jury6-Sept6, furn. 2V, rms. Share apt. from June 1. 120 & Amst. sep. bedroom, W 86 St. bet W.E. Ave. $70. 666-7982. 5893 oV Riv. Dr., $150/mo. inc. g&e. CaB Rvrside Dr. 5 Rm. Apt. 24 hr. eleva724-0684 after 9 P-Pl. 5830 tor serv., hi-fi, piano, completely furn. Summer Sublet available June 1 — t o share, or completely sublet for sumAugust 25. $125 p.m. at apt. 6B, 431 mer. 866-0849 after 7 PM wkdays-aB Riverside Drive, corner of 1 IS Street. 'day weekends. Price to be arranged. 5299 5892 Apt. to sublet for summer nr. RiverSublet: June 1-Sept. 1 or 15. 4 large side Church—3V4 furn. rm. suit, for rooms, furn. $180/mo. W. 110 St. couple. 663-2721. 5857 View. CaD Mary 662-0521 or Alice 865-0132. 5890 Prof. & wife seek Man. apt. 6/15 or 9 / 1 / 6 8 - 9 / 1 / 6 9 . 3 or more rms. Pref. Sum. Sub: 1 or 2 girls needed to share furn. No chad/pet. Write EUenburg, furn. W. 72 St. apt. with one other Mt. Hoiyoke College, So. Hodley, girl. June 15-Sept. 15. EN2-180S. 01075 or 413-536-3784 5856 morns. 5891 Large, well furnished 3 bedroom apt. For Sale: Round-Trip charter flight available for summer. Near campus It ticket to LONDON June 14-August 23. cheap. 865-8184 or 864-0304. 5291 $260. CaB UNS-8420. 5889 To Sublet, with option to Iease-2M Citroen-ilH9 en vente 666-3680 5888 rm. apt. S15 W H I , a p t . 2D. $125/ month. 5298 1U-2K room apt. needed for married couple June or Sept. onward. Wanted: d e a n , sunny 2-bedroom apt. near Columbia or downtown. $200 Can Jban-663-3655 6788 max. Can Dick, 522-4174, $40 re-. ward. 5852 Femek Roommate Wanted: to share 2V4 rm. furn. apt. June-A ig. or Sept. j Yr. share S72.50/mo., S I ) W. 110th 864-7971, keep trying ' 5297 Sum. Sub. 3 rm. furn. apt. 419 W. 119th St. 866-2072 S820 GOYA 12-ttrmg, great action. Asking $200. Win bargain. Ed Reisner, 614 Furnald. MO 6-5000. 5815 ORIENTAL FOOD SHOP-Japanese, Chinese, Korean foods & gifts. 124 & Amsterdam Ave. 5831 IBM Typing (Selectric) MO3-933S. 5271 Would you rather walk through Europe or drive? We sell-rent-lease. Eur ope by Car Agency, 617 W. 115 St CaD 666-2318. 5811 PART TIME BOOKKEEPER WANTED GOOD PAY CAU 280-3635 FOR APPOINTMENT . May 16, 1968 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Page Ten Clothing Bedding Books RAVI SHANKAR We would like to thank all who are contributing lost property to the Poor People's Campaign. If, however, you do not wish to make your contribution, retrieve all lost property from HO Earl Hall before 5 p.m. on Friday, May 17th. Sftar Concert with ALLA RAHKA MAY 25, 1968 - 8:30 P.M. WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST PROPERTY Tickets sold at PAPERBACK FORUM Broadway mi 116th Street ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SUNDAY, MAY 19 Concert beM at North Avenue Presbyterian New RotheUe, New York 11 a.m. ' Holy Communion, Book of Common Prayer Sermon by the Reverend Carl N. Edwards, Managing Editor of Soundings a new Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies Music by the Chapel Choir Advance Sales Only 9:30 ajn. Holy Communion, Lutheran 5:00 p j n . Ma«5, Reman Catholic THE PUBLIC IS WELCOME AT ALL SERVICES Over 20 Students Dismantle Sculpture In Anti-Strike Move More than twenty students, mostly fraternity members, Friday night destroyed a large sculp. ture erected by strike supporters and then marched from College Walk to Ferris Booth Hall to confront the Strike Coordinating Committee, which maintains offices in the FBH basement. No one was injured at the midnight demonstration, but the sculpture- built by fifteen students from the School of the Arts—was left in a heap of plaster, chicken wire and wooden planks. The demonstration started at 11:40 p.m. when a group of protesters , calling themselves 'Students fo r the Rectification of Crummy Art," moved to College Walk. Then the students ran across South Field to Ferris Booth Hall, where they presented a member of the Strike Coordinating Committee with two wooden planks from the fallen sculpture. FACULTY IN SUPPORT OF COLUMBIA STUDENTS WHO REFUSE MILITARY SERVICE (ADVERTISEMENT; On March 14, the following statement of support, signed by 239 faculty members, appeared in Spectator. Since then an additional 5 7 members of the teaching staff have signed, bringing the total number of signers to 296. The names of the new signers appear beneath the statement. Some Columbia students have refused to cooperate with Selective Service in order to indicate their opposition to the war in Vietnam. Others, faced with imminent induction, will refuse military service when called. These students face jail sentences of five years. sponse on our part. Few of us can declare opposition to the war in so direct and palpable a way. To accept imprisonment rather than enter military service is an extraordinary act of faith in the future of this country. Such initiatives and decisions have come from the students. Most faculty members would not feel justified in encouraging any student to take these actions. ,Nor would we want to contribute any sense of exhilaration to a decision that might deprive anyone so young of his freedom for five years. But we cannot avoid considering our relationship, as their elders and teachers, to those of our students who make this choice. We cannot let them disappear for five years without any r e - Declaring our support for Columbia students who refuse military service in no way dimishes our concern for those who are fighting in Vietnam. Rather, we wish to support those among our students whose acts in direct opposition to the war involve the risks of moral isolation, obloquy and long-term consequences for their future lives and careers. Our support will be of a continuing nature, taking such forms as financial, legal and person aid. We jointly make the following declaration: We, members of the faculty of Columbia University, will support those Columbia students who decide to refuse cooperation with Selective Service because they consider our war in Vietnam unjust and immoral We take this stand even though the possibility cannot be excluded that our support will be interpreted in ways that subject us to indictment and prosecution. Barbara Friedbbro (Enclish^ Michael T. F. Carpendale (Rehabilitation Medicine. P & S) Carolyn M. Clapp (American Language Program) Arthur W. Collins (Philosophy) Marjorie Dobkin (English, Barnard) Mario G. Salvadori (Civil Engineering & Architecture) Richard L. Faust (American Language Program Francine Stieglitz (American Language Program) Bernard Gersten (School of the Arts) Michael H. Stone (Psychiatry, P & S) Leon H. Goldin (School of the Arts) Mervyn W. Susser (Epidemiology, Public Health) Frederick D. Grab (English) Jtay L. Trautman (library Service) Glenn C. Halverson (French) Ilmar WaWner (Philosophy, Barnard) Robert W. Harming (English) Alex Way man (Middle East Languages & Cultures) William E. Harkins (Slavic Languages) Mary Alice White (Psychology and Education, T.C.) Allen T. Hazen (English) Roger Whitehouse (Architecture) George A. Holoch, Jr. (French) Roland E. Wulbert (Sociology) Clarice J. Kestenbaum (Psychiatry, P & S) George Kittle (American language Program) Preceptors and Assistants Ellis R. Kolchin (Mathematics) Rachel Blau (English) Mortimer Kreuter (Special Education, T.C.) Dan W. Brock (Philosophy) Thomas B. Larson (Government) Carol Duncan (Art History) Cyrus Levinthal (Biological Sciences) Frances Lee Foote (Biological Sciences) JoAnne D. Medalie (Human Development) Faculty members who wish to join their 296 colleagues in signing the above declaration of support may do so by filling out the form below. t William W. Kerrigan (English) Betty Levitov (American Language Program) Deborah Low (American Language Program) Allen S. Morrison (French) Miriam L. Pollack (American Language Program) Anna Raitiere (French) Lillian S. Robinson (English) Sandra J. Schacter (American Language Program) David J. Schiller (English) Eileen P. Simon (American Language Program) Susan Otis Thompson (Library Service) Marie Francoise Vachon (French) Donald Vander Wyde (American Language Program) Roger Wiley (Government) 1 wish to <ign the declaration of support. (Signature) (Department) Return to: FACULTY SUPPORT GROUP I aS2-jKj I (Name) (Columbia Address) c/oDavid Captovitz 502 HaskeU Mill Columbia University Columbia students refusing to cooperate with Selective Service are invited to contact the Faculty Support Group, c/o David Capfovitz, 502 HaskeU Hall, Ext. 4045. We would like to know who you are and the ways in which we can be of most help to vou. NewYoik,N.Y. 10027 immmm NewVo*,N.Y. 10027 • lay 16, ,1^68 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR ^Page Eleven LdmissionsNot Hurt \y Crisis Publicity Publicity resulting from the fE-* t disturbances at Columbia have no noticeable effect on the cisions of entering freshmen i enroll in the College. Approximately 55 per cent of students who were admitted the class of 1972 will regisin the College next fall. This a slight increase over t year's 53 per cent. The College accepted 1,230 of [its 3,820 applicants in April, and received 674 affirmative r e plies. The remainder of the 700ember class will be drawn from 390 applicants on the waiting |list. Last year, nearly one hundmembers of the class were from the waiting list, acIcording to William Oliver, assist|ant to the director of admissions. Mr. Oliver said yesterday that |he has received letters from apdmately six accepted applicants reversing their original deIcisions not to come to Columbia, land an equal number of reversals students who had originally I intended to come. JOURNALISM New York correspondent of London Financial Times needs secretarial and editorial assistant (female). Must be able to sign on for one year minimum. Not a summer job. Economics major, helpful, but not vital. Phone David Palmer 944-5257. SUMMER JOBS • RECEPTIONISTS •TYPISTS •STENOS SECY5 wife JOYCE PERSONNR SIKViCE II WEST 42nd ST. ROOM 70b (OPPOSITE PUBLIC LIBRARY) toby dark talks the language of aovcrasino DubHc relations We are a leading source for executive and creative personnel in the communication industries. Advertising agencies and companies come to us seeking qualified talents from junior to senior executive levels. That's why we can refer you to the most likely company. We know a good beginner when we see one! Start your career in these dynamic fields with the help of our professional personnel guidance and placement service. toby dark a « Two great ways to get around on campus. che mocs Just two of the many styles of handsome Apache Moc casuals with genuine handsewn vamps that you'll find at stores everywhere. PLYMOUTH SHOE COMPANY, MIDDLEBORO, MASS". TOM AUSTIN COMPANY, NYC HAMILTON SHOE SHOP, NYC STAGER SHOE CORP., NYC "WHERE THE JOBS ARE" 18 E. 48 S I , New York City ^^^^^^—^~mm i_ i " ^ — W 3 K 3 a p ^ a ^ a M Does ithurt to chill beer twice? Spot Cash ^Discarded Books FOR (yes, even books discontinued at your college) We pay top prices for books in current demand. Bring them in N O W before time depreciates their value. BARNES & NOBLE, Inc. 105 Fifth Avenue at 18th St., New York 3, N. Y. Not that you'd want to. Somejust because the temperature times it just happens . . . like has its ups and downs. after a picnic, or when you You can understand why bring home a couple of cold when you consider all the extra 6-paks and forget to put 'em trouble and extra expense that in the refrigerator. Does rego into brewing Bud®. For inchilling goof up the taste or stance,. Budweiser is the only flatten the flavor? beer in America that's BeechRelax. You don't have wood Aged. to worry. So... it's absolutely okay A really to chill beer twice. 6 f good beer like * C » • l n«weise Enou h said. (Of Budweiser is just course, we have as good when you chill it a lot more to say twice. We're mighty glad about about Budweiser. But we'll" that. We'd hate to think of all keep it on ice for now.) our effort going down the drain No? Budweiser. KIN6 OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. <NC. • ST. LOUIS . NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON Page Twelve HAT IS OFF TO TRANS EUROP. EXPRESS, THE FIRSJ INTELLECTUAL FILM WHICH IS EROTIC, BEAUTIFUL, S U B T L E R FUNNY ALL ATTHE SAME T I M E ^ T H E STORY ENDS WITH THE LONGEST NUDE SCENE EVER SHOWN ON THE SCREEN. THERE IS NO DOUBT THAT AtAIN R0BBE-6RILLET IS A GREAT MOVIE-MAKER." . __Miche( JEAN-LOUIS TRINTIGNANTtstarofAMman^whmam MARIE-FRANCE PISIER-ALAIN ROBBE-GRILLETin TRANSEUROPEXPRESS Wntter, ("Last Year at Marienbad- )and Directed by Alain Robbe-Griltet Executive Producer Samy Hattoo-Tines by Noetle GiMmof A Como Films Production ^^mmmmam^—mm A Trans American Films Release \ PLAZA \ (ADVERTISEMENT) May 16, 1968 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR A Space Odyssey (Continued from Page 9) vivor, manages to turn off the computer after a series of desperate adventures in the void; as he pulls Hal's memory cores one by one the computer sings, more and more slowly, "Daisy, Daisy," pleading "Please don't, I can feel my mind going." Hal's mind isn't the only one to be blown—Dullea, with the awesome globe of Jupiter before him, encounters the third obelisk as he maneuvers in a lifeboat outside the ship. In one of the most exciting visual sequences in modern cinema, (an elaboration of the light show in the Museum of Modern Art) the obelisk—and the aliens beyond the stars—reorder Dullea'smind, ' ridding him of his corporeal self, leaving only energy. Dullea wakes up in an enigmatic, roccoco Restoration bedroom, where, incredibly aged, he dies, lying in a great white bed in front of the ubiquitous black obelisk. He is then reincarnated, a baby-like humanoid with an oversized skull, floating in a forceglobe overlooking the sleeping: earth. Ape with bone becomes galactic baby, a spectacular vision of human consciousness and destiny. It would be impossible to describe the visual and aural magnificence of "2001." From the credit sequence, with the earth rising over the cragged, gleaming face of the moon and then the sun exploding into brilliance behind thtr earth to Dullea's apotheosis hours later, Kubrick overwhelms the senses. The kid I sat next to bad seen the movie five times ("After a week, I start to miss it," he said); that's not overdoing it. Peterson. Outlines Judicial Reforms (Continued from Page 6) such responsibility to the new judicial council. Miss Peterson's letter came in response to criticism of an alleged decision to expel Linda LeCIair •70B, despite a judicial council decision to limit her punishment for housing rule infractions to banishment from the Barnard Cafeteria. City College of New York Supports (ADVERTISEMENT) Students and Faculty of Columbia University The Ad Hoc Facility Committee at CCNY supports the demands of students and faculty who have implemented the strike at Columbia University. President Kirk asserted that his actions were in defense of all universities in the country, in defense of academic freedom, in defense of the ambience in which learning takes place. His actions in calling on the police to implement his policy, however, is but another step in the erosion of the meaning of university life. The administration of Columbia University has consistently acted unilaterally in its relations with the Harlem community. The President and his administration have encouraged participation by the faculty in war-oriented research. Under these conditions, the shameful events of April 30th became predictable to many familiar with the administration's insensitivity to these strains. To call upon the police to intervene in the university setting, without warning, indicates a complete failure to explore all possible alternatives. We condemn this use of violence. The situation at Columbia University is not unique. All institutions of higher learning are beset and will continue to be beset by similar problems. We call upon the presidents of all urban universities to promote and institute the following changes on their campuses: 1. Police will not be called onto the campus to settle internal disputes; that they not be allowed on campus, except where the immediate health and safety of persons on campus be involved; and that a student-faculty-administration committee be established with authorization to determine when such conditions obtain. 2. A greater number o_f black, poor white, and Puerto Rican students be admitted to the university. 3. Expansion of SEEK program. 4. A greater number of black and Puerto Rican professors be appointed. 5. Participation of community groups in the expansion and growth of the urban campus. 6. Participation in decision-making by students and faculty. ' We, the undersigned, believe that unless we begin to establish herewith the foundations for a community on our campuses, we will live under the threat that force can be used to implement academic policy. It is time that this threat be once and forever removed. Partial listing BIOLOGY Sandra K. Mesur CHEMISTRY M.Greene Thomas Haines Aith Woodward ECONOMICS A.H.Conrad EDUCATION, SCHOOL OF Gladys Makus F. Weber • M.Dotn P.Schwais Theresa Woodruff S.Weinbetg Ruth A. Adams Vivian O.Wmdley Helen H. Davidson — lrvin Singer Herbert Kauffman Wilma Caffentzis William Ringstuelt Henry Miller Fred B.Wright Frederick M. Binder E.D.Meyers Wayne Y. Kahn Ramon Sanchez ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Eugene Shurnick Richard Wiener ENGLISH Leonard Kriegel Leo Hamalton Arthur Zeiger Edward Quinn R. Zimbaido KailMalkoff Barbara Watson Rachel Brownstein Nathan Berall James Greene Frederick Karl Barry Wallenstein Addison Gayle Frederick Goldin HISTORY Walter Strove Martin Waldman Fred Israel Sidney Ditzion Radmila Milentijevic Peter Force Aaron Nolan Silly SoUy Richard Skilnick This advertisement sponsored by: The Ad Hoc Faculty Committee Finley Hall, The City College of the City University of New York Convent Avenue & 138th Street NewYofk.N.Y. 10031 Susan Jams Joel Wiener D.M.Lowe James Watts Bernard Bellush Henry Feingold Joseph Ellis Henry Huttenbach lrvin YeUowitz Howard Bernstein George Schwab Emanuel Chill Lawrence Kapler MATHEMATICS Morton Bard Herbert Nechin Lawrence Plotkin Victor Emouttz Stephen Thayer Larry-Gould Sheldon Waxenberg Rjchard Feldman Brerlda Tepper Doris Howard Harvey Stone Barbara Rice Ronald Taffel Louis Dickstein Jane Tucker JohnLandolf Nicholas-Papouchis Jacob E. Goodman Steve Lerner Bruce Bennett Mona Tenenbaum Sherwood Washbum MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Stuart Baum John Munoz Michael Schoenberg 'Iioyd Cohl PHYSICS Michael Stein Bert Wemsteir; Harvey Barocas Hairy Soodak David Glassman Harry Lustig William King Arthur Bierman Alfred Kornfeld Michael Arons Jill AUen Richard Yanow William Feinstein Claire D. Metz Carole Rothman PaulMilvy PHILOSOPHY Abraham Goldbaum Julius Elias Gerold Touger A. Baley Alfred Herzog SOCIOLOGY Gerald G. Kutscher Sheldon Sellers John Cook Frieda Silvert Henry Weber James Somers Robert Ludwig Arnold Birenbaum Arthur Wieglein Harvey Siegal Philip Zacuto Betty Yorburg Daniel Wishivesky Joan Campbell Stephen M. Goldberg Deborah David Daniel Greeburger Gerald Handel David Sugurman Shelboume Lyman Martin Tiersten Philip Leonhard Aurel Seifert Mariis Krueger Mory Jaffe Gerald Tenney Michael Silverstein POLITICAL SCIENCE Beverly Porter Marshall Berman Edward Sagarin Joyce Galb Bernard Rosenberg Marc Somaroff Charles Winick Benjamin Weissman Badya Varma Marvin Markowitz N.Prasad Allen Baliaid Jonathan Laskowiti PSYCHOLOGY Lawrence Krader I Max Hertzman SPEECH Lisa Goldsmith Martha Weisman * Jo Lang Paul Feinberg iy 16, 1968 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Page Thirteen msssmms Pivotal Year FOR SALE: ROUND-TRIP charter flight ticket to LONDON June 14-August 23. $260. CaUUNS-8420 (Continued from Age 16) | completed one of its finest seasons | by winning first the Ivy League and then the national championship. This achievement was simply a matter of a team living 19 to its Goya 1 2-String preseason billing as the b e s t something the Lion fencers do fairasking $200 Will bargain ly regularly. In addition, there were several EdReisner 614 Furnald MO6-5000 key events as far as the overall picture is concerned: the hiring of a new, young, and seemingly ambitious director of athletics, the revitalization of the Varsity when asked about the psyC Club, and a detailed criticism chology of Ayn Rand, then of Columbia athletics (plus sugsaid gestions for needed improvements) • prudish, compulsive, by a special committee of the perlectionistic, obsessive. Alumni Association. In the currant issue of Indeed, at this point there seems RATIONAL LIVING, to be only one monumental probDr. Albert Ellis lem to which an adequate solution on "Objectivism, is nowhere in sifeht. But then, the New Religion." who ever thought that the new J1.65 Box RLS4S E.6S St., NYC 10021 gymnasium would really get built anyway? . ELLIS SHRUGGED THE COUNSELOR TO JEWISH STUDENTS invites you to attend the SABBATH PROGRAM FRIDAY, MAY 17,1968 7:15 p.m. Kabbalat Shabbat Service (Orthodox)Auditorium, Earl Hal 7:30 p.m. Sabbath Meal - Auditorium, Earl Hall 8:00 p.m. Conservative-Reform Service Dodge Room, Earl Hall graduate to greatness... become "someone special" the new york city nurse! Make the most productive use of your education and your abilities by starting your career as a New York City Nurse. You can select your area » of clinical interest from among 19 general and specialized hospitals, learn new skills and techniques as you prepare for professional advancement, and make an important contribution not only to your particular job but to the entire City of New York. You can be a good nurse anywhere, but you can become a great nurse in New York City. Write today for more information on how to become "Someone Special"... The New York City Nurse. Professional Recruitment Division, Room 608. Dept. C-10 DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALS I S Worth Street, New Y o * . H.T. M l ! Pleue send me your brochure about nursing in New York City. NAME_. ADDRESS. CITY .STATE. SCHOOL. Followed by Oneg Shabbat -ZIP- _GRAD. DATE. An Equal Opportunity Employer SATURDAY, MAY 18,1968 12:30 pjn. - Sabbath Meal OPEN TO ENTIRE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY We have a memory of Columbia.. Enthusiastic, Intelligent people dedicated to personal goals of self improvement of leadership in their individual worlds of meeting the challenge of the Columbia tradition. We have a memory of lab results obtained deep in the bowels of the steam system we called Colombia Engineering .of bull sessions ID dorm, lab, and Lion's Den of boys who became men at Columbia. We are concerned . about Columbia on trial about boy« who possibly may become men without appreciation of this great Columbia tradition without :i.- feeling th*t Columbia was, is and will continue to be a great moulder cf men. • Therefore, we •ffirm our support of the Trustees and the Administration in their efforts to resolve the present problem. - This space was p**d for by the CUft of 1945 Engineering t Page Fourteen (ADVERTISEMENT) May 16, 1968 . COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Over 1,000 Support No-Amnesty Stand of the Committee for Defense of Property Rights During the current violent disruption of Columbia, ours has been the only group to draw major support for uncompromising punishment of acts of student coercion and lawlessness. Here is the Committee's latest position paper on the key issue of amnesty: AMENSTY MEANS COLUMBIA GOES "UP AGAINST THE WALL!" The issue of amnesty Is not debatable. We will not make terms with coercive mobs who posh their unwashed bodies between us and the education we have paid for. We will not stand by and watch Columbia being meekly handed over to hoodlum revolutionaries. We will not tolerate appeasement of the destroyers of our university. Amnesty-or half-amnesty-would mean the final surrender of any pretense of civilized authority at Columbia. There is just one way to save Columbia from the chaotic disintegration experienced by other riot-torn universities around the world: kick the demonstrators out permanently and jail all convicted student criminals. The cry for amnesty for acts of mob intimidation, physical coercion, and violence overwhelms us by it swaggering amorality, its brazen Teliance on the doctrine that might makes right. That cry represents a crude attempt to overturn and reverse the actual moral principles involved: it sanctions the initiation of physical force and simultaneously condemns as "brutality" action in self-defense to retaliate against initiated force. In their psychedelic universe, when their gang imprisons a college dean, that i s a natural and proper expression of dissent; when the Administration belatedly employs police action to defend its property and protect innocent students, this i s a brutal wielding of arbitrary power. They demand to be free of all legal authority-they, whose heroes are Lenin and Che Guevera, they, whose goal is Mussolini's system of guild socialism and whose means are, in principle, those of Hitler's storm-troopers, they whose defiant shriek to the world is: "up against the wall, mother f — e r s l " - they dare demand amnesty to enable them to continue to trample over our rights with impunity. To grant amnesty under such circumstances is not to forego punishment, but to punish the innocent instead of the guilty. In the name of all those who deserve the title "student," we proclaim our innocence and refuse to allow the. destruction wreaked by the criminal minority to be shifted onto our backs. WE HAVE S U F F E R E D ENOUGH - if the Administration will not stand up for its own rights, we demand that it protect ours. We are tired of being victimized. We are through with being pawns in the power play of miniature Castro's who thrill to mob violence. It is our classes which have been blocked, it is our semester's work and tuition which have been sacrificed, it is our careers which hang in the balance. We demand an end to our unwilling martyrdonTto a movement we despise. -Committee for Defense of Property Rights Our specific four-point stand, as stated in the following petition, has been endorsed by over 1,000 students and faculty to date: We the undersigned students and faculty members of Columbia University wish to make it known that the campus demonstrators, however vociferous, do not speak for us on University issues. We support the following goals: No takeover: Although student and faculty opinion should be considered, the decision-making process at Columbia must not be taken out of the hands of the Trustees and administration. No amnesty: Irrevocable expulsion and criminal prosecution of all student law-breakers Withdrawal of University sanction of Students for a Democratic Society and all other groups that use force to achieve their objectives. A firm policy declaration by the Columbia administration that any future forcible disruption of University functions will be stopped without hesitation and by whatever means are necessary, and that those responsible for criminal acts will be promptly arrested and expelled. Anita Ack, Barnard Chalet C Act, GS L. Carroll Adams. CC G. Bennett Adlei, GS HayAejau.CC Blake Alcott, GF Duane Alexander, CC Franklin Alexander, Arch. H. Alhuuski, Engr. Stephen D. Allison, CC Joseph Aluch,CPS David J. Anderson. Business Robert Anderson. Busmen Clifford G. Andrew, CC David J. Anderson, Business R.P.Aadnw,CC Matthew R. Anguile. CPS JohnArand,GF Craig Archer, CC Peter E.Arendt.CC George Aspatore, CC Sam Aster, TC R. Baker, GF Roger Baker, Law Robert A. Barbed, Law David Barg,CC John Barney, Engr. William T. Ban, CC Kathleen Barry, Barnard Edward Banamian, Engr. J. Butrik.CC T. R. Baskom, Engt. Fac. Gregory Basso, Engr. DouglasBaum.ee Glenn Beale, CC E. John Beckley, GF Anthony Low Beet, GF Christopher P. Bell, GS Fanny Benamy, TC Maxine Bender, GISS R.Bercaw.GS Michael A. Berler, Law J. Berman, EE A. Bernstein, Eng. Richard F. Bertholsdof, GF Stephen Besyedith, Engt. William A. Bibbo, Engr. George Bietheiton, GF Martin Bigu, GF David Billet, Business Harry Binswanger, GF C. H. Bishop. Business J.W. Blake, CC U.Bliznarov,GF H. M. Boggil, Business BeUBogkowski,CC JuliaB. Bokan.GF Edward Bohdian, Engt. C F. Bonilla, Engt. Fac. Robert T.Bonja,CC William L. Bonn, CC H. D . Boococh, Engt. W.Bottomley.GS Erskine Boveer, Business Richard Boyd, Business Shelly M. Boxer. Engt. Steve Boyden, GS Anna Boyle, TC Robert V . Brady, Business Roger C. Brsnford, Business Paul Brautingham, Law Sally Brecher, Engt. J. Ernest Breeding Jr., GF E. Brennen, CC Richard Brooker, Engt. R. BrooksMte, CC Michael Btourman, Journalism Michael L. Brown, CC Weinet Biuwnschewehter, Business Robert K. Bunder, Business Edward A. Buokl,GS Barbara Burke, GF L. Burkinshaw, Barnard Michael Busa, CC C Bosch, GS Jonah Byram, GF Jose M. Cadenas, GF Dennis Cak>,CC Stephanie Caminiti, TC Doris Campbell, GF Joseph Carlucd, Engr. Edward Casper, GF Mark CaseUi, CPS Rocco D. Cassone, CC F . Y . Chang, Engr. Ross Charap, CC Jerry Charnoff, Business Toyoko Chen, GF C Christoplos, Engt. Anthony J. Ckcone, CC Robert W. dark, Engt. Robert dark, TC Mark deary. Engr. K. H. Oein, Engr. Shepard B. dough, GF Jonathan F. Cohen, GF HarlanK.Cohen.CC Tenense Jay Cohen, CC Harold R. Cotwin, Jr., Business A.Comiri,GF John Cornell, TC Rocoo Connisso, Engt. Richard R. Conte, CC Joseph J. ContigugBa. CC Don Cook, Business (This Is only a partial list; hundr sign O. Wayne Coon, Law Kathleen Coon, Arch. Lloyd Corgan, Engr. Q. Cornish, Business Robert F. Correlo, Business Edwin Cort, Engt. Stuar Corwan, Business Don Costa, TC Francis Costello, CC R. C. Cotcet, GF J. de Couray, GS Douglas Coverly, CC Robert Covetitt, Engr. BenCovington,GF C. Corwin Coward, CC William Cox, CC Gordon Crammer, GS John A. Cranford, U w Linda Crootof, TC Roger L. CrossUnd.CC George C Cr ucus, Engt. JeanCuDtton,TC A.R.Dale,GF Robert Daly, Engt. FrankDann.CC •Walter Dsnyievich, CC Ivan Dariyanoff, GF Jacqueline Darroch, Barnard David Davidarutz, Entot. Ronald Davit, Theatre Thomas Dempsey, Engr. Linda Denin, Barnard GeorgeW.Dent.CC EdwatdM. DeSeat.CC John C. Devanney, Engr. Thomas Dewitt, CC NeU Dicketson, CC Simos C. Dimas, CC John A, Docbeny, Arch. Kenneth Doesschate, Engr. Thomas Doy.GF James Drago, Engr. B.Driefiro.TC I ate constantly coming in.) The Committee for Defense of Property Rights at Columbia University P-O. Box 922, Ansoma Station, New York, 1 W . 10023 William A. Drown.CC Ken Dubuque, Engt. SaraR.Dukee.GF William Duncan, Law Jerome Dunn, CC Stanley E. Easter, TC Thomas E. Easter, GF AlanEdelson.GF P. H. Elanger, Business Frank W . B d , C C Peter EUiot,CC David J. Ellis, CC Hasan S. Etginez, Engt. Marro Falsami, TC Laurice E. Farinas, GF Steven Farron, GF Leonard M. Fertig, Engr. V. Fayner.CC Thomas Fearson, GS G.Feinberg,GF Eleanor Filipouiez. GS Bruce Fogel, CC Michael Fluss.GF O. Rogers Flyn, Jr., Business Donald C. Frang, Jr., Business StephenFranke.CC Karl W. Freyberger, GS R. E. Friedan, GS Joseph B. Friend, Business John R. Fuchs, Engt. LeoT.Fircht.CC George Furey, CC MarkJ.Fnrey.CC PaulP.Fmey.CC F. T. FuriDo, CC Arthur Gandolfi, GF Lynette Ganim, Barnard Oswaldo Garcia, Engt. Michael H.Gastman.GF Carol Gellis, GSS A. M. Gentile, TC Richard G.Giaccio.CC John Gelbard, CC Barbara Gimbd, GS Michael Giophe, Business Gary GUckten, Business Gary S. Gladstein, Business Laurie Glenby, TC Susan Goldsmith, TC Alice Goodwin, U w David Z. Gordon, Law-Business Richard Gorlin, Engt. David J. Gotlon, Law-Buanes (ADVERTISEMENT) J May 16, 1968 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Page Fifteen Use of Clubhouse Facilities Causes Crew-Tennis Feud By ALEX SACHARE A seemingly trivial disagreejacent to the crew facilities. Bement between crew coach Bill cause pilings were not used, much Stowe and those in charge of the of the fill just slid into the Harlem Columbia tennis program has River, causing what Stowe termed threatened to erupt into physical "great damage to our docks." violence this past .month at Baker In early April the construction Field. company working on the tennis On May 2 Stowe, according to courts left same wooden forms several witnesses, threatened to in the boathouse area to be used throw the tennis team physically a ft-, days later. Stowe, according out of the locker and shower rooms to Hendin, told the members of which both teams share at Gould his crew to "get rid of those Boathouse. Members of the crew forms' and added that 'if they team did not take any action, how- dumped them on the tennis courts, ever, and violence has been avoid- he would not object." The crew ed to this point. dumped the forms on the courts, For the past nine years, ever and they were removed by the since Columbia moved its tennis contractor at an estimated expense program uptown to Baker Field, of $150. the tennis players have shared the On Saturday, April 13, Stowe shower and locker facilities at warned the contractor not to work, Gould Boathouse with the crews. and according to Hendin, intimated According to Dr. Herbert Hendin, that physical action might be taken. chairman of the Varsity C Club's The oarsmen were holding christennis committee, none of the pre- tening ceremonies for many of vious crew coaches has ever ob- their new boats that morning, and jected to this practice. This is since a number of influential people Stowe's first year at Columbia. were to be on hand, Stowe did not Stowe has given four reasons for Want them to see the construction his opposition to the tennis per- workers on the adjacent courts. sonnel in Gould Boathouse. They Hendin compared the conflict at are the lack of facilities, "smoking the boathouse to the recent crisis on the part of tennis personnel," on the Columbia campus. "Nobody "soda and beer drinking" in and in the administration is willing to around the boathouse; and the lack deal with the problem." he said. of unity among the various crews ' Hendin has written- ^numerous "when interspersed with tennis letters of complaint to members personnel." of the administration, but has reHendin maintains that there is ceived no response. "Nobody wants more than enough room for both to do anything to alleviate the situteams in the boathouse, and that ation," he stated. He mentioned the behavior of the tennis people Acting Dean Henry Coleman and Athletic Director Ralph Fureyas is not that disruptive. The dispute apparently stems two who "have been unbelievable from the construction of two new in the way they postponed taking tennis courts on filled-in land ad- action.". CfJ THIS SUMMER... Work where you want. Work when you want. At High Pay. As a Temporary Office Employee. There Is No Fee. Register now before your summer vacation to insure a good summer position. 9 ft * ® Dot and Miss Rae's Temporary Office Personnel • Interesting Assignments • Office Skills Helpful • Stimulating Environment • Choice of Many Jobs *•?%• • * Come see us. It only takes a few minutes. DOT & MISS RAE'S MIDTOWN OFFICE: Chrysler Bldg. (42 & Lex) 33rd Floor Phone: 867-8525 DOWNTOWN OFFICE: 150 Broadway, N.Y.C. ; Suite 911 Phone: BA 7-5000 better there for half fai Jr Canada. CLOSE me GeneRflnon AT THE WALDORF-ASTORIA Play it smart when your parents come to New York for graduation. Make sure they're staying at The Waldorf-Astoria. They can get a great double room for only $14.00 per person. Right •n the middle of everything you want to do. Including Trim Lopez in the Empire Room, May 31st to June 15th. Get the'message? Then give them our reservations number: (212)355-3000 (But donf give them this ad.) P»rk Avenue, 49th to 50th St».. New York. N. V. 10022 CANAPIf you're more than 12 years old and under 22 you can fly anywhere on Air Canada's North American routes for only half-fare. No extra charge for stopovers. Just go to an Air Canada office or your travel agent and present any airline youth Stand-By fare I. D. card for your half-fare ticket on Air Canada. If there's an empty seat in economy class at take-off time, we'll put you in it for half price. No telephone reservations or confirmed advance sales. You can also join Air Canada's own Swing-Air Club and present our membership card to most other airlines for a Stand-By economy class seat at half-fare. Membership costs three dollars. The more you fly, the more you save. Get your Swing-Air application and all the details at any Air Canada ticket office or write to Swing-Air Club, Air Canada, Place Ville Marie, Montreal 2, Canada. Now when you travel you won't stick out like a sore thumb. AIR CANADA r May 16, 1968 COLUMBIA DAILY SPECTATOR Page Sixteen Columbia Athletics A Pivotal Year sBy ANDREW Despite the fact that sports at Columbia is not, for most people, a central topic of conversation these days, it might be appropriate to leave our readers, especially the graduating seniors, with the reminder that this was in fact a pivotal year for athletics on Momingside Heights. A brief review of major events will, I suspect, easily prove this point The academic year began with another disastrous football season, but the result was different for the first time in eleven years—the Columbia administration, in a rare moment of inspiration, decided to ask for Coach Buff Donelli's resignation, received it before it was officially requested, and hired an apparently able, young successor, Frank Navarro. Meanwhile, the future of soccer seemed vastly improved by at least three factors: an undefeated freshman team, the resignation ef Joe Molder as tennis coach in order to concentrate on soccer, and initial moves to insure to varsity of a playing field which would not be ruined by automobiles every Saturday. Then came what was quite possibly the greatest moment in Columbia athletic history. Jack Rohan's basketball team brought to Momingside Heights more recognition and respect than has any professor or academic achievement in memory. After aslow start, the Lions swept the Holiday Festival, trounced Princeton in a playoff for the Ivy League championship, moved on to the N.C. A. A. Eastern Regionals before being edged by Davidson in overtime, and ended the season with a decisive rout of St. Bonaventure. Columbia proved itself to be the best team in the East, and one of the five or six best in the country. This was the sort of accomplishment which had previously been achieved only by the fencing team, and the effect on the collective psyche of the Columbia community was electric. The spirit and enthusiasm evident on March 5—the night of the playcff against Princeton at St. John's—was absolutely unheard of in previous years. At the same time, the fencing team under new coach Lou Bankuti, PEACE SYMBOLS HANDWROUGHT IRON PINS AND PENDANTS Adirondack Girl's Camp $3.00 (Summer '68) JAN'S BOUTIQUE Call 212 NE 4-2935 414 W. 121 ST. 4 films+5 records+1 sculpture+ Aspen is the multi-media magazine. It comes in a box which means we can put in all sorts and sizes of things. Aspen's articles use the medium most Appropriate to the subject matter—whether it be a wall poster or LP record or deck of cards. For example, our current issue is the first magazine to contain film. And what films! Four art classics by Hans Richter, MoholyNagy, Robert Morris/Stan VanDerBeek, and Robert Rauschenberg. It also has 5 records with some of the most memorable names in art and literature making special recordings of their work just for us. Marcel Duchamp and Richard Huelsenbeck reading their early Dada writings (the first time they've been recorded), Naum Cabo reading his Realistic Manifesto, plus William Burroughs, Alain Robbe-Grillct, Samuel Beckett and Merce Cunningham in a valuable collection of "oral history" available only in Aspen. You'll also find new recordings of John Cage's "Fontana Mix" and Morton Feldman's "King of Denmark," plus the scores so you can see that the music looks as wondrous as it sounds. Tony Smith gave us his drawings for his 4-piece sculpture "The Maze" plus cardboard modules so you can construct your own version at home. In print, there are essays by Roland Barthes, George Kubler and Susan Sontag . . . poetry by Michel Butor and Dan Graham . . . special projects by Sol LeWitt, Mel Bochner, Douglas MacAgy and Brian O'Doherty, editordesigner of this historic issue. TONIGHT FREE CONCERT BY THE TUDOR SINGERS 8:30 p.m. ST. PAUL'S CHAPEL Dramatics and-or Dance Counselor (Female) m 117thandAmsterdainAw . Featured work. MASS FOR FIVE VOICES by WILLIAM BYRD Student Sailings England •And other fun-loving people. I & Europe *180. Call 924-8450 The s.s. .Waterman sails from New York to Southampton and Rotterdam on May 25, August 13, and September 8. She leaves Rotterdam for Southampton and New York on June 10, July 9, August 28 (from $205), and September 28. Completely air-conditioned, the Waterman has all the sports, lounges, and fun a student/economy sailing can have. Plus such advantages as no tipping. See your travel agent or send for our brochure. Or telephone. SAFETY INFORMATION: the s.s. Waterman, registered in the Netherlands, meets International Safety Standards for new ships developed in 1948. Aspen is about excellence in any field. It brings you new ideas in new formats. Each issue is built around a different theme by a different editorial-design team (the best that we can find). So the content and format change radically each issue. For example, Andy Warhol put our Pop/Underground issue in a Fab box. Then filled it with an underground movie flip book; a postcard kit of new paintings; a rock&roll "press kit"; the first, last and only edition of the Plastic -Exploding Inevitable underground newspaper. • In contrast, our next issue on Far Eastern Thought will be brimful with five rolled scrolls: a Kuo Hsi landscape (Sung dynasty, 11th century) . . . a calligraphy scroll from the Palace Museum on Taiwan . . . a Ch'an masterpiece by Yu-Chien . . . a yard-long frieze of Indian temple sculpture . . . a Tibetan lhanka. There'll also be miniature screens from the Shoko Zen Temple in Kyoto . . Rajput miniatures from India . . . Zen parable cards . . . even a dragon kite. All scented with incense. It's the issue you'll hang all over the house. By unbinding our magazine, letting it run free in its box, there's no end to our three-dimensional ideas. In short, you don't simply read Aspen . . . you hear i.t, hang it. feel it, fly it, even sniff it! Would you like to see what Aspen is like? We have a tempting subscription rate to help you find out. Aspen is published four times a year at $4 per issue (our current issue, Aspen 5 + 6 , being a double issue, is $8). But try Aspen on our money-saving subscription offer-and pay just $10.95 for one year. You may pay later if you prefer. But if you send payment with your order, saving us bookkeeping and billing costs, we'll reward you with a free gift—a small surprise that will be a delightful preview of Aspen itself. You may cancel at any time and pay only for the issues mailed. But to be sure you'll receive Aspen 5 + 6 , a phenomenal collector's item and conversation piece, mail the coupon today. Then start planning your first Aspen Bpx Party. ASPEN MAGAZINE P.O. Box 205 Village Station, New York, N.Y. 10014 CS D Aspen sounds great. Send me one year for just $10.95-a $5.05 saving over the regular single copy price of $16. • I want to take advantage of your~subscription rate for two years. Send me 8 issues for $19.95. D I'm enclosing payment Send me a free surprise. • Please bill me. Please include payment with orders outside continental U.S.A. TRANS-OCEAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY Address. Pier 40, North River, New York, N.Y. 10014, Tel. (212) 924-8450 City Canadian and foreign rates $12.95 for one year; $21.95 for two years. .State. .Zip. i D New subscription Q Renewal