Chicago Maroo75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 28 The University of Chicago Tuesday, January 10, 1967Teacher's Strike Averted,Salary Demands Metby David L. Ailen Revolution in Social RulesNew Hoursby Michael Seidmanclasses, 25 for English and speechclasses. The union had asked 30 for A quiet revolution is occuring in house social rules.Chicago junior college teach' most classes, 25 for English. Some \ Steming from a memorandum sent by Dean of Students Warner A. Wick to the Inter-ers returned to work Monday c^ss^are^now^as^arge^as 40.^ pjouse council (I.H.C.) in mid-November and a subsequent resolution passed by I.H.C. lastas a strike over salaries and duced by two weeks. The union had month, a new procedure for determining visiting hours has been formulated.(lass loads was settled. j asked for a cut in the school year THE ORIGINAL Wick memoran-The teachers were on the picket from ten months to nine. dum approved in principle the idealines Friday, in the second walkout 4. Teacher course loads will be Qf house autonomy in the area ofat the college system in six weeks, reduced to 15 or 16 hours per week, social rules, which the I.H.C. wasAbout 37 percent of the teachers , Some teachers now carry up to 20 then discussing. The subsequentdl,e to meet classes Friday were hours, while the union had asked > i.h.C. resolution, passed at a meet-on picket lines, while another 30 f°r a maximum of 12 hours (aver- jng attended by Wick and other ad-percent called in “sick.” age class is three hours per week.) ininistrators, established a systemIN A 4V2-hour session Sunday 5. The pact also covered a range whereby the individual housesnight in the office of Chicago may- of fringe benefits, such as sever- draw up their own rules and submitRichard J. Daley, negotiators ance Pa>’< personal leave, and sab- them to the I.H.C. which in turnbatical leaves. j gives them to the Housing OfficeTHE STRIKE affected eight | £or finaj approyal .branches, with a total enrollment The new system has already ledorfor the union, local 1600 of theAmerican Federation of Teachers,and the Chicago City College Boardreached agreement on salary , in¬creases and reduction of classloads, reducting class sizes, andfringe benefits.The union’s House of Representa¬tives then approved the pact by a26-1 vote.Terms of PactThe agreement covers:1. An immediate pay increaseof $20 a month, to be followed byan additional $30 next September.The union had originally asked fora straight $2,000 annual increaseim mediately.2. Reduction of class sizes to amaximum of 35 students for most (Continued on Page Five)Student Government hasannounced that Dr. MartinLuther King, leader of theSouthern Christian Leader¬ship Conference, will notspeak at UC this quarter. SGhad previously announcedthat King would deliver aj lecture on Monday, Jan. 9.According to SG, King isworking on a new book andasked that the date for hislecture be postponed.s:f-■. j to a substantial expansion of hoursin one house, and I.H.C. officers Ihave indicated that they expect fur-!ther changes in most of the otherdorms.Hell to Payi “It’s not safe to assume that hours, wood’s proposals, none have beenpassed. The I.H.C. is alloted tendays under the new formula inwhich to pass on the house rulesand submit them to W’ick for finalapproval.The Greenwood proposal, creat¬ing twelve new visiting hours from5 pm to 8 pm in addition to thestandard weekend hours, has al¬ready been approved by the I.H.C.and Wick and is now in effect. Pas¬sage of the new hours marks thefirst time in University history thatweekday visiting hours have beenpermitted in undergraduate houses,according to John Moscow, Secre¬tary of the I.H.C.Unprecented HoursAlthough the new GreenwoodKlowden said. “The,whole hours are unprecedented, they areWarner A. Wick. ,, , _ ___ ' IIUIU o die UliMlCLLUcmcu, V au.Dean Wick won t veto many of idea of the new system is for each only temporary. The Greenwoodnew rules, stated one I.H.C offi- house to operate without guidelines. House Council has already submit-| cer who asked not to be identified,“but it’s safe to assume that if hedoes, there will be hell to pay.”Michael Klowden, I.H.C. presi¬dent, also indicated that he couldnot predict Wick’s actions. “I haveabsolutely no 'idea of what DeanWick will consider to be ‘proper’Young: Mutual Advantage KeyTo Fruitful U.S. - China Talksby Michael KraussIf United States negotiations with Communist China are to prove fruitful, asserted KennethT. Young, former career diplomat in Eastern Asia, in a speech Friday, both parties must findparallel and mutual advantages.Young spoke at the Weymouth Kirkland Courtroom of the Law School as a guest of theUC Center for Policy Study. One ofthe few Americans who has had di¬rect contact with the Communist alreadyThe houses should decide for them- ted to the i.h.C. a proposal whichselves what is best for them-i W0ldd permit visitation from 11 am'selves.” to midnight on weekdays and fromReached at his office, Wick re- n a,m t0 2 am on Friday and Satur-fused to state whether he would ac- j day. Passage of the new proposal,cept the new rules, but he did hint at least in modified form was con-that wide-spread vetoes were un-1 sjdered likely,likely. j Other proposals include thoseTHE NEW HOURS, representing submitted by Vincent House whichincreases as large as 330%, and in would expand their hours to 100 perthe case of Hitchock House, a pos- Week and Lower Flint which wouldsible total abolition of restrictions, j gjve the house council the power ofwill go to Wick on Thursday. In rule making subject only to theaccordance with the new procedure Veto 0f the resident head.Wick will have seven days after he All proposals submitted thus farreceives the recommendation in have included a general clause re-which to pass on them. If he takesno action within that time, therules will automatically take effect.Thus far, only four houses, havesubmitted proposals to the IHCand, with the exception of Green-Chinese, Young was a negotiator atthe Panmunjom conference afterthe Korean War, later served asU S. Ambassador to Thailand. Heexamined the history of Sino- American negotiations and offered sadorial talks which were heldprojections for the future. first in Geneva and now in War-ALTHOUGH THE two countries ! saw.have no formal diplomatic rela- j Eight men, five Americans, andtions, the United States and China three Chinese, sit at these little-have sat together at the conferencetable more than 200 times since1953, especially at the “ambas-SG, SNCC, Agree Stokely Worth $500Stokely Carmichael and StudentGovernment (SG) have settledtheir difference of opinion over howmuch Carmichael is worth. Thefiery advocate of black power willspeak at Mandel Hall January 12for approximately $500.Originally SG had planned to payCarmichael $300 for his speech.The SNCC leader this week, howev¬er, asked for $1000 and threatenedto cancel his appearance. The com¬promise figure was worked outThursday.Carmichael gained prominencelast year when he became head ofSNCC, an activist civil-rights orga¬nization. He is one of the leaders ofthe “Black Power” movement, andhe has at times advocated the for¬mation of a separate “black na¬tion" in the United States.Carmichael has not announced aspecific topic for his lecture, but heu HI discuss some aspect of theBlack Power movement.Tickets for the lecture are avail¬able in the SG office in Ida Noyes known talks in an atmospherewhich is business-like, though hos¬tile and propagandistic, Youngsaid.China Talks 'Useful'While these talks have resulted inlittle or no concrete agreement, serving to the individual housecouncils the right to act in any waythey see fit to preserve order in thehouse. *THE NOTION of autonomy forthe individual houses was originallyproposed by the so-called Mentschi-koff Committee on University lifeissued a year and a half ago. TheCommittee called for student-faculty committees within eachdorm to continually review the so¬cial situation and submit their pro¬posals to an all-campus student-has spread its halitosis on the facult7 social rules committee.In a memorandum issued lastCensor's BreathWilts GreenvilleThe hot breath of censorshiptiny campus of Greenville Col¬lege.Last month’s issue of the ChicagoLiterary Review (CLR) proved year, Wick indicated that he was insympathy with many of the Ments-chikoff suggestions, but left the is¬sue of house autonomy undecided.Young said, they are useful in clar-j medicine too strong for the Free Then in a later memorandum, is-ifying the positions and signalling Methodist affiliate school. Accord- sue(l on November 14, 1966, Wickthe intentions of each side. ing to David Fairbanks, Greenville ; stated that a committee consistingHe urged that such talks be ! Editor of CLR, “the ‘Sodomy Last I (Continued on Page Five)strengthened and expanded. They Summer’ review, and particularly j *should also, if possible, be protect-| the lengthy passage quoted from |/|m Cri*0\A/C lifted from interference by the rivalry Sade’s book was not at all well re-; l*U|J JvIvWJbetween Communist China and the ceived here.” Popular reaction to 1Soviet Union.“We should try to prevent theSino-Soviet rupture from embroil-Americans” and our bilateralStokely Carmichael EsquireHall. All seats are unreserved.General admission is $2.50. Stu¬dents with ID cards may purchasetickets for $1. talks with China, Young stressedBombing Called ''Nonsense'“It is nonsense to say that bomb¬ing North Vietnam would bring theVietnamese to the conference ta¬ble,” Young also cautioned. Therecan be “no negotiating until Hanoican maneuver out of the immobili¬ty between Moscow and Peking.”The China-Russian quarrel hasprevented Ho Chi Minh from “feel¬ing free” in talking about the Viet¬nam situation, Young commented.IN THE Warsaw talks, represent-(Continued on Page Five' this article forced the Greenville Malians MaroonPapyrus to drop the literary maga- _ _,v .zine. Irv Kupcinet erroneously re-Ted Hearne, co-editor-in-chief of ported that the Maroon er-CLR, called the Greenville dispute roneousiy reported that Hans“an unfortunate incident,” adding!that he was astonished at “the j Morgenthau was leaving UC,quiet pockets of censorship remain- in his column, Sunday, January 8.ing among academic communi-• Kup said that Morgenthau has noties.” plans to leave UC, indicating thatNoted sadist David H. Richter, he has a better idea of what Mor-author of the review in question, genthau’s plans are than the rakishsaid that he was “gratified that professor himself,students at Greenville were not so As far as Morgenthau knows, hejaded that they were unable to has made no definite plans. Thisshare my own intense reaction to doesn’t necessarily mean Kup isSade, but disappointed that their wrong of course. Never underesti-response to intellectual and emo- mate the resources of a resourcefultv.'val shock was so puerile.” i columnist.ACE SurveySDS Maps Sit-InAgainst UC's BankRichard Thomas, of theAmerican Committee on Afri¬ca, will speak on “US Econom¬ic Involvement in South Afri¬ca’" at an SDS rally Wednesday al8 pm.According to SDS spokesmanChris Hobson, a dozen Americanbanks are involved in a revolvingloan fund to South Africa. Two ofthese banks are located in Chicago:Continental Illinois, at which UCdoes its banking, and National City.HOBSON SAID that the following to repeat here a coup it pulled inNew York on December 9, the daybefore Human Rights Day. On thatdate $24 million was withdrawnfrom New York banks makingloans to South Africa.The withdrawals were made bysuch organizations and invidiulalsas the magazine Christianity in Cri¬sis, Pete Seeger, Congressman Jon¬athan Bingham, D-N.Y., and NewYork State Senator Patterson.The location of Wednesday eve¬ning’s rally has not yet been an¬nounced. Class of 70WASHINGTON (CPS)—The,average member of the classof 1970 is a white protestantfrom the North Central regionof the U. S. who attends churchregularly (though drinks beer onthe side), has a B to C high schoolaverage, and intends to get a grad- !uate degree with an undergraduatemajor in engineering, business or apre-professional subject.These statistics were releasedlast week by the American Councilon Education, based on informationfrom 206,865 freshmen at 251 col¬leges and universities. The infor- Bunch of Regular Joesmation, in conjunction with data 1collected later, will be used to eval¬uate changes in students’ behaviorduring college.PARENTS OF this current fresh¬man are likely to be high schoolgraduates with a gross family in¬come of $10,000-$15,000. They willbe the major source of funds dur¬ing his freshman year.This freshman considers himselfabove average in “academic abili¬ty,” “cheerfulness,” “drive toachieve,” and “understanding ofothers,” and his most important ob¬jectives are to “help others in diffi¬culty,” “be an authority in myfield,” “keep up with political af- j fairs,” and “succeed in my ownbusiness.”IMPRESSIONS OF their new col¬leges had already been formedwhen students completed the ACEquestionnaire during their orienta¬tion period. Naming characteristics“very descriptive of the atmosphere of the college,” over 60 percent said “realistic.”Fifty-six per cent said “warm,”50.6 per cent “practical-minded,”44.4 per cent “social,” 39.9 per cent“liberal,” and 34.6 per cent “intel¬lectual.” Only 1.8 per cent felt theircollege was "snobbish,” and 3.9 percent “Victorian."quotes were obtained from Conti¬nental Illinois officials when thebank was asked to send a speakerto explain the bank’s position:• “We don’t want to send aspeaker to speak in a hostile at¬mosphere.”• “The bank has already turned The Blown Mind: FREAKSTad Browning's FREAKS, a classic horror Film. At Doc Films Wednesday, Janu ary 11. Soc. Sci. 122, 59th and University. 40 cents. Cam* Mew your minddown invitations from the Method¬ists, the Presbyterians, and theUnited Church of Christ.”• “Moral discrimination must notplay a part in economic decisions.”SDS is presently circulating a let¬ter to student organizations and in¬dividual faculty members request¬ing support for a demand that UCwithdraw' its funds from Continen¬tal Illinois.Other contemplated activities in¬clude a sit in at the bank.THE OBJECT of the AmericanCommittee on Africa in Chicago is !The Student Tutors’ Ele¬mentary Project (S.T.E.P.)will hold the first in a se¬ries of evening workshops, jentitled “Thinking AboutTeaching,” tonight. It will: take place at 8 pm in theI East Lounge of Ida Noyes >.•3 Hall.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA DiscountsBOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroAaitfaMooleyhm»tCom pi*to RepotoAnd ServicePar AH Popular Import*Mldwy 1-45046052 So. Cottage GroveLook into ourfuture and yoursAt Ford Motor Company, theelectric car, computerizedteaching machines, andartificial limbs controlled bythe brain are much morethan hazy visions. Andthe man who can helpus with these and other belterideas has a real future here.If your major is arts,science or business. Ifthinking ahead is one of yourskills. See your placementoffice now and make a dateto meet the representativefrom Ford Motor Company.Dates of visitation:Feb. 7, 1967 A better ideanever came out of a crystal ballAt Ford Motor Company we’re always lookingfor better ideas. But not with a crystal ball.We do it with background and brain.We do it by seeking answers for down-to-earth questions such as: Should a profitable centralcity dealership be relocated to a growing suburbanlocation? What’s the sales potential for a newpersonal car?And we do it by trying to solve problems thathaven’t been faced till now. Problems such as: Is anelectric car the answer to city traffic? How willpeople travel in the year 2000?In short, our better ideas come from betterpeople. And we take extra steps to get them. FordMotor Company has a College Graduate Program which provides immediate opportunities for indi¬vidual development. In our rotational assignmentsystem graduates are assured broad training andconstant visibility to management. Right now, newproducts, new marketing programs, new subsidiaryoperations here and abroad are creating new jobs.One could be yours.For more information, write our CollegeRecruiting Department. Or better yet, schedule anappointment through your placement office totalk with our representa¬tive. He’ll be on campussoon—looking for betterpeople with better ideas.THE AMERICAN ROAO • 0EAR80RN. MICHIGAN • AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER - ■'2 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 10. 1967Party Rivalry LeadsTo Rebel Ul Paperby David A. SatterThe University of Illinois’ Chicago Circle campus will havetwo student newspapers next week, but nobody agrees on why.Tom Sandy, former managing editor of the Chicago Iilini,has taken over the reins of a new independent newspaper, theCircle Commuter. The new paper,he says, is necessary because theChicago ILlini is being manipulatedby CONSCIENCE, a campus politi¬cal party.SUE ANDERSON, the editor ofthe Chicago Iilini, insists that theCircle Commuter, far from beinga new independent voice, is reallyonly an arm of ACTION, the ma¬jority party in the Chicago Circlestudent government and the arch-toe of CONSCIENCE.Both Sandy and Miss Andersonagree that the conflict out of whichthe new paper is arising is more amatter of personalities than of is¬sues. Miss Anderson said that shewas l>asically “all in favor of an independent newspaper but thisnewspaper isn’t a free newspaper.”Miss Anderson said that theChicago Iilini is underwritten bythe University of Illinois and sheadmitted that accepting universityfunds means contending with uni¬versity regulations.THE COMMUTER is independentand incorporated. Sandy says hehas enough advertising money to1 pay for the Communter’s first issuej and he’s keeping his fingers jI crossed for the future.Sandy hopes, he says, to keep theCommuter objective, highly jour ’nalitic—and independent. League for Spiritual DiscoveryRoosevelt Organizing an LSDJ A number of students atRoosevelt are trying to place aRoosevelt League for SpiritualDiscovery (LSD) on an equalfooting with the Christian Associa¬tion and the Hillel Foundation.Bill Moore, a graduate studentthere, who is leader of the groupand a follower of Timothy Leary,maintains that the League is quali¬fied to become a recognized reli¬gious organization."WE USE the word ‘religion’ be¬cause the experimental aspects ofour movement cannot be well fittedunder any other name—we’re not[♦olitical activists, we’re not ath¬letes, we’re not addicts.” Theleague, he said, differs from otherreligious organizations in that itdoes not “turn satrament into sac-!rilege.”Roosevelt Dean of StudentsGeorge Watson disagrees. In a pre- jliminary judgement he said that! the group “is organized for an ille¬gal purpose and therefore cannotbe recognized as a Roosevelt stu¬dent group.”However, he delayed a final deci¬sion to explore the legal questionfurther.Lectures PlannedWith accompanying diatribesagainst most other religions (“Itseems,” Moore said, “that the 20thcentury is devoid of any concretereligious experience. . . that thegods of yore have led it to war. . .”), the group, if recognizedand perhaps even if not, will shakeup Roosevelt as much as it can.Several lectures are planned,among them one by former Roose¬velt student Joffre Stewart, whohas been banned from speakingsince he burned an American flagat an anarchist meeting in 1964. Hewill lecture, according to Moore, onhis life as a “persecuted saint.”OTHER PLANS include passingout the formula of LSD in cafe¬ terias, showing films, and conduct¬ing “esoteric dances representingthe natural live birth of the grandlama of Tibet.” Moore said he is“thinking of putting acid (LSD) inthe coffe machine and freakingout the whole school.”He went on: “It has been ourthought for a long time that onearea of the body has been unused:the navel. The unused navel areaof the Roosevelt student bodywould provide enough space for avictory garden for the Viet Cong.”There are two vacan¬cies for student members-at-large on the student-faculty .committee on orien¬tation. Any one interestedin joining the committeeshould call Steve Solomonat 493-9360, or send hima postcard at 5625 So. Uni¬versity Avenue.Sermon SeriesISSUES OF LIFE AND DEATHFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th and WoodlawnJack A. Kent, ministerSunday mornings at 11:00ALCOHOLISMDRUG ADDICTIONLSDSUICIDEALIENATION, ISOLATIONAND LONELINESS January 15January 22January 29February 5February 12Who Are These Unitarians?The second in a winter series of Sunday readingsat Three Sunday evening discussions led byJack A. KentTHE OTHER SIDE1603 EAST 53rd ST.No cover, no minimum, no admission Minister, First Unitarian Church8:00 p.m.Next Week: CHERRY ORCHARDThis Week at the Other Side1603 E. 53rd St.Wed. Jim Jackson, ComedianRick Younker, guitarThurs. Bill Reddy, BluesFri. The Grimm Brothers,Musical SatireSat. Franklin David, guitarJim Jackson, ComedianSun. the Other Players readKing Lear, 2 pm.the Brent House Singers,singing Renaissance Madrigals,9 pm. at FENN HOUSE, 5638 Woodlawntransportation from evening discussion meetings will be available.WHAT DO UNITARIANS BELIEVE January 15Unitarians do not have a creed. Do they consider themselves Chris¬tians? What do they believe about man, about God? What is theirsource of authority? Why are some Unitarians atheists?HOW UNITARIANISM CAME ABOUT January 22Many Unitarians have been important to the history of our country.To name a few: Jefferson, John Adams and John Quincy Adams,Clara Barton, Horace Mann, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Marshalland Oliver Wendell Holmes, Joseph Priestly and Charles Steinmetz.How did Unitarianism develop in America?WHY A CHURCH? January 29Is Unitarianism a religion? Why is it organized in churches and fel¬lowships when the religious authority rests with the individual? Whatis its role in the community in civil rights, peace, and other pressingissues in today's world?Sponsored by the First Unitarian Church of Chicagoand The Student Religious LiberalsJanuary 10, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Quiet RevolutionSocial rules may take on a new look if the “quiet revolution”reported on in today’s Maroon is carried out as expected.The new plan for determining visiting hours represents aninventive compromise between complete house autonomy anddirect administration control. While it remains to be seenwhether the individual houses, the Inter-IIouse Council, andDean Wick can avoid deadlock using this new system of multi¬passage of the unprecedented Greenwood hours is a goodindication that the system can work to the benefit of bothstudents and administors if those who use it do so with aminimum of good sense and moderation.If, as now appears likely, social rules are substantially liber¬alized in the next few weeks, it will mark the end of an era instudent faculty relations and the decisive defeat—on this cam¬pus at least—of the outmoded and discredited doctrine of inloco parentis. Already the debate has shifted from questions ofwhat is moral and acceptable to those outside the university tothe all-important question of what those in the houses reallywant.So marked a change in attitude, apparently quite sudden,but actually years in the making, deserves at least some at¬tempt at explanation. On the surface, at least, house autonomywould seem to be a victory for the more moderate studentforces on campus. Such students, most heavily represented onthe I.H.C. (the organization which actually negotiated the newarrangement) have long contended that the administrationcould be influenced through quiet pressure exercised throughestablished channels. Now their patient persistance has paidoff, and they have real benefits to show for their efforts—whereas last year's enthusiasts who slept-out on a rainy nightcan demonstrate only hoarse voices and mildewed clothes.Yet, while the I.H.C. and its supporters are to be congratu¬lated, we simply cannot believe that they alone are responsiblefor the revolution. Changes in University attitudes occur inambiguous, and complicated ways. They relate to the changingviews of the society in which the University must function, tohow a certain set of administrators feel about a certain issue ata given time, and to the general climate of opinion on campusand how well it is utilized to influence those in power.Thus tracing the entire tortuous route towards social reformon this campus would be a difficult if not impossible task. Butif we cannot map the whole route, we can at least find guide-1posts, and most conspicuous of these would have to have beenthe passage of the Mentschikoff report two years ago, accept¬ance by Dean Wick of the bulk of the Mentschikoff recommen¬dations, pressure exerted on the Administration by SG andother campus organizations, and—yes, even the hoarse voicesand wet clothing.We cannot determine precisely what effect the less “legiti¬mate” forms of student pressure have had on the final out¬come, but clearly they are not to be discounted. Students whocare enough about a situation to actively vent their displeasuremust always have an effect on administrators—whether theyare protesting draft policy, lack of a student voice, or studenthousing. 44It is probably quite correct to say that there would neverhave been a change in social rules had not the I.H.C. trans¬formed the raw material of the sleep-out into more sociallyacceptable forms of pressure. But without the concentratedand dramatic demonstration of student concern about an issuedirectly affecting their civil liberties, it seems to us equallyunlikely that the administration could have been budged bythe high minded appeals of a few students.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ' David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor ... Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HeameBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyEditor Emeritus ..: Daniel Hertzberg David H. RichterThe Bubby Circuit:Life on the Old West SideWhatever behavioral psycholo¬gists may tell you, the first andgreatest Skinner-box was the oldWest Side of Chicago.Floating in an amnion filledwith cabbage borscht, bricked upwith Manischewitz’s matzo, theJewish boychicle or maydele wasreared to maturity in a complete,shaping environment.Uncrowned monarch of theWest Side family was the bubby.Part of her authority derivedfrom her creation of the Fridaynight challah and chicken soup,those twin housels of the Jewishcommunion. But the bubby’s im¬portance stemmed also from herunique position in the sociology ofthe West Side.Unlike Christian churches orConservative and Reformed Jew¬ish temples, the orthodox shulwas divided into two sections—one for the men, with a separatepurdah for the women. This me¬chanical restriction had the forceof bringing all the bubbies of allthe families together for services.And in this unity, the bubbiesfound their strength.As they were traditionally un¬learned (relatively speaking) inthe formal lore of Jewish ritual,the bubbies found time to gossip, to form and destroy alliances between the families—in short, toplan the social life of the ghetto.How many marriages were formedbecause his bubby sat next to herbubby in shul! How many physi¬cians and lawyers today owe theirpractice to the machinations onthe bubby circuit!My generation was only thepassive recipient of this beautifulform of social organization, butalthough we were nearly uncon¬scious of its workings, we nowfeel its benefits.Maroon Editor David Satter,who spent his formative yearsabout a block from my ownbrownstone at Van Buren andSpringfield, has his own nostalgicmemories of the experience: “Aperson who has spent part of hislife of the West Side is like a guywho was once a member of anelite social fraternity—he’s gotsomething he can identify himselfwith for the rest of his life.” Ortake my own case.Last summer, I decided to takea trip to New York City, and myparents requested that I pay acall on two old friends of the fam¬ily. They did not exactly requestit—they insisted that I neverdarken their door again if I re¬ turned without having seen themI was hesitant: one was a 34-yearold psychiatrist, the other an edi¬tor at Curtis Publishing Companyjust turned of 30. They had notseen me since I was ten yearsold, the brat upstairs.But I was amazed, not only bythe warm reception with whichthey received me, but also by thefreedom and ease of our talk. Wechatted, not of auld lang syne, butof our current problems andachievements, taking up, itseemed, a conversation we hadbroken off eleven years ago.Blame it all on the bubby circuit.The fecund warmth of the oldWest Side survives in my genera¬tion, but I doubt that it can becommunicated to the next. Thelinchpins which held ittogether—the bubbies, that is—have all migrated to Florida, Cal¬ifornia, and other polyethyleneelysiums, and Jewish neighbor¬hoods have become “suburban”in essence if not in location. Thekaffeeklatsch has replaced thechicken soup, while “hospitality”has superseded real good will andcommon interest.I, for one, miss it. Plannedcommunities—humbug! Give methe old bubby circuit again.Letters to the EditorGumpert ColumnTO THE EDITOR:Mr. Gumpert’s column of Janu¬ary 6 is a criticism of the peacemovement for its failure to alignwith the Lippman-Morse-Gruen-ing position on the war in Viet¬nam. According to Mr. Gumpert,the “new realities of the Ameri¬can position in Vietnam” havemade absolete the demand forimmediate withdrawal of Ameri¬can forces. An examination of these “realities” appears to bein order.“Two years ago (the peacemovement) advocated immediatewithdrawal from Vietnam on thegrounds that the United Stateswas fighting a barbaric and mor¬ally indefensible war.” 1 see noevidence that the war has sincebecome less barbaric, or acquiredany sort of justification, be itmoral or political. The military es¬calations since that time, theproven lies of the government re¬garding military affairs and civil¬ ian casualties, and the hypocrisyof the peace offensive and relatedgimmicks point to a wholly opposite conclusion.The fact that “the United Statesis too deeply involved in Vietnamto withdraw unilaterally” is afunction of the global anti-revolutionary commitment of theUnited States, and merely indi¬cates the extent of the barbaritythat might ensue if the currentintervention is not stymied, either(Continued on Page Five)II THE MINNS LECTURESUnder the Auspicies ofThe Trustees of the Minns Lectureship(King's Chapel and First Unitarian Church in Boston)BYTHE REVEREND JOHN W. CYRUSMinister, The First Unitarian ChurchMilwaukee, Wisconsinon the general subjectTHE LIBERAL MINISTRYThe Minister's Self-Examinationall lectures will be given in Hull Chapel of First Unitarian Church,57th and Woodlawn (chapel entrance 1174 E. 57th)at 8:00 p.m.I. The Search for ClarilyWednesday, January 11II. The Search for CommitmentWednesday, January 18III. The Hazards of an Ego-Cenfric CallingThursday, January 19OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITEDCHICAGO MAROON • January 10, 1967Teacher Strikes AvertedIn Last Ditch Settlements(Continued from Page One)around 34,500. The union claims amembership of 475, out of 684 full¬time faculty.The earlier strike, November 30-December 2, was over a demandby the college’s negotiators that theunion renounce any intention to-trike before negotiations could be¬gin.The union won recognition of itsright to strike, but twice-weekly ne¬gotiating sessions since the end ofthe first strike got stuck on theunion's substantive demands.WHILE THE strike was on, chiefnegotiators for the union and thecollege board, meanwhile, were ex¬changing unkind references to eachother.Oscar E. Shabat, chancellor ofthe city college, told the press thatthe union’s prime concern was withsalaries. He said the union had de¬manded $1 million in pay increasesat the final bargaining session theday before the strike.The board’s final offer, whichShabat called the “absolute limit”it could afford, was a package to¬taling $633,500. This would includeS310.000 for pay increases, the restfor hiring more faculty and provid¬ing an insurance plan.Union Stressed Course LoadsUnion president Norman G.Swenson called Shabat’s statement“entirely false and misleading.”“Our primary demand never hasbeen, and is not now, salaries,”Swenson said. “They proposed thatwe take the money just for sala¬ries. and we turned them down.” The Union’s real interest, Swen¬son contended, reducing class sizesand course loads for teachers.THE UNION contended the boardcould raise the salaries if it in¬creased its tax rate from the pres¬ent ten cents per $100 assessedvalue on property to eleven cents.The board’s offer would involve atax increase of three-eights of acent.Under present state law, themaximum rate the board may levyis 13 cents. Shabat said that normalincreases in size, and new buildingprograms, will necessitate in¬creases to this maximum in thecoming years.THE COLLEGE administrationin December submitted a budgetproposal to the board which con¬templated an increase for 1967 of$10 million over last year’s spend-I ing. Half of this was allocated forbuilding, none for teacher salaryincreases.Present salaries in the Chicagojunior colleges range from startingpay of $6,450 to a top of $15,900.Parleys Since OctoberNegotiations between the union,which is an affiliate of the Ameri¬can Federation of Teachers, andthe board began last October, whenthe union won a vote among theteachers as their bargaining agent.This was the first time a collegefaculty in Illinois had chosen aunion for collective bargaining, al¬though unions elsewhere have rep¬resented college teachers. One lo¬cal in Flint, Michigan struck thecity colleges there last fall.Negotiations Only an Alternative to War(Continued from Page One)atives of the two countries taketurns reading prepared statementsof proposals, which are occasional¬ly interrupted by questions. Thereis little spontaneous discussion.Conversation ends when each coun¬try has completed its statements,but before they can adjourn theymust decide upon the date of thenext meeting, Young remarked.By mutual agreement the tran¬scripts of the talks are secret.Thus, problems are discussed inmore honest terms than most peo¬ple realize.In the twelve year history of theambassadorial talks, there hasbeen only one agreement; in 1955 itwas decided that each countrywould re-patriate citizens of theother country currently being de-- i. J:,/* rfV ■> '> tained. This agreement, in fact,; was never satisfactorily accom¬plished. American officials claimthat the Chinese reneged.For the time being, the talks deal; mostly with proposed exchanges ofnewsmen, cultural agents, scien-I tists and scholars.IN YOUNG'S opinion, the ex¬change of personnel is not a eur-I rently desirable goal. He suggestedthat the increased exchange of| materials and information must| first prepare members of theseradically differing cultures to un¬derstand one another.The value of the negotiations isobviously not to be found in theirrecord of viable agreements,Young commented. It lies rather inthe fact that they are an alterna¬tive to war.Letters to the Editor(Continued on Page Four)by military defeat or by effectivedomestic obstruction."A HORRIBLE amount ofchaos and bloodshed would resultif we withdrew now, not to men¬tion the political and psychologi¬cal effects of such a move.” Mr.Gum pert seems less horrified bythe bloodshed resulting from theAmerican presence—bloodshedfor which he as well as the rest ofus bears direct moral responsibil¬ity, which claims somewherefrom two to six times as manycivilian as military casualties,and which (a gruesome realitywhich is more pleasantly ignored)will surpass by orders of magni¬tude anything that might have re¬sulted from the Vietnamese 'civilwar itself.“The anti-war groups might se¬riously consider rallying to thesupport of such nationally promi¬nent doves as . . . Lippmann,Morse, Gruening, and others.” Iwill merely point out theobvious—namely, that the objec¬tions raised by these gentlemenhave produced not the slightestconcrete de-escalation; indeed,aside from their role in provoking /. '-JiX W$< Asi MSiM % ~ ■■•'the demonstrably fraudulent gov¬ernment statements on “willing¬ness to negotiate”, they have noteven produced the substantivecritical exposure of the war thathas been accomplished by radicalefforts (i.e. in magazines like VietReport.) It is this exposure whichwill discredit and condemn theJohnson administration in theeyes of the generation that followsours.THAT OUR own demonstrationsand agitations have come to littleis evident and well-known; in¬deed, we often u’onder whetherthere is any concrete possibilityof forcing our rulers to abandontheir imperialistic enterprise. It isequally obvious that our theoreti¬cal knowledge of the motivationsand sustaining forces behind thisimperialism is as yet at a primi¬tive level.DAVID M. FINKEL IV/cfc To Decide on Hours(Continued from Page One)of Dean of the College WayneBooth, Dean of the Chapel SpencerParsons, Dean of the GraduateSchool of Business George Shultzand Wick had been meeting at therequest of the Provost on the Issueof house autonomy, and that theyhad agreed that “Autonomy in thepositive sense...is very much to bedesired.”End to Protest?Under the new scheme, theI.H.C., subject to Wick’s veto willapparently perform the function or¬iginally envisioned for the all¬campus social rules committee.If, as expected, most of the newproposals are allowed to stand,much of the impetus towards thecreation of an all-campus socialrules committee will undoubtedlybe destroyed. “The new plan is going to take■ away all legitimate student com¬plaints about social rules,” saidMoscow. “There still will be com-j plaints from minorities in thehouses, but this should be the onlything we’ll have to work out.”| l^ti^^cceMUicUieA$ ("Summer and Smoke")!S by TENNESSEE WILLIAMSstarringDOLORES SUTTON • LEE RICHARDSONWith BEVERLY YOUNGEROpens Jan. 13 SLIPPING ON ICE?Avoid injuries, lawsuits. Save time,labor, money. Make your home orbusiness more attractive to visitors.F-ree snowbound cars.Use Pace Chemical De-IcerMelts ice and snow 36 times faster thansalt, at a fraction of the cost. Harmlessto plants, animals, fabric, floors, con¬crete, metal. Leaves no residue, doesnot track. The choice of importantinstitutions everywhere it snows.Call BU 8-8495SEMI-ANNUAL SALEALL SPORT COATSFormerly$42.5059.5079.50100.00 ,< NOW$34.5047.50 & 43.5063.5079.50ALL SUITS79.50100.00125.00150.00 to 175.00 63.5079.5099.50119.50 to 139.50FLANNEL & WORSTED TROUSERSReg. 15.95 Now 12.95ALL OUTERWEAR-SCARFS-GLOVESREDUCED 20%!! SPECIAL!!VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTSDISCONTINUED STYLESReg. $5.00 NOW *3.59 3 for $10.506olW ^ Stety,mepUtamtt $c GJampunin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 t. 5510 SI. Hume 752-0100W. C. FieldsIn a Forgotten classic, MILLION DOLLAR LEGS. Tonight at Doc Films. Soc. Sci. 122, 59th and University. 60 cents. Godfrey Daniel and mother of pearl!January 10, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Music ReviewWill Real CSO Please StandNo. that wasn't the CSO performing in Mandel Hall last December 3 at the 75 Anniver¬sary Concert of the UC Symphony Orchestra: there were too many recognizable faces sittingon the stage. Nor was there a hidden stereo set lurking backstage: I went back afterwards NEW BOOKS JUST RECEIVEDDivision Street: Americaby Studs Terkel $5.95v *Chicago Renaissanceby Dale Kramer * $7.95Men at Workby Honor Tracy $4.95and checked. |No, that Was. really and truly,our own UC Symphony, the ensen-ble whom unkind people used to re¬fer to in years past as the N. Y.Mets ol Orchestras, proudly tearingthrough the Titan-ic First Sympho¬ny of Gustav Mahler, and playing itwith the very best of them.A sudden change? Not really, forin the past year the orchestra hassteadily been improving both in in¬strumental virtuosity and ensembleperformance and has now arrivedat the point where it could take onone of the great endurance tests ofsymphonies, by a composer—:conductor who had little respect forinstrumental failings, and comethrough as absolute champs.The catalyst responsible for thiswelcome reversal of campus musi-,cal fortunes is Richard Wernick, IAssistant Professor of Music andConductor of the Orchestra for thepast year. His short tenure has in¬deed brought about some wondrous jchanges: brass and woodwind sec-1tions that play without self-consciousness and with confidence,a -string section whose miraculously Iimproved intonation was the talk ofthe audience, and, most important- jly, a sense of enjoyment in the per- |form a nee of the standard orches- ,tral repertoire that is the keynoteof amateur ensembles and whichhas been instilled in the orchestra.While Wernick has restored disci¬pline to the ranks, the mostimpressive quality of his conduct¬ing is that he does not simply leada run-through of the works heplays. The Mahler Symphony no. 1was a real performance, full of idi- jomatic quirks and Wernick’s ownpersonality (plus not a little ofKoussevitsky’s), but, whatever the jreason, the performance came!through as a solid success for Wer¬nick, complete vindication for theOrchestra, and thorough enjoymentfor an audience that loved everyminute of it.Conductor Wernick was also rep-1resented on the program as Com-1poser Wernick, with the world pre- jmiere of his Aevia, a 75 Anniversa¬ry Commission, which, in manyrespects, tended to mirror his con¬ducting style: effectively gettinghis point across, while doing it in agenerally terse and uncomplexmanner.Following the Wernick work was 1William Cernota, co-winner of theOrchestra’s 1966 Concerto Competi-ition in a performance of Haydn’s 1D-major Cello Concerto, op. 101,and one suspects that his ratherrestrained and restricted reading ofthe solo part was due to a case ofnerves rather than to any faultymusicianship. Even so, he gave theConcerto a generally sunny perfor¬mance, jtie that was neitherhigh-pressured nor intensely intro-!spective, but what really made theConcerto shine was the sparklingaccompaniment provided by Assist-1ant Conductor John Solie. Not onlywas the Orchestra keenly respoo-!sive to his beat, but Solie knew his !man well enough to gauge justwhen to relax his tempos and give ;him leewray, and cello and ensem¬ble merged with great integration.;Cernota, however, was not theonly soloist. In solving the problemin Stravinsky’s microscopic Greet¬ings Prelude of “What kind of pian¬ist is most worth having?”, the Or¬chestra elected one Wayne Booth, of literary fame. While its probably,not true' that Vladimir Horowitz wlH continue to resist the blandish-has decided to return to retirement, orients of Sol Hurok and remainupon hearing of his debut, the Col- j w*th the l niversify,lege sincerely hopes that Mr. Booth ! Ed Chikofsky GENERAL BOOK DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Continued expansionof our military and commercial businessprovides openingsfor virtually every technical talent 4As you contemplate one of the most important decisionsof your life, we suggest you consider career oppor¬tunities at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyoneelse, we offer all of the usual “fringe” benefits, in¬cluding our Corporation-financed Graduate EducationProgram. But, far more important to you and your fu¬ture, Is the wide-open opportunity for professionalgrowth with a company that enjoys an enviable recordof stability In the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.And make no mistake about it . . . you'!! get a solidfeeling of satisfaction from your contribution to ournation's economic growth and to its national defenseas well.Your degree can be a B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. In: MECHAN*ICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structuresoriented), ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGI¬CAL ENGINEERING • ENGINEERING MECHANICS,APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS andENGINEERING PHYSICS. wwrr * WHtmtr aircraft ttchnical population vs yearsRECORD Of STABILITY(No dtp ir* technical populationfoi the lait quarterof a century) jTake a look at the above chart; than a good long look atPratt & Whitney Aircraft—wher* technical careers offerexciting growth, continuing challenge, and lasting ata-|bility—where engineers and scientists are recognized atthe major reason for the Company's continued success.For further information concerning a career with Pratt& Whitney Aircraft, consult your college placementofficer—or write Mr, William L. Stoner, EngineeringDepartment, Pratt A Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,Connecticut 06 TOR. SPECIALISTS IN POWER . . . POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONSINCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILES,'SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.PpP v>‘ "" •'IStudent Government hasannounced that a debate|j on ranking, scheduled for|| tonight, has been postpon- |?§1 ed until sometime nextweek.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 10, 1967 Pratt & Whitney AircraftCOHNBCTKUT OPERATIONS EAST HART TORO. CONNECTICUTFLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST PALM BEACH. rUMUOA MVteiON OP UNITBOi awcnaptft eon*Am ImmmImouse SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCE ,Call Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALI MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602LOOKING FOR SELF-FULFILLMENT?SHERUT LA'AM — ISRAELMAY BE YOUR ANSWERTo: Sherut La'am (Service to the People)515 Park AvenueNew York, N. Y. 10022I am a graduate—undergraduate (underline one) between 19-30and would like you to send me, without obligation, FREE informa¬tion telling how I can serve a full year in Israel for only $670which includes round trip fare. (A limited number of long-termloans are available). I understand a knowledge of Hebrew isnot a prerequisite.NAME (PLEASE PRINT)MAJOR FIELD OF STUDY COLLEGE OR UNIV.STREET ADDRESS PHONE ^OPTIONAL)CITY_ musses _ STATE t- ZIPSluggish Week forBasketball Teamby Syd UngerThe first week of each quar¬ter is usually a sluggish one.Nobody relishes the thought ofhaving to do term papers,study for exams, or perform anyarduous work. This ‘'take it easy”attitude was evident in last week¬end’s basketball game.In what must go down as one ofthe most boring games in the pastthree years, Chicago stumbled pastIllinois Institute of Technology,46-37.THE MAROONS played well un¬der the boards with Ken Hoganson,who had been plagued with injuriesearlier in the season, making 15 re¬bounds. In another fine perfor¬mance Doug Peterson, who hadalso been out because of injuries,was second in scoring for the Ma¬ roons with nine points.Chicago played a good defensivegame, holding I1T, a team whichusually scores around 70, to 37points. The Maroons’ defense, how¬ever, seemed to be based on aweak offense.EVEN WITH a tight defense andgood rebounding, it will be almostimpossible for a Chicago to beatTulane on January 28 if they shootwith the same accuracy (20%) theydid last Saturday. Too often Chica¬go players got rebounds only tomiss easy follow-up shots. Againsta taller Tulane team the Maroonswon’t get that many rebounds anda few missed inside shots couldcost them the game. Paring Culprit Brought to JusticeAlto Flute Is RecoveredAn alto flute, stolen during lastFriday night’s Chamber concert atMandel Hall, has been recoveredthrough a chain of coincidences.The Contemporary Chamber Play¬ers had just concluded a cantantaand flutist Jan HerKnger went tolook for his alto flute, the fluted’amour. At the same time ayoung man walked from the stagewing, across the stage and up theaisle with a protrusion under hiscoat that was noticed by Mrs.Carol Schneider, a member of theaudience.When the loss was announced tothe audience, Mrs. Schneider spokeup, as did Paul Antal, who recog¬nized the thief as a crasher at hisNew Year’s Eve party. From tapesmade at this party, Antal chancedto find the thief’s name. Using this information and Mr. Antal’s identi¬fication, the police arrested JohnSnowden, 18, as he stood on thecorner of 55th & University.His reason for the theft of the$800 instrument: “I wanted to playit”.webuilt a Monday through Friday,Jan. 9-13FEMALE SUBJECTSNEEDEDby Hyde Park MarketResearch GroupAges 17’/2 to 31 Vs$2 per hour for spare timeparticipation hours arranged tofit your schedule. For furtherinformation call 684-2438Allied Research Council5464 So. Shore Drive i u 3eeK morePetitions by Jan. 20Students Against the Rank(SAR) will seek to add to theapproximately 1000 signaturesit has collected against maleclass ranking by concentrating newefforts on the College.At an executive meeting Satur¬day it was decided to have thegroup give itself until January 20 towind up its petition drive. Thedrive was authorized last quarterat a general meeting. “After Jan.20 we expect we’ll have to go backto the general body for them to as¬sess the results,” according to SARspokesman Jeff Blum.Over one-third of the studentsand faculty in the College havesigned petitions against ranking,said Blum.UC faculty Wives PlanTo Cavort af Ouad ClubWhile their husbands arehaving dinner at the PalmerHouse as guests of the Univer¬sity’s trustees, the wives of UCfaculty members will be cavortingat the Quadrangle Club, at a galaevent featuring a show entitled,"The Secret Life of Mitty Walter.”The evening’s plans call for din¬ner at 7 pm, the show at 8 pm. anddancing when the facuKy returns_ ! from dinner later that night.better OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110Here's the greatestInvention since contactlenses. Lensine is here!The new all-in-one solutionfor complete contactlens care. You no longerhave to keep separatesolutions for wetting,cleansing andsoaking contacts.And on thebottom of everybottle there’s aremovable lenscarrying case, aLensine exclusive.Pick up a bottle.There’s nothinglike it at any price.for contacts If you have a genuine desire to go on learning—and to continue growing—there’s a demanding andrewarding career position for you at Philco.We are a major subsidiary of Ford Motor Company,fast approaching $1 billion in annual sales toconsumer, Industrial and government markets. Weare dedicated to major areas of endeavor . . . fromthe vastness of outer space to the microcosmos ofultramlnlaturlzatlon . . . from advanced color TVtechnology to vocational classes in depressedcommunltlea . .. from re-entry to refrigerator*.Interested In finding out more? We will be visitingyour campus on January 12. Contact yourPlacement Office. Stop by and talk to us aboutyour future or write to College Relations, PhilcoCorporation, C A Tioga Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 19134.PHILCO WILL BE HERE ON JANUARY 12Curuur opportun/tlet available on the past Coast, tha Midwest, theSouthwest, the West Coast, and throughout the world.DMalona: Aaronutronlc • Appliance • Communications d Electronics •Consumer Electronics • International • Lansdele • Microelectronics •Se/ea A Distribution • TeohRep • Western Development LaboratoriesAN (ODAL IFPOITNNIIT IMUUHI M/FOther companies * -may offer you the moonPhilco offers you hard work,a chance to learn something, andmaybe the moon with a ribbon around itJanuary 10, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7CaJe“>dar of EventsTuesday, January 10SEMINAR: "M ammalian BrainStudies: New Approaches", LeonardRadinsky. Biology Dept.. Brooklyn Col¬lege. Anatomy Bldg, Room 104, 4:30.Refreshments Room 105, 4 p.m.LECTURE: “Chemical Proceses in theEarly Solar System", Prof. Edward An¬ders. Chemistry Dept., Eckhart 209.VOLLEYBALL: Hyde Pk. NeighborhoodClub: men & women welcome, 8 pm.Thursday, January 12LECTURE: Stokely Carmichael speakson "Black Power” at 8 pm. in MandelHall. Adm. S2.50 reg, $1 studs.FORUM: ‘The Changing Face of Amer¬ican Medical Education,” with Dr. Wm.Bronston of Menninger Inst. BillingsP-117 4 pm.MEETING: Inter-house council JudsonMEETING: Wash. Prom, committeeIda Noyes Library 8 pm.ClassifiedPERSONALSPSST1 (It’s a coffe hour, so cleverlydisguised you won’t even recognize it.)Snell Cellar Party. Tonight 9-11.Jobs offeredGirl grad student looking for apt or aptto share. Contact Sherry—FA 4-5160—around 6 pm.Restore your youthful vigor: Play vol¬leyball Men & women wanted. lues, »pm. Hvde Park Neighborhood Club. Fri¬day. 7:30 Ida NoyesKAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.Night ski trip to Alpine Valley, Wise,this Thursday: call Don Isbell 363-3814Learn to read, write Hebrew 10 lessons.Exper, prog. Classes conducted in threecities at once. Free College Jew StudiesHA 7-5580—call immed.More subjects needed at Sleep Lab.Pays. X2333.Male roommate wanted $36/mo. 56o4Drexel. 752-5383. Griess & Byrd.YIDDISH FILM FESTIVAL :Tevya, Sat¬urday evening. 7:30 pm, Hillen House,admission 50cUndergrad, girl wants apt. or apt. toshare. Call International House, Room951. or leave name & number with oper¬ator.Come and see what a Women’s Club isall about. Join the Quads at a CabaretParty Wed Jan. 11 9-10:30 pm. PHIGAM FRAT HOUSE, 5615 S. Univ.Free for all! The Snell UndergroundFreedom Movement urges you to un¬chain yourself from your desk, unlockthe door to your cell, and meet peopleat our Cellar Party. Tonight. 9-11.Exercise your creativity, Graffiti! SnellCellar Party, Tonight 9-11JOBS OFFEREDFac Family will exch. large roomw/private bath for assistance w/2 littlegirls. Call Virgil Burnett at ext. 2762 oraft 6 at 373-7865.Young man—pt. time—to assist man innursing home. 731-5044. ____Proof reader, pt. time afts., 20-25hrs/wk, good bkgrnd in Eng. required.X4444.FOR SALEHeathkit 100 watt Stereo preamp/amp:$75. Heathkit FM-Stereo FM Tuner:$60. Knight (Rek-O-Kut) Turntable withRek-O-Kut Arm and Shure Stereo Cart¬ridge: $60. Two Knight (EV) 3-wayspeakers: $50 each. All this equipmentis in excellent condition. 324-5751.1960 Volkswagen, Black, Sun Roof. Ex¬cellent condition, $450. Call after six643-7362G.E. 14” portable TV, perfect condition.$35: 463-35851949 Harley-Davidson 750 c.c. Newrings, valves, tires — transmission di¬sassembled A really sweet machine.$200-324-5750Selling to bare walls. Tons of hardcoverbooks 50c each antiques 50% off 2915 W.Cermack Rd.open 11-7 pm. includingSunday. Bring copy of ad.HAND CARVED FIRST ~ QUALITYBLOCK MEERSCHAUM PIPES DI¬RECT FROM TURKEY. Fantasticvalue. Call 363-6451.TO RENTNice clean room near campus for rent.Call MI 3-92574V2 large rooms furnished apartment-Newly decorated. 2 master bedrooms-natural wood burning fireplace Suitablefor 3 professional or business men.Near 55th St. and Cornell. $180/month.MU 4-8222.6900^ SOUTH CRANDON Ave. DeluxeHighrise 1 bdrm. apts. from $120; par¬quet floor, see Mrs. Haley receivingrm. or security guard. MU 4-7964.56th and Kimbark 3Va rooms nice quietbldg, good location. Unfurnished, $93Call 643-6778.FOUNDParker Int'l Pen. 54th & Ellis; *4 call684-1857LSD \ HYDE PARK has the‘savingest’ plans in townThat’s right. We now combinemaximum security with maxi¬mum interest earnings. So...get your “nest egg” movedinto one of these terrificplans right away.Six-MonthTime Certificates$1,000 (or more in $100 units) buysyou a 6-month 43/4% annual rateTime Certificate. 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You can redeemyour Time Certificate any time after90daysand still earn4% annual rate.Yes, it is worth changing financialinstitutions to enjoy these savingsaccount earnings.RegularPassbook SavingsSave any amount anytime with |regular withdrawal privileges. |Passbook interest is now com- Ipounded and paid quarterly (Apr. 1/ IJuly l/0ct. 1/and Jan. 1) Deposits Iin by the tenth of any month earn {from the first.JBank your money for all it’s worth ... at “the 6 o’clock bank.”0) Hyde Park BankandTrust Company sgt1525 E. 53rd ST. / CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 / CALL: 752-4600 / MEMBER F.D.I.C.Hyde Park Bank and Trust Company1525 E. 53rd. StreetChicago, Illinois 60615Gentlemen: Enclosed is my check for $ Pleasesend me (5% One Year) (4%% 6-Month) Time Cer¬tificate (s) in amounts of $_$100 units). ($1,000 or more in Please issue the Certificates as follows:NameStreet.City -State Zip Code-Social Security No..Mail me Certificates □ Passbook form Q> JA psychology student is studying theuse of LSD on campus. He would like tointerview students who have had experi¬ence with the drug. All interviews willbe confidential and anonymous; theywill be arranged at the convenience ofthe interviewee. Call Slade Lander,324-3034.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 10, 1967