'Univ. of CV,o* Libraryeriodical Recordarper M-22<jfo ' rlTV r— —fchgo . , Hi » 60637OF CHIJ^GOJlrchi (Ucki'J^S' I M ! * | 1Non - Profit Org.U. S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931and ItsUrban Renewal: Bulldozers and ChangesRenewal: The expanding campus.South East Chicago Commission, charac¬terized by Abramson as “a second com¬munity organization, one described as be¬ing a ‘practical’ rather than an ‘idealistic’approach to community problems, to workin the interest of the power groups andindividuals who had no confidence in theeffectiveness of the Conference.”Also, HPKCC had many volunteer com¬mittees to study the problems concerningschools and community organization.HPKCC could accomodate volunteers,while SECC handled those jobs on whichvolunteers could not be used. Abramsonwrites: “ ‘The conference,’ said one mem¬ber of the Committee of Five some yearslater, ‘actively welcomed new Negro fam¬ilies into the area. This alarmed manypeople because it seemed to uc the prob¬lem was how to prevent engulfment. Itwas really to offset some of the activitiesof the conference on the one hand and towork co-operatively with it on the otherthat the South East Chicago Commissionwas formed.’ ”The state of the law was not very favor¬able. The Housing Act of 1949 provided forrenewal of already blighted areas, butthere was no legal provision for areaswhich were deteriorating. The Housing Actof 1954, which provided for spot renewal,gave the answer. Through Jack MeltzerSECC applied for Hyde Park. Also in 1954,Mayor Kennelly of Chicago declared HydePark-Kenwood a model area for urbanredevelopment.‘This Is Hyde Park,Shoulder to ShoulderAgainst theLower Classes.’The community felt a great sense ofurgency. There had never been a case inwhich a community which began to changefrom white to black became stably inte¬grated. The community was dangerous,and the University was having trouble re¬cruiting faculty and students. Some answerwas necessary. Whether the one chosenwas the best one that might have beentried is at best debatable.The person of Julian Levi was very im¬portant in subsequent actions. Levi was"and is SECC’s executive director. Someresentment was inevitable of anyone inhis position. However, it seems Levishaped much of the nature of the com¬ mission and engendered more than neces¬sary resentment and mistrust. “Persuadedthat the conference was made up of ‘abunch of do-gooders trying to talk theirway out of a difficult situation’ and be¬lieving that involvement of large groupsof people created unnecessary problems,”Abramson comments, “Levi was disin¬clined to waste time on such frills as hu¬man relations or on talks with any butinfluential individuals. Why for example,should he ■wait for tlte PTAs to get to¬gether through the conference PublicSchools Committee, assemble facts, decidewhat should be done about them, get thedecision approved by the conferenceboard, and arrange an appointment withthe appropriate authorities when he felthe already knew what the communityneeded and could put the wheels in motionby a direct call to the superintendent ofschools?”Also, from the Rossi and Dentler book:“In the words of an extremely well-in¬formed, long-term Board member of theCommission: The SECC has never built aprogram of public education or public in¬formation. This is its greatest failure. TheUniversity, with the help of the Commis¬sion, had continued to make enemiesthrough the kinds of land purchase andbuilding purchase practices they have en¬gaged in. Even old, established residentsof the community have discovered recentlythat the University has been quietly buy¬ing up every available middle incomehouse. People who would have remainedhere have simply been forced to leave orto squeeze into small apartments. None ofthis has been carried on with any aware¬ness of the consequences it leads to-hostil-ity toward the University and the Com¬mission.”What were the guidelines of the tacticsused? According to Muriel Beadle in “TheHyde Park-Kenwood Renewal Years,”there were two factions: those people whowere for no regulation and those whowanted a segregated neighborhood. “Butthe greatest compromise of all, and thebitterest pill that the community had toswallow,” she recalls, “was to accept thefact that the stated objectives of conser¬vation and renewal could not be obtainedunless (1) the community accepted inte¬gration; (2) treated integration as a classproblem; and (3) discriminated againstlower income families and individuals."Rossi and Dentler shed more light: “Ascomedian Mike Nichols expressed it, ‘Thisis Hyde Park, whites and blacks shoulderto shoulder against the lower classes.’ ’’By Barbara SnowIN THE 1930’s, Louis Wirth, the noted so¬ciologist, tried to convince the Universityof Chicago to buy and improve deteriorat¬ing property. In 1946, the western borderof Hyde Park-Kenwood began to changefrom white to black. Thomas Wright, headof the Chicago Commission on Human Re¬lations, tried to persuade neighborhoodI groups to consider ways to keep the neigh¬borhood from deteriorating. Both Univer¬sity officials and the Hyde Park PlanningAssociation, whose main function accord¬ing to author Julia Abramson was to“keep the area white,” gave him no help.In May, 1949, the Supreme Court de¬clared restrictive covenance, an agree¬ment between property holders not to sellor rent to members of a certain group,unconstitutional. This opened Hyde Park,a previously overwhelmingly white com¬munity, to Negroes.In November, 1949, at the urging of the57th St. Meeting of Friends, a group ofcommunity business, church, and civicleaders met at the First Unitarian Church.Out of this meeting came the decision toform the Hyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference (HPKCC).Because of the University of Chicago’simportance in the neighborhood, KPKCCvery much wanted the support of theUniversity. HPKCC representatives metwith University officials in 1950, but Chan¬cellor Robert Maynard Hutchins madeonly a brief statement and then left. AsAbramson writes, “ ‘He made an excellentdeclaration of principle on the race issueand began putting on his hat and coat,’said one of the committee (from HPKCC)members later. ‘But before he left, thevice-president in charge of business af¬fairs did everything he could to discreditthe work of the conference and attributeall gains in conserving the community tothe work of his office.’ ”Lawrence Kimpton, who became chan¬cellor in 1951, was more receptive to deal¬ing with neighborhood problems thanHutchins had been. He saw as urgent the needs for a compatible community andexpanded campus. In 1952, following aseries of crimes which included the kid¬naping of a faculty wife, there was anopen meeting at Mandel Hall which wasthe first time University officials had metwith community people on matters con¬cerning both parties. At that meeting, aCommittee of Five was appointed, headedby Kimpton, whose role was to create anorganization to work for increased policeprotection, stricter building code enforce¬ment, and representation of communityinterests.The organization which resulted was theSlum: Back view of housing tom down in Hyde Park-Kenwood renewal project.THE CHICAGO MAROON May 2$*'- 196ftEven this degree of tolerance is question¬able. “Asked by our interviewer why theUniversity did not consider expansion tothe east (which in many ways seemedmore plausible than expansion in HydePark), a respondent high in the Univer¬sity administration replied that the ar6ato the east contained ‘our people.’.. .Whether one liked it or not, neighbor¬hood conservation and renewal meant thepreservation of Hyde Park-Kenwood as aprimarily white middle class residentialneighborhood.”What was the result of this philosophy?According to Mrs. Beadle, “Apartmenthouse landlords tend to rent to Negroesin accordance with what might be calledthe ‘social capacity’ of a particular groupof tenants to accept Negro neighbors. Thisis not the same as a flat quota systembecause it varies from place to placeand also from time to time. Some land¬lords and some tenants still refuse com¬pletely to accept Negroes; others go outof their way to endorse interracial living.”DURBy Pat VergataWHAT IS GOING ON in the “strip” from60th to 6lst Sts. and from Cottage Groveto Stony Island Aves. is not urban “re¬newal,” The original Urban Renewal Actwas passed with the intention of replacingunsound buildings with standard housingfor low-and middle-income people. Unfor¬tunately, since this act was passed it hasbeen used as a means to displace peoplefrom their homes in order to make roomfor the expansion of large businesses andinstitutions and little has been done to dis¬pel the notion that what is going on isactually urban renewal as originallyenvisioned.One eminent law school professor askeda member of our committee why we areopposed to the relocation of these people.Weren’t the buildings they were .living inunsafe for human habitation, ready to col¬lapse at any moment? Like most of dieUniversity community he’d evidentlynever glanced southward while walkingalong 60th st., had evidently never evenlooked across the street from the LawSchool where he would have seen on Uni¬versity Ave. what most of the structuresthat are going to be destroyed look like —two-story homes in sound structuralcondition.Among them is Plaisance Court onBlackstone Ave., a charming intimategroup of townhouses that no urban plan¬ner in his right mind would destroy. Infact, of about 100 structures left to be de¬stroyed, approximately 60 are two-storyhouses like these. The other structures aremostly larger apartment complexes andeven their present condition (after being.•> ti ' !<• •; - • •. What of the University? In February1962, the Chicago chapter of CORE spon¬sored a sit-in over discriminatory rentalpolicies by the University. The officialUniversity statement said that Chicago didnot discriminate. However, a faculty re¬port said that the rental policy was un¬clear and that “even among the groupscharged with the administration of thispolicy, we found differences of view andjust what the policy was at a givenmoment of recent time.” This was anotherexample of University vagueness, perhapsthrough negligence and perhaps so thatthe University would not have to follow aconsistent policy and thus could never beproven to have deviated from a policy.The report also noted that “the state¬ment of policy. . .appears to be the prod¬uct of a process of evolution marked byperiodic outbursts of dissatisfaction overthe way rental policy is administered.Each outburst or incident apparently pro¬duced a shift in policy, at least in theview of the particular office on whichthe incident was focused. The result hasand ‘Theunder the care of the Department of Ur¬ban Renewal) don’t hide the fact that themajority of them, buildings that are com¬fortably housing low-income people inapartment-poor Chicago, could be rehab¬ilitated. But more important than thehousing units are the people in them. Whathappens to low-income blacks in machine-run Chicago when the DUR takes over?Mrs. R. W. is old, alone, and black. Forthe past twelve years she has lived onBlackstone, but now she has been toldthat she must move because her buildingis going to be torn down. She doesn’t quiteunderstand why, since the building is ingood condition and the landlord had in¬stalled a buzzer system and had recentlyplanted trees and flowers in front. But sheknows it is futile to protest and has al¬ready lined up a new apartment. She toldher welfare caseworker (whom she hasnever seen) and somebody from the DURabout the place, but for some reason oneof them told her it’s not all right to move.She doesn’t know which one it was exact¬ly, and she doesn’t know what to do aboutit. ..... .‘These Buildings Are Unfitfor Human Habitation,Are They Not?’Mrs. L. W. and the four others in herfamily have to eat and finish up in thekitchen before it’s dark because the lightin the kitchen stopped working a monthago and nobody had done anything about been that University policy has not beenclear to the faculty, students, or the gen¬eral public.”Low-income BlacksTake the Brunt ofthe RenewalWho were the people who were removedby the project? According to Mrs. Beadle,“Since 1960 , 2,476 Negro families and 611white families have been displaced, aswell as 1,013 single Negroes and 1,179single whites.” According to the facultycommittee, most of the people displacedoriginally were white, but low-income Ne¬groes took the brunt of the renewal. Ac¬cording to Levi, the vast majority of thepeople in the original renewal area werewhite. Many of these people moved whenthey found the area was to be renewed,it. Had she seen an urban renewalworker? Didn’t he tell her what to do?She had seen somebody briefly back inFebruary who told her she had to move.He was supposed to send her somethingin the mail but he never did and shehasn’t heard from anybody since. Didn’the tell her that the DUR was supposed totake care of the building or that he wassupposed to help her find a new place?No, he just told her she had to move.One of the buildings on Drexel Ave.owned by the DUR has been without heat,hot water, and electricity for much of thewinter. The sewers have backed up sever¬al times leaving an unbearable odor in theapartments. Vacant apartments have notbeen securely boarded up and the brokenliquor bottles they are littered with indi¬cate the presence of campers with com¬plete access to the building as there areno locks on ar.y doors. One of the resi¬dents of this building is an elderly ladywho was moved here from her apartmenton Harper Ave. by the DUR. She was toldthat this was only a temporary arrange¬ment but she has been living there sinceNovember and no attempt has been madeto find her another place. Like many otherresidents she is afraid to leave her apart¬ment and keeps her door bolted in fear ofthe drunks who wander in from outsideand have been known to “pound on thedoor with what must have been a baseballbat.”The DUR is obligated to assist thesepeople in finding new places to live. How¬ever, most of these people have beenvisited once months ago by a DUR workerwho informed them that they must move,left an explanation booklet, and has notbeen heard from since. When the DURdoes give referrels, they are invariablyunsuitable. For instance, one woman toldme, “Nobody wants kids. And when youask the DUR for help they give you thesereal estate lists with ‘adults only’ in frontof every apartment.”A frequent practice of the DUR is“checker-boarding” — moving peoplefrom one condemned building to another.The rationale for this, explained a DURworker, is that these buildings are “un¬fit for human habitation” and as it’s ne¬cessary to move people out immediatelythe only recourse is to move them into va¬cated DUR-owned apartments. The oldlady on Drexel, who has been living in herpresent residence for eight omnths, waschecker-boarded there without having pre¬viously seen this apartment. A blind manon Blackstone had been checkerboardedinto his present apartment and had beentold that the DUR was not going to payfor moving expenses again as they hadalready moved him once.The feeling described so well in the Ker-ner Report as “alienation” a feeling ofinability to control what is happening, afeeling of being pushed around without re¬dress — all this is happening here rightnow. tvooKiiaaX'iVtoS .'Hvl'i and many Negroes moved in once theyknew the area was to be renewed.Most of SECC’s activity now is con¬cerned with code enforcement, in whichit is quite active, work with the policedepartment, and work to establish friend¬lier relations and cooperation with TheWoodlawn Organization (TWO).Around 1960, the University’s interestturned to Woodlawn. The abolition of re¬strictive covenance had affected Woodlawneven more than Hyde Park. In 1940, therewere 25 Negro residents in Woodlawn, andin 1950, there were 6,446 out of 55,395. By1960, Woodlawn was almost entirely Ne¬gro. Like Hyde Park, the 1892’s WorldFair had started the community’s deteri¬oration, which progressed with the years.Julian Levi has written:“On July 18, 1960, Chancellor Kimptonand Chairman Lloyd formally presentedthe South Campus Proposal to the Chi¬cago Land Clearance Commission. Theynoted that the University owned approx¬imately 60 per cent of the total landareas between Sixtieth and Sixty-FirstStreets, Cottage Grove to Stony IslandAvenues; that 26.5 acres were not soowned and were characterized by wide¬spread decay and deterioration. Theynoted that the University of Chicagowould generate approximately $6,893,000of Section 112 credits, which would bematched by $21,000,000 of Federal UrbanRenewal credits available to the City ofChicago; that of this amount the SouthCampus Project would cost approxi¬mately $6,500,000, thus leaving availableto the city $14,000,000 for use in supportof urban renewal projects such as themayor and City Council might de¬termine.”The Woodlawn community reacted lessthan favorably. According to authorCharles Silberman,“Even before the South Campus pro¬posal, the University was generallyhated in Woodlawn—in part because ofits “Negro removal” tactics in the HydePark-Kenwood area, and in part becauseof a barbed wire fence the Universityhad put up to protect its campus againstthe Woodlawn community.”Saul AlinskyComes To OrganizeWoodlawn and TWOIs BornWhether the Hyde Park Kenwood Re¬newal project was directed against Ne¬groes or simply poor people, Woodlawnresidents who were both poor and blackfelt very threatened. A group of Woodlawnministers had earlier approached SaulAlinsky of the Industrial Areas Foundation(IAF) about organizing Woodlawn. Thecontroversy over the South Campus proj¬ect brought the community together soAlinsky could be effective. The WoodlawnOrganization resulted.The University was less than thrilled.Silberman writes: “In February 1961, forexample, Carl Larsen, the University’sPublic Relations Director, together withJulian Levi and another P.R. man, calledon several Chicago dailies to warn themagainst ‘the evil forces’ of Alinsky, theIndustrial Areas Foundation, the CatholicChurch and TWO. They brought with thema dossier on Alinsky and his foundationcontaining a number of items; the mainone was a copy of the Industrial AreasContinued on Page FiveMiss Snow, ’70, this year researchedthe history of the University’s involve¬ment in urban renewal programs andwas leader of the Committee for aResponsible University.Mrs. Vergata is a member of theWoodlawn Committee for RelocationRights, a small group of social workersand students who have been workingin the “strip” renewal area since Jan¬uary advising all but a few of the per¬sons being relocated of their rights andinterceding on their behalf with theDepartment of Urban Renewal.May, 29fl W6B HTR VntCAGa’ MAROONr %Thank you,Marianne,for the fantasticClassifiedAds.You won’t have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ r foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 The Gutmann family*wishes to thankall the many friendson and off campusfor their expressionsof sympathy at theoccasion of our recent loss.IF YOU ARE 2! OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJusf 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.tired of the grind ofstudent life?cartoons, musicals, serials, miscellanyDOC FILMS COBB HALL 75‘ 7-12FRIDAYCome anytime!free balloons 90-minutrpfogfam showncontinuously! We hove thenew Volvo 144.WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTRJNC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too!IIGRADUATES |IMrs. Robinson !ilIIIIlllUniversity Book Store III♦IMAQOW* *Intellectual Involvement: Programs and ConcernThe University, Motherof Urban Sociology,Gives Birth to $750,000Program for BlackStudents. A Panoply ofOther Programs Springsfrom the Mother’s Head,Not Quite Full-Grown.By Barbara HurstqURBAN SOCIOLOGY had its origins atChicago, and it is not hard to see why theUniversity, its various departments, andits faculty and students have shown asmuch concern as they have for the ghettocommunity that surrounds them.Partly in response to criticism leveledat it, the administration has been creatingnew ghetto programs practically everyday. The most dramatic of these was an¬nounced just this month.Many of Chicago’s graduate and pro¬fessional schools have become involvedwith the urban problem and some haveestablished programs to explore the cityand its needs.The Divinity School began a Ph. D. pro¬gram three years ago under the directionof Professor of Divinity Colin Williamsto train ministers for work in the innercity. Students work with city institutionsdoing legal, medical, and social welfarework; some have become active in polit¬ical campaigns and political organizations.According to Williams, the program en¬courages students to “learn what the aimsof the organizations are and to analyzethem by participating in their work. Ithink it’s going very well.” The programwas set up, Williams adds, “because theold-style of preparing people for the pro¬fessional ministry did not prepare themadequately for work with the people theywould be dealing with.” Most of the six-month training period is done with theUrban Training Center. All students in theprofessional ministry go through this train¬ing, and about 40 students per year par¬ticipate; the first group will graduate inJune 1969.The School of Education has developed ateam approach to the problems of inner-city education. Its project is funded by$1,100,000 of a $3 million grant from theFord Foundation for use in urban studies.TheUniversityand ItsCommunityJeffrey Kuta— EditorBarbara HurstBarbara SnowPat Vergata — ContributorsRoger Black — Managing EditorMichael Seidman — Bit WriterDiane Jancovic — Ghost WriterA Special Issue OfThe Uiieugo MaroonFounded in 1892, is published by students of theUniversity of Chicago on Tuesdays and Fridays dur¬ing the first nine weeks, once during the tenth weekof the fall, winter, and spring quarters of the aca¬demic year, and on alternate Thursdays during thesummer quarter. Non-profit postage paid at Chicago,Illinois. Address all correspondence to: Ida Noyes-(all, 1212 East 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone:i/Udway 3-0800, Ext. 3260, 3265, 3266, and 3269. Dis¬tributed on campus and in the Hyde Park area free)f charge. Subscriptions by mail, $6 per year. Charter■nember, U.S. Student Press Assn. Subscribers tohe Chicago Literary Review and the College Presstarviafe'.'. itit4ii«ii.i4< *••*< • ■ t . *!W:WiCAG5:^XRddN 5TWO has been suspicious of SECC andthe University, and probably with goodreason. Donald Blackiston, criminology ex¬pert of SECC, seems to think SECCwanted to rehabilitate Woodlawn. Althoughin the SECC annual report for 1967, it wasnoted that there was not true communityparticipation in institutions in Woodlawn,and welfare services were grossly inade¬quate, the Hyde Park-Kenwood projectwas pointed to as a glowing example ofwhat can be done. Hyde Park-Kenwoodbecame a middle-class and upper-middle-class community; one wonders whatSECC’s intentions for Woodlawn were.Since February 1967 the University,WO, and District 14 of the Chicago Pub-c Schools have been working together onresearch project in Woodlawn schools,'his is the first project on which the Uni-prsity and. TWO have ^{pnjiplly, £ooper:, Professor Julian Levi wih city officialsand, cprrgnunity leaders at ^reTQQ&hef,, marking the demolition of the firsttitty 2&r mbA special $750,000 program is in theworks to provide scholarships and extratraining to black students. The plan isanother step in the University effort todeal with urban ghetto problems and toextend the University’s urban responsibil¬ity. According to President Beadle, thescholarship program is “aimed at attract¬ing students from the ghettos who other¬wise would not have an opportunity toattend Chicago.” The fund is at presentfinanced by the University, but outsidefunds are being sought to endow the pro¬gram permanently.The program involves a special schoolthis summer for 100 South Side inner-cityRENEWALContinued from Page ThreeFoundation’s income tax return showingvarious Catholic groups as its principalsource of financial support in the yearin question.. .When I asked the reporterwhat the income tax return was supposedto demonstrate, other than support of theIAF by the Catholic Church, he repliedthat that was the point. In his opinion,which reflected that of the University’sspokesmen, Catholic support was itselfenough to discredit IAF and TWO.”TWO gained strength through demon¬strations and “being united in purpose,”according to staff member Leon Finney.TWO also conducted a voter registrationcampaign, and forty-six busloads of peoplewere taken downtown to register. Theyalso picketed slumlords, put up signs say¬ing “This is a Slum” which embarrassedthe landlords, and were recognized by theUniversity and the City of Chicago as thesole representative of Woodlawn. students to be staffed by eight facultymembers and ten Chicago students. A tu¬toring program for 1968-69 freshmen willappropriate about $20,000 of the fund. Thisactivity will be aimed at students whoseprevious education made them “risks”under the usual College admissions policy.The University will also implement a The University: A fortress?special recruiting program under thisgrant for entering freshmen in 1969, 1970and 1971, headed by a full-time directorin the Office of Admissions. It will includespecial Saturday sessions on campus forthose students over the next three yearsand a one-to-one sponsorship by currentUniversity students.ated. This fall some of the results of thatstudy will be applied to some schools inWoodlawn. Discussion is now going onwith people in Woodlawn schools.Earlier this month, Chicago studentscomprising the Committee for a Respon¬sible University submitted a petition to theUniversity demanding certain changes inwhat they called racist policies, one ofwhich concerned the South Campus Proj¬ect. In response to this demand, a meetingwas called, headed by Levi, and TWO wasalso there. The purpose of the meeting asinterpreted by the different groups therediffered, but the important thing that cameout of the meeting was that Levi becamemore specific than he had been in thepast and made some promises.Later, a letter was written to him ask¬ ing him to verify his statements at themeeting that the University would act inWoodlawn only as a junior partner to thecommunity, that all University activitiesin Woodlawn would be made public, thatstudents would be made full members ofthe Special Committee to Advise the res¬ident on the Problems of Woodlawn, andthat at least one meeting a quarter wouldbe held of that Committee open to thepublic. Levi replied affirmatively, possiblyindicating a reassessment of the Univer¬sity’s role in the community.Still, concern about University action inWoodlawn will not cease. Rather, nowthat something moderately specific hasbeen said, people will be watching to seewhether the University and Levi adhere totheir promises.— — i "5 ;NEW YORK TIMESCERTMNLY THEMOST EXCITINfiAND MEANINGFULFILM IN YEAHS!" THEFKWCHCOLONEL ...who wasforced evento torture!Lift MAGAZINEREMARKABLE!BEAUTIFUL! THEBEST OF ITS KIND! ONE OfiTHE MANYWOMEN .whostoppedat nothingto win!NEW YORKER MAGAZINE★ ★★★ THEALGERIAN JSTREET 1BOY... 1who becamea rebelhero1 jDAILY NEWSNEWSWEEK MAGAZINEGene Wesson, Albert Schwartz & Harry Diamond present A FILM OF GILLO P0NTEC0RV0 - An ALLIED ARTISTS Release )9AT CHICAGO'SEXCITING NEWAVANT GARDETHREEPENNYCINEMA2424 N„ Lincolnat Fuller ton-Hoistedone block east ofFullerton "El" stopTel.: 528-9126FREE PARKINGat 2438-40 N. HoistedpremierMay 29LIMITED ENGAGEMENTTHROUGH JUNE 13WATCH FOR THE PREMIERES OF THE JEAN LUC GODARD MASTERPIECE “LA CHINOISE"AND OF A POWERFUL NEW ANTI-WAR FILM! ISWAP tutor: A graduate student with neighborhood students at the OrientalInstitute.Continued from Page FiveCadre teams of teachers, administratorsand specialists such as psychologists willbe trained and placed in inner-city schools.Unlike a purely academic approach of theusual grade-level program, the plan willemphasize special educational and environ¬mental needs. The purpose behind theplacement of teams rather than individ¬uals is to prevent the assimilation of per¬sonnel into the existing school attitudesand practices. The first teams will beplaced in Du Sable and Kenwood HighSchools in Autumn 1968.The Graduate School of Education isalso running a visiting professor programto bring Chicago faculty members toneighborhood elementary and secondaryschools. Since the program began, about30 visits have been made yearly.One formal Graduate School of Businessprogram is a special internship-aid planfor Negro students, sponsored by severallocal business firms. The plan providessummer internships, employing studentson jobs that afford them contact withmanagement work and personnel. The jobis” offered during the summer before thestudent enters the School and the summerbetween his two years of study. Businessfirms participating in the program guar¬antee the student’s tuition and livingexpenses.Students and FacultyWork (Privately) forSCLC and OperationBreadbasketBusiness students and faculty are alsoinvolved in a project not under Universityauspices, but run by the Southern Chris¬tian Leadership Conference. The programis called Operation Breadbasket and in¬volves such faculty members as Alan Pit¬cher of the Divinity School and HarryDavid and Robert McKersie of the Schoolof Business. Breadbasket seeks to help thegrowth of Negro business by giving counciland aid to businessmen.Although Breadbasket is not a Univers¬ity project, Business School students areworking with local shopkeepers to furtherblack economic development. Seminarsare run to give instruction to prospectiveentrepreneurs in the practical aspect ofrunning a business operation. Breadbasketran its first seminar in January 1965 andstudents have been involved with theproject for the last year-and-a-half. Theprogram works along with growing busi¬nesses, too, helping them with the contin¬ual problems involved in expansion.According to McKersie, the program hashad its greatest success in Chicago where“at least a dozen large companies, mostlyin the retailing fields, have signed cove¬nants with Breadbasket. In these agree¬ments the companies have agreed to pro¬vide more shelf space to productsproduced by Negro businessmen, and touse the services of Negro companies insuch areas as garbage removal, extermin¬ation, banking and construction.” The National Director of Breadbasket,the Rev. Jesse Jackson, has outlined theultimate goals of the project: “We haveto recognize that either we will live con¬strained and racially congested in aneighborhood or some of us will rise andparticipate in a brotherhood where menwill be redefined and subsequentlyrerespected. And where the StewardBleaches and the Bolles Waxes and theJoe Louis milk will be on everybody’scounter. Where we can own franchises andwe can participate. And where you willnot be able to determine the color of aman’s skin by his address.”Graduate Students Workin Woodlawn, Sponsoredby Their Departmentsand the SSABusiness School students have also beenworking with the Chicago Economic De¬velopment Corporation, a similar organi¬zation. There are five pairs of studentspresently working with the CEDC.Graduate students in the School of So¬cial Service Administration (SSA) have,as part of the social work curriculum, atwo-year experience in social agencies un¬der the close tutelage of qualified socialwork practitioner-teachers. Students havethis field instruction in social agenciesthroughout metropolitan Chicago, and inWoodlawn 65 SSA students carry socialwork responsibility in 10 agencies, includ¬ing five elementary schools. SSA studentshave had field placements in Woodlawnfor over 20 years.Social work students have carried re¬sponsibility in the schools in Woodlawnfor three years. Social work in schools isdesigned to offer service to children andtheir parents when the school and parentswant help with problems children have inschool or problems that interfere with thechildren’s ability to use educational oppor¬tunity. Each student invests from two tothree days per week in field instructionthroughout his two years in SSA.During the past two academic years,four graduate students from SSA have re¬ceived their field training in communityorganization at The Woodlawn Organiza¬tion. The student spends two days a weekas a staff member during the academicyear.Dr. Irving Spergel of SSA is currentlyengaged in a research evaluation of TheWoodlawn Organization’s Youth ManpowerProgram. The staff, which includes pro¬fessionals as well as several part timeyoung adult interviewers from The Wood¬lawn Community, are examining the effec¬tiveness of The Woodlawn Organization’smanpower demonstration program on theBlackstone Ranger' and East SideDisciples.The Center for Urban Studies providespre-doctoral training in research and edu¬cation in urban studies or in professionalcareers, including city planning. The pro¬gram is an inter-disciplinary one and em¬phasizes the contributions of the socialMiss Hurst, ’71, is an editorial assist¬ant jor The Maroon and next year willbe its news editor. She is majoring inftfAPSfa k&toms* sciences and related professions to an un¬derstanding of urban problems. The pro¬gram attempts to provide the urbanspecialist with the opportunity to under¬stand the relationship between his ownparticular discipline and the urban studiesof other social sciences.The Center was formed in 1963 with theidea in mind that a common urban out¬look is necessary for all social scientists.The Center is also involved in researchin urban areas, bringing together the in¬formation gathered throughout the Uni¬versity and providing an overall frame¬work for continuing research. It offerscourses for University students in urbanaffairs including a three-quarter core se¬quence in The Study of Urbanization, Ur¬ban Systems Analysis, and Policy forUrban Systems.Faculty and students have for a longtime been conducting their own urbanproblems program both with and withoutofficial sponsorship.Two of the most well-known are StudentTutors Elementary Project (STEP) andthe Student Woodlawn Area Project(SWAP). STEP, established in 1962, isaimed mainly at third- to fifth-gradersfrom the Wadsworth Elementary Schoolwho come to the STEP Study Center twiceweekly and receive one-to-one tutoring inmany academic subjects.Since 1966 STEP has operated a summercamp for South Side children. In responseto an article written by Charlotte Ritter,’68, and circulated among Methodists inChicago, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Town ofNew Lennox, Illinois, offered their eighty-acre farm in Hancock, Wisconsin for thecamp.The summer program is entirely run bystudents, including fund-raising, and coun¬sellors are for the most part Chicago stu¬dents. Three two-week sessions are held,involving a total of approximately 90 chil¬dren each summer. The camp is sponsoredby the Woodlawn Methodist Church, wherethe STEP Study Center is located.STEP Camp Needs •Pots, Pans, a Truck,But, Most of All,Black CounsellorsAn urgent camp problem is the lack ofblack counsellors. Other pressing needs in¬clude sports equipment, pots, pans anddishes, the use of a truck or micro-bus forsix weeks, and money. Interested peopleare urged to call Janie Steinfels, 363-6381;checks should be made out to Student Tu¬tors Elementary Project and sent to Ange¬la Lee, Room 1225, Woodward Court, 5825S. Woodlawn.SWAP was initiated in 1963 and present¬ly tutors some 400 South Side high-shcoolchildren. Special programs are offered inmodern dance, Negro history, sports,drama, chess and art.Faculty MembersDemonstrate TheirConcern in ClassFaculty members also are showingconcern.When Professor of Education JosephSchwab talks about “Disintegration andIntegration of Education,” for instance, heemphasizes the need for public thought anddiscussion of decisions and legislation re¬garding integration in education.Morris Janowitz, professor and chair¬man of the Department of Sociology, forinstance, has investigated “Social Controlof Escalated Riots,” which he says “re¬quires independent efforts in the deesca¬lation of violence; domestic disarmament,if you will.” The article was written forthe “Short Term and Emergency Mea¬sures to Avert Urban Violence” confer¬ence at the Center for Policy Study.This year the Center composed of a num¬ber of faculty fellows, is bringing promi¬nent urban exports .to .Chicago for sessions on the urban crisis.Albert V. Crewe, professor of physicsand Director of the Argonne National Lab¬oratory, in “The Scientific Control ofCrime” seeks to establish a way for tech¬nology and science to help in controllingthe crime rate.The University sponsors a televisionpanel discussion program called “The Uni¬versity of Chicago Round Table.” Numbereleven on the schedule was a discussion of“The Quality of Inequality: Suburban andUrban Public Schools,” and panelists Phil¬ip B. Kurland, professor of law; Julian H.Levi, professor of urban studies; and Ar-thus Mann, professor of history discussedthe inequities between the quality of ed¬ucation in suburban and urban publicschools and the constitutionaltiy of subur¬ban schools.Other examples would range from theHauser and Havighurst reports on ChicagoPublic Schools to Richard Flacks’ andMarlene Dixon’s radical research work.This is only a small and current samplingof faculty members’ involvement in com¬munity problems.The University LaunchesRange of HealthPrograms, for Bodyand MindThe University’s health program for theindigent community includes both physicaland mental aid.Billings Hospital’s psychiatric unit, forexample, traditionally private due to pro¬hibitive costs of hospitalization, opened acommunity clinic in April for short-termcare. The program is funded by the StateDepartment of Mental Health which paysgeneral medical costs for eight days ofhospitalization. The pilot will test whetherintensive care in private facilities canavert long-term public hospitalization.Dr. George G. Meyer says he is glad tosee an end to the “bar at the emergencydoor” but also notes some problems. Sinceaverage treatment lasts 25 days, patientsmust be selected on the basis of who couldbenefit from a short emergency stay. Theunit works with the Woodlawn MentalHealth Center for out-patient care, but thisinvolves a change of doctors and tech¬niques. Nevertheless, Meyer says, it ispossible to ground the patient in a solidmedical program correcting medical, den¬tal, social, and psychiatric problems dur¬ing the eight days or later through otheragencies. Three to five of the patients ina 25-bed ward are receiving government „aid.The Woodlawn Mental Health Centerwas founded five years ago and is nowunder the co-directorship of Dr. SheppardG. Kellam and Dr. Sheldon Schiff. Fromits conception the Center was under theguidance of a community advisory boardwhich set priorities and now meets atleast once each month to reassess the pro¬gram. At one point, all one had to do togain membership on the board was standup at a meeting and say, “The headshrinkers are ruining our kids,” com¬mented Dr. Kellam, who wants the Centerto be a community rather than a Univer¬sity enterprise.A controlled study of first graders’adaptation to the school role, followed byevaluation two and then four years later,indicates that seven out of ten schoolchildren are not adapting well and be¬come symptomatic later. As a combinedprevention and treatment, group sessionsare held weekly in the classroom to whichparents are invited. Although these ses¬sions have made progress, Dr. Kellam en¬visions collaboration of all major agenciesfor a comprehensive service and trainingof community members for home visits.Adult care is decentralized, “social clubs”meeting weekly in church recreation cen¬ters for group therapy and crisis counsel¬ing. These sessions serve as pre- and af¬ter-care for the Billings’ Psychiatric Unit.A Drug Abuse Program which began inFebruary has seen approximately 200 ad¬dicts to date. It serves primarily the South.». *, Continued on. Page EightMay 28^~1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONContinued from Page SevenSide but will accept anyone needing treat¬ment. A halfway house for rehabilitationis about to be opened and a hospital with¬drawal unit is in planning stages. Dr. Jer¬ome H. Jaffe is the head of the program,which is financed by the State of Illinois.Some Help Is Offeredto Children and to ParentsPlanning FamiliesMedical aid for ghetto children was firstavailable last summer at the WoodlawnPediatric Clinic. It is designed to givecare to patients suffering from acute andchronic conditions as well as to establishprograms for area residents. The Clinicwas developed by the School of MedicinePatient? with the aid of a five-year grant from theChildren’s Bureau of the U.S. Departmentof Health, Education, and Welfare. In es¬tablishing the Clinic, the University wasassisted by The Woodlawn Organizationand the City Board of Health.Another medical service, birth control,is available in a limited sense at the WestOffice Clinic. Family planning is offeredto area residents who are receiving Aid toDependent Children or are on what iscalled the 502 program. Dr. Joseph R.Swartwout, the University director of theprogram, hopes to extend this service toall women who want help. He is the chair¬man of the Family Planning Co-OrdinatingCouncil of Metropolitan Chicago, an orga¬nization directed to making birth controlavailable to all women who can’t affordit. Resident doctors of the University alsowork with the Planned Parenthood Asso¬ciation in the Chicago Area.Dissatisfied with the disjointed effortsof existing health, education, and welfareagencies, the Student Health Organization(SHO) co-ordinated a ten-week summerproject involving medical, and social workstudents from all over the country. Stu¬dents in Chicago, one of three projectcities, worked with 75 “interns,” almostall of them ghetto residents interested inhealth careers.Some of the services were simple androutine — babysitting so that motherscould take children to hospitals, commu¬nity surveys, and follow-up medical calls.Other projects included tutoring childrenwho had been dismissed from school as“emotionally immature” or “mentally in¬capable”; the students found the young¬sters to be teachable. Due to co-ordinationof services the SHO was able to give med¬ical attention and also to correct housing,welfare, and legal problems encounteredon the job. Equipped with a report by lawstudents, workers suggested and revisedwelfare programs they found to be out¬dated. As student Director Fitzugh Mullanput it, “We still haven’t become tolerantof the establishment. We’ve just learned towork around it.” Plans are under way fora repeat project next summer.G. W. Chicago Offers TwoLegal Aid Services — IfNot Actual Law OfficesThe University of Chicago doesn’t goaround sponsoring law offices,” as HenryW. McGee, Jr., legal director of LegalServices to Youth, likes to comment. ButChicago is deeply involved in a number oflegal services providing counsel for scoresof indigents, neighborhood residents, andstudents.More than 400 people a month passthrough the doors of the Edwin F. MandelClinic, one of the two major legal agenciesthe University operates. Its director, Phil¬lip H. Ginsberg, who gave up a lucrativelegal practice four months ago to join theClinic, doesn’t bother to conceal his enthu¬siasm about the project. “I feel that theprogram has tremendous potential,” hesays.“It’s great for us to talk about solvingthe problems of the ghetto. But to do some¬thing about them, somebody must workwith the indiginous groups in the commun¬ity. This is a difficult time for that kind ofwork, but I think we’ll be there when thebell rings.”Eighty-five percent of the Clinic’s casescome from indigent residents of the sur¬rounding community (the other 15 percentare Chicago students and staff) and mostof the cases involve landlord-tenant dif¬ficulties, consumer credit suits, and do¬mestic litigation.Ginsburg has recently involved the Clinicin what he calls “remedial programs.”These include projected plans to go intoinner-city public schools to discuss variousaspects of the law with students, and toparticipate in the city’s drug abuse pro¬gram. In addition, the Clinic will studyIllinois’ archaic consumer credit laws andoffer counsel on one-to-one bases to busi¬nessmen who set up their enterprises in black neighborhoods through an OEO pro¬ject.The Clinic is staffed by four attorneysworking full-time and second and thirdyear law students. Ninety percent of thefunds for the program come from theUnited Charities of Chicago; the Universityhas covered the rest of the cost. Ginsburgindicates, however, that the University hasbeen contributing more to the financing ofthe Clinic’s activities in recent years andthat he expects this trend to continue asthe Clinic begins to work more activelywith other parts of the University.It is the tricky problem of funding thatplagues Chicago’s other experiment in le¬gal aid—Legal Services to Youth (LSY)Financed for the last 18 months as an“action research” project by the FordFoundation, LSY will go out of business bythe end of May if it does not find an in¬dependent basis of support or convincethe University to take over its expenses.So far, the prospects look bleak on bothfronts.Although disappointed by the lack of sup¬port, LSY Legal Director McGee appearssatisfied with the progress his organiza¬tion has made in the year-and-a-half it hasbeen in existence. The project was estab¬lished to demonstrate a need for new legalmethods to deal with the problems of theyoung in poverty areas. “I would say thatwe demonstrated a howling need,” saysHans W. Mattick, associate director of theCenter for Studies in Criminal Justice,“but that doesn’t mean that somebody willpick it up.”Operating in the Wabash Ave. police dis¬trict. which has a population of over 40percent juveniles and one of the highestcrime rates in the city, LSY has deliber¬ately avoided classical legal methods. Theproject was widely advertised in the com¬munity and an effort was made to involvecommunity members by employing non-legal assistants.According to McGee, the project’s chiefgoal is breaking the “arrest-detention-pro¬secution-imprisonment cycle” at its incep¬tion, and for this reason its storefront lawoffice is located two blocks from the policestation itself.LAKE COUNTRY STRING BANDBAROQUE COMPASS PLAYERSPAUL KAPLAN. Fridays & Saturdays, 8:30 pm-1:30 amThrough June 29No ReservationsHARPER THEATER COFFEE HOUSE5238 South Harperin that wiIdmixed-media, atotal environment called1106 W. LAWRENCE, CHICAGO, LO-1-8558DANCL DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICAIS Rip out this ad now and bring it toCheetah this weekend for aSPEC'L UNIV. of CHICAGOSTUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT T ICKET CEN TR A L ' 2 12 NO RTH MICHIGANgroup sales: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah tor §0-2000WIDE OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 8 P.M.1 ^ Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.A GOODYEAR,JEFF Ml 3-4020slower S^liofy“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53RD STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSApplications now being accepted for summer jobs withmaj or corporation. Students 18 yrs. of age &■ over wanted/to learn marketing, sales promotion, and brand identi¬fication techniques during summer period. High levelexecutive management training courses given to qualifiedapplicants. Earn $115 per wk. for first 3 wks, $145 perwk. plus bonuses starting 4th week. We have officeslocated in most cities however please contact districtoffices listed below for an appointment:Chicago Mr. Vass (312) 346-7037Grand Rapids. . . . Mr. Schmitt. . . (616) 459-5079Minneapolis Mr. Hartmann. . (612) 333-5647Transient Rooms AvailableFor The Graduation WeekFor Visiting ParentsShoreland HotelPlease Call PL2-10005454 South Shore DriveMay 28, 1968i'» r } Pb >; T1 3 •• , )Community Response: Apathy and GrumblingBy Jeffrey KutaIN A RECENT New York Times feature onthe universities and the urban crisis (oc-casiond by the Columbia disturbances),Fred Hechtinger pointed to the Universityof Chicago as a model of university-com-Tiunity relations. His observation may havebeen correct, but for some unique reasons.To the average Hyde Parker, the Univer¬sity is the University. Elderly ladies whohave been given notice to move out of theiripartment building or hotel will gripe aboutthe disruptiveness of Chicago’s expansion.Followers of Elijah Muhammed at TempleNo. 2, who’ve never before participated inthe political process, will endorse for Con¬gress a man who claims Leon Despres,Stanley Korshak, and the University werein collusion “to systematically removeblack people from the Hyde Park areathrough the University’s expan¬sion program.”As for the rest of Hyde Park, a commun¬ity for whom the University is the chief in¬fluence, a community that is intimatelytied to the physical and human investmentChicago pours into it, the reaction is mixed.For 15 years now The Hyde Park Heraldhas pointed out editorially that the Univer¬sity is concerned primarily with its ownsurvival and not necessarily with commun¬ity interests. “This is not to say that theUniversity can’t be a constructive force,”says Lee Botts, the newspaper’s editor.But she adds that her position also derivesfrom her interests.For The Hyde Park-Kenwood Voices, apaper this year resurrected after a shortpublishing stint two years ago which wasa result of political differences with TheHerald, the view is less veiled. “Polit¬ically,” Editor Don Rose comments, “theUniversity’s role has probably been nega¬tive since the days of renewal. It is, byHyde Park standards, a quasi-racist forcedictating what the community must be.”Speaking of renewal. Rose goes on to talkabout what he calls the “guilt syndrome”— the feeling that what the University didin the 1950’s was probably necessary yetunpleasant. The Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Conference, once criticized by Ju¬lian Levi’s South East Chicago Commission(SECC) as being too liberally idealistic, isExpert Typing ServiceFast, Accurate, Hasste-lessJudy 858-2544m Cornell florist jj;1645 E. 55th STREET mCHICAGO, ILL. 60615Phone: FA 4-1651SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200ArtistsPick up your work fromthe Festival of The ArtsShow and Contest fromthe Student ActivitiesOffice, INH. today taking a more conservative position>n the 47th St. projects while Levi is cast asthe radical community spokesman: theroles are exactly reversed, and for Levipast experience may be the reason for this.The Community Is NotUp at Arms Either inHyde Park or Woodlawn.Not Yet Anyway.Perhaps, however, the vast majority ofHyde Parkers who are neither faculty norstudents nor staff remain unaffected and,consequently, unconcerned about the Uni- Ranger Territory.versity. In Woodlawn, people are being af¬fected more and more every day, but apa¬thy seems to remain dominant.Even caseworkers who visit poor blacksabout to be removed from the urban re¬newal “strip” that will one day be part ofthe South Campus agree: there are fewstrong feelings about the University be¬cause Woodlawn residents don’t see theUniversity as directly affecting their lives.The family plagued by relocation difficul¬ties, for instance, will direct its anger to¬wards the federal government, the Depart¬ment or Urban Renewal, the city — not atthe University.And whether or not their anger shouldbe directed at the University, it is almostuniversally agreed that Woodlawn has no true grass roots community organizationsthat could manipulate such a thing. TheWoodlawn Booster, like The Hyde ParkHerald, is a rather uncontroversial news¬paper that prints uncontroversial news,patting The Woodlawn Organization (TWO)on the back. TWO, which became thebrainchild of Saul Alinsky when he wasfirst trying his hand at community organ¬izing in Chicago, is in many ways notthat much different than the SECC.While Alinsky set himself up as a signif¬icant representative of a radical reformbody acting in the interest of the commun¬ity, TWO couldn’t then and can’t now becalled truly representative; no Woodlawngroup can. What Alinsky did was to pressContinued on Page ElevenIf you’re drivinghome for the 8summer havetwo®road.May 28, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9' c ■ ; y - 'fITHE CHICAGO MAROONBiC Fine Point 25*ionsDespitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst ball-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic’s "Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamicbic Duo at yourcampus store now.WATERMAN-BIC PEN CORPMILFORD. CONNBiC Medium Point 19*co starring ABBEY BEAU NAN LAURI CARROLLLINCOLNwBRIDGES MARTIN PETERS—O'CONNOR bIbbSCREENPLAY BY ROBERT ALAN AURTHURFROM A STORY BY SIDNEY POITIERDIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY EDGAR J.SCHERICK and JAY WESTONJOSEPH COFFEY QUINCY JONES fro* .see, DANIEL MANNCINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATIONIN COLORHUMOR US!WRITE SOMETHING HUMOROUSBLACKFRIARSannounces theCOMPETITIONFor original scripts for its 1969Musical comedy production.Authors in search of composers andvice versa should contact us.A completed act and a synopsis mustbe submitted at the beginning of theAutumn, 1969, quarter.For further information, call:Alan Rudnick MI-3-8679Steve Goodman X 3545 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN TM1NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESC0RS0Notice to the heads of all recog¬nized organizations or organizations thatwish to be recognized: CORSO requiresthat the following be submitted to it byFriday, June 7: 1) A preliminary de¬tailed budget »rom each organization whichanticipates receipt of funds from CORSO;not less than 10 copies of such budget mustbe submitted. 2) These budgets must beaccompanied by the name, summer ad¬dress, and telephone number of a desig¬ nated representative who will be availablefor summer consultation with CORSOFailure to provide such Informatio nwilimean that CORSO will not act upon anyrequests for funds for that organizationCORSO requires that 20 copies of the final(infinitely) detailed budget be submittedby Friday, June 28. Inqueries may be ad¬dressed to Student Activities Office or JeffSchnitzer, chairman of CORSO, 3276 orHY 3-2909.HOUSES-FOR SALE-SOUTHEASTFIVE BEDROOM HOMENR. 73rd & SO MERRILLQuiet street, lovely yard,nat’l. fireplace, Ige. kit. Newgas heat-new stove & ref.IVj baths. Partially air-cond’n.Excellent buy!Sybelle Heilbrunn BA. 1*6154or HY 3-8100McKEY & POAGUE750 E. 71st St.ORGANIZEWhites in Massachusettsarp/jnd community issues.JUNE 17 - AUG. 31Subsistence provided. Menespecially needed.Contact NICK JANKOWSKIService Civil Intern’ISCJ-IUSP.O.BOX 9036CHICAGOMU-4-9035FoodDrinkPeopid'-311 E 23rd Street2‘blocks W. 5f McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400J&metfe >Sidney FditiCi1laughing mid loving in (lie now romanlie comedy..forisreof xwContinued from Page Nineradical demands and then make a politicaldeal, a compromise, and he has used thistactic ever since.TWO Is Not Exactlya Democratic OrganizationThe TWO Alinsky built is, many think,structured along elitist lines.Only within the last year has TWO madefriends with the Blackstone Rangers overthe Manpower Training Act grant that hasprovided salaries for some of the gangmembers. Such is their mutual affectionnowadays that when Ranger mentor Rev. John Fry is asked for his reaction to thepresence of the University, he replies thathe’ll have to consult with TWO headmanRev. Arthur Brazier before they can issuea statement. Neither did.But Brazier’s position is clear. At theUniversity’s May Committee on Woodlawnmeeting, he defended before a crowd ofconcerned students TWO’s recent compata-bility with the school. “I was calling JulianLevi a racist five years ago,” he snappedat an activist. “We’re not interested in . . .fighting old battles,” he said, implying thatthe new relationship was tried-and-true themost profitable. Brazier asserted TWO’s in¬dependence of the University, in fact, itsrejection of white leadership and its relega¬tion of the University to a junior partner¬ship; he denied the existence of any se-The Social ServiceCenter, A NewCollection of ServicesContinued from Page EightThe Social Services Center of the Schoolof Social Service Administration providesthe first opportunity for a school of socialwork to develop a new neighborhood facil¬ity to achieve more efficient coverage anddelivery of social services, encouragementof innovation and research, and develop¬ment and evaluation of new methods of so¬cial work education.The Woodlawn community was chosenbecause of its serious social problems andresponsive interest to the Center. An Ad¬visory Board, including representatives ofThe Woodlawn Organization and otherWoodlawn groups, has been actively en¬gaged in program planning for the Center.It was clear that the Center should serv¬ice the Woodlawn community because ofWoodlawn’s composition and proximity tothe University. The services having thegreatest promise as Center components in¬clude maternal and child health, day care,public assistance, and legal services forthe poor. The Center provides the opportunity toexperiment without changing the basicprogram of the SSA. With support for stu¬dent stipends and for faculty salaries fromthe Children’s Bureau, it also makes it pos¬sible for the School to expand its en¬rolment. An additional 25 students will beadmitted in Autumn 1968.The service program of the Center isdesigned to meet the objectives of thethree institutions responsible for its devel¬opment—the University, the Department ofHousing and Urban Development, and theChildren’s Bureau. President Beadle hassaid that, while the University’s majortasks are education and research, the Uni¬versity is also necessarily concerned withthe welfare of the community. The Depart¬ment of Housing and Urban Developmentis providing funds for the building in orderto encourage the development of a neigh¬borhood service facility in a target area.The Children’s Bureau objectives arebroad—to improve the quality of teaching,to provide a setting for research and dem¬onstration, to improve the quality of publicchild welfare and related services, and toupgrade the entire field of social welfarethrough demonstration of what can be donein child welfare.A number of agencies, both public and cret deals and insisted on the representa¬tiveness of TWO as a community organiza¬tion. And Levi backed hini up all the way.Despite current University-TWO coopera¬tion, there are many who feel the Univer¬sity is an enemy of Woodlawn, although thepeople who seem to be the most conscious¬ly resentful towards the school are stu¬dents. It was not Woodlawn residents butChicago students who have for the past fewyears most vehemently opposed the Uni¬versity’s expansion southward so long asrelocation procedures are as faulty as theyare; it was white Chicago students whoformed the Committee for a ResponsibleUniversity to press related demands thisspring, and it was black Chicago studentswho took over the Administration Building.But as it turned out, the blacks gave up theprivate, have been working out plans to lo¬cate units or branches in the Center. Al¬though there are some advantages to cli¬ents when a number of agencies are lo¬cated in one building, unless there is aco-ordinated program with common goalsthe actual potential of the Center cannotbe realized. The Center staff includes pro¬gram directors in health, child welfare,and community work, whose primary re¬sponsibilities will be to work with compon¬ent agencies to effect joint planning andco-operation. The Center’s research direc¬tor will help agencies develop demonstra¬tion and research projects in conjunctionwith the research activities of the School.As the agencies work together within aclimate favorable to innovation and con¬cern for program evaluation, they hope toreach out in new directions. Faculty willbe encouraged to engage in direct practice,which will have beneficial effects both onthe field and on social work education.In order to prepare students to assume awider range of professional responsibility,the committee on educational design hascharged the faculty members assigned tothe Center program to develop curriculumcontent to prepare students to work withindividuals, families, and small groups. building and a last-ditch effort by whitestudents to fodis eit .relocation failed togather momentum ehough for a studentstrike and possibly a subsequent sit-in.The official University has been playingit very carefully, and it looks as if it willcontinue to do so, at least as long as thepossibility of agitation remains. With riotsbreaking out in urban ghettoes every sum¬mer and even more frequently, the lastthing Chicago wants to see is a disturbancein its own backyard — which would furtherdissuade faculty and students from cominghere.Old ladies and Muslems are not likely togive the University serious trouble, andenough concessions can be made to placatestudents as was done this spring. As far asthe Woodlawn community goes, it is gen¬eral ignorance of the University’s andTWO’s role combined with the Rangers’selfishness that will keep things in line.For the Rangers, the East Side Discip¬les, and similar types will either get whatthey can out of the University or else notreally give a damn. The two hitherto rivalgangs’ mass meeting on the Midway follow¬ing the Martin Luther King riots was atonce an agreement that Woodlawn wouldbe “kept cool” and a warning that thegangs could summon enough manpower “toburn the place down,” as a First Presby¬terian Church staff worker put it, if fheUniversity doesn’t treat them well.The city’s next urban revolt could hit anyof about five neighborhoods, but Woodlawnwould by no means be the first. But evenif the Rangers couldn’t or wouldn’t keepthings cool, community observers find itdoubtful whether rioting would spill overonto the University. Much as it is dislikedin some quarters, the school remains a ter¬tiary target to potential Woodlawn rioters.Unlike the television salesman or super¬market manager, the University is once re¬moved from blacks’ everyday lives andpeople don’t perceive of it as a personalenemy — in fact, many blacks who have in3ne way or another been adversely affectedby the University haven’t even seen it. Be¬sides, there’s nothing materially profitablefor the rioter in “burning the place down”:63rd St. is the place to go for TV sets.m INVITATION TO 1M UM RAM COMMUNITYto attendthe SPECIAL VIETNAM CONVOCATIONA ceremony addressing itself to the political realities facing graduatingseniors and first year graduate students, and honoring those who aregraduating into the arms of the Selective Service but who have pledgedto refuse induction.Noam Chomsky and Dean E. Spencer Parsons, speakingFRIDAY, JUNE 7 7:30 P.M. ROCKEFELLER CHAPELfollowed by a celebration and danceSTATEMENT FOR THE DRAFT-ELIGIBLEOur war in Viet Nam is unjust and immoral. As long as the,UnitedStates is involved in this war, I will not serve in the ArmedForces. I am aware that this statement will be made public.I hereby give consent to have myname sent to the selective service.I YES n NO □ NameSignature*; College 12 3 4Graduate 12 3 4 Addressv' Phone STATEMENT TO SUPPORT THOSE WHO REFUSE SERVICEAlthough I am not subject to the draft, my opposition to our govern¬ment's policy in Viet Nam compels me to support those draft eli¬gible Americans who have pledged to refuse induction. I pledge tosupport these young Americans with encouragement, counsel, andfinancial aid.I am aware this statementwill be made public. Name-SignatureAddress—Phone—UC Student —Faculty—Alumnus —Parent of UC Student—Resident of Hyde Park or WoodlawnOVER 500 STUDENTS AND 95 FACULTY HAVE SIGNEDMAIL SIGNED PLEDGES TO:SPECIAL VIETNAM CONVOCATION GROUP. IDA NOYES HALL1212 EAST 59th SL CHICAGO. ILLINOISraw eg rr wrw—■ ■ i/ 1.11 1 11SEAWAY CYCLE CO.“Seaway for Service"• HONDA• TRIUMPH• BULTACO• SERVICEPARTS • SALES 2812 East 79th StreetSA 1-9129 SA 1-8999 WANTEDooooooooooooooooA Part time worker for the United Synagogue Youth De¬partment. Preferably a graduate student with some ex¬perience with Youth Groups and adequate Jewish educa¬tional background.If interested please contact Mrs. Ruth A. Bonder at:GREATER CHICAGO REGION 72 EAST NTH STREETUNITED SYNAGOGUE OF AMERICA CHICAGO, ILL. 60605DEPARTMENT OF YOUTH ACTIVITIES WEBSTER 9-2353carryGoingsurecoaWreay wit e n eCEPTEVEaphorized banks, *,«k's offices. WO»- —754 Per lu|arges» trove'1ravel ogenc.esrnoK&SON gan\zat«onnd allaooo»«ooo6i UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorThe Chicago Maroonapologizes toLesly Imports Inc.for the misleadingadvertisementinserted withouttheir authority inthe April 3 issue.MOST COMPLETE PHOTAND HOBBY STORE ONTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259Student Discounts MENTAL PATIENTSare people.And they deserve help.Work directly with foreign mental patients at a half-way house in theNorth side of Chicago for a portion of the summer. Volunteers givenmaintenance.For information: Nick JankowskiSCJIUS, P.O. BOX 9036. CHICAGOMU4-903S U of C Students are Invited to Apply forSUMMER HOUSINGROBIN HOODat 6:00 and 9:30ERROL FLYNNOLIVIA de HAVILLANDBASIL RATHBONECLAUDE RAINSCOBB HALL AUDITORIUMSATURDAYDOC FILMS 75'CAPTAINJLOODat 8:0012 m " THE. CHICAGO MAHQONsv' Mayc?§, WK v A3>i t IV jIn the Following Fraternity Houses:ALPHA DELTA PHI5747 University Ave.PL2-9718DELTA UPSILON5714 Woodland Ave.PL2-9647PHI DELTA THETA5625 University Ave.FA4-972JPHI GAMMA DELTA5615 University Ave.PL2-9874PHI KAPPA PSI5555 Woodlawn Ave.PL2-9709PSI UPSILON5639 University Ave.BU8-9876ZETA BETA TAU5472 Ellis Ave.684-9658 $10 - $12/week$40/m#nth$150/summer$125/summer$125 - $150/summer$150/summer, $50/month$100/summerAll rates include kitchen privileges and apply from June 10until late September.IDEAL LOCATIONS , LOWEST RENTS£ S 3 £ *• E £ £ V »' :• . 4 ..II m «•* * m »*1 i -f i'P’ickcA. '?iied S&ii*Hfc4GoVtlon’d •R E ST AURAN TCARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from * $10 Used $X1JRug, To a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants ft Mill Returns at fractionot the Original cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY FINAL WEEK SALEBrand Name Merchandiseat Drastic ReductionsCome in and ask to seethese specialsSpotcoats — $10.00Shirts from $1.98Sta-press dress shirts $2.98Sta-press pants $5.98Sandals from $2.98Boys Suits $5.00JOHN’S MENS STORE1459 East 53rd StreetWe give a lot morefor a lot lessMiddle East CenterStudents AssociationpresentsMr. Gad Rennon, Consul for Pressand Information, Israeli ConsulateISRAEL: TWENTY YEARS LATER”May 29 8:00 P.M. Business East 103Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony island 734-6393 NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR:1. four seat belt*2. back-up light*3. sliding sunroof4. 4-spera synchronized transmission5. power brakes, disc front6. wall-to-wall carpeting7. windshield washer8. two-speed heater/drfroster9 fully adjustable, reclining front seats10. stainless steel exterior trim 11. electric dock12. trip mileage counter13. front and rear center armrests14. bumper guards, rubber Inserts15. tool Kit16. Mlchelin X (radial-ply) dree17. carpeted trunk18. fresh air ventilating system19. extra thick body steelWHAT ELSE DO YOUWANT FOR $2699?PEUGEOTcome indrive theall NEW '68NOW!LESLY IMPORTS INC.PEUGEOT SALES WINNER for CHICAGO and MIDWEST2235 S. MICHIGAN 328-2SSOPreparation & Delivery Not IncludedPIZZAPLATTERPina, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!(460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 SUMMER ADSSUMMER ADSSUMMER ADSChicago Review Speaker’s Series presents:A Program of Midwest Artists For Peace• Cheetah Light Show• Mime Theatre, Morgan Gibson’s “Madame C.I.A.,”• Edith Meinecke’s “The Wheel”• Poetry - Selwyn Schwartz• Film - Jeff Chouivard• Music - Faure, A Major Sonata, Elaine Skorodinviolin, Ruth Green, piano; Terry Collier’sFolk BandQuantrell Hall, May 25, 8:00 pm., $ 1.00 admissionstudent co-op bookstoresummer plansMaV2b,m&' THE 'etiiCAbo MAkdoti'^ 13open interims and summer10-6 weekdays12-6 Saturdaysservices:• used books bought & sold• summer jobs• housing list• rides and ridersreynolds clubcome undergroundSlimniinnnill 1111 m 1 I 1 1 1 IIWFTWMaroon Classified AdvertisementsDOMESTIC MAID SERVICENEED YOUR HOUSE CLEANED bytrustworthy workers? Let Fanny do it!FANNY MAID SERVICE at Ml 3-3543.COMING EVENTSCONCERT, ART, AND FOLK SINGING. 13thto 20th. Shelia McKenzie Sop-Guitar. 8 PMFriday the 31st. Lutheran College, 55th &University.WORKSeeking escape from the humdrum studentlife? Join Captain Blood this Saturday.Plenty of fresh salty air and ALL YOU CANPLUNDER! In Cobb at 8 pm.Frmale student for part-time secretarialwork for handicapped Hyde Park Housewife.BU-8-7929.EDITORIAL ASSISTANT & SECRETARY.Start approx. July 1. Must be good typistand know how to spell. Excellent opportun¬ity to learn publishing from inside the U.C.PRESS. Apply through University Personnel,X. 442.The Woodlawn Business Men's Association islooking for a male executive secretary .about20 hours per week (flexible), $2.25/hour.Call DO-3-5362.ROOM FOR RENTCOOL J‘00M, near Lake, 1C, shopping.Till Ocff 684-5722.SUBLET & BEYONDONE MAN APARTMENT. A Lakefront loca¬tion. Hyde Park. Bar, swimming pool, Fullkitchen, furnished, priced LOWER than you'dthink, Will negotiate, 324-7670.SUBLET: l-’/i room apt. Completely fur¬nished. Avail. July 7. May have lease in Oct.$80/mo. 5419 Harper. Call 643-1644 9 am to2 pm.TYPINGMANUSCRIPTS TYPED. Call 363-1104.FREE & SLEEKSleek Black Kitten to be given away. 363-564FOR SALE6.50 x 13, Full 4-ply Atlas Plycron white walltire with wheel. Never Used. Perfect for aspare tire! Cost 40 dollars, will sell for $25or best offer. 324-5751.HUGE METAL DESK with large drawers(one with file dividers). Large enough tohold typewriter and a row of books. $5.00or best offer to anyone who will dismantle(screwdriver variety) and remove. 324-5751.Dbl. Bed: mattress, springs. Desk, carpet,miscellany all types. 363-9112.Mono Hi-Fi: Amp, tuner, Thorens table,E-V speaker, Old but reliable. $60 or separ¬ately. Also chests, garish cushioned chairand cover. 363-8211.KOWA SE SINGLE LENS REFLEX CAM¬ERA w. CdS thru lens meter; telephoto andwide angle auxiliary lenses. PERFECT CON¬DITION. Call 475-3968 after 6.FM TUNER $12; 600 Ohm microphone $7.Bulk tape eraser $3. All excellent cond.363-3814.1966 HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER, Kandy AppleBlue, $390. BU-8-9728 after 6.RCA Speakers. 2 tweeters (sic). Woofer Wal¬nut Cab. Thigh high. Excellent Condition!$60/pair. Room 38. Snell.HONDA. 150 cc. Good Cond. Exc. for sum¬mer campus use. 288-1979 after 6.MOVING. Everything must go incl. stereo,couches, tables, etc. Call 667-5675.Beautiful desk, fold top—cubbyholes. Smallbut serviceable. Must sell. Matching dresserin less beautiful condition. Cheap. 324-4867.Couch $25. Matching chair $5. Double bedswith bookcase headboards, one with bedsidetable $35 or $50. 375-6467.1 dining room set $75, 1 marble table $20,1 double bed $20, 1 dresser $15, and misc.pieces. Will negotiate. Call 693-7004.Couch, tables, double bed, desks, dressers,etc. Call 684-4204 or 324-8012.Large desk and dresser, 493-1548.Old Fender Deluxe Amp. Exc. Cond. $75.Call Swan at 731-4164.DOUBLE BED $20 8. COFFEE TABLE $8.643-69091966 HONDA S-90. 6200 miles, Exc. cond.,$225 or offer; MI-3-6000, Room 551. NOW.HONDA 305 SUPERHAWK BLACK BEAU¬TIFUL. Only 1,100 miles. Exc. Condition.$500. Call BU-8-6610, Ext. 3225X. If noanswer, leave message.Coffee Table. Lamps. Elec. Heater. 752-8282.GRADUATION RECEPTIONFRIDAY JUNE 7. After the Special VietnamConvocation, parents will meet together withDraft Counsellors and Lawyers.RIDES, DRIVERS, & RIDERSRide wanted to Portland, Oregon after June3. Will pay. 324-7104 or 752-5407. Leavemessage.Need a lift to LOS ANGELES? Undergraddriving out June 8 or 9. Riders welcome.Share driving and expenses. Call 529-7577after 6 pm.Wanted: Two to share driving & expensesto N.Y.C. June 12 .'52 Chevy. 955-1374. Person(s) wanted to drive our car to LosAngeles. Leave about June 15. You pay forgas, etc. 285-5999.DRIVER WANTED to N.Y.C. Lv. 6/2. Std.Shift. Share Expenses. 493-8863PHOTOGRAPHYWEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY. Candid picturesa specialty. Thomas Hocker, I IT photo gradstudent. Call 842-5425, evenings.GRADUATION WORKSHOPSFRIDAY, June 7 & Sat., June 8 for parentsand students: 2:30 to 4:00 PM.PANEL DISCUSSION: With faculty draftcounsellors and resisters.CONFRONTATION WITH THE DRAFT:programs for action places to be announced.CAMPING EQUIPMENT RENTALCamping Equipment Rental: Tents, Sleep¬ing Bags, Stoves, Lanterns, Contact HickoryExt. 2381 or 324-1499.CATERERSHaving a Party?—or feel tired of cooking?Let Mary Lou do it for you. Hors d'oeuvres,menus, buffet and family dinners. MaryLou Catering, Ml 3-3545. Try our originalleberkase.TRAVELFemale U.C. Grad seeks adventurous FemaleTravelling campanion for summer in Eu¬rope. 761-4522.International House Association's Weekendvisit to Shakespearean Festival Theatre, |Stratford, Canada, by chartered bus. Friday, !July 19 (6 p.m.) — Sunday, July 21. MID- ISUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, ROMEO 8. jJULIET, concert (Vivaldi, Bach). Alterna¬tives available. Tickets from $2.50. Fare$20. Lodging, $4 per night. Inquire at Int.Hse. Assn. 1414 E. 59th Street, FA 4-8200,evenings. Sat. afternoon.Camping Equipment Rental: Tents, SleepingBaqs. Stoves, Lanterns, Contact Hickory Ext.2381 or 324-1499.Escape Hyde Park Now or Forever! Getyour tickets at Marco Polo Travel. 288-5244.WORK WANTEDWORK AS HOSPITAL ORDERLY. Call 285-5438 or 624-1262. Leave message for Nate.Young Irishman (A. B. Econ.) offers as¬sorted services—intellectual, physical, emo¬tional—to anyone creative enough to enablehim to live in the States from early Julyto mid—Sept. Contact. 288-7454.RENTSTUDIO APT. for sum. 8. opt. in fall. 52nd8. Kenwood, $105. 324-6078.2 Large Bedrms, 2 Baths, Parking Lot, Air-Conditioning, Dishwasher, Carpeting, NearLake, Sublease June 15—Sept. 30, Option toRenew. $185. Call 324-5636 .or 275-8730.4-Vi RMS. $112, with opt. for Oct, 752-8026.SOUTH SHORE. 8 rm apt., 4 bdrm., 3bath, Sunroom, near Lake 81 1C, 10 min. toCampus. Avail. July 1, 667-6172, evenings.Sublet for Summer, Option Jo renew, 4 rms.in Hyde Park. Call 684-4204 or 324-8012.Spacious 6 room apartment, South Shore.Includes garage, basement, storage, appli¬ances, 2 large bedrooms 8, study area.Available July 1st. $167.50 . 731-5667.APT. to Sublet, June 1—Sept. 30 with opt.for lease. 4 rms., free furn. $100/mo. 7600S. Colfax, South Shore. Call Sasha, NO 7-4700, Ext. 8195, Day 8. after 7:30, F. 5 to7:30, 374-2820.4 ROOM APARTMENT available for fallquarter. Partially furnished. $97.50 permonth. South Shore. 7516 S. Colfax Avenue.Call 374-7590 evenings or weekend.2 rms., Near Harper Court, co-op. Theater.$104./month. Possible summer discount.684-3346.ENTIRE BASEMENT (QUITE DINGY NOW,but could be cool after a good cleaning, toRENT from early June until Fall or beyond.With bathroom & own entrance. Kitchen up¬stairs. Only $40 per month including utilities.Located in Friendly Woodlawn (check thestatistics. Brothers and Sister, Black 8,White—you're safer in Woodlawn than HydePark). View of Jan Mazaryk and the Mid¬way. Friendly, integrated (racially) residen¬tial neighborhood. Call 324-5751.SUBLETSUBLET: 5-'/i rm. apartment, June—Oct.or less, furnished or unfurnished, 5342 S.KimbaFk, $45/month. Call 493-0156 after11:00 P.M.SUBLET: 5-Vi Rm. Apartment, garage, back¬yard. June—Oct. cr less, furnished or un¬furnished, 53rd 8< So. Kimbark, call 955-1495 after 10.COOL 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. Rent one bed¬room of three in this large, completely furn¬ished and newly painted apartment fromearly June through late September, give ortake a week or two. Asking $66.67 per monthbut will go down depending on highest bid.Call 493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!10 ROOM HOUSE. 5606 Maryland. 3 bed¬rooms still available. $33/mo. June—Sept.684-0560.Nice summer sublet. 53rd 8, Greenwood. 3-5persons. CHEAP. Call 363-6961, eves.GOOD 8< CHEAP. 4 rms. $95/mo. Comp.Furn. June—Oct. 1517 54th Street, Near Co¬op, I.C. Smedley's, etc. 493-3410.7 rooms. 54th 8, University. June—Sept.$138.00/mo. Call 363-3768. Hyde Park. 3-Vi rooms to sublet July 1st.Option to sign lease in .Fall. 684-6996.5-Vi room turn. apt. with yard, sunporch,8. study to sublet June 15—September 1.57th 8. Maryland. 643-4082.2-Vi room furn. sublet. June 10, 55th 8.Blackstone. $120/mo., incl. util. 955-1933.Beautiful CLEAN 3-4 bedroom apartmentplus LARGE living room. 2 bathrooms.Available early June—mid-SepterT.oer. $185/mo, but WILL BARGAIN FOR LESS. CallNancy 684-0579 or BU 8-6610, Ext. 3409.To sublet for summer: Two rooms (pluskitchen). $40 each per month. One blockfrom Campus. 288-4631.LGE. APT. for 3 or 4 roommates. 2 blks.fr. Campus. Porch, swing, backyard 8. 2bathrooms! Available mid-June, 324-4867.Really fine apt., spacious, lovely, 4 bedrms,2 baths, sunporch. 363-0140.Sublet 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.SPACIOUS STUDIO APT., 50th at Lake,21st floor, magnificent view, $100/month.Phone 324-1460.2>/i furn. 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.Female roommate wanted: Anytime June 5-Sept. 30. Large. Aircond. Furnished apt.57th 8. 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.b S 10Own room. East Hyde Park. June-Sept. Call493-3471.4-'/a Ige, sunny rms. Furnished. 55th St. 3blocks from campus. 493-6831 any hour.5-Vi Rms. $100, mid-June—Oct. 643-5060.53rd 8> Harper. 2-’/a rms., furnished. From6/10 to 10/1. $80/mo. 324-5128. After 8 p.m.4-Va Rms—Spacious, fully furn. Campus busat corner. 6753 Chappel. HY 3-8404.Sublet 6 room, 4 bedroom furnished air-cond.apt. to female students or family. 57th 8,Dorchester. $220 a month, util. incl. 324-2864.Furn. 5 rm. Apt. Exc. cond. For summer 8<54th 8. Univ. $118/month. Call Jon, 363-8154.Female roommate wanted at 57th 8, Dor¬chester. Own room. Air conditioned. $65 amonth. 363-5609.Sublet with option to lease in Oct. 2-Va roomapt., iust dec., in midst of 53rd Streetaction. $83/month. Call Ml 3-2511 after 5:30.Furn. apt. in Madison Park (Safe 8< north of53rd). Suitable for 4-5 persons. Rent $250.00per month or best offer. Mid-June to Mid-Sept. Please Call 285-2697.Mod. Elev. Bldg, on Campus. $87/month.Mid-June- Sept. 684-3472.MORE SUBLETSSUBLET ROOM beginning Saturday inFriendly Woodlawn (check the statistics.Brothers and Sisters, black or white—you'resafer in Woodlawn than Hyde Park). In 8room townhouse (Vintage 1896) with woodedCourtyard and scenic view of Jan Mazarykand the Midway. Friendly, integrated (ra¬cially) residential neighborhood. Call 324-5751. Rent $30 per month plus utilities. Com¬plete kitchen facilities and maid comes oncea week. Available til early September.SUMMER SUBLET. 7-Vi rooms (2 baths).Compl. furn. on Cornell Ave. near Lake 8.parks. Call 684-4421.GOOD RENT. Space for 3-4 students or1-2 couples; rent adjustable depending onneed. 288-5325.Sublet for June—Sept. 7 room, 2 bathroomapt. 55th 8, University. $45/month perperson. 493-1142.1 bdrm. furn. w. Lake 8< Loop views:UC bus. Summer, negotiable. 798-7892.Vi <4 6r»l,(|iJ ft G1*(BcV<.(/.(o(t*rt/v(M J A'ibG t'T*) A■ mw 2& m Furniture, indoor plumbing 8< other frillsfor 1 more girl in stunning summer sublet.$46.25. 493-6147.ENTIRE BASEMENT (DINGY NOW butcould turn out to be anything after a goodcleaning) to SUBLET. Option for Fall. Withbathroom. Own entrance in back. Kitchenupstairs. Available in early June. Only $40.00per month including utilities. Has dryer 8,washer which will be repaired on request.Call 324-5751, evenings. Located in Wood¬lawn (see first ad.)Three room apt. on 928 E. 61st. VacantJune 12 thru August 12, 1968, $20.00 a week.Call 643-1749 after 6 P. M.2 bedroom apt. June 15-Sept. 15. Completelyfurnished (beds, T.V.). Near Campus. $100/month. Call Rich. 684-4775.3 rm. apt. to sublet. Wonderful Locationright behind Fermi Institute. Recently re¬finished. $100/month. Available early June.Call 955-6541.l-'/i rm. furnished apartment for summer(and beyond?). 53rd 8, Harper. Good airand light. $70/mo. or less. 955-3623.Summer sublet, l-'/i rooms. Reas. Fall opt.Cool in summer, nr. Lake. HY-3-3802, eves.ROOMMATES WANTEDFemale students wanted to share 6 roomfurnished apt. for summer. Own room, air¬cond. $55 a month. Util incl. 324-2864.Two grad, girls seek 3rd girl to share facul¬ty apt. for summer. 3 bdrm. TV. Protectedsunporch. Own tree. 1 blk. from campus.$50. Call 363-9112.Female wants one female roommate toshare Prairie Shores Apt. 8, Art Studio.Graduate student and/or teacher preferred.326-1548 after 5 p.m.’HOMELESS? Your own room $43.75/mo.53rd 8. Dorchester. Avail. June 15. Optionfor Fall. Share large 8 rm. apt. 324-5404.Male roommate wanted to share 5 roomapt. at 54th 8, Kimbark with 2 others.Mid-June to end of Sept. $45 per month.Call Dan Candee, 493-0156 or Ext. 4715.4 girls to share an apt. at 1400 E. 57th forthe summer. Call 324-7637.Sum. occupants wanted for furn. So. ShoreLakeview apt. Negotiable. 798-7892.2 male grad students seek apt. for Fall.Bill. BU-8-110O (Ext. 212).SUMMER: Person wanted to share cleanlovable apartment with clean lovable Marooneditor, 2 kittens, air conditioner, and TV.Roger, 955-5240.WANTED• ■.. ' .MAX-3July SUBLET wanted. 3 bedroom House orApt. in Hyde Park or South Shore, Phone667-1054.Need college boy who will act as a compan¬ion to a 12 year old child for free* room &board, live 8800 S. 2200 E. in Large ModernHome. ESsex 5-1346.Male student desires room w. family in HydePark for summer 8< next year. Willing tobaby sit. Call 667-5675.ROOM DESPERATELY WANTED FORFALL. 2 rooms or 1 large room in an apart¬ment for 2 girls. Call 684 4480.Old Cycle at Pierce Tower — 643-2738.DRUMMER wants to play with Jazz or RockGroup; Summer quarter for fun or profit;Phil FA-4-9500, Room 1705.Will pay up to $500 for old VW. Bob at NO-7-5611.MOVING? Have an old PIANO you want toget rid of? Call Judy. BU-8-6610, Ext. 1220.STUDENT seeks Female Companion fordrive to California in Mid-June. 375-9034.I want my PRINCE to comeWanted: Person of talent, wit, perseverance,good nature, and dedication to take over jobof Managing Editor of the Chicago LiteraryReview. Endless opportunities to meet newpeople (even non-UC types), some travel.Must be able to deal with authoritarian-de¬luded editors in an essentially non-authori¬tarian hierarchy. Duties involve mostly officeand personnel management, editing and lay¬out as desired. Possibility of token remunera¬tion (to be arranged) and assurance of infin¬ite appreciation. Come to Ida Noyes 305, orspeak with Mary Sue Leighton, Jeff Schnitzer,or Rick Hack. An Equal Opportunity Employ¬er. (?)Female roommate for summer and/or nextyear. Own bedroom. 6 rm. apt. w. porch.DO 3-7682.Wanted: Person to share Apartment duringsummer on 57th 8< Kenwood. $50/mo. Con¬tact or leave message New Dorms 1221.1-2 females to share Ig. furn. 7 rm. apt.near 57th 8< Kimbk. own rm. $35.50. June-Sept. 288-4910 after 5.2 female grads needed from June 17 toSept. 17. Apt. fully furnished. Air cond. $33.per mo. per person. Stereo 8< TV. Call 363-1245.COOL 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. Rent one bed¬room of three in this large, completely fur¬nished and newly painted apartment fromearly June through late September, give ortake a week or two. Asking $66.67 per monthbut will go down depending on highest bid.Call 493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!! room apartment to share with male gradualtstudent. Location excellent (on Kimbark near53rd). If interested, contact Neil Komesarat Ext. 2423, ST 2-5400 or Ml 3-3579.One person wanted to share South Side Ad*with three male graduate students. Summerand/or next year. $48.75/100/month. Call 32*2671.Male roommate to share luxury 5 rm SShore apt. for summer. Complete with photodarkroom. Call Sandy after 9 P.M2740.SUMMER: Person wanted to share com¬fortable, clean, friendly apartment in HydePark with comfortable, .clean friendly Ma-roon Editor. T.V., many magazines. Possibly air-conditioning. CHEAP! Call RooerExt. 3269 or 955-5240.Summer 8. option for 2 in 3 man 7apt. nr. campus. 684-6870.Fern, student needed. June 10 - August 31.Own room, furn., air cond. 363-5267.CARS FOR SALEGoing to CALIFORNIA???A VW is excellent for a dune buggy asthat learned journal TIME states. Here's aperfect '56 bug with '64 engine. Good stu¬dent car too. Call Larry 324-7152.1960 VW. Sun roof. Runs good. Only $85.Call: 324-5128. After 8 p.m. Rutherford.'62 VW. 66 ENGINE. $450. 667-7911. Susan'62 CORVAIR. Auto, trans. Reas. cond. Mustsell. $175. Will bargain. 288-4910 after 5.1966 V.W. Sedan. Best offer. NO 7-4700. Ext8326, weekdays. 9 to 5.VW-'64 Sedan. Sunroof. Many extras inclradio, leather int. Best offer. 955-9039.1958 MGA COUPE. Wire wheels, ContinentalKit. Radio 8, Heater 39,000 miles. ExcellentBeautiful 'Inside 8. obtr Timed with brakescompletely overhauled. $850 6r be$t offerOA-4 4406.'66 VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN. Exc. Cond. Rad ,W. W. Tires. Only 14,000 miles. $1,100. Cal!Steve at KDO-9292.FILM30 neon violins!70 girls in 69 bathtubs!17 cops on roller skates!38 Ruby Keeler look-alikes!50 girls at 50 revolving pianos!All Busby Berkeley Friday. Cobb.Robin Hood. Saturday. CobbBATTLE OF ALGIERSPontecorvo prize-winning film, opens May 29,Chicago's new 3-penny Cinema, 2424 N. Lincoin. Special student group rates. Call 733-4613. Also, see ad in this paper!Cartoons: Bugs, Mr. Magoo, TOM $• JERRY,Etc. Friday, Cobb.Captain Blood. Saturday. Cobb.BLUEPRINT FOR A COURTYARD".. .in the Center, there will be a huge, rec¬tangular expanse of ground which will alsobe planted with grass, bushes along thelength 8, width, and flowers. There will be noentrance to this beautiful green cemetery forall will be forbidden to step or sunbathe orplay innocent games upon it except for hewho pushes the lawnmower. Let the childrenplay on the sidewalks or in the streets whenthey get older, it's safer than on the grass!Or maybe we can build at a tiny sandboxfor them, though we may have to charge lessrent for the people at that end who don't liketo be awakened at 8 am on SaturdaySunday."PERSONALSThe hour of departure has arrived, and wego our ways—I to die, and you to liveWhich is the better, God only knows.Think small.Walk to Woodlawn.Feed one hungry person.Erool Flynn IS Captain Blood.Who is that incredible person who painted"Sock it to me" on his Volkswagen?Black students should get their dorm, pro¬vided they name it after a segregationistTout comprendre rend tres indulgent.Bandersnatch is open till 9:30 PM Wednesday of EXAM WEEK.Would you believe?—Lurleen Memorial HallCRAM SPECIAL, 7-11:30, Monday-FridayThis week and next—THE HUTCH GAL¬LERY.Little One! Oh, Little One!I am searching everywhere!WHITES WORKING WITH WHITES!Community organizing In a rural Republicanarea in Mass. Subsistence provided. Malevolunteers especially wanted. June 17-Aug.31. Cali Nick Jankowsk. MU-4-9035.14 7m CmCAGO ^ARQQNNH: If you'd stuck with me, you'd be partin'through silk—Super K."Every one lives by selling something."RLSWho's responsible for those ugly mummifiedchicken eggs in the Oriental Institute?Charlie Brown 8, Gandalf—Congrats, butwhat will we do? Sugar & Lucy.You have to admit that U-High is betterthan Southern Illinois University."I think there is a fatality in it—I seldom go to the place I set out fcr.Someone fired the Wrong Man. ..Basil Rathbone IS Prince John.Overheard in the Maroon Business Office:" 'Cause I's wicked—I is. I's mighty wicked,anyhcw. I can't help it."MY HUSBAND IS THE FIFTH HORSEMAN.The basic problem is the fundamer'al break¬down in personal communication due toideological intoxication.AFTER GRADUATION: 7:30 PM on Friday,June 7."We have iust enough religion to make ushate, but not enough to make us love oneanother."If you smoke or deal, beware of TOMZANDY & Chuck McKissick.I love you, CRAB-THING. F.C.But the comtroller's made of marbleWith a guard at ev'vry door.And the Bursar's filled with silverThat the studentSweated for.ME LARGA, SEU GUARDA, EU NAOSOU ESTUDANTE! SOU APENAS UMLADRAO. . .If you have ordered CAP & GOWN, youcan pick it up in Ida Noyes 306, the CAP& GOWN office, between 3:30 pm & 5pm Wednesday through Friday this week,or between 1 pm & 5 pm, any afternoonduring Final Exam Week.Thar catatonic Uncle Tom, Alderman ClaudeW.B. Holman, will represent YOU at theDemocratic National Convention unless heloses to Cousins or Young.She hath no loyal knight and true.The Lady of Shalott.What's going on at the BANDERSNATCHthat I don't know about?From TIME: Executive Producer Paul Mo¬nash. . .says "All the Negroes I've seen onTV are colorless—absolutely devoid of char¬acter, humor, or idiom. They are. pricelessNegroes, castrated men, and desexed fe¬males. These people are really gildedRochesters."Ever watch Richard J. Daley eat soup?Male apes & monkeys definitely preferfeminine partners who show bodily signsof sexual receptivity.Mash notes to the Maroon business staffsecretary will get you somewhere, but fora real trip, send money.Or sugared cubes.Probably lots, sweety.Claude Rains is the Sherrif of Nottingham?TO THE ALUMNI AND TRUSTEES OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO: When you re¬ceive a request this year for an "Un re¬stricted Donation" to the University, please,check "Other" instead and indicate that thefunds should go to the Chicago Maroon...maybe next year we won't have to worryabout paying for a good paper and wewon't have to fill the paper with ads whichdon't pay for it anyway. Thank you. More Maroon Classified Adsbaklava (Ahmad's), or in a jar of feta The final answer you gave T., "Be verycheese (Party M^rt), or In a Duchess Sun- ! cool and don't trust anyone too much." Thisdae (Mad Hatter).Hallelujah Anyway.Where freedom is real, equality is the pas¬sion of the masses. Where equality is real,freedom is the passion of a small minority.CRAM SPECIAL, 7-11:30, Monday thru Fri-GALLERY.1984 has gone and past—the Governmentcalls it progress.Jeff Blum is funny. Harvey Wasserman isnot.Want to help released mental patients groovewith society again? Work at a Vi way houseon the North Side this summer. Subsistenceprovided. Nick Jankowski. MU-4-9035.TOYKO (UPI)—Economist John Kenneth Gal¬braith said Wednesday "fat cats" on theboard of Columbia University have "out¬rageously mismanaged" student unrest onthe New York campus.And don't call me sweety.Come to think about it, Chris Hobson isn'tvery funny, either.SHAVUOTShavuot services will take place on Saturdayevening, June 1, and on Sunday and Mon¬day, June 2 and 3. An all night Torah studysession (Mishmar Let Shavuot) will be heldon Saturday, June 1.HILLEL HOUSE 5715 Woodlawn.The vote for a sit-in at the local saloonwas unanimous!SCIENCE FICTION: "Berserker" authorFred Saberhagen and "Rogue Moon" authorAlgis Budrys. Tonight. 7:30, Ida NoyesTheatre.If you have not yet ordered CAP & GOWN,it will be sold in the bookstore beginningWednesday, May 29, 1968.1 hope that the same party who writestheir classified ads didn't write the yearbook.CRAM SPECIAL, 7-11:30, Monday-Friday.This week and next. . .THE HUTCHGALLERY.David Finklestein—Thank you for the book. ..Steve will be in New York this week.. .Love!Don't eat a Hershey Bar until senility isremoved from the Selective Service Office.Paul—What are you doing here?!The spokesman for the Black Student sit-inshas an unlisted phone.CHICKEN BARBEQUE to benefit CADRE onSaturday June 8, From 5 pm. In home ofRissman, 1031 E. 50TH Street. Donation is5 (five) dollars.EXAM-WEEKESCAPES—Grow a giant tomato and push it out ofyour window while you scream for help.—Create a seen ein the Harper Library bypretending to poison yourself with ink.—Join the world of the formerly sane.—Premeditate.—Reread NAUSEA.—Explore the Wooded Isle behind the Muse¬um of Science and Industry.—Seeing the sun rise could make an other¬wise unfortunate day beautiful.—Believe none of what you hear and half ofwhat you see.—Eat at the PIT (after your exams or youmight not make it through) — on 87th, nearStony Island — or the TACO and ENCILADAplace just north.—On the date of your exam at Mandell, in¬form the Police and Fire Departments of anunpublicize Benefit performance for theSEED.—Re-evaluate time.—Corner the market on Reality.—Remember tis better to have loved andlost—much better.—Walk away.—Drown your sorrows in a malt (Drugstoreat 57th & Blackstone), or in cafe moka and —God forgot woman when he created man.—MAN is synomous for both all males andfor humanity, woman is the "other thing."—Return to the womb.—Reread the first two ESCAPES If youreally want a lot of things to do.—Remember that "each of us knows onlyhis own unhappiness."—Get confiscated along with the evidence.—Run.—Be self-contained.—Blame it on your mother.—Blame it on the Board of Admissions.—Blame it on your father—"The sins of thefather are visited upon the son."—Get laid.—Act accordingly.—Reject all offers of a ride to Jimmy's.—Reconsider.—Control the Dexedrine Concession.—Program yourself out.—Consider the source.—Live only for today.—Re-evaluate the entire scene and decide ifit's really worth anything at all.—Re-organize the plot.—Dance alone.—Get all your professors busted.—Capitalize on the fact that you exist.—I think therefore I am—does this mean ifI think more, I will exist more?—Find the Syrian Restaurant on the NearNorth Side.—Stop talking about the Good Old Days whenPaul Butterfield played for nothing at supertwist parties which atracted all kinds ofpeople of every race, color, & creed Includ¬ing some very fine thieves. Instead, rejoicein your security and suck on your I.D. card.—Kiss your favorite security policeman good-by (after 7 pm).—Ascend into Heaven.—Commit an unnatural act.—Join Sergeant Fury — His Howling Com¬mandos.—Collect 3 or 4 "R's."—Cry over spilt milk.—Follow That Dream.—Organize a giant Cop-Out and relocate thecampus at Martha's Vineyard.—Write a sensational & perverse novel.—Protest the quatre-annual rebirth of ten¬sion, despair, wringing hands, and endlessparagraphs of nonsensical bullshit.—You really deserve to eat well now—if youdon't still have the restaurant guide—remem¬ber that the closest place with a four-starrating is the GOLD CITY INN in HarperCourt.—Start each day with a breakfast at theTannenbaum Pharmacy—fresh orange juice,pancakes, or a cheese omelet, coffee, &wheat toast.—Eat plenty of fresh fruit and drink 8 glass¬es of water every day.—Write a novel about Valois.—Submit your name as a write-in candidatefor a B.A.Dear P.P.C.:This is a letter of boastful pride, in re¬gards to the letter from T., in your P.P.C.column. On May 17, 1968.This is to inform you and your readers.That I am a so called NARC..After reading your amusing answer to T.,ON HOW TO SPOT A NARC. . .1 just had towrite a response. Of course this letter hasno official standing, and the views arestrictly my own.If you do print this letter, and I hope youdo. Your readers will probably, think theyknow me. They might be right or wrong.But no one will ever know.The description of myself and my co-workers, is the best I've heard ot yet. Ican only say, I hope you are never robbed,or attacked by any person, or persons. Togive anyone a description like yours, theculprit would surely never be caught.I'm not sure, if your descriptions wheremade in jest. Perhaps you are dowr. rightserious. Anyway they gave me the impres¬sion that I could be anyone on campus, oron Hyde Park. Well, your right, because ifI didn't look like everyone else. I would havenot been picked for the job. answer to me was the best advice given yet.I myself have been with people like T„ ormaybe even T., I've broken bread with them,drank their wine, and have laughed at theirstale and morbid jokes. All the while, alsolaughing at them, because I knew their daywould come.Now if I may give a suggestion, to all ofmy intellectual Hyde Park friends. If thesepersons would like to know how not to getbusted. They should take this warning toheed:Don't trust a dam person brother,Because the brothers soul, you save.May not save yours.Thank you P.P.C., for your indulgence.Your Friendly NARC. ofHyde Park, and U. of C.Armpit power.You are inconsiderate and it hurts me somuch only because I love you.Urban Crisis and Civil Disorders—A practical course.U.C. KARATE CLUBdearest Forcynthia: whoever you may be—I suppose you are in a position to be clevertohugh you handled it rather banally—would I be asking too much for you toreturn it to 833, 1005 E. 60th—it meansa great deal—emotional and all that rot.Dave, Mary, Sue, Sandy, Burt, Burt, Peg,Jean, and Margaret have ever a place inthe BANDERSNATCH! heart—not to men¬tion Granny Tubbs.George—send me a rock from Tennessee...?A big heart, made of bagels & cream sheese.Wanted: Guerilla fighters to oppose localconstabulary. Contact F. Tuck, X 2e98.COMMUNICATE with white suburban youthon racism. A work camp on a farm 60miles outside Chicago. June 9-21. Sponsoredby Service Civil International (' ’’-ivs). CallWick J. MU-4-9035.SF WRITERS A.J. BUDRYS AND FREDSABERHAGEN—Tonight, Ida Noyes Theatre,7:30 p.m.Is Captain Blood the Robin Hood of the highseas?"My father believes," said Kyo slowly,"that the essence of man is anguish, theconsciousness of his own fatality, fromwhich all fears are born, even the fear ofdeath. . .but that opium frees you from it:therein lies its virtue." Malraux.BUNTING, YOU'RE TOO SMUG!Only God can create a classified ad.FAREWELL!! STEVE!! We'll Miss YOUI!The Black Man Fights in VIETNAM for theWhite Man's Right to LYNCH HIM!Studying at the BANDER is a fulfillingexperience.Any American Black man free of "racism,"in the racist white man's concept, is trulya nigger ape dedicated to the glorificationof the American white man's brutal con¬tinued subjugation of Black America. GAVINSTUDENT SPECIAL:SA N D A LS—S A N DA LS—S A N DA LS—SAN D A LSMADE TO ORDER: OVER 55 STYLES!1 week to 10 days delivery. Old ones re¬paired and restrung. Iso handbags, totebags, coats, skirts & paunchos.AD LIB STUDIO. Now at 5225 HARPERCOURT — C7. Phone: 752-3945. 5% StudentDiscount until June 1st.BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL.Do you still believe integration is possible?Help organize a recreation program near Watts, Subsistence, SCi-ivs. Call Nick atMU-4-9035.WRITERS WORKSHOP AT PL-2-8377.Please send us copies of the May 3rdpaper...GRANDMA & AUNTIE—See you SaturdaylCram Special: 7-11:30, Monday thru Friday.This week 8. next. . .THE HUTCH GALLERYIs Robin Hood the Captain Blood of thegreen forests.AGAINST RACISM?Kenwood Study Center needs TUTORS evenfor one hour a week after 3 p.m. First Bap¬tist Church, on 50th, east of Drexel. Ask forMr. Rimsky.We give you food and a handful of grease. . .BS.What is this place—a garage or a restaurant?ALGIS BUDRYS 8. FRED SABERHAGEN.. .Tonight in Ida Noyes Theatre at 7:30."One last tip: in English pubs it is not thecustom to run up a fill while you drink.For each order, it's cash on the barrelhead,old buddy!"Legislation to prevent unlawful takeover ofcollege property and facilities by protestingstudents should Lj one of the major projectsof the new governor of Illinois, S. Thom**Sutton, Republican candidate for *,:an rf)esaid. He continues "Adults ai thUnrun the schools, not the chile nenichildren are so brilliant that theythe colleges, there's no reason to sen.,to college at all. "College officials, deansor counselors who negotiate or confer withstuden groupt breaking the law.. .would al¬so be disciplined. He said that the Negrodemands at Northwestern are proof of hiscontention that "the Negro and white agi¬tators do not know what they want or why-only that they have dedicated themselves todestroy our society."Who the hell is Busby Berkeley?Like ya goofed, ya owe a quarter 'cuz yamissed the Shapiro return date yesterday.ROTriLTEIN: Have you finalized your de¬cision? M. L.Have a REMBRANDT SANDWICH (cornedbeef, sauerkraut, sharp American Cheddarcheese, broiled to a Gourmet's taste a LaFlame) — $1.50 with a KING AND QUEENsundae for dessert — seven dips of Vala'sIce Cream 8. only $1.45. Only at the MADHATTER RESTAURANT, 53rd 8, Lake Park... on your way to the Point or to theSkyway.Go to HELL if you think you can buy my '66VW for less than $1350. However, if you'dlike to try, call me at NO-7-4700, Ext. 8326,from 9-5, weekdays.Ahmad's is very close to campus and it hasvery, very good food — PERSIAN SOULFOOD — 1440 E. 57th Street.Interested in one-week bike (10 speed) triparound Lake Michigan. Call DO-3-7548.W^lk in dappled grass, Highto your chest, Soaking of the dew.Dance with the crushing step.That always rises three steps — down two.Ah! wind comes —Fields move — wailing of a woman,"Against and with (Against and with),"Slapping your sides with feathery seeds.Eyes watch the myriad spines — bendAt once — make flat — then rise. Again,and Again, and again.Wind Up.Slip! Touch the ground.(shhh .. .listen to the wind down the grassover you).Black humus, fresh.Fresh. Taste it on your cheek, LifeCrawling out — dancingOne times One step on your brain.D. FinkelsteinEPITAPH"Think only this of me ...VOILA LE COMMENCEMENT DE LA FIN.SUMMERThe Maroon summer edition will appear on Thursday June 27, July 11, July 25, Aug. 8, Aug. 22.Deadline for advertising is the preceding Monday at 3 pm.You may have Summer mailed to you for $2. Contact The Maroon Business Office.May is, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON isMaroon Classified Advertisements IDOMESTIC MAID SERVICENEED YOUR HOUSE CLEANED bytrustworthy workers? Let Fanny do it!FANNY MAID SERVICE at Ml 3-3543.COMING EVENTSCONCERT, ART, AND FOLK SINGING. 13thto 20th. Shelia McKenzie Sop-Guitar. 8 PMFriday the 31st. Lutheran College, 55th 8.University.WORKSeeking escape from the humdrum studentlife? Join Captain Blood this Saturday.Plenty of fresh salty air and ALL YOU CANPLUNDER! In Cobb at 8 pm.Frmale student for part-time secretarialwork for handicapped Hyde Park Housewife.BU-8-7929.EDITORIAL ASSISTANT & SECRETARY.Start approx. July 1. Must be good typistand know how to spell. Excellent opportun¬ity to learn publishing from inside the U.C.PRESS. Apply through University Personnel,X. 442.The Woodlawn Business Men's Association islooking for a male executive secretary .about20 hours per week (flexible), $2.25/hour.Call DO-3-5362.ROOM FOR RENT-IOcf! iTill Ocf: 684-5722.SUBLET & BEYONDONE MAN APARTMENT. A Lakefront loca¬tion. Hyde Park. Bar, swimming pool, Fullkitchen, furnished, priced LOWER than you'dthink. Will negotiate, 324-7670.SUBLET: l-’/2 room apt. Completely fur¬nished. Avail. July 7. May have lease in Oct.$80/mo. 5419 Harper. Call 643-1644 9 am to2 pm.TYPINGMANUSCRIPTS TYPED. Call 363-1104.FREE & SLEEKSleek Black Kitten to be given away. 363-564FOR SALE6.50 x 13, Full 4-ply Atlas Plycron white walltire with wheel. Never Used. Perfect for aspare tire! Cost 40 dollars, will sell for $25or best offer. 324-5751.HUGE METAL DESK with large drawers(one with file dividers). Large enough tohold typewriter and * row of books. $5.00or best offer to anyone who will dismantle(screwdriver variety) and remove. 324-5751.Dbl. Bed: mattress, springs. Desk, carpet,miscellany all types. 363-9112.Mono Hi-Fi: Arrtp, tuner, Thorens table,E-V speaker. Old but reliable. $60 or separ¬ately. Also chests, garish cushioned chairand cover. 363-8211.KOWA SE SINGLE LENS REFLEX CAM¬ERA w. CdS thru lens meter; telephoto andwide angle auxiliary lenses. PERFECT CON¬DITION. Call 475-3968 after 6.FM TUNER $12; 600 Ohm microphone $7.Bulk tape eraser $3. All excellent cond.363-3814.1966 HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER, Kandy AppleBlue, $390. BU-8-9728 after 6.RCA Speakers. 2 tweeters (sic). Woofer Wal¬nut Cab. Thigh high. Excellent Condition!$60/pair. Room 38. Snell.HONDA. 150 cc. Good Cond. Exc. for sum¬mer campus use. 288-1979 after 6.MOVING. Everything must go incl. stereo,couches, tables, etc. Call 667-5675.Beautiful desk, fold top—cubbyholes. Smallbut serviceable. Must sell. Matching dresserin less beautiful condition. Cheap. 324-4867.Couch $25. Matching chair $5. Double bedswith bookcase headboards, one with bedsidetable $35 or $50 . 375-6467.1 dining room set $75, 1 marble table $20,1 double bed $20, 1 dresser $15, and misc.pieces. Will negotiate. Call 693-7004.Couch, tables, double bed, desks, dressers,etc. Call 684-4204 or 324-8012.Large desk and dresser, 493-1548.Old Fender Deluxe Amp. Exc. Cond. $75.Call Swan at 731-4164.DOUBLE BED $20 8. COFFEE TABLE $8.643-69091966 HONDA S-90. 6200 miles, Exc. cond.,$225 or offer; MI-3-6000, Room 551. NOW.HONDA 305 SUPERHAWK BLACK BEAU¬TIFUL. Only 1,100 miles. Exc. Condition.$500. Call BU-8-6610, Ext. 3225X. If noanswer, leave message.Coffee Table. Lamps. Elec. Heater. 752-8282.GRADUATION RECEPTIONFRIDAY JUNE 7. After the Special VietnamConvocation, parents will meet together withDraft Counsellors and Lawyers.RIDES, DRIVERS, & RIDER*Ride wanted to Portland, Oregor after June3. Will pay. 324-7104 or 752-5407. Leavemessage.Need a lift to LOS ANGELES? Undergraddriving out June 8 or 9. Riders welcome.Share driving and expenses. Call 529-7577after 6 pm.to N.Y.C. June 12 .'52 Chevy. 955-1374. Person(s) wanted to drive our car to LosAngeles. Leave about June 15. You pay forgas, etc. 285-5999.DRIVER WANTED to N.Y.C. Lv. 6/2. Std.Shift. Share Expenses. 493-8863PHOTOGRAPHYWEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY. Candid picturesa specialty. Thomas Hocker, I IT photo gradstudent. Call 842-5425, evenings. Hyde Park. 3-Vi rooms to sublet July 1st.Option to sign lease in <Fall. 684-6996.5-Vi room turn. apt. with yard, sunporch,8, study to sublet June 15—September 157th & Maryland. 643-4082.2-Vi room furn. sublet. June 10, 55th 8.Blackstone. $120/mo., incl. util. 955-1933.GRADUATION WORKSHOPSFRIDAY, June 7 8. Sat., June 8 for parentsand students: 2:30 to 4:00 PM.PANEL DISCUSSION: With faculty draftcounsellors and resisters.CONFRONTATION WITH THE DRAFT:programs for action places to be announced.CAMPING EQUIPMENT RENTALCamping Equipment Rental: Tents, Sleep¬ing Bags, Stoves, Lanterns, Contact HickoryExt. 2381 or 324-1499.CATERERSHaving a Party?—or feel tired of cooking?Let Mary Lou do it for you. Hors d'oeuvres,menus, buffet and family dinners. MaryLou Catering, Ml 3-3545. Try our originalleberkase.TRAVELFemale U.C. Grad seeks adventurous FemaleTravelling campanion for summer in Eu¬rope. 761-4522. Beautiful CLEAN 3-4 bedroom apartmentplus LARGE living room. 2 bathrooms.Available early June—mid-September. $185/mo, but WILL BARGAIN FOR LESS. CallNancy 684-0579 or BU 8-6610, Ext. 3409.To sublet for summer: Two rooms (pluskitchen). $40 each per month. One blockfrom Campus. 288-4631.LGE. APT. for 3 or 4 roommates. 2 blks.fr. Campus. Porch, swing, backyard 8. 2bathrooms! Available mid-June, 324-4867.Really fine apt., spacious, lovely, 4 bedrms,2 baths, sunporch. 363-0140.Sublet 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.SPACIOUS STUDIO APT., 50th at Lake,21st floor, magnificent view, $100/month.Phone 324-1460.2'/j furn. rooms at 57th & 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.Female roommate wanted: Anytime June 5-Sept. 30. Large. Aircond. Furnished apt.57th 8. Dorchester. $65/mo. 684-8527.international House Association's Weekend ^"-^nished ^t00^ lvisit to Shakespearean Festival Theatre, pa,.hs- ®nly ' ploc* f- ,fTpu,s »* _56,h. .&Stratford, Canada, by bartered bus,_Frida_y, | £.versrty.^ Ava.l^ 3^g.rls.July 19 (6 p.m.) — Sunday, July 21. MID.SUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, ROMEO 8< |JULIET, concert (Vivaldi, Bach). Alterna- jfives available. Tickets from $2.50. Fare !$20. Lodging, $4 per night. Inquire at Int.Hse. Assn. 1414 E. 59th Street, FA 4-8200,evenings, Sat. afternoon.Camping Equipment Rental: Tents, Sleeping jBags, Stoves, Lanterns, Contact Hickory Ext.2381 or 324-1499.Escape Hyde Park Now or Forever! Getyour tickets at Marco Polo Travel. 288-5244.WORK WANTEDWORK AS HOSPITAL ORDERLY. Call 285-5438 or 624-1262. Leave message for Nate.Young Irishman (A. B. Econ.) offers as¬sorted services—intellectual, physical, emo¬tional—to anyone creative enough to enablehim to live in the States from early Julyto mid—Sept. Contact. 288-7454.RENTSTUDIO APT. for sum. 8, opt. in fall. 52nd8. Kenwood, $105. 324-6078.2 Large Bedrms, 2 Baths, Parking Lot, Air-Conditioning, Dishwasher, Carpeting, NearLake, Sublease June 15—Sept. 30, Option toRenew. $185. Call 324-5636 or 275-8730.4-Vj RMS. $112, with opt. for Oct. 752-8026.SOUTH SHORE. 8 rm apt., 4 bdrm., 3bath, Sunroom, near Lake 8. 1C, 10 min. toCampus. Avail. July 1, 667-6172, evenings.Sublet for Summer, Option Jo renew, 4 rms.in Hyde Park. Call 684-4204 or 324-8012.Spacious 6 room apartment, South Shore.Includes garage, basement, storage, appli¬ances, 2 large bedrooms 8< study area.Available July 1st. $167.50 . 731-5667.APT. to Sublet, June 1—Sept. 30 with opt.for lease. 4 rms., free furn. $100/mo. 7600S. Colfax, South Shore. Call Sasha, NO 7-4700, Ext. 8195, Day 8. after 7:30, F. 5 to7:30, 374-2820.4 ROOM APARTMENT available for fallquarter. Partially furnished. $97.50 permonth. South Shore. 7516 S. Colfax Avenue.Call 374-7590 evenings or weekend.2 rms., Near Harper Court, co-op, Theater.$104./month. Possible summer discount.684-3346.ENTIRE BASEMENT (QUITE DINGY NOW,but could be cool after a good cleaning, toRENT from early June until Fall or beyond.With bathroom 8, own entrance. Kitchen up¬stairs. Only $40 per month including utilities.Located in Friendly Woodlawn (check thestatistics, Brothers and Sister, Black &White—you're safer in Woodlawn than HydePark). View of Jan Mazaryk and the Mid¬way. Friendly, integrated (racially) residen¬tial neighborhood. Call 324-5751.SUBLETSUBLET: 5-Vi rm. apartment, June—Oct.or less, furnished or unfurnished, 5342 S.KimbaFk, $45/month. Call 493-0156 after11:00 P.M.SUBLET: 5-Vi Rm. Apartment, garage, back¬yard. June—Oct. cr less, furnished or un¬furnished, 53rd 8< So. Kimbark, call 955-1495 after 10.COOL SUMMERTwo bocks 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. Rent one bed¬room of three in this large, completely furn¬ished and newly painted apartment fromearly June through late September, give ortake a week or two. Asking $66.67 per monthbut will go down depending on highest bid.Call 493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!10 ROOM HOUSE. 5606 Maryland. 3 bed¬rooms still available. $33/mo. June-Sept.684-0560.Nice summer sublet. 53rd 8, Greenwood. 3-5persons. CHEAP. Call 363-6961, eves.GOOD 8> CHEAP. 4 rms. $95/mo. Comp.Furn. June—Oct. 1517 54th Street, Near Co¬op, I.C. Smedley's, etc. 493-3410.7 rooms. 54th 8t University. June-Sept.$138.00/mo. Call 363-3768. Own room. East Hyde Park. June-Sept. Call493-3471.4-Vi Ige, sunny rms. Furnished. 55th St. 3blocks from campus. 493-6831 any hour.5-Vi Rms. $100, mid-June—Oct. 643-5060.53rd 8i Harper. 2-Va rms., furnished. From6/10 to 10/1. $80/mo. 324-5128. After 8 p.m.4-Vi Rms—Spacious, fully furn. Campus busat corner. 6753 Chappel. HY 3-8404.Sublet 6 room, 4 bedroom furnished air-cond.apt. to female students or family. 57th 8,Dorchester. $220 a month, util. incl. 324-2864.Furn. 5 rm. Apt. Exc. cond. For summer 8,54th 8> Univ. $118/month. Call Jon, 363-8154.Female roommate wanted at 57th 8. Dor¬chester. Own room. Air conditioned. $65 amonth. 363-5609.Sublet with option to lease in Oct. 2-Vi roomapt., iust dec., in midst of 53rd Streetaction. $83/month. Call Ml 3-2511 after 5:30.Furn. apt. in Madison Park (Safe 8< north of53rd). Suitable for 4-5 persons. Rent $250.00per month or best offer. Mid-June to Mid-Sept. Please Call 285-2697.Mod. Elev. Bldg, on Campus. $87/month.Mid-June- Sept. 684-3472.MORE SUBLETSSUBLET ROOM beginning Saturday inFriendly Woodlawn (check the statistics,Brothers and Sisters, black or white—you'resafer in Woodlawn than Hyde Park). In 8room townhouse (Vintage 1896) with woodedCourtyard and scenic view of Jan Mazarykand the Midway. Friendly, integrated (ra¬cially) residential neighborhood. Call 324-5751. Rent $30 per month plus utilities. Com¬plete kitchen facilities and maid comes oncea week. Available til early September. Will pay up to $500 for old VW. Bob at NO-7-5611.MOVING? Have an old PIANO you want toget rid of? Call Judy. BU-8-6610, Ext. 1220.SUMMER SUBLET. 7-Vi rooms (2 baths).Compl. furn. on Cornell Ave. near Lake 8.parks. Call 684-4421.GOOD RENT. Space for 3-4 students or1-2 couples; rent adjustable depending onneed. 288-5325.Sublet for June—Sept. 7 room, 2 bathroomapt. 55th 8< University. $45/month perperson. 493-1142.1 bdrm. furn. w. Lake & Loop views:UC bus. Summer, negotiable. 798-7892.H o(4 6 rtI, J. U ino4 L otoV>4) ifbk (-9 4 fe'v STUDENT seeks Female Companion fordrive to California in Mid-June. 375-9034.I want my PRINCE to comeWanted: Person of talent, wit, perseverance,good nature, and dedication to take over jobof Managing Editor of the Chicago LiteraryReview. Endless opportunities to meet newpeople (even non-UC types), some travel.Must be able to deal with authoritarian-de¬luded editors in an essentially non-authori¬tarian hierarchy. Duties involve mostly officeand personnel management, editing and lay¬out as desired. Possibility of token remunera¬tion (to be arranged) and assurance of infin¬ite appreciation. Come to Ida Noyes 305, orspeak with Mary Sue Leighton, Jeff Schnitzer,or Rick Hack. An Equal Opportunity Employ¬er. (?)Female roommate for summer and/or nextyear. Own bedroom. 6 rm. apt. w. porch.DO 3-7682.Furniture, indoor plumbing 8. other frillsfor 1 more girl in stunning summer sublet.$46.25. 493-6147.ENTIRE BASEMENT (DINGY NOW butcould turn out to be anything after a goodcleaning) to SUBLET. Option for Fall. Withbathroom. Own entrance in back. Kitchenupstairs. Available in early June. Only $40.00per month including utilities. Has dryer 8,washer which will be repaired on request.Call 324-5751, evenings. Located in Wood¬lawn (see first ad.)Three room apt. on 928 E. 61st. VacantJune 12 thru August 12, 1968, $20.00 a week.Call 643-1749 after 6 P. M.2 bedroom apt. June 15-Sept. 15. Completelyfurnished (beds, T.V.). Near Campus. $100/month. Call Rich. 684-4775.3 rm. apt. to sublet. Wonderful Locationright behind Fermi Institute. Recently re¬finished. $100/month. Available early June.Call 955-6541.1-Vi rm. furnished apartment for summer(and beyond?). 53rd 8. Harper. Good airand light. $70/mo. or less. 955-3623.Summer sublet, 1-Vi rooms. Reas. Fall opt.Cool in summer, nr. Lake. HY-3-3802, eves.ROOMMATES WANTEDFemale students wanted to share 6 roomfurnished apt. for summer. Own room, air¬cond. $55 a month. Util incl. 324-2864.Two grad, girls seek 3rd girl to share facul¬ty apt. for summer. 3 bdrm. TV. Protectedsunporch. Own tree. 1 blk. from campus.$50. Call 363-9112.Female wants one female roommate to !share Prairie Shores Apt. 8. Art Studio.Graduate student and/or teacher preferred.326-1548 after 5 p.m.'HOMELESS? Your own room $43.75/mo.53rd 8. Dorchester. Avail. June 15. Optionfor Fall. Share large 8 rm. apt. 324-5404.Male roommate wanted to share 5 roomapt. at 54th & Kimbark with 2 others.Mid-June to end of Sept. $45 per month.Call Dan Candee, 493-0156 or Ext. 4715.4 girls to share an apt. at 1400 E. 57th forthe summer. Call 324-7637.Sum. occupants wanted for furn. So. ShoreLakeview apt. Negotiable. 798-7892.2 male grad students seek apt. for Fall.Bill. BU-8-1100 (Ext. 212).SUMMER: Person wanted to share cleanlovable apartment with clean lovable Marooneditor, 2 kittens, air conditioner, and TV.Roger, 955-5240.WANTED31 'July SUBLET wanted. 3 bedroom House orApt. in Hyde Park or South Shore, Phone667-1054.Need college boy who will act as a compan¬ion to a 12 year old child for free* room 8,board, live 8800 S. 2200 E. in Large ModernHome. cSsex 5-1346.Male student desires room w. family in HydePark for summer 8, next year. Willing tobaby sit. Call 667-5675.ROOM DESPERATELY WANTED FORFALL. 2 rooms or 1 large room in an apart¬ment for 2 girls. Call 684 4480.Old Cycle at Pierce Tower — 643-2738.DRUMMER wants to play with Jazz or RockGroup; Summer quarter for fun or profit;Phil FA-4-9500, Room 1705.Wanted: Person to share Apartment duringsummer on 57th 8. Kenwood. $50/mo. Con¬tact or leave message New Dorms 1221.1-2 females to share Ig. furn. 7 rm. apt.near 57th 8, Kimbk. own rm. $35.50. June-Sept. 288-4910 after 5.2 female grads needed from June 17 toSept. 17. Apt. fully furnished. Air cond. $33.per mo. per person. Stereo 8. TV. Call 363-1245.COOL 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 Woodl .wn. Rent one bed¬room of three in this large, completely fur¬nished and newly painted apartment fromearly June through late September, give ortake a week or two. Asking $66.67 per monthbut will go down depending on highest bid.Call 493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!!14 m CmCAGOMARQfjN ■ Kay ft m Airy, attractive moderately priced two h«Hroom apartment to share with male ora,',student. Location excellent (on Kimbfrk53rd). If interested, contact Neil Knm«frat Ext. 2423, ST 2-5400 or Ml 3-3579 S9rOne person wanted to share South Side An.with three male graduate students. SumnE,and/or next year. $48.75/100/month Call ri/2671.Male roommate to share luxury 5 rm ,Shore apt. for summer. Complete with Ph0j0darkroom. Call Sandy after 9PM £,°2740. • M7‘SUMMER: Person wanted to share comfortable, clean, friendly apartment in Hvd»Park with comfortable, .clean friendly m,roon Editor. T.V., many magazines Fos'sibly air-conditioning. CHEAP! Call RcoerExt. 3269 or 955-5240. 9 'Summer 8. option for 2 in 3 man 7apt. nr. campus. 684-6870.Fern, student needed. June 10 - August 31.Own room, furn., air cond. 363-5267.CARS FOR SALEGoing to CALIFORNIA???A VW is excellent for a dune buggy asthat learned journal TIME states. Here's aperfect '56 bug with '64 engine. Good stu¬dent car too. Call Larry 324-7152.1960 VW. Sun roof. Runs good. Only $85.Call: 324-5128. After 8 p.m. Rutherford'62 VW. 66 ENGINE. $450 . 667-7911. Susan.'62 CORVAIR. Auto, trans. Reas, cond Mustsell. $175. Will bargain. 288-4910 after 5.1966 V.W. Sedan. Best offer. NO 7-4700. Ext.8326, weekdays. 9 to 5.VW-'64 Sedan. Sunroof. Many extras incl.radio, leather int. Best offer. 955-90391958 MGA COUPE. Wire wheels, ContinentalKit. Radio 8, Heater. 39,000 miles. Excellent.Beautiful 'Inside 8. dbtv' Tuned with brakescompletely overhauled. $850 or best offer.OA-4 4406.'66 VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN. Exc. Cond Rad.,W. W. Tires. Only 14,000 miles. $1,100 CallSteve at KDO-9292.FILM30 neon violins!70 girls in 69 bathtubs!17 cops on roller skates!38 Ruby Keeler look-alikes!50 girls at 50 revolving pianos!All Busby Berkeley Friday. Cobb.Robin Hood. Saturday. CobbBATTLE OF ALGIERSPontecorvo prize-winning film, opens May 29,Chicago's new 3-penny Cinema, 2424 N Lin¬coln. Special student group rates. Call 733-4613. Also, see ad in this paper!Cartoons: Bugs, Mr. Magoo, TOM 8, JERRY,Etc. Friday, Cobb.Captain Blood. Saturday. Cobb.BLUEPRINT FOR A COURTYARD".. .in the Center, there will be a huge, rec¬tangular expanse of ground which will alsobe planted with grass, bushes along thelength 8, width, and flowers. There will be noentrance to this beautiful green cemetery torall will be forbidden to step or sunbathe orplay innocent games upon it except for hewho pushes the lawnmower. Let the childrenplay on the sidewalks or in the streets whenthey get older, it's safer than on the grass.Or maybe we can build at a tiny sandboxfor them, though we may have to charge lessrent for the people at that end who don't liketo be awakened at 8 am on SaturdaySunday."PERSONALSThe hour of departure has arrived, and wego our ways—I to die, and you to live.Which is the better, God only knows.Think small.Walk to Woodlawn.Feed one hungry person.Erool Flynn IS Captain Blood.Who is that incredible person who painted"Sock it to me" on his Volkswagen.Black students should get their dorm, P™vided they name it after a segregatiomsr.Tout comprendre rend tres indulgent.Bandersnatch is open till 9:30 PM Wednes¬day of EXAM WEEK.Would you believe?—Lurleen Memorial HaHCRAM SPECIAL, 7-11:30, Monday-Friday.This week and next—THE HUTCH GLERY.Little One! Oh, Little One!I am searching everywhere!WHITES WORKING WITH WHITES!Community organizing in a rural RepuDtiarea in Mass. Subsistence provided. Maevolunteers especially wanted. June i'M s'31. Cali Nick Jankowsk. MU-4-9035.NH- If you'd stuck with me, you'd be partin'through silk—Super K."Every one lives by selling something."RLSu/hn'c responsible for those ugly mummifiedchicken eg£s in the Oriental Institute?rtrown & Gandalf—Congrats, butwhat will we do? Sugar 8. Lucy.You have^to admir”that LMHigh is betterthan Southern Illinois University.I think there is a fatality in it—I seldom go to the place I set out for.Someone fired the Wrong Man. ..Basil Rathbone IS Prince John.Overheard in the Maroon Business Office:" 'Cause I's wicked—I is. I's mighty wicked,anyhtw. I can't help it."MY HUSBAND IS THE FIFTH HORSEMAN.The basic problem is the fundamer al break¬down in personal communication due toideological Intoxication.AFTER GRADUATION: 7:30 PM on Friday,June 7."We have fust enough religion to make ushate, but not enough to make us love oneanother."If you smoke or deal, beware of TOMZANDY A Chuck McKissick.I love you, CRAB-THING. F.C.But the comtroller's made of marbleWith a guard at ev'vry door.And the Bursar's filled with silverThat the studentSweated for.ME LARGA, SEU GUARDA, EU NAOSOU ESTUDANTE! SOU APENAS UMLADRAO. . .If you have ordered CAP & GOWN, youcan pick it up in Ida Noyes 306, the CAP& GOWN office, between 3:30 pm & 5pm Wednesday through Friday this week,or between 1 pm & S pm, any afternoonduring Final Exam Week.Tha: catatonic Uncle Tom, Alderman ClaudeW.B. Holman, will represent YOU at theDemocratic National Convention unless heloses to Cousins or Young.She hath no loyal knight and true,The Lady of Shalott.What's going on at the BANDERSNATCHthat I don't know about?From TIME: Executive Producer Paul Mo¬nash. . .says "All the Negroes I've seen onTV are colorless—absolutely devoid of char¬acter, humor, or idiom. They are pricelessNegroes, castrated men, and desexed fe¬males. These people are really gildedRochesters."Ever watch Richard J. Daley eat soup?Male apes & monkeys definitely preferfeminine partners who show bodily signsof sexual receptivity.Mash notes to the Maroon business staffsecretary will get you somewhere, but fora real trip, send money.Or sugared cubes.Probably lots, sweety.Claude Rains is the Sherrif of Nottingham?TO THE ALUMNI AND TRUSTEES OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO: When you re¬ceive a request this year for an "Un re¬stricted Donation" to the University, please,check "Other" instead and indicate that thefunds should go to the Chicago Maroon...maybe next year we won't have to worryabout paying for a good paper and wewon't have to fill the paper with ads whichdon't pay for it anyway. Thank you. More Maroon Classified AdsHallelujah Anyway.Where freedom is real, equality Is the pas¬sion of the masses. Where equality is real,freedom is the passion of a small minority.CRAM SPECIAL, 7-11:30, Monday thru Frl-GALLERY.1984 has gone and past—the Governmentcalls it progress.Jeff Blum is funny. Harvey Wasserman isnot.Want to help released mental patients groovewith society again? Work at a Vs way houseon the North Side this summer. Subsistenceprovided. Nick Jankowski. MU-4-9035.TOYKO (UPI)—Economist John Kenneth Gal¬braith said Wednesday "fat cats" on theboard of Columbia University have "out¬rageously mismanaged" student unrest onthe New York campus.And don't call me sweety.Come to think about it, Chris Hobson isn'tvery funny, either.SHAVUOTShavuot services will take place on Saturdayevening, June 1, and on Sunday and Mon¬day, June 2 and 3. An all night Torah studysession (Mishmar Let Shavuot) will be heldon Saturday, June 1.HILLEL HOUSE 5715 Woodlawn.The vote for a sit-in at the local saloonwas unanimous!SCIENCE FICTION: "Berserker" authorFred Saberhagen and "Rogue Moon" authorAlgis Budrys. Tonight. 7:30, Ida NoyesTheatre.If you have not yet ordered CAP & GOWN,it will be sold in the bookstore beginningWednesday, May 29, 1968.I hope that the same party who writestheir classified ads didn't write the yearbook.CRAM SPECIAL, 7-11:30, Monday-Friday.This week and next. . .THE HUTCHGALLERY.David Finklestein—Thank you for the book. ..Steve will be in New York this week.. .Love!Don't eat a Hershey Bar until senility isremoved from the Selective Service Office.Paul—What are you doing here?!The spokesman for the Black Student sit-inshas an unlisted phone.CHICKEN BARBEQUE to benefit CADRE onSaturday June 8, From 5 pm. In home ofRissman, 1031 E. 50TH Street. Donation is5 (five) dollars.exam-week escapes—Grow a giant tomato and push it out ofyour window while you scream for help.—Create a seen ein the Harper Library bypretending to poison yourself with ink.—Join the world of the formerly sane.—Pre-meditate.—Reread NAUSEA.—Explore the Wooded Isle behind the Muse¬um of Science and Industry.—Seeing the sun rise could make an other¬wise unfortunate day beautiful.—Believe none of what you hear and half ofwhat you see.—Eat at the PIT (after your exams or youmight not make it through) — on 87th, nearStony Island — or the TACO and ENCILADAplace just north.—On the date of your exam at Mandell, in¬form the Police and Fire Departments of anunpublicize Benefit performance fo* theSEED.-Re-evaluate time.—Corner the market on Reality.—Remember tis better to have loved andlost—much better.—Walk away.—Drown your sorrows in a malt (Drugstoreat 57th A Blackstone), or in cafe moka and baklava (Ahmad's), or in a jar of fetacheese (Party M;»rt), or in a Duchess Sun¬dae (Mad Hatter).--God forgot woman when he created man.—MAN is synomous for both all males andfor humanity, woman is the "other thing."—Return to the womb.—Reread the first two ESCAPES if youreally want a lot of things to do.—Remember that "each of us knows onlyhis own unhappiness."—Get confiscated along with the evidence.—Run.—Be self-contained.—Blame it on your mother.—Blame it on the Board of Admissions.—Blame it on your father—"The sins of thefather are visited upon the son."—Get laid.—Act accordingly.—Reject all offers of a ride to Jimmy's.—Reconsider.—Control the Dexedrine Concession.—Program yourself out.—Consider the source.—Live only for today.—Re-evaluate the entire scene and decide ifit's really worth anything at all.—Re-organize the plot.—Dance alone.—Get all your professors busted.—Capitalize on the fact that you exist.—I think therefore I am—does this mean ifI think more, I will exist more?—Find the Syrian Restaurant on the NearNorth Side.—Stop talking about the Good Old Days whenPaul Butterfield played for nothing at supertwist parties which atracted all kinds ofpeople of every race, color, & creed includ¬ing some very fine ihieves. Instead, rejoicein your security and suck on your I.D. card.—Kiss your favorite security policeman good-by (after 7 pm).—Ascend into Heaven.—Commit an unnatural act.—Join Sergeant Fury — His Howling Com¬mandos.—Collect 3 or 4 "R's."—Cry over spilt milk.—Follow That Dream.—Organize a giant Cop-Out and relocate thecampus at Martha's Vineyard.—Write a sensational & perverse novel.—Protest the quatre-annual rebirth of ten¬sion, despair, wringing hands, and endlessparagraphs of nonsensical bullshit.—You really deserve to eat well now—if youdon't still have the restaurant guide—remem¬ber that the closest place with a four-starrating is the GOLD CITY INN in HarperCourt.—Start each day with a breakfast at theTannenbaum Pharmacy—fresh orange juice,pancakes, or a cheese omelet, coffee, &wheat toast.—Eat plenty of fresh fruit and drink 8 glass¬es of water every day.—Write a novel about Valois.—Submit your name as a write-in candidatefor a B.A.Dear P.P.C.:This is a letter of boastful pride, in re¬gards to the letter from T., in your P.P.C.column. On May 17, 1968.This is to inform you and your readers.That I am a so called NARC..After reading your amusing answer to T.,ON HOW TO SPOT A NARC. . .1 just had towrite a response. Of course this letter hasno official standing, and the views arestrictly my own.If you do print this letter, and I hope youdo. Your readers will probably, think theyknow me. They might be right or wrong.But no one will ever know.The description of myself and my co¬workers, is the best I've heard of yet. Ican only say, I hope you are never robbed,or attacked by any person, or persons. Togive anyone a description like yours, thecuiprii would surely never be caught.I'm not sure, if your descriptions wheremade in jest. Perhaps you are down rightserious. Anyway they gave me the impres¬sion that I could be anyone on campus, oron Hyde Park. Well, your right, because ifI didn't look like everyone else. I would havenot been picked for the job. The finaf answer you gave T., "Be very! cool and don't trust anyone too much." Thisanswer to me was the best advice given yet.I myself have been with people like T„ ormaybe even T., I've broken bread with them,drank their wine, and have laughed at theirstale and morbid jokes. All the while, alsolaughing at them, because I knew their daywould come.Now if I may give a suggestion, to all ofmy intellectual Hyde Park friends. If thesepersons would like to know how not to getbusted. They should take this warning toheed:Don't trust a dam person brother,Because the brothers soul, you save.May not save yours.Thank you P.P.C., for your indulgence.Your Friendly NARC. ofHyde Park, and U. of C.Armpit power.You are inconsiderate and it hurts me somuch only because I love you.Urban Crisis and Civil Disorders—A practical course.O.C. KARATE CLUBdearest Forcynthia: whoever you may be—I suppose you are in a position to be clevertohugh you handled it rather banally—would I be asking too much for you toreturn it to 833, 1005 E. 60th—it meansa great deal—emotional and all that rot.Dave, Mary, Sue, Sandy, Burt, Burt, Peg,Jean, and Margaret have ever a place inthe BANDERSNATCH! heart—not to men¬tion Granny Tubbs.George—send me a rock from Tennessee...?A big heart, made of bagels & cream sheese.Wanted: Guerilla fighters to oppose localconstabulary. Contact F. Tuck, X 2898.COMMUNICATE with white suburban youthon racism. A work camp on a farm 60miles outside Chicago. June 9-21. Sponsoredby Service Civil International (' '’-ivs). CallWick J. MU-4-9035.SF WRITERS A.J. BUDRYS AND FREDSABERHAGEN—Tonight, Ida Noyes Theatre,7:30 p.m.Is Captain Blood the Robin Hood of the highseas?"My father believes," said Kyo slowly,"that the essence of man is anguish, theconsciousness of his own fatality, fromwhich all fears are born, even the fear ofdeath. . .but that opium frees you from it:therein lies its virtue." Malraux.BUNTING, YOU'RE TOO SMUG!Only God can create a classified ad.FAREWELL!! STEVE!! We'll Miss YOU!!The Black Man Fights in VIETNAM for theWhite Man's Right to LYNCH HIM!Studying at the BANDER is a fulfillingexperience.Any American Black man free of "racism,"in the racist white man's concept, is trulya nigger ape dedicated to the glorificationof the American white man's brutal con¬tinued subjugation of Black America. GAVINSTUDENT SPECIAL:SANDALS—SANDALS—SANDALS—SANDALSMADE TO ORDER: OVER 55 STYLES!1 week to 10 days delivery. Old ones re¬paired and restrung. Iso handbags, totebags, coats, skirts & paunchos.AD LIB STUDIO. Now at 5225 HARPERCOURT - C7. Phone: 752-3945. 5% StudentDiscount until June 1st.BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL.Do you still believe integration is possible?Help organize a recreation program near Watts, Subsistence, SCi-ivs. Call Nick atMU-4-9035.WRITERS WORKSHOP AT PL-2-8377.Please send us copies of the May 3rdpaper...GRANDMA & AUNTIE—See you Saturday!Cram Special: 7-11:30, Monday thru Friday.This week 8. next.. .THE HUTCH GALLERYIs Robin Hood the Captain Blood of thegreen forests.AGAINST RACISM?Kenwood Study Center needs TUTORS evenfor one hour a week after 3 p.m. First Bap¬tist Church, on 50th, east of Drexel. Ask forMr. Rimsky.We give you food and a handful of grease. . .BS.What is this place—a garage or a restaurant?ALGIS BUDRYS 8. FRED SABERHAGEN. . .Tonight in Ida Noyes Theatre at 7:30."One last tip: in English pubs it is not thecustom to run up a fill while you drink.For each order, it's cash on the barrelhead,old buddy!"Legislation to prevent unlawful takeover ofcollege property and facilities by protestingstudents should tc one of the major projectsof the new governor of Illinois, S. ThomasSutton, Republican candidate for that post,said. He continues "Adults are supposed torun the schools, not the children. If thechildren are so brilliant that they can runthe colleges, there's no reason to send themto college at all. "College officials, deansor counselors who negotiate or confer withstuden groupt breaking the law.. .would al¬so be disciplined. He said that the Negrodemands at Northwestern are proof of hiscontention that "the Negro and white agi¬tators do not know what they want or why-only that they have dedicated themselves todestroy our society."Who the hell is Busby Berkeley?Like ya goofed, ya owe a quarter 'cuz yamissed the Shapiro return date yesterday.ROTiiLTEIN: Have you finalized your de¬cision? M. L.Have a REMBRANDT SANDWICH (cornedbeef, sauerkraut, sharp American Cheddarcheese, broiled to a Gourmet's taste a LaFlame) — $1.50 with a KING AND QUEENsundae for dessert — seven dips of Vala'sIce Cream 8. only $1.45. Only at the MADHATTER RESTAURANT, 53rd 8. Lake Park... on your way to the Point or to theSkyway.Go to HELL if you think you can buy my '66VW for less than $1350. However, if you'dlike to try, call me at NO-7-4700, Ext. 8326,from 9-5, weekdays.Ahmad's is very close to campus and it hasvery, very good food — PERSIAN SOULFOOD — 1440 E. 57th Street.Interested in one-week bike (10 speed) triparound Lake Michigan. Call DO-3-7548.W'lk in dappled grass, Highto your chest. Soaking of the dew.Dance with the crushing step.That always rises three steps — down two.Ah! wind comes —Fields move — wailing of a woman,"Against and with (Against and with),"Slapping your sides with feathery seeds.Eyes watch the myriad spines — bendAt once — make flat — then rise. Again,and Again, and again.Wind Up.Slip! Touch the ground.(shhh .. .listen to the wind down the grassover you).Black humus, fresh.Fresh. Taste it on your cheek, LifeCrawling out — dancingOne times One step on your brain.D. FinkelsteinEPITAPH"Think only this of me ...VOILA LE COMMENCEMENT DE LA FIN.SUMMERThe Maroon summer edition will appear on Thursday June 27, July 11, July 25, Aug. 8, Aug. 22.Deadline for advertising is the preceding Monday at 3 pm.You may have Summer mailed to you for $2. Contact The Maroon Business Office.May 28, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAr66n 15Ab Mikva... the kind of man that oil kinds of people admire, praisefrespect...your kind of man in CongressAb was a fine labor lawyer in private practice when we werelaw partners, and throughout his legislative career he haspromoted imaginative programs to protect and enlarge therights of working men.HON. ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG. U S. REP. TO U.N.He initiated legislation to outlaw deceptive trade practices... the foremost leader in Illinois in credit reform measuresto protect the consumer.LINNEA ANDERSON. NOTED CONSUMER ADVISERAb has supported public education on all levels ... he hasinitiated many proposals as a legislator to improve thequality of the city schools.WARREN BACON. CHICAGO BOARD OF EDUCATIONAb has worked actively ... on many fronts in help¬ing to assist the people of the slums to take theinitiative in determining their own destiny.DR DONALD L. BENEDICT, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR.COMMUNITY RENEWAL SOCIETYAb supported the eacher Corps as anothermeans of improving the quality of educationin our city- cfiools.TIM BLACK, ASSISTANT DIRECTOR.CHICAGO TEACHER CORPS CONSORTIUM... a thoughtful, dedicated attorney ... aneffective legislator . . . aware of the impactof laws on individual people as well as ofthe need for laws to protect the people asa whole.THOMAS J. BOODELL, FORMER PRESIDENT,CHICAGO BAR ASSOCIATION“I'm sure every housewife trying to makeends meet will appreciate his concern forwhat rising prices can do to a familybudget.”MRS. STEVE MOTYLL. SOUTH CHICAGO HOUSEWIFE. . . his involvement in religious affairs is broadbased. He is Vice President of KAM Temple . . .on the Board of the Chicago Conference on Reli¬gion and Race.DR EDGAR H.S. CHANDLER. NOTED RELIGIOUS LEADERAs a state legislator, he has sponsored many billsto reform local government and make it moreeffective.HON DAVID DAGENAIS, ALDERMAN. BLUE ISLANDAb stood up for the rights of working men... whenhe successfully fought the attempt of anti-laborforces to pass right-to-work legislation in Illinois.MICHAEL G. DRAKULICHPRESIDENT, PROGRESSIVE STEELWORKERS UNIONAb Mikva will fight for effective steps to combat airpollution. We can count on him to bring a breath offresh air into our politics and into our cities.LAURA FERMI, NOTED AIR POLLUTION EXPERT ... his record during ten years in the Illinois legislatureshows he knows how to move solutions through the govern¬ment machinery.HON. WILLARD WIRTZ, SECRETARY OF LABORAb has made a direct contribution to fillingthe bousing needs of the District as one ofthe prime movers of Amalgamated’s KenwoodPark project.MURRAY H. FINLEY. VICE PRESIDENTAMALGAMATED CLOTHING WORKERS OFAMERICA AND NON-PROFIT HOUSING DEVELOPERAb understands that you have to developprograms in order to involve youth inour society in constructive ways.JIM FITZGIBBCNS ANDDENNY O’KEEFENo legislator has done more for mentalhealth in the State of Illinois.DR. FRANCIS J. GERTY, FORMER DIRECTORILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTHAbner Mikva knows that conservation...encompasses the problems of cities aswell as rural areas. He was a leader inthe successful battle to save the IndianaDunes.RAYMOND MOSTEK, VICE CHAIRMANCITIZENS COMMITTEE FORNATURE CONSERVATIONAbner Mikva . . . has encouraged respon¬sible businessmen to involve themselvesin community issues.BEN HEINEMAN, CHAIRMAN. CHICAGO ANDNORTH WESTERN RAILWAY COMPANYHe has never been confused about therelationship between workers’ rights andthe “right to work." If we want repeal ofSection 14B of the Taft-Hartley Act, weneed a fighter like Ab.ROBERT JOHNSTON, DIRECTOR. REGION 4UNITED AUTO WORKERS OF AMERICAHe impressed me deeply as a law stu¬dent ... as a lawyer and legislator. He isa rare public resource.HARRY KALVEN, JR., PROFESSOR OF LAWUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOAb’s support of group health insurancefor state employees shows his concern forproviding adequate medical care for allcitizens on an individual basis.DR. RICHARD LANDAUPROF. OF MEDICINE, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOHis support of more equitable taxing methods toreplace the sales tax shows his concern for theretail merchant and the low income consumer... amost refreshing understanding of consumer credit.JOSEPH T. MEEK. PRESIDENTILLINOIS RETAIL MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION ... we grew up together. I have had the opportunity to seethe exceptional qualities develop in Ab which will makehim a truly outstanding Congressman.NEWTON MINOW, FORMER CHAIRMANFEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSIONAb’s commitment to high ethical standards was demon¬strated when he sponsored a strong code of ethics for publicofficials while we served together in the Illinois House ofRepresentatives.HON. ADLAI E. STEVENSON III, STATE TREASURER... a champion for the senior citizens ... he vigorouslyopposed any reduction in state assistance to the elderly. Heis wholeheartedly supporting our drive for reduced fares.MAJOR ROY B. NORDHEIMER. PRESIDENTCHICAGO AREA COUNCIL OF SENIOR CITIZENS ORGANIZATIONMikva could bring fresh air to Washington. He was brilliantin the Illinois legislature . . . the leader of a group of inde¬pendent, honest, hard-working legislators.MIKE ROYKOAbner will be as progressive and innovative in Congress ashe was during our five terms together in the Illinois House.HON. ANTHONY SCARIANO, STATE REPRESENTATIVEAb realizes that the backbone of good schools and goodeducation lies in competent, aggressive management bylocal school boards.JOHN E. SCHUDYPRESIDENT, SCHOOL BOARD 157, CALUMET CITYAbner Mikva knows that government economy means elimi¬nating waste and inefficiency in the operation of govern¬ment itself. He represents everything that is both humaneand sensible in government.HON. PAUL SIMON, STATE SENATORLong before the Kerner Report, Ab recognized that one ofthe most important problems in race relations was jobs. Hehas been involved in . . . the effectiveness of the Tri-Faithemployment centers and training programs.MONROE B. SULLIVAN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTORCHICAGO CONFERENCE ON RACE AND RELIGIONMikva served responsibly and imaginatively as Chairman ofthe Judiciary Committee in the Illinois House.HON. JOHN P. TOUHY, FORMER SPEAKERILLINOIS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVESThe outstanding expert in the House about credit reform.CHICAGO TRIBUNE. .. the most instrumental person to help end open garbagedumping in the Calumet Park area. He does somethingabout community problems.ED WASHAK. EDITOR, CALUMET INDEX. . . young enough to understand the problems and concernsof young people, and old enough to be in a position to affectnational policy on these issues. He's up with things.CAROL ANN WALKER, SENIOR. ST. XAVIER COLLEGEI know that in Congress Abner Mikva will be an active voicefor peace, as he has consistently been throughout his careerin public life.RABBI JACOB WEINSTEIN, RABBI EMERITUS. KAM TEMPLEVote June 11 forAbner J. MikvaDemocrat for Congress2nd DistrictUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO COMMITTEE FOR MIKVA Co-Chairmen: Jeremy R. Azrael, Frank R. Breul, Lloyd A. Falters, J. David Greenstone, Arnold C. Harberger,Morris Janowitz,Harry Kalven Jr., Richard C. Lewontin, Hans Mattick, Paul Meier, David Street, Richard Wade•16 May 28, 1968THE CHICAGO MAROON