The Chicago Maroon FoundedIn 1892VOL. 76, NO. 54 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1968 9# 8\PAGES150-110 VOTE UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO^ArchivesStudents Vote against a StrikeBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorLeaders of Students for a Demo¬cratic Society (SDS) and Commit¬tee for a Responsible University jiCRU) were voted down Friday af¬ternoon at a meeting they calledto consider administration responseto their latest demands. The nega¬tive vote temporarily ended the;threat of a strike on this campus, j“We have suffered a clear defeathere,” SDS leader Chris Hobson, agraduate student in political sci¬ence, said after the vote. “Let’s nottry to blink at it. We have a lot ofwork to do on this campus beforeit gets out of its blind acquiescenceto what’s going on in America.”Hobson was booed and badly heck¬led during his speech.CRU’s steering committee metover the weekend to reformulatetheir strategy in light of their de¬feat. They have tentatively sched¬uled a rally for the middle of thisweek to reorient their programtowards housing. Present plans callfor dropping of the other demandsand refraining from asking for an¬other strike vote at least until theyhave recaptured their momentum.The decisive vote Friday cameon a motion to go ahead with thestudent strike that was planned tobegin yesterday. The group ofabout 400 students had previouslyvoted that Chicago’s response tothe resubmitted CRU petition andadditional demands for reform of the Disciplinary Committee andUniversity opposition to federalpunishment for demonstrators hadbeen inadequate.Dramatic VoteThe dramatic vote then followedon whether to implement the strikeproposal that had been approvedlast Wednesday if the Universityresponse proved inadequate. By avote of 150 to 110, the group votednot to hold the strike.In the mass confusion that fol¬lowed the vote, CRU leaders triedto arrange for a new meeting thisweek to consider other proposals,but it proved impossible to holdthe rapidly disintegrating crowd to¬gether.By refusing to strike, studentseffectively reversed the decisionthey had taken Wednesday nightfollowing the black sit-in at the Ad¬ministration Building. At that time,the white group resubmitted theirpetition requesting a 20-percentblack quota, low-cost housing forstudents and neighborhood resi¬dents, curriculum reforms that in¬cluded mandatory courses in blackhistory and culture, and open Uni¬versity facilities. |17-Page ReplyBefore the meeting Friday, the jUniversity submitted a 17-page doc¬ument, signed by Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell summarized pastactions which the University has jtaken on the racial issue. He re-Teacher Cadres ProgramAids Inner-City SchoolsThe “teacher cadres” programto improve inner-city education,announced last quarter by theGraduate School of Education andsubsequently approved by the Chi¬cago Board of Education, is get¬ting under way.The project is known as the FordTraining and Placement Programand will be headed by RaymondL. Jerrems, principal of the Ray¬mond School, 37th St. and WabashAve.The project will train and placein Chicago’s innter-city schoolsabout 30 professional staff persons,sach year for the next five years.Included will be teachers in all?rade levels and subject areas andpsychological specialists, adulteducators, and administrators.They will be placed in teams ofeight or 10.The training will emphasizespecial educational needs and en¬vironmental aspects of inner-cityneighborhoods, in addition to theusual grade level or subject matterelements. Placement of teamsrather than individuals is expected to help the teachers and otherstaff to succeed in an inner-citysetting.The program will be operatedby an executive committee andadvisory board representing boththe University and the ChicagoBoard of Education. Student andcommunity participation in plan¬ning the program is anticipated.The teams will begin their train¬ing this summer at the University.The first teams will enter DuSableand Kenwood High Schools thisautumn. The first elementaryschool team will be placed in anew school at Vincennes and Ker-foot Sts. when it is completed in1969.Most of the teachers will bedrawn from the Master of Arts inTeaching and Master of Sciencein Teaching students in the Grad¬uate School of Education. Theteachers chosen will have takenspecial work in inner-city schooleducation.The program is supported by$1.1 million of the $3 million grantfrom the Ford Foundation for usein urban studies. The Maroon — GREG SOLOMONFRIDAY DECISION: Students gathered in Hutchinson Quad and voted down the CRU-SDS planfor a student strike, which had been scheduled for yesterday.Grass’ Arrests AreRapidly Increasingfused to accept a quota on Negrostudents, although maintaining thatChicago would continue its effortsto attract such students and re¬fused to replace the projected stu¬dent village with low-cost housingfor area residents, although statingthat the student village remainedunder study.O’Connell also stated that theissue of open use of University fa¬cilities was under review and thatfaculty groups were continuingstudy of curriculum reforms.Opposed to BillOn the two additional CRU de¬mands, O’Connell announced thathe was referring the CRU demandfor an elected disciplinary com¬mittee to the Kalven Committeestudying disciplinary reforms andthat the University was “firmly op¬posed” to the bill which has passedthe House of Representatives deny¬ing federal funds to campus pro¬testors.The Maroon has learned that anumber of top-ranking Chicago ad¬ministrators have been contactingmembers of the Senate urgingthem to vote against the bill.In general, CRU and SDS leadersstated that they found O’Connell’sresponse unsatisfactory. The sec¬tions on housing were particularlycriticized with a number of stu¬dents voicing opposition to the Uni¬versity’s relocation efforts.Students opposed to the strikerarely spoke in favor of all aspectsof O’Connell’s response, but at¬tacked the strike plan on tacticalgrounds or because they objectedto the formation of some of CRU’sdemands. First part of a two-part series.By PHIL SEMASCollege Press ServiceWASHINGTON - Arrests forpossession of marijuana are be¬coming as common as protests onmany campuses.No one knows exactly how manythere have been. A compilation bythe National Student Associationlists 90 raids involving 333 persons,most of them college students ar¬rested for possession, during thefour month period from November2, 1967, to February 23. An inform¬al survey by CPS turned up anadditional 21 busts involving morethan 100 students during the pres¬ent academic year.The most famous bust was at theState University of New York atStony Brook where students wererousted out of bed just before dawnin a police raid complete with ex¬tensive on-the-spot press coverage.But Stony Brook is not the onlycollege to face the pre-dawn raidtactic. At Bard College in NewYork police stormed onto the cam¬pus at 1 a.m., setting up roadblocks, searching dorms and rous¬ing students out of bed. They ar¬rested 34 students, 14 on drug pos¬session charges, the rest oncharges from drunk driving to har¬assing an officer. Two New Hamp¬shire colleges, Franconia andKeene State, have felt the brunt of the pre-dawn tactics. So has Amer¬ican University in Washington, D.C.No SanctuaryEven Lyndon B. Johnson’s almamater has been busted. In Januaryseven Southwest Texas State Col¬lege students were arrested for pos¬session of marijuana afer a month¬long investigation in which collegeofficials co-operated closely withfederal narcotics agents.Although pre-dawn raids at smallschools like Stony Brook have got¬ten the most publicity, pot bustsare so frequent at large campusesthat they go unnoticed. In responseto a recent CPS survey, collegeeditors at many large schools, suchas the Universities of Wisconsin,Colorado, and California at LosAngeles, said there had been toomany arrests for marijuana tocount.Arrests for possession of mari-Turn to Page 5' » j. j i a . .. , a ■Student Groups Oppose Congress Anti-Protest BillWASHINGTON (CPS) - Leadersof three national student organiza¬tions have come out stronglyagainst the bill passed by theHouse to deny federal scholarshipsto those who participate in unlaw¬ful demonstrations.And one organization, CampusAmericans for Democratic Action,plans a campaign to try to defeatthe bill in the Senate.Meanwhile, the large educationassociations, such as the American Council on Education (ACE), weretaking a careful approach to thebill. Jonn F. Morse, director of theACE’s federal relations commis¬sion, said the education associa¬tions and college presidents he hadtalked to were “concerned” aboutthe bill, but wanted to study it be¬fore making public statements onit. The bill is not expected to comebefore the Senate for at least threeweeks.Harvard and Columbia presi¬dents Nathan Pusey and Grayson Kirk have come out against thebill. The Columbia demonstrationwas the largest of those thatsparked the House bill.The three student organizationleaders who spoke out against thebill were Ellis Levin, former Chi¬cago student and national secre¬tary of CADA: Ed Schwartz, pres¬ident of the National Student Asso¬ciation; and Stephen Schonberg,president of the University Chris¬tian Movement. They said passage of the bill will increase campusprotests next year.Levin said his organization plansa campaign or a petition campaignamong administrators and facultymembers and both petitions andletters to Congressmen among stu¬dents. He said that once substan¬tial support has been gathered hisgroup plans to meet with membersof Congress. He said he was “notunduly confident that this effortwill have any discernible effect onthe decision makers.”SECOND DEMONSTRATIONStudents Protest U. of Wisconsin Stock OwnershipSpecial to The MaroonMADISON—University of Wiscon¬sin students demonstrated againyesterday in response to a board ofregents decision not to sell univer¬sity stock in the Chase ManhattanBank. Students demand that thestock, which amounts to some$230,000, should be sold in protestto a loan by the bank to SouthAfrican’s apartheid government.In response to the regents’ de¬cision at a Friday afternoon meet¬ing, 350 Wisconsin students sat-inat the school’s administration build¬ing Friday night. At 11 p.m. theypresented the following formal de¬mands to University officials:•An emergency meeting of theBoard of Regents Monday;• A Regents vote to sell theChase-Manhattan stock;•The money from the stock to beused to bring black students to theuniversity;•A general policy-making com¬mittee for the university to beformed of minority students; and•The appointment of a black co¬worker to the Doyle program, theorganization which recruits blackstudents.In addition to the demands, stu¬dents issued an ultimatum to theeffect that if their demands werenot accepted they would re-takecontrol of the administrationbuilding.Berkeley Pres. InitiatesInner City Program..The University of California an¬nounced Friday a program to carryTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. “the thought and research of thecampus directly to the heart of thecity.”California’s new presidentCharles J. Hitch said in a statementthat he had called upon the headsof nearly 100 other California col¬leges and universities to join in theprogram.Among the parts of the programare:• $1 million in scholarships to un¬derprivileged students.• Special teacher training to im¬proved elementary and high schoolteaching.• Appointment of a coordinator toprovide fairer job opportunities inthe university and in placementservices.• An increase in minority-groupenrollment in graduate schools.Antioch Faculty VotesTo Abolish GradesYELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio (CPS)—The faculty of Antioch Collegehas voted to abolish grades, andreplace them with a “credit/nocredit” system of evaluating stu¬dents’ work.At present Antioch has an A—B—C—D—F grading scale. The newsystem, which was approved by thefaculty May 7, requires faculty togive fairly detailed reports on theprogress of students in addition toassigning them credit or “no cre¬dit” for courses.The new plan was the result of atwo-year study by the educationalpolicy committee, which wasMOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOSBY STORE OtTHE SOUTH ’SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent DiscountsMEXICANA DAYThursday May 23in the Commons for lunchAll Mexican MenuDinner in the C-Shopin the GALLERY 7-li:30Special evenung menuto orderi 1 ? siri t 1 1 t tiuintj !2i: headed by Mrs. Ruth Churchill,director of testing at Antioch.Under the plan, “no credit” rat¬ings will not be registered on astudent’s transcript, nor will theybe released outside of campus.According to Mrs. Churchill, thedetails of the new evaluation sys¬tem are still being worked out byher committee. She says, though,that faculty will be able to givecomments on students, and alsonote their progress in the followingsix areas: skills and techniques,substantive learning, creativethinking, independent thinking,quality of work and responsibility.Students Elect DeanAs Student Body Pres.GUNNISON, Colo. (CPS) - Stu¬dents at Western State College herehave elected the dean of studentsas student body president.The election of Dean Olaf Kjos-ness was seen as a protest againsta lack of student power in campusdecision-making. “Since he has allthe power, we thought he might aswell have the job,” explained oneof the students.Both student candidates for thepost withdrew and Kjosness got 87per cent of the vote in a write-incampaign. The students are askingior a greater role in control of thevay tuition and fee money is spent ind in the setting of women’s dorm-tory hours.Oregon Protest WinsCommittee PositionsEUGENE, Ore. (CPS) - Afterthree days of sit-ins and demon¬strations, students at the Univer¬sity of Oregon have won represen¬tation on the committee which willbe seeking a replacement for re¬tiring President Arthur S. Fleming. “As leaders of three of the na¬tion’s largest student organiaztionsand as present co-plaintiffs in alawsuit against General Hershey’sdirectives calling for reclassifica¬tion of draft protesters “1-A”, wewish to take strong exception t0the amendments.. .denying federalloans to students engaged in dis¬ruptive protests on campus.“We are fighting the Hersheydirectives on both Constitutionaland political grounds. We opposethese amendments for the samereasons. Apart from their ambigu¬ous wording — which raises seri¬ous questions as to their constitu¬tionality — we believe that theyrepresent an entirely wrongheadedapproach to dealing with the prob¬lems of student activism. The is¬sues which young people are rais¬ing — the war, the cities, the qual¬ity of education — cannot be wipedaway by police action and threatsof federal sanction. Young peoplemerely will intensify their resis¬tance to legal authority if they seethat the instruments of force arethe only instruments which thecountry can use to solve itsproblems.”WHAT TRANSPIRED BETWEEN THE !VATICAN AND THE THIRD REICH? ♦THE DEPUTY, o play by Rolf Hochhuth ♦will be presented onJune 7 at The Shoreland Hotel, 8:30 pmBenefit for COUSINS & YOUNG-McCARTHYLIBRARY HELP WANTEDstudents and student wives,tel. 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueNO EXTRA CHARGE FOR:1. four seat belts2 back-up lights3. sliding sunroof4 4- spe«J synchronized transmission5. power brakes, disc front6 wall-to-wall carpeting7. windshield washer8. two-speed heater/defroster9 fully adjustable, reclining front seats10 stainless steel exterior trim 11. electric clock12. trip mileage counter13. front and rear center armrests14. bumper guards, rubber Inserts1 5. tool kit16. Mlchelln X (radial-ply) tires17. carpeted trunk18 fresh air ventilating syston19. extra thick body steelWHAT ELSE DO YOUWANT FOR $2699?PEUGEOTcome indrive theall NEW '68NOW!LESL Y IMPORTS INCPEUGEOT SUES WINNER Isi CHICAGO aid MIDWESTS. MICHIGAN 326-2SSOPreparation & Delivery Not Included! I S ! X I ! i i : * : : ' 2 I f I : ? : ; 'THE CHICAGO MAROON May 21, 1968Kuwaiti Official Attacks Israel's Founding, PoliciesBy JUDIE RESELLEditorial Assistant“Israel is precisely as democrat¬ic as South Africa,” asserted Fay-ez Savagh, Senior Consultant to theKuwaiti Foreign Ministry, in aLecture Saturday night in BreastedHall.Celebrating the 20th anniversaryof Israel’s creation, Savegh spokeon “An Arab View: Israel TwentyYears After.”“The cost of the creation and ofthe maintenance of Israel has been paid in full by the Arab people ofPalestine,” Savegh commented. Heaccused Israel of denying to theArabs of Palestine their humanrights and their right to self-determination.“The dispossession and subjuga-ion of the Arabs of Palestine washe intended result of Zionism,”;"^egh said. He said that the re¬moval of the native population ofPalestine in order to create Israelwas not endorsed by the inter¬national community. “Israel was founded on a human¬itarian promise, a nationalist prom¬ise, and a spiritual promise,” Sa¬vegh commented. He did not feelthat Israel has fulfilled any ofthese promises in her 20 yearhistory.Among Israel’s failures, Saveghcited, is the fact that Israel is thehome of only a sixth of the world’sJews. “Israel’s distinction has notbeen in the area of Jewish values,or as a creative center of Jewishlife.”“The future of the Middle EastAzrael Predicts US-USSR TensionsPresent liberal trends in easternEuropean countries could furtherstrain relations between the SovietUnion and the United States, Asso¬ciate Professor of Political ScienceJeremy Azrael said Sunday night.Azrael, who was charged by theSoviet Union with spying for theUnited States earlier this month,asserted this on “The Universityof Chicago Round Table,” theweekly TV discussion program.Discussing “Changes in the So¬viet Hegemony” with him wereAndrew C. Janos, professor of po¬litical science at Berkeley, andChauncy D. Harris, professor andchairman of the Department ofGeography and director of the Cen¬ter for International Studies atChicago.The autonomy that the satellitenations are developing “makes theSoviet Union more reluctant to en¬courage an atmosphere of rap-proachement, which makes liber¬alization legitimate and deviationlegitimate, which suggests that. pluralism in all of its various man¬ifestations is an approprate pol¬icy,” Azrael said.In Ten YearsAsked what might happen ineastern Europe in the next 10years, Harris replied: “We mayface a peculiar situation in whichwe hoped that there wouldn’t be amonolithic Soviet control, but wemay jump to the other extreme ofBalkanization and the renewal ofancient rivalries as between Hun¬gary and Romania over Transyl¬vania and between Yugoslavia andBulgaria. ..”Azrael then commented, “Tenyears from now we may reallyface a situation in which 20 yearsof Communist rule seem relativelyinsignificant. . .and eastern Europelooks the way it looked in the1930’s: Brush fires and all kindsof horrible specters can be con¬jured.”Janos said he thought the trendtoward liberalization “will con¬ tinue, but I can see certain verydefinite limits to either domesticliberalization, or to what we some¬times call desatellization.NS A Will Meet TonightThere will be a meeting of theNational Student Association com¬mittee tonight at 8:15 p.m. in theIda Noyes Library to draw up abudget, pick a NSA coordinator,and determine which students willbe going to the Congress this sum¬mer. All interested students are in¬vited to come, a spokesman said.Memorial ServiceThere will be a memorialservice for Roy Gutmannin Bond Chapel tomorrowat 8 p.m. Friends andmembers of the Universitycommunity are invited toattend. is bound to be a future based I s unacceptable about Israel, theeither on the law of conquest, for human misery that was its costIsrael is an act of conquest, or it and its exclusiveness as a state,”can be based on negation of what I Savegh said.Hutch Offers Candlelight, MusicHutch Gallery, a new attempt toimprove the food service at Hut-Features include candlelight din¬ing, background music, and eve¬ning food specials,chinson Commons, will be openevenings from 7 to 11:30 p.m.Monday through Friday.During the last week of the quar¬ter and during exam week itself,the air-conditioned gallery will beopen for study. Cram specials willbe offered. The Free Store is now open.Located in the back of the Epis¬copal Church on 56th and Black-stone Sts., the Free Store was setup to liberate Chicago before theYippie invasion this summer, ac¬cording to one of its organizers.Free food, free music, and freethoughts will be offered 24 hours aday for those who need tomeditate.IF THERE BE FAULTPLACE IT ON THYSELFAND PLACE THYSELFWITHIN REACH OF ITSCORRECTIONSPRING SALE - TYPEWRITERSSmith-Corona Compact Electric (Model#250)These typewriters are demonstrator models, slightly used, all in perfect working condition, andwill be sold with the full one year guarantee which is standard for new typewriters. RegularPrice * $250.00SPECIAL SPRING SALE PRICE$125.00In addition, we have many other models, new and used, portable and standard, manual and electricon sale at prices ranging from $32.50 to $495.00University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.(Our Spring Sale of Books at Vi price or less continues apace.)i ifJ 1) -£1M:May 21, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger Black | Associate Editors David E. GumpertExecutive Editor Michael Seidman i Daniel HertzbergNews Editor John Moscow 1Photographic Editor David Travis j Editor Emeritus David A. SatterDorm DrugsTuesday night’s Chicago police entrance of ShoreyHouse with search and arrest warrants for an allegednarcotics pusher underscores the need for a reassess¬ment of Chicago’s policy on social rules in general.This newspaper has frequently pointed out that itshould not be the University’s business to stick itsnose into the private lives of students, particularly tomete out academic penalties such as suspension andexpulsion for so-called infringements of social rules,Tuesday’s incident bears further witness to thehopelessness of the University’s attempts to keep stu¬dents’ actions in line with either its own ideals orsociety’s legal norms, whether the case in point is useof drugs or “abuse” of parietal hours.Recently two commendable proposals have arisen,either or a combination of which if implemented wouldrepresent an intelligent response by Chicago to thedisaffection with which so many students regard theadministration’s policies in this area. Letters to the EditorsThe first, espoused by such libertarians as MiltonFriedman, would get the University out of the enforce¬ment business altogether so far as social matters areconcerned. It would leave to students and only stu¬dents the responsibility of seeing that their freedom istempered with the obligation to see to it that nomember of the society is inconvenienced by another’sactions. This could be accomplished by removing theDean of Students’ veto power over social legislationvoted by members of individual houses and by re¬stricting the authority of the Disciplinary Committee(which, we think, would then need both faculty andstudent representation) to academic matters such asplagiarism and other acts clearly disruptive of ascholarly atmosphere.The second, advocated by Harry Kalven, is moremoderate. On the assumption that the official Uni¬versity indeed bears a responsibility for the socialactions of students in its housing, it proposes that vio¬lators of social rules simply be barred from Universityhousing. This would entail the existence of the author¬ity of the Disciplinary Committee in matters social,presumably within the framework the committee heis heading recommends. Some QuestionsBoth in content and in tone,your editorial of May 17 “Againsta Strike” was a moderate andrelevant approach to the politicsof confrontation at Chicago, andthe vote of the students on Fridayagainst a strike seems to indi¬cate that the majority even ofpolitically active students on thiscampus feel that the administra¬tion’s response to the black stu¬dents may still be altered by, asyou say, “reason and argument.”But I wonder if there is notanother level of explanation forwhite students’ relatively passiveresponse — that many white stu¬dents realize, at lease subcon¬sciously, that they, perhaps morethan the administration, are re¬sponsible for the alienation ofblack students from the Univers¬ity (confining the discussion tomatters internal to the Univers¬ity, if that is possible)Either of these would represent an immense im¬provement over the current outmoded procedures.Friday's VoteThere is little to say about the vote against thestrike but to reaffirm our view that such action at thepresent time would destroy the effectiveness of thepolitics of confrontation for the future. One peripheralobservation, however, comes to mind.With all the cliches about listening to reason andrefraining from force, people have forgotten the basicundemocratic nature of this University and universitiesin general. Not until students receive decision-makingpower commensurate with their stake in the academywill force be for the most part eliminated as a justifiablemeans of producing change. PERHAPS black separatism onthis campus was inevitable, butwhat have students, individuallyor collectively, done to integratethe blacks into the community?Where are the black Maroon ed¬itors or even reporters? SPACclaims to be a radical SG party,concerned with the larger moralissues; where are its black lead¬ers or even members? If the uni¬versity is to seek out and recruitblacks because they are blacks,without being paternalistic or pa¬tronizing, why did student or¬ganizations fail to do so back inthe old days when whites andblacks could communicate witheach other?More than feeling annoyed orpeculiar, should not the CRU members think a little about whythe black radicals refuse to talkto them? Was such a breakdownof communication inevitable, orwas it helped along by studentswho are quick to blame the uni¬versity for faults which theythemselves manifest?I feel that such questions mustlurk just below the surface inmuch of the discussion aboutthe events since SPLIBS wasformed; but they should bebrought to the conscious level.Perhaps a few of the accusationsshould be turned inward.PAUL BURSTEIN, ’68Bookstore PricesI am writing to you to expressamazement at the retailing habitsof the University of Chicago Bookstore. Never known for its overlyhumanitarian habits, this institu¬tion has recently exceded even itsown extraordinary standards. Toenumerate,• Chomsky, “Cartesian Linguis¬tics,” Harper and Row, list price$5, UCBS price $6.• Chomsky, “Topics in the The¬ory of Generative Grammar,”Mouton, list price $2.90, UCBSprice $3.50. This is certainly asingular accomplishment. Mou¬ton, long known as the crownprince of book publishing thiev¬ery has never been overly gen¬erous in its mark off (pun intend¬ed) and to add to Mouton’s listprice certainly deserves notice ofsome kind.•Bhargava’s abridged Hindi-English dictionary in two volumes,list price 6 rupees (there are ap¬proximately seven rupees to thedollar) is sold by UCBS for $7.This is even more noteworthy than the UCBS standard policywith regard to Indian books,namely converting a given num¬ber of rupees into the same num¬ber of dollars.•Postal “Constituent Struc¬ture,” list price $6, UCBS price$7. This is again an extraordin¬ary offer. Originally priced at $3by University of Indiana Press,the price has already been upped(under the strong influence of theMouton mob) to $4 and $6. Never¬theless, it does seem strange thatUCBS has anticipated the nextescalation of the price withouteven a word of encouragementfrom the publisher.In short, the UCBS is to be con¬gratulated for its creative retail¬ing. It is only through enterpris¬ing business managing such asthis that our country hasachieved its current greatnessMICHAEL C. SHAPIROResearch Assistant inMunda LanguagesLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school Vearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303 , 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60837. Phone Midway 3-0800 Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Nonprofit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartsmember of U.S. Studer.r Press Assn., PubUshers of„ Collegiate Press Service.4 'v' THE CHICAGO MAROON r;>** May 21, 1968MAROON SPORTSTufts, Psi U Win Bowling TournamentBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantTufts South and Psi Upsilonscored respective College houseand fraternity victories in the in¬tramural bowling tournament heldlast Tuesday, Wednesday, andThursday.Steve Korwin of Tufts Southscored the high single games, 220,while Mark Cohen of Salisburymade high series with a 558.Runner-ups were HendersonSouth in College house and AlphaDelta Phi in the frat division.The Flint I team of Steve Heni-koff and Fred Wigley defeated Del¬ta Upsilon’s fraternity champion¬ship team Dan Kroll and LarryRockwood for the all-Universitytitle in the IM horseshoe tourna¬ment.Henikoff and Wigley scored 21-10,21-9 victories in the final match;they previously defeated Hender¬son South for the College housechampionship. This victory markedthe Flint trio’s third such title infour years.In the softball tournament, Tufts South trounced Salisbury 22-4 towin easily the College house cham¬pionship last week. Later, however,fraternity champ Alpha Delta Phinipped Tufts 11-8.Alpha Delta will oppose the divi¬sional champions, the Law SchoolEagles, in the all-University Cham¬pionships tomorrow at North Fieldat 4 p.m.TennisThe 1968 tennis season was, inthe words of Coach Bill Moyle,“one of our better seasons in sev¬eral years.”Chicago netters finished with anoverall 7-2 record, dropping onlya 6-3 match to Wheaton and a 5-4one to the University of IllinoisChicago Circle Campus. The squadshut out Illinois Institute of Tech¬nology 9-0 and scored 8-1 victoriesover Northeastern Illinois Stateand George Williams twice. In ad-tition, the team took first place inthe Chicagoland IntercollegiateTennis tournament.In that tournament, the Univers¬ ity defeated UIC, 35-24. Over theyear, the Maroon netters amasseda total of 59 match victories whiledropping only 23 matches.Individually, several squad mem¬bers amassed excellent records.Don Mars led the team from thefifth singles spot by taking ten outof ten singles victories and losingonly one of eight doubles matches.First singles Mike Koch-Weser,who usually teamed with Mars,finished 8-2 in singles and 9-1 indoubles, while Tom McCroskeywas 7-3 in singles and 55 indoubles.Other individual records includedDick Pozen, second singles andthird doubles, 6-3 and 7-2, Jim Grif¬fin, third singles and first doubleswith McCroskey, 5-4 and 2-6; BruceSimmons, sixth singles and thirddoubles, 5-4 and 6-2; Irl Extein,various positions, 2-0 and 0-2; MikeKoss, various positions, 4-0 and3-1; David Liu, various positions,0-0 and 2-0; and Mike Hu, no reg¬ular matches.Studenf Pot Smoking SpreadsContinued from Page 1juana are rising. In 1966 the Calif¬ornia Department of Criminal Sta¬tistics reported 14,209 arrests onmarijuana charges. In 1967 therewere 37,513 or about two-and-a-halftimes as many arrests.Why this upsurge in arrests?There are three major reasons:20 Percent Use•Marijuana use among studentsis increasing. Chuck Hollander, di¬rector of drug studies for the U.S.National Student Association, es¬timates that in 1966 10 to 15 per¬cent of the nation’s students usedmarijuana. Today he estimatesthat it has risen to at least 20 per¬cent everywhere except in theSouth and as much as 35 percenton the West Coast. Moreover, hesays that may be a conservativeestimate.•A CPS survey of about 20 dif¬ferent schools showed a 20-30 per¬cent on most campuses. Most ofthese were results of surveys takenby the campus newspaper. The ef¬fect of this increase in use hasbeen compounded by publicity.There are few national magazineswhich have not run at least onestory about drug use on campus,usually with scare headlines on thecover. •Students are not careful aboutwhen and where they use mari¬juana. An editorial in the DailyCardinal at the University of Wis¬consin recently warned: “Drugusers at this university.. .insist onsmoking marijuana in dormitoriesand advertising the fact to all theworld.. .The moral of Stony Brookis that students let down theirguard and let themselves be infil¬trated by police informers. Wis¬consin is ripe for a similar exper¬ience unless students here begin torealize that drug use is not agame.”•Perhaps the most importantreason is the triumph of the phil¬osophy of strict enforcement viewof drug use over the educationalview. This confrontation has oc¬curred primarily within the federalgovernment.Goddard Loses OutThe two protaganists in the battlehave been Harry Giordano, direc¬tor of the Bureau of Narcotics, andJames Goddard, commissioner ofthe Food and Drug Administration.Giordano is an advocate of strictenforcement of anti-marijuana lawsand strict new laws against LSDand other hallucinogens. Goddardhas publicly questioned the lawsagainst possession of marijuana. Goddard has lost the battle. Pres¬ident Johnson called for new anti¬drug efforts in his State of theUnion message, lambasting thosewho “sell slavery to the young.”The Administration is pushing abill for strict new laws againstLSD, which Goddard hasbeen forced to reluctantly support.Goddard’s defeat is best demon¬strated by the creation of thenew Bureau of Narcotics and Dan¬gerous Drugs in the Justice De¬partment, combining Giordano’sBureau of Narcotics and theBureau of Drug Abuse Control,which was part of Goddard’s FDA.The director of the newbure au hasnot yet been named, but he is ex¬pected to be someone with a stronganti-marijuana view. The two asso¬ciate directors will be Giordanoand John Finlator, director of theBureau of Drug Abuse Control, whois expected to take a much tougherline now that he is out from underGoddard’s wing.In other words, Goddard hasbeen eased out. And many educa¬tors fear the result will be dozensof Stony Brooks and hundreds ofnarcotics agents coming onto theircampuses. The big question iswhat the educators’ response willbe.SURPRISE!!!€md will come out on time this year!LAST CHANCE LAST CHANCE LAST CHANCEHURRY! HURRY! HURRY!• CAP & GOWN will arrive on Tuesday, May 28, 1968, exactly one week fromtoday.• Only ONE WEEK LEFT to buy CAP & GOWN at the special PRE-PUBLICATIONPRICE of five dollars.• Call Ext. 3598 or come to the CAP & GOWN office in 306 Ida Noyes between3:30 p.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.• OR: fill out the CAP & GOWN card you received at registration and take it withyour payment to the bursar’s office.. * • .' .• !'i w r n sir- r ‘\ fi ? if" J . 'ft U I 1*1 I 'c . I i L}X: would you believeA Winged Horsein Vietnam?VIETNAM TRIANGLE:Moscow, Peking, HanoiDonald S. ZagoriaImproving prospects for a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam warmake all the more urgent a clarification of the relationships of thedifferent Communist factions involved. Vietnam Triangle is perhaps themost thoroughly informed and documented analysis available on thiscomplex matter. "A plea for understanding that there are a variety ofplausible options open for peace in Vietnam. Few American experts aremore qualified to examine the alternatives to present United Statespolicy in Vietnam than Donald Zagoria, now Director of the ModemAsia Research Institute at Hunter College, and author of The Sino-Soviet Conflict, a classic on the crack-up of the Communist camp."—The Washington Post288 pages, f6.95, clothbound; $1.75, paperboundIn a Ghetto?THE POLITICS OF POVERTYJohn C. Donovan"What ever happened to the War on Poverty? John C. Donovan'sanalysis of the conception, evaluation and eventual enfeeblement ofLyndon Johnson's offensive leads one to believe that nothing is likelyto revive it. Chairman of the Department of Government at BowdoinCollege and a former New Frontiersman, Donovan served as an aide toLabor Secretary Willard Wirtz from 1962-65 ... he communicatessomething of the sense of urgency and desperation that was shared byso many of the anti-poverty workers who enlisted for what they thoughtmight be a glorious fight." —The New Leader"Highly recommended. The flames of Detroit have shown dramaUcallyhow vital it is for us to understand why the Negro poor are angry. Mr.Donovan's book is one that will help us achieve that understanding."—The Library Journal160 pages. $5.75, clothbound; $1.45, paperboundIn a Breadline?YEARS OF PROTESTA Collection of American Writings of the 1930'sEdited by Jack Salzman with Barry WallensteinThe excitement, the anger and the anguish of the Depression Era, itsissues, struggles and movements, are magnificently evoked in thisillustrated anthology of stories, songs, poems, plays and reviews byleading writers of the period, among them Agee, Algren, Anderson,Benet, Caldwell, Cowley, Cummings, Dos Passos, Farrell, Gold, Hayes,Hemingway, MacLeish, Maltz, Millay, Miller, Odets, Pound, Saroyan,Stevens, Steinbeck, Wolfe, Wright, Vorse, West, and others. Withphotos, cartoons, paintings, and drawings of the period. "A collector'sitem . . . required reading for anyone studying that period of ourhistory." —The Chicago Tribune"Useful and faithful . . . the heart of this literature lies in its protest—against the men and institutions that made a national disaster out ofgreed, inertia, and mendacity." —The Nation"A brilliant anthology."—The Pittsburgh Press448 pages. $7.50, clothbound; $2.50, paperboundOn a Peace March?THE WAR MYTHDonald A. Wells“An incisive attack upon modern war-making, an attack aimed not somuch against the methods as the attitudes of the war-makers."—The Los Angeles Times"Equally at home with Dr. Strangelove and St. Thomas Aquinas, Wellsquotes pertinently to prove his point that war must be made illegal ifthe human race is to survive. Perhaps the most appalling part of thishistory of 2,500 years of war is the demonstration that Christian leaders,throughout the ages, have apologized for and defended their nations'right to wage war."—Prof. Ralph Spitzer, University of British Columbia"To my knowledge, the best book on the subject, especially valuablebecause of the extensive and thorough documentation."—Prof. Herbert Marcuse, University of California at San Diego"An important and timely book."—The Library Journal■ 288 pages. $6.95, clothbound; $1.75, paperboundAll available at fine booksellersP E <S AS UA Division of Western Publishing Company, Inc.850 Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 JS|rf!-3 Mllfrc •May 21, 1968 x . r THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Bulletin of EventsCALENDAR items should be typed onforms available in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyonce. ^ ...GENERAL NOTICES should be submittedin typewritten form two days beforepublication. They may appear a maximumof twice on request.RECRUITING VISITS are scheduled bythe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, with repre¬sentatives of recruiting firms at thatlocation. , ^ _.NEWS BRIEFS are composed by TheMaroon Staff.CALENDAR OF EVENTSTuesday, May 21LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Absorption andOptical Activity as a Probe for the Struc¬ture of Biological Macromolecules,'' DanW. Urry. Abbott 324, 3 p.m.RADIO SERIES: (From the Midway),"Privacy: A Constitutional Right in Searchof a Definition," Louis Henkin, ColumbiaUniversity; "Privacy and Social Conflict:Dilemma of a Data Based Civilization,"Alan F. Westin, Columbia University.WEBH 93.9, midnight.MEETING: (Chicago Science Fiction So¬ciety), debate on Andre' Norton. Ida NoyesSun Parlor, 7:30 p.m.SLIDE SHOW: (Students for Social Actionat SSA), slides from post-revolutionaryCuba, Joe Horton, member of SDS SSA,Room E-l, 8 p.m.FILMS: (CADRE), films on the April 27march. Pentagon confrontation, draft resist¬ance, McCarthy campaign. Mandel Hall,8 p.m. 75 cents.SPEBSQSA: (The Society for the Preserva¬tion and Encouragement of BarbershopQuartet Singing in America). 5544 S.Woodlawn Ave., 7:30 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: (Divinity School). Del MEETING: (East End Tennis Club), newmembers invited. Co-op basement, 7:30p.m.LECTURE: (Committee on InformationalSciences), "From the First ElectronicComputer to Von Neumann's Theory ofSelf-Reproducing Automata, Part I, "ArthurW. Burks, University of Michigan. Re¬search Institute, Room 480, 4 p.m.MEMORIAL SERVICE: For Roy Gutmann,in Bond Chapel, 8 p.m. Friends and othermembers of the University community areinvited to attend.MEETING: (VISA), "Changing MentalHealth Legislation in Illinois," interestedpersons invited to attend. Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge, 4:30 p.m.FILM: (Sights and Sounds of India), "TheMaharajah Meets a Challenge," Rosen-wa!d 2. 12:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Regulation andMechanism of PhosphoribosylprophosphateSynthetase," Robert L. Switzer, NationalHeart Institute. Abbott 101, 4 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia. Ida NoyesDance Room, 8 p.m.Thursday, May 23ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: (Hillel Founda¬tion), teaching and requests. Hillel House,7:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Absorption andOptical Activity as a Probe for the Struc¬ture of Biological Macromolecules," DanW. Urry. Abbott 324, 3 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: Board of PrecollegiateEducation, Hutchinson Commons, noon.LECTURE: (Middle Eastern Center), N.J.Coulson, "Conflicts and Tensions in IslamicJurisprudence: Stability and Change," N.J. Coulson. Law School Seminar Room D,3:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Advanced Genetics), "HumanMutations and Lipid Storage Diseases,"Donald S. Fredrickson, National HeartInstitute. Ricketts, 7, 4 p.m.REHEARSAL: (U.C. Concert Band), LabSchool,( Belfield 244, 5 p.m.GENERAL NOTICES for University of Chicago students whohave appointments as government internsin Washington this summer. Former stu¬dent interns and Harold Richman, formerWhite House Fellow, will be present toanswer any questions that interns mayhave. Plans for summer seminars willalso be discussed. Interns who are unableto attend this meeting should call theOffice of Career Counseling and Place¬ment, Ext. 3282.NEWS BRIEFSFELLOWSHIP: Monica Emily Raymond,'68, is the winner of a $3000 Book-of-the-Military PrisonsPHILADELPHIA (CPS) - Thereare at least 74 conscientious objec¬tors in military prisons, accordingto the Rev. Robert Horton, co-or¬dinator of a new prison visitationprogram for war objectors.Horton said he is finding moreconscentious objectors in jail allthe time. His project is sponsoredby the National Service Board forReligious Objectors, the American Month Club Creative Writing Fellowship.Miss Raymond is one of 13 college seniorsfrom all parts of the U.S. selected forCreative Writing grants by a board ofnational judges.TWENTY-FIVE STUDENTS in the Collegehave been selected for membership inthe Maroon Key Society. The Society iscomposed of 30 third-and fourth-year stu¬dents who give service to the Universityand in particular assist in the enterain-ment of visitors to the campus.GEORGE W. BEADLE was elected presidentof the Chicago Horticultural Society bythe Board of Trustees of the Society attheir annual meeting on May 9. It is anunsalaried position.Hold 74 CO'sFriends Service Committee, theCentral Committee for Conscien¬tious Objectors, and the Fellowshipof Reconciliation.“The conscientious objectors inour prisons are there either be¬cause they refused to register, orbecause they registered and laterchanged their position, or becausethey were refused CO classifica¬tion by their draft boards,” accord¬ing to Horton.Chicago Review Speaker’s Series presents:A Program of Midwest Artists For Peace• Cheetah Light ShowPrado Hotel, 3 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (James Frank Institute),"Evidence for a New Kind of EnergeticNeutral Excitation, in Superfluid," Clif¬ford M. Surko, University of California,Berkeley. Research Institutes, Room 480,4 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Interna¬tional House, 8 p.m.Wednesday, May 22DEMONSTRATION: (CADRE), in supportof Dr. Spock et.al. Mock trial and draftcard return. Federal Building, noon.MEETING: (CADRE), meeting of thoseinterested in summer draft work. (Freecoffee and donuts.) The Blue Gargoyle, 7p.m.MEETING: (Peace and Freedom Party),informational meeting. Ida Noyes, 8 p.m. SCULPTURE EXHIBIT: May 25 is the clos¬ing date of the Guniner Aron exhibit ofmetal menorot at Hillel House. This isthe final week to see these contemporarydesigns.SHAPIRO TOUR: The Art Department hasarranged a tour of Joseph Shapiro's privatecollection at his home in Oak Park. (Sha¬piro donated the circulating collection atChicago, and his own collection is con¬sidered by David Katsive, art-co-ordinator,to be "fantastic.") The tour will leaveFriday at 6:30 p.m. from Reynolds Cluband should be back by 10:30. Interestedstudents should call Ext. 3880.THERE WILL be a meeting on Friday, May24, at 3 p.m. in the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement, Reynolds Club, • Mime Theatre, Morgan Gibson’s “Madame C.I.A.,”• Edith Meinecke’s “The Wheel”• Poetry - Selwyn Schwartz• Film - Jeff Chovinard• Music - Faure, A Major Sonata, Elaine Skordin,violin, Ruth Green, piano; Terry Collier’sFolk BandQuantrell Hall, May 25, 8:00 pm., $ 1.00 admissionCADRE Asks Students' SupportThe Chicago Area Draft Resisters j( ADRE) have asked Chicago stu-jdents to join them in activities jplanned for tonight, tomorrow, andthe coming summer.Eight films related to draft re¬sistance and student activism will;be shown tonight at 8 p.m. in Man- jdel Hall, most of them produced bymembers of the radical ChicagoFilm Co-op, including a documen¬tary of the April 27 march inChicago.Tomorrow at noon at the FederalBuilding in the Loop, CADRE willhold a rally and mock trial in honorof Dr. Benjamin Spock and fourothers who went on trial yesterdayin Boston for advocating draft re-You won’t have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 sistance. Among the CADRE peo¬ple in the mock trial will be alum¬nus Mitch Hilton and DivinitySchool student Paul Ruppert.Tomorrow night at the Gargoyle,CADRE will show two films at7 p.m. and discuss plans for thesummer.FoodDrinkPeople311 E. 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400j&roer’e We hove thenew Volvo 144. IWE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR.JNC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too!_ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113 EUROPE THIS SUMMERSTUDENtS - FACULTY - EMPLOYEESnew! Student Government Charter Flight Program has a limited number of seats available onthe following Jet-Flight to Europe.^ ^foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange 68-B June 25 Chicago - ParisSept. 4 London - Chicago $335Call Shirley Xt: 3272/4 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. or visit her on 2nd FloorIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.............. 111 : 4 t n ? s s j 5 t s n s » s ) h s t n * s t s i : e ! : j i a ImportantIf your name is on this list, callExt. 3598 or come to Cap andGown office, 306 Ida Noyes, Mon¬day thru Friday 3:30-5:00 P.M.to pick up your 1967 Cap andGown.Mark AndersonLarry AskewJohn Barker, Jr.Jack BeacherChuck BerryAvey BrookesF. Carlene BryantCarol ButlerCynthia CanarySusan CarolloDavid ChambersPaul CreelanPatricia CutlerGeorge DavisSara DayanSusan DiamondP. D. Doreian William BagnuoloMargaret BaldCarolyn BelkoJ. William BrodJohn BerubakerElizabeth BurroughRebecca CampbellJohn CarlsonLeonard CarrelDavid ChandlerCary CurtisHarry DavidowMarge DavisRandolph DelehantyDennis DingemansFrank EamanJonathan EndeAdolph Edwards III Theodore FathauerBob EvanderMelvin FirestoneJulie FisherEdward FormanKorin BabbardJohn GabrielsonAndrew GarlandNeal GladstoneClair HansonTheodore HealdA. RodolfoMary HoffmanRovert HughesBrad JohnsonRichard JonesMarc KastnerP. C. KettlerRegina KramSteve KureyThemis LazakisJack LeesPaul LundGuy Mahaffey IIIGedimina MarchertasThomas MerleFrederic Melcher Jeanine MinkinPaul FleischmanRovert FactorJames FreundCarl BabrielsonDeborah GansKathy GilbrechMark GreenbergPamela HawkinsJeanne HeinenJohn HobgoodPatricia HoganSayre JenningsLtoyd Johnson* •Mary JorgensenLydia KeninO. KomonytskyMarilyn KuhrJohn LaytonSandra LeibsonLawrence CitzkeyMelvin D. MaddoxAlan MantellAnne MeierAnne MertlTanya MorrowPeter MundyJohn NeillNeukomWarren OesenHubert OttoDiana PaulsonRichard PeiticrewLaurie PhillipsJames PremingerMargo ReichOberon ReynoldsEstelle RogersRhea RollinSherman RosenfeldD. RossKenneth SakauyeSanford RockwitzAlan SchreierThomas ShutkinMichael SiemonDiane StevensRichard StomperErich StrasburgerRachel SullivanJohn TaylorRoger ThomasLeslie ThompsonRonald UnderwoodMyron WeintraubNancy WieckowiczBeverly Wilson" -,ra Wolinharles Wright.ames ZieglerWalter ZlotowJohn RhineNancy ToderGeorge WalshDavid RubrightRalph OrlikDiane FriedmanDennis WaldonSusie HoffmanBernard Aronson Margaret MorshinC. MusselmanDavid NelsonRichard NeumeierDan OpitzDiana PaulsonBernice PetersonCynthia PhillipsBarry PoliskyPhilip ReesJohn ReidJ. D. RichardsJon RolandLibby RosenbergLawrence RoskinKathleen RyanDon SamuelsonPeter SchirrnThomas ScottBarbara SiegelJames SmeltzesIreland StewartN. StotlandFrederick SuhmKathryn SuterD. Alan TempleKathleen ThompsonJohn ToneyRita TomasalloNancy WieckowiczClara WilkinsonGeorge WindstrupMary Anne WrightM. Cheek YeeDennis ZilavyJohn PeversonJohn CollinsRandall AmmondsonStanley GrenbaumShirley ThompsonNora LesserGregory StengelEdward AzoffLoren NelsonMark Han1 i i i6 the; chjcaqo maroon May 21, 1968Hershey Recommends No 'Right of CounselFrom the College Press ServiceWASHINGTON - Selective Ser¬vice Director Lev,'is B. Hershey,who has opposed every major pro¬posal to reform the draft, testifiedbefore Congress last week thatyoung men should not have theirright to be represented by an at¬torney when they appear before lo¬cal draft boards.Giving potential draftees theright of counsel would cause “in¬finite delays” in the induction pro¬cess, Hershey said. “We have agreat many people who can stalloff for a year or a year-and-a-halfthe way it is now.”Presently, Selective Service reg¬ulations specifically deny the rightof counsel to potential drafteeswhen they appear in person beforetheir local draft boards. Ten sena¬ tors, however, are sponsoring abill which would guarantee thisright to all Selective Service regis¬trants.“If we get this war over, and ifa fellow can already put off get¬ting in for a year or more, hemay be able to get out of the ser¬vice entirely” if the bill passes,Hershey said. He testified beforethe Senate’s Judiciary Subcommit¬tee on Administrative Practiceand Procedure.Other Recent ActionSome Congressmen have tried topersuade the administration tolighten the effect of the removalof graduate deferments, with ef¬forts centering a round two pro¬posals:• Make 19-year-olds not in col¬ lege the prime age group to bedrafted.• Allow a graduate student, oncehe is drafted, to complete his yearin school.The House Special Subcommitteeon Education considered calling inSecretary of Defense Clark Clif¬ford, who has the power to changeto the 19-year-old plan, to discussthe proposals. Hershey, althoughhe didn’t like the idea, told thesubcommittee “I won’t say as anoperator I can’t do it.”Subcommittee Chairman EdithGreen (D-Ore.) discussed the de¬ferment problem in terms of man¬power requirements with theHouse Armed Services Committeewhose chairman, L. Mendel River(D.-S.C.), wrote to Hershey advo¬cating both proposals.Students Request Sublet RevisionsSeveral students living in themarried student housing at 5110 S.Kenwood Ave. are petitioning theStudent Housing Office to allowthem to sublet to non-Universityindividuals during the summer.Presently, students in marriedstudent housing must sign a one-year lease. According to the peti¬ tioners, those who do not wish toremain in Hyde Park must eitherbreak their lease for a $25 fee andgive up the right to move back in¬to the same apartment next fall,or sublet to a registered Universitystudent.“There may be legal problems,”said Turkington of the demands.Subletting to non-University peopleHousing Creates 15 New SinglesDirector of Student Housing Ed¬ward Turkington has announcedthe conversion of fifteen doublesin Woodward Court to large sin¬gles over the summer. Most or allof the singles will be in the wom¬en’s dormitories and will be aboutas large as the large singles inBurton-Judson and Snell-Hitchcock.Twenty-seven doubles in Wood¬ward and 28 doubles in PierceTower have been converted to sin¬gles over the past three years,while 18 doubles have been madeinto lounges. The 15 new singleswill cause an additional loss of $12thousand per year.“We hope these changes will at¬tract more upperclassmen,” saidTurkington.In other housing developments,Turkington announced changes indormitory rates for the 1968-69 ac¬ademic year. The largest changes'P'ichcA. Pried SAri+nfidfioUloniRESTAURANT132 1 East 57th ST.Dependable Service•on ypur Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from « *10 Used VXliRug, To a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants ft Mill Returns at fractionof ttie Original cost.Decorative Colors and Qualifies. AddFtional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY are in Pierce and Woodward largesingles, which have gone downfrom $648 to $570 and $627 to $552,respectively. Other dorms havehad increases or decreases rang¬ing from three to thirty-threedollars. may mean that the housing unitwould have to be considered ashaving hotel status, he said. •According to Turkington, a nine-month lease would cause evengreater problems. “It is impossibleto lay off janitors and others forthree months when they are livingin the buildings, carrying outminor repairs, and taking care ofthe boiler, and there would beproblems with the union, also.“Operating costs would not godown substantially and there wouldbe a large number of vacantrooms. As the system is now basedon a breakeven rate, this wouldmean a substantial increase in sub¬sidies from the general Universityfunds,” said Turkington.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 00 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT IENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSEAWAY CYCLE CO."Seaway for Service"TRIUMPHBULTACO• SERVICEPARTS • SALES 2812 East 79th StreetSA 1-9129 SA 1-8999IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. Five Republican Congressmenissued an attack on PresidentJohnson and Hershey for their fail¬ure to reform and erase the in¬equities of the present draftsystem.The Congressmen combinedtheir attack on the Johnson admin¬istration with the introduction inthe House of a massive legislativepackage designed to change theSelective Service law. In a jointstatement, they said that “draftreform is not dead — in spite of the outrageous attempts of Selec¬tive Service Director Lewis Her¬shey to thwart all efforts to re¬form an outdated, ineffective, andinequitable draft system.”The five are the authors of abook published last fall entitled,“How to End the Draft.”The five Congressmen are Re¬presentative Robert T. Stafford(Vt.) Frank Horton (N.Y.), Rich¬ard S. Schweiker (Penn.), GarnerE. Shriver (Kan.), and Charles W.Whalen Jr. (Ohio).Smokie Robinson& The MiraclesFri. May 24McGaw Hall 7.00pm.Northwestern UniversityTickets s250 at the doorA CommunityExperience With .Mental IllnessUnder the direction of Phillips Brooks House, theHarvard student volunteer organization, a group ofthirty students, thirty chronic mental patients, andsome hospital staff will spend the summer togetheron Cape Cod in an experimental treatment project.Students living in the community will become fullyinvolved with the patients and will receive intensivegroup-centered clinical support.Through the Harvard Summer School, the studentswill enroll in Social Relations S-188, a course inclinical psychopathology, while they are living in thecommunity. The course will provide a frameworkwith which the students will be able to integratemore fully their experiences with the patients andwith one another. No prior training in psychology isrequired.Admission is made on the basis of a special question¬naire to be submitted with the regular application foradmission. There is no absolute deadline for sub¬mitting applications.For applications, contact:Clinical PsychopathologyHarvard Summer School735 Holyoke Center1350 Massachusetts AvenueCambridge, Massachusetts02138For specific information, contact:Ian BenhamMental Hospitals CommitteePhillips Brooks HouseCambridge, Massachusetts, 02138 /•“*'-' J, ) !lMay 21, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per line re¬peat. Count 35 characters and spacesper line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No Ads will be taken over the phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO 3P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.WORKSUMMER JOB for responsible person. Runmimeograph, collating, etc. Own boss. Goodpay. No experience necessary. Call 643-6039.THE CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW is of¬fering a desk near the window in an officewith a delightful old English atmosphere,undying affection, and a HANDSOME COM¬MISSION to an enterprising and responsiblestudent (preferably, but not necessarily, inthe Business School) in exchange for hisservices as Business Manager. Fringe bene¬fits include access to volumes of the finestcontemporary literature, congenial associates,a chance to make potentially useful per¬sonal contacts in the fields of advertisingand publishing. Hours flexible, relations be¬tween editorial and business staff excellent.Guaranteed annual income. Interested per¬sons please come to Ida Noyes 305 or callx3276 between noon and three weekdays.Or speak with Wayne Meyer (BusinessSchool), David Aiken, Jeff Schnitzer, orMary Sue Leighton.CHALLENGING . . . Interesting . . . Part-time. The Woodlawn Business Men's Associ¬ation is looking for a male executive secre¬tary, about 20 hrs. per week (flexible).$2.25/hour. Call DO 3-5362.NEEDED: Black Teachers at U-High. Con¬tact Francis U. Lloyd.CAMPING EQUIPMENT RENTALCamping Equipment Rental: Tents, SleepingBags, Stoves, Lanterns. Contact HICKORYat Ext. 2381 or 324-1499.TENNIS LESSONSTENNIS INSTRUCTION: Reasonable Rates.Start in mid-June. Call Dan at 288-7060.LOSTThe Fruit of Love's Labour.LOST Wed. on Quads—small change pursewith contact lens in white case. Call 684-6883. DIANA.FILMBATTLE OF ALGIERS. Pontecorvo prize-winning film, opens May 29, Chicago's new3-penny Cinema, 2424 N. Lincoln. Specialstudent group rates. Call 733-4613.SUBLETSublet with option to renew Oct. 1. Onegigantic room in basement. Complete kitch¬en. Available June 15. $75/mo. In SouthShore W. nearby campus bus (! ! !) stop.MU 4-5949, evenings.Really big 8. beautiful 4 bedroom apt. June15-Sept. 15. $180/month. Furn. 667-8928.Apartment for four girls to sublet for thesummer. Call 324-7637.Large, airy ROOM near Lake, shopping,and I.C. Call 493-6698 for Rich.5-Vi rm Apt. $100. June-Oct. 643-5060.ICHEAP! 53rd Harper. June-Sept. ICHEAP!Call BJ 110 or X3562, room 114.! IFURNISHED SPACIOUS 6 room APT.!!VERITABLE PALACE. Summer sublet. Falloption. 7 rooms, 3-Vi bedrooms, 2 baths,open veranda. South Shore. Call 363-4615,evenings.Own room, 57th 8. Drexel. $40/mo. DO 3-7548.Spacious 8-rm townhouse. Kitchen, parlor,dining and living rooms downstairs; fourbedrooms upstairs. 2 blocks from campus.$200/month, summer quarter. JUNE RENT-FREE. 667-7246.3 bedrooms, living, dining, kitchen, 2 baths,57th 8. Ellis, $135. 6/16-10/15. 752-5868.Summer Sublet, 1-Vi rooms, very reas.. Fallopt., cool in summer, nr. Lake. HY 3-3802,eves.HUGE HOUSE — 10 rooms 8< basement.6 bedrooms. Completely turn. Individs orj.-ps. Do your thing. 5604 Maryland. 667-5012.Large, turn. apt. 1900 sq. ft. 7 rooms, 2baths, air conditioning. Washer, dryer, dish¬washer. Exc. HI-FI. T.V. Blackstone be¬tween 57th 8, 58th. Available June 1-Dec. 23.Call 493-6535 after 6:00 P. M.HOUSE, June-Sept. From 1-6 people needed.Furn. Washing machine. Will rent to groupor rent individual rooms. 684-4999.Summer Sublet (possible option for Fall).Furnished, 6 rooms, 53rd 8< Woodlawn. 643-6669.Great apt. 57th 8> Maryland, 6 rms, 4 bed¬rooms, June-Oct., 5 min. from Campus.$165/mo. 2 bathrooms, 288-4303.Summer sublet/own room in house withwasher 8. dryer. 5450 S. Dorchester. $43/month (female). 493-5419.Sublet 5 rooms, 3 bedrm, June — Sept.,$105/mo. 57th 8. Drexel, 288-3728.SUBLET. June 1, 54th & Harper, S'/t largerooms, furn. 363-5607. $175 or best offer. SUMMER ROOMAAATEUnusually nice apt. Own room. Dbl. bed.Good location, near everything. Live withtwo other girls. For more information, Call324-0740.JUST PAINTED! Clean 2 bedroom, turn,apt. 54th 8. Greenwood, 667-1353, eves.Sublet June 1—Sept. 1. N.Y.C. 111th 8<Amsterdam. 2 min. walk from Columbia.6Vi rm. 4 bedrooms. About $200/mo. Call288-3576.SUMMER ROOMAAATE WANTED. Furn.own room. Only $40/month. 752-3737.PIANO, AIR-COND. Fully furn. 4 rm. Idealfor 2 (Starving Musicians?). CHEAP. June8-Sept. 15. Call evenings, 493-0196.Attractive summer sublet. Modern furnish¬ings. Single apartment, 57th 8, Blackstone.$94/month. 667-1615.SPACIOUS STUDIO APT., 50th at Lake,21st floor, magnificent view, $100/month.Phone 324-1460.7 room HOUSE-furnished 8. spacious withgarden—55th 8. Woodlawn. $170 but willnegotiate. June-Sept. 363-8154. or Ml 3-0800,Ext. 4137.2Vi furnished rooms at 57th 8, Blackstone.Close to stores, campus, I.C. Perfect for acouple. Sublet June 15-Sept. Will negotiate.Ml 3-0800, Ext. 260. Bill Lamb. Leave mes¬sage.HOUSES FOR SALEHOUSE FOR SALESouth Shore deluxe Georgian 7 rooms,3 bdrms., formal dining room, paneled den 8<rec room, IVi ceramic baths, cent, air cond.,2 wd-burning fireplaces, w/w carpet, drapes,appliances, 2 car brick garage. Near 81stand Crandon. Upper 20'.s Private. Call375-7209APARTMENT FOR SALECONDOMINIUMHyde Park 8. 55th Street6 8. 7 rooms. 2 bathsPrice $20,500 & UP. DO 3-6842.APARTMENTS TO SHARERoommates for Fall—South Shore Apt. CallMartha 2404 X. New Dorms.Male roommate for summer. Share 5 roomapt. Furnished. W/air cond. & T.V. on 57th8, Drexel. Call 288-7060 or 288-6775.Female grad, student wanted to share apt.summer or summer/fall. Own bedroom. 51st& Kenwood. $56.25/mo. Call 288-5118 after 5.Female Roommates wanted for summer.Air cond. apt. with piano. 684-6883.Males wanted for summer or summer 8.next yr. Near campus. $35/mo. 324-0277.Med. student seeks female student as apt.roommate. Summer 8> or fall quarter. CallBJ, room 556.Female roommate for summer and/or nextyear. Own bedroom. 6 rm. apt. w. porch.DO 3-7682.Male roommate wanted to share 7 room,furnished, air-conditioned, Northside apt.with 2 other students. $50 a month torsummer. Call 'evenings at 935-8469.Need one or two female roommates to shareapartment at 53rd 8, Harper. Summer 8.next year. $50. 955-3395.FREE CATADORABLE longhaired cat needs good home.HY 3-3471.ONE MORE TO SHARECOOL SUMMERTwo blocks away from The Point, a half¬block from the Co-op and the 1C, in themidst of the little-old-Jewish-lady ghetto,well-insulated from Woodlawn (how aboutHyde Park?). Rent one bedroom of threein this large, completely furnished and new¬ly painted apartment from early Junethrough late September, give or take aweek or two. Asking $66.67 per month butwill go down depending on highest bid. Call493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!!ANOTHER FILMSee the female answer to ALFIEJULIE CHRISTIE in DARLINGFriday/7:00 & 9:30/ Cobb HallANOTHER FOR SALELarge Desk and Dresser, 493-1548.MORE SUBLETSSublease spac. 5 rm. apt. 54th 8, Ellis. June-Sept. Opt. to lease Oct. 1. Furn. $108/mo.Two or 3 mature applicants. 643-5541 week¬end or eves.Female roommate wanted: Anytime June 5-Sept. 30. Large. Aircond. Furnished apt.57th & Dorchester. $65/mo. 684-8527.Well-furnished apartment, 3 bedrooms, 2baths. Only 1 block f. campus at 56th 8>University. Avail. June 15-Sept. 2—3 girls.Rent negotiable. Call 924-9213 after 5.Own room. East Hyde Park. June-Sept. Call493-3471.Mid-June-mid-Sept.: share nouse one block f.campus, half-block Law School. $90/monthplus Util. FA 4-6796.Sublet 2Vi apartment, furnished, June 17-Sept. 1 or 30. $75/month, Blackstone near54th. Call 288-6496, after 6 p.m.SUMMER SUBLET: 6 room faculty apart¬ment, furnished, close to campus, availablefrom mid-June to September 1. Will rent toresponsible students. $163.00 per month, plusutilities. For further details, write: JulietMcGrath, c/o Meiss, 43 Maxwell Lane,Princeton, New Jersey—08540. MORE APTS. TO SHAREGIRL needed to share apartment, June thruSeptember. Block from campus. Own room.$35.00 per month. BU 8-6610. Room 2321 or3407.Girl roommate. Own room. $50/month. 1block from Campus. June 7-Sept. 7. 363-9112.Wanted: Person to share Apartment duringsummer on 57th 8< Kenwood. $50/mo. Con¬tact or leave message New Dorms 1221.Wanted—F. rmmate. for summer. Own rm.54th 8. Dorchester. $62.50. 324-6640.1-2 females to share Ig. furn. 7 rm. apt.near 57th 8< Kimbk. own rm. $35.50. Jun-Sept. 288-4910 after 5.1-2 men to share airy 6 rm, 2 bath apt.nr. campus, summer. $50/mo. 363-1949.2 female grads needed from June 17 toSept. 17. Apt. fully furnished. Air cond. $33.per mo. per person. Stereo 8. TV. Call 363-1245.6 room apt. in South-Shore. 2 baths. 3 bed¬rooms. Furnishings avail. Call 374-5821.Comp. furn. 4 rm. apt. a bdrm. 5302 Univ.$110/month. Please, please call 684-1187.HOUSE FOR RENT June 15-Sept. 15. Airconditioned townhouse near U.C. 3 BR 2-Vibath Mod. kitchen, laundry, piano, yard,priv. pkg. Family or 2 couples. Reasonable.288-7030.Large l-'/a rm. basement apt., furn. or un-furn. Available June 15. 5437 Woodlawn. 324-0969.2-Va RM. APT. NEW FURNITURE. Over¬looks garden. Married students only. $124util. incl. July. 288-7047.4-Va ROOM APT. $112 with option for Oct.752-8026.ROOMS FOR RENT: Women students — 2rooms in apartment at 5435 Woodlawn forrent June 10 to Oct. 1 Kitchen privileges,$55 a month each, (call BU 8-8213 or con¬tact E. Johnson by mail).ROOM TO RENT. Starting in June. Optionfor lease for next year (Autumn, Winter,Spring Quarters). Large room, much storagespace, large windows — plenty of air, twovery large bookcases. Near 1C, Lake 8.shopping. Call Rich, 493-6698.PERSONALSDear MAROON BUSINESS STAFF — Beforethe school year ends, I want to thank youfor what you have done with the Classifiedads in this year's MAROON. For the pastten years I, as a Hyde Parker and a formerU.C. student, have been a regular readerof the Maroon and for these 10 years andprobably for the 60 or 70 years preceeding,the Classified ads HAVE BEEN rather bland,certainly dull, and often poorly arrangedor incoherent. This year the ads (and, ofcourse, I am primarily referring to thePERSONALS), have been incredibly enter¬taining and witty, refreshing outspoken, andmuch more sensitive to what is happeningon campus and in the world than any otherpart of the newspaper. You deserve to besyndicated! Thank you again and I hopethat this year's secretary will pass hersecret on. (Name & Occupation withheld byreqo st)And THANK YOU! — The Business Secre¬tary.There's a new magazine out — written bypeople under 30 — THE WESTWOOD VIL¬LAGE SQUARE — a few quotations: "youwill find solid evidence — not emotionalconjecture — that Vietnamese Communistsare behind much of the confused violencethat has scarred American campuses andcities." EG: "While Americans are beingmassacred by Viet Cong, a small coterieof students and professors are cooperatingwith the enemy." (That is, they sent forsome pamphlets). The magazine offers but¬tons reading "Avoid the Draft ... EnlistNow!" "PEACE THRU VICTORY" (EDNOTE: A. Hitler would have worn thatone) "USERS ARE LOSERS" and "Dropout now ... pay later."Is there a SfHAPIRO in your closet?DOCTOR (at Auschwitz): Uncle Doctorhas some candy for you. Come here!THE GIRL (shyly): Thank you.DOCTOR: What's your name?The Child does not answer.A pity the little girl has not atwin brother. Research on twinsis my special hobby.—THE DEPUTY. Coming in June.A BENEFIT for MC CARTHY: COUSINS-YOUNG.Sock it to me Madame CIABrilliant, captivating, unmarried adoniswishes to cohabit. Call 752-9609 and ask for"THE DUDE."AC or DC exchange?WILL the social worker who talked to RogerBlack a few weeks ago please contactthe Maroon.Rally in support of SPOCK et. al. on Wed¬nesday, May 22, at Federal Building aroundNoon. Also mock trial and draft card re¬turn. MEETING for those interested insummer draft work will be held at theBLUE GARGOYLE at 7 p.m. FREE donutsand coffee.Male grad seeks female passenger for 10day trip to San Francisco. Lease June 8-9.363-9292. Apt. 421.Eat at 1440 E. 57th Street tonight,tomorrow night, and the next night.You will be very happy.—ZoroasterTHE U-HIGH MIDWAY, student newspaperof the University of Chicago Lab HighSchool, this year became the first highschool to win more than one national beststory in a single year from the AmericanNewspaper Publishers Assn. You can usuallypick up a copy late Tuesday afternoons atJudd or at U-High. Don't miss itl — it hasa higher rating than the MAROON or THENEW YORK TIMES.Police informers have Infiltrated and are EVERYWHERE! Beware or celebrate 16years early — 1984 comes to the Universityof Chicago!The Maroon Business Office hereby presentsthe FIRST ANNUAL THANK YOU TO AMAROON EDITOR AWARD to Mr. RogerBlack for being the first editor (or person)in the history of the Maroon to call theBusiness Manager BEFORE cutting theClassified ads. Thank you from the bottomof our soul — we have no heart.Chicago Science Fiction Society presentsFred Saberhagen on May 28, in Ida NoyesTheatre at 7:30 P. M.HEY Byrd. Flapping Your Arms Can BeFlying.Work for the RESISTANCE in Hyde Parkthis summer. Possibilities of free room andboard. Contact Richard Speiglman, 363-3814or Slade Lander. 288-7961.Does 11% Negro imply 3% Jewish???Hear Prof. Hans Jonas (Visibting Prof.,Committee on Social Thought) at Hillel, Fri¬day, 8:30. TOPIC: "Contemporary Problemsin Ethics from a Jewish Perspective."Since AAAISON HENRI closed in HarperCourt, there has been no place in HydePark where you could eat super home-bakedcakes until THE MAT HATTER OPENEDRECENTLY. Now at 53rd 8« Hyde ParkBlvd.JEFF GOES DOWN!! — See ONE MOREAPARTMENT TO SHARE for his incredibleoffer to the highest bidder!!!The last Maroon will still be published onMay 28, there will be no papers after thisdate until June 28, 1968. The deadline forall ads for the May paper is May 24th at3 P.M. There will be no exceptions — SladeLander, Bandersnatch, and ContemporaryEuropean Films notwithstanding.HELIX — made posters don't cost morethan the average but the difference inQUALITY is hard to believe — send yourphoto to HELIX, LTD. 321 West HuronStreet, Chicago, Illinois-60610 or call formore information at 642-9682. Only $3.50for a 18x24 poster. Your parents want toknow what you do with your time — sendthem a poster!Minis, maxis, put your Shapiro in a taxi.To I.N.H. before May 27th.PLEASE RETURN MAY 3 papers, SDS orwhoever it was who took them. To room304, Ida Noyes.YOGA YOGA YOGA YOGA YOGAExercises, concentration, and meditationlifts consciousness beyond existential hopeand despair to tranquility and ecstasy.YOGI SRI N ERODE DO 3-0155.We will pay 10c a copy for all May 3papers, up to the first 25 copies. Room 304.Join the POOR PEOPLE'S CAMPAIGN formassive demonstrations in D.C. on May 30.Students can sign up next week at theBookstore or call 363-7682, Janet.GERSTEIN ... RICCARDO ... EICHMANN... THE POPE ... See THE DEPUTY,June 7 (Benefit for Cousins — Young —MCCARTHY).ELECT a MAN! — NOT A MACHINE!Vote for Eugene McCarthy and support himNOW with your donations!!!Writer's Workshop. PL 2-8377."What if THEY gave a riot and nobodycame" and "BLACK plus WHITE plus REDequals RIOT" — From the WESTWOODVILLAGE SQUARE ...SVGG MEETING to discuss resitance workin Hyde Park this summer, 10 p.m., Tues¬day, May 21, at 5515 S. University, Call 363-2540 for more information.Blood on the Civic Center Plaza! Films ofthe April 27 MARCH, The Pentagon Con¬frontation, Draft Resistance, the McCarthyCampaign ... in Mandel Hall, Tuesday,May 21. Tonight at 8 p.m. 75c. Benefit forCADRE.Folk dancing at Hillel Thursday nights.Backyard.What is the pseudonym for IDA at theUniversity of Chicago?Quotes from Cardozo ghetto children (inWashington D.C. where the riots were):"I took things because everybody did andwe did not have anything so we took whatwe want."''A soul brother is a Negro who knowshe's a nigger and respects it.""A soul brother or sister may also bea white person who are for black people."Why are there STILL no Black Teachersat U-High?WHY NOT A FACULTY QUOTA TOO?Chicago Science Fiction Society — Meetingand Battle. May 21, Ida Noyes Sun Parlor,7:30.To the GOLD CITY INN in Harper CourtThank you for all the wonderful mealsyou served us this year, especially theLotus Root Soup and the Beefand Black Mushrooms!!!—Hyde ParkTHE HYDE PARK ART CENTER IsDESPERATELY in need of an ELECTRICPOTTER'S WHEEL!!!!What is happening at the Lakeside Gallery?The Party Mart just called to say that itsmost discriminating customers come fromthe University of Chicago ... they chooseonly the BEST of the wines and cheesesand they keep coming back for more ...especially for Dom Perignon Champagne,for V.S.O.P. COGNAC, for those special 7oz. bottles of domestic beer, for all thosestrange imported beers, and for the boxes,barrels, slices, chunks, balls, and bite-sizedsamples of cheeses from every corner ofthe world, including New York!Get your dirty apartment cleaned!I'm waiting, Mr. Shutkinll DOMESTIC MAID SERVICE!!!Need your house cleaned by trustworthyservants? Let FANNY do it! FANNY MAIDSERVICE at Ml 3-3543.PEACE AND FREEDOM PARTY informa¬tional meeting, Wednesday, May 22, 8 P.mIda Noyes.People will kill you, but females will killyou faster.THE ONLY FAIR RELIGION. Free infofor a stamped self-addressed envelope. PostOffice, Box 57981-R, L.A., Calif. 90057.EAST COAST TRIP ca. 2nd week of June.Male student desires travel companion, sharedriving. FREE. Ml 2-8266.Try our ORIGINAL LEBERKASE — MaryLou Catering. Ml 3-3545.FOR SALEUnknown make office model typewriter.Best offer. Ext. 3266.Europe—Regular PAN-AM Flight to London,leaving N.Y. June 19, returning August 28Only $270. Mark Seldon. 667-1117.2 CONVOCATION TICKETS for price ofthis ad, 493-9623.Dining Room Set, hide-a-bed, desk, dressers,and rugs. HY 3-1171.AM-FM pocket-sized Sony transistor. Nicefor walks. Call 721-2397, nights.63 DODGE V-8 Power st. Air Cond. Exc.Mechanical Condition. Some body work.$395 or offer. 684-7787.Din. table, occas. table, asst'd chairs, desk,2 chests, double mattress, bookcase, lampMust sell soon. Cheap. Call 752-2542.1962 SUNBEAM ALPINE. Hard 8, soft tops,wire wheels, radio, heater. Must sell, leav¬ing country. Call after six. DO 3-7500, Ext.307.COUCH. Can also be used as a single bed.$10. 643-3403.1967 BULTACO METRELIA. 250 cc. New-just broken in (200 miles). Roadracer, fast¬est 250 made. 80 mph in 12 seconds. Mustsell. $550 or best offer (includes Bell Hel¬met). $750 new. Call David. HY 3-8J35.'62 CORVAIR. Auto. Trans. Reas, conditionMust sell. $175. Will bargain. 288-4910 after 5.SOFA, chest of drawers, end-table, bed.Excellent condition. Call 324-3612.GERMAN SHEPARD DOG. MALE. 1 yearA.K.C.—Phone 312-276-2068.BICYCLE. Beat up English. Will run butneeds fix 8. clean. $10 or best offer. CallBU 8-6610, room 3127.BUREAU. Shelves. Filing cabinet. Lamps8, tables. All for sale. Call 752 8282.1961 JAGUAR, 3.3 Mark II Sedan. Excellentcondition, radio 8, overdrive. 684-7884.FURNITURE BONANZA. The whole apart¬ment must go. Everything in good condition8. negotiable. Call 643-7004.DOUBLE BED $20 8. Coffee table $8 . 643-6909.Return trip UC charter flight (London —Chicago). Sept. 20. $110. 493-7038.Old FENDER DELUXE AMP. Exc. Cond$75. Call Swan at 731-4164.2 Dunlop Fort Tennis Rackets. $15 each.Blues, Rock, R 8< B albums 8, Sing, old &recent. Call Swan at 731-4164.APARTMENTS WANTEDMale 27 yr. vet. U. of C. student seeksapt. to share. Call mornings at 337-1174.Female grad, seeks roommates 8. apt. forOctober. Call OR 5-2617 after 6:30.Two male grad, students seek apartmentnow or Sept. 15. Call 667-7597. >TYPING SERVICESSuper fast, expert typing service. No has¬sles, accuracy guaranteed. Judy 858-2544.RENTAL SPACEMin. 500 sq. feet work space with electricoutlets, needed for 3 mo. beg. June. In¬expensive. *>43-6039.WANTEDDriver to take car to N.Y.C., late May orJune. Std. shift. Share expenses. Call 538-1027.ONE MALE BIKE. 288-7961 or MU 4-6100,Ext. 5800.TRAVELEscape Chicago in style ... Call MarcoPolo Travel. 288-5944.WORK WANTEDYoung Irishman (A.B. Econ) offers assortedservices — intellectual, physical, emotional— to anyone creative enough to enable himto live in the State from early July to mid-Sept. Contact 288-7454.WORK AS HOSPITAL ORDERLY. Call 285-5438 or 624-1262. Leave message for Nate.FOR RENT4 ROOM APT. Available for fall quarterPartially furnished. $97.50 per month. SwJthShore. 7516 S. Colfar Avenue. Call 374-7590,evenings or weekend.8 rooms overlooking Harper Court, $150/mo.It's yours if you buy my furniture. Bestoffer. HY 3-1171.Spacious apt. for 2. 4 rooms & bath. 2porches. Nice location (South Shore). *blocks from Lake. Campus bus 1 block toI.C. $115. 731-0590.8 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 21, 1968