***»*♦♦♦♦By Caroline Heck and Barbara HurstNSF Reduces Grant Funds The University will subsidize the nor¬mally high rent hotel accomodations; stu¬dents will pay an average rent of $75.00per month. The housing list also referredstudents to 47 spaces in unfurnished apart;ments in the Hyde Park area, the SouthShore Commission, the Hyde Park YMCA,and the Student Co-op for additional in¬formation. Finally, Faculty have beenasked to notify the Office of Student Hous¬ing if they have space to rent to students.This list was also sent to the thirty-fivestudents who requested dormitory spaceafter the spring deadline for upper classapplications. Turkington stated that “it ishard to say what happened to the 35 wecould not accomodate. It appears extreme¬ly unlikely that there will be dormitoryspace for them.”Turkington Hopes to Place AllTurkington feels, however, that in lightof the available non-dormitroy housing theUniversity has disclosed, “We are going tobe able to offer space to any student whohas not yet been housed.” He suggestedthat any student without housing come tohis office in the Administration Buildingfor help.Most of the emergency freshmen housingconsists of 23 bunk beds temporarily placedin single rooms in Burton Judson Courtand Chauncy Boucher Hall. Nine fresh¬men are living in rooms usually reservedfor University guests in Pierce Tower,Burton-Judson and Flint House in Wood¬ward Court.Turkington, stated, “We see this as avery temporary arrangement, and as soonas we can undouble these rooms, we willdo so. Before the quarter begins, Turking¬ton added, “we hope to be able to undoubleeight or ten rooms.”Within the past week, some single roomshave already been reinstated. One fresh¬man did not show up; two Chicago areafreshmen, after learning of the housingshortage, decided to commute.Turkington expects that upperclass at¬trition will account for the undoubling ofthe remainedr of the rooms by the end ofthe Autumn quarter.STEEL AND BRONZE: Workmen on the Regenstein Library seen through HenryMoorels Sculpture, 'Atomic Energy.' The housing shortage, always severe atthe University, has now reached crisisproportions.An estimated 150 to 500 students do nothave places to live yet this fall.. Director of student housing EdwardTurkington attributed the immediate hous¬ing shortage to two unexpected develop¬ments: the larger proportion of men inthis year’s freshman class than last yearand the fact that an anticipated drop inthe male graduate enrollment due to thedraft did not materialize.The first reaction of the housing officehas been to create emergency accomoda¬tions for 32 freshmen.The sharp increase in the number of en¬tering freshmen, whom the University hasan obligation to house, forced the Univer¬sity to deny dormitory space to 35 upper¬classmen who requested Universityhousing.Housing List DistributedEighty-five students, most of them gradu¬ates, have in the past week applied toTurkington’s office for help in locatinghousing. Turkington has referred them toa list of available housing in the Hyde Parkarea and in South Shore.The list includes apartments reserved forstudents by the University in the Black¬wood, Plaisance and Madison Park Hotels.One hundred spaces inthe Blackwood Ho¬tel were reserved early this past summerwhen, according to Charles D. O’Connell,dean of students, it became apparent tothe University that there was not enoughavailable student housing in Hyde Park.Since that time additional space has beenallocated to the University by nearbyHotels.Edward TurkingtonDirector of Student HousingBy John MoscowThe National Science Foundation (NSF)has placed a ceiling on the amount ofmoney from NSF grants that Chicago mayspend during this fiscal year.The ceiling represents a cut of about21 percent form the amount of researchmoney the University received last yearand the amount it is being permitted tospend during the year. The University hadexpected an increase of twelve percent.The ceiling was placed into effect afterthe NSF budget was cut from 1500-mil¬lion to $400 million in a money-savingeffort by the Congress.Activities NightAlmost all campus student organi¬zations will be represente dtonightat the annual 'Activities Night'starting at 7:30 in Ida Noyes. TheMaroon invites freshme nand up¬perclassmen to visit our offices tosee what we’re up to this year. Chicago’s appropriation is being cutfrom $8.7 million last year to a maximumof $6.39 million this year. Both figures in¬clude money for construction and for NSFtraineeships, however, and do not reflectthe real amounts spent on research here.According to figures from the universitycontroller’s office, approximately $6.4 mil¬lion was spent for research in fiscal 1968,but a ceiling of approximately $5 millionhas been set for this year.The ceiling, according to NSF sources,does not represent an actual cut in theamount of money being given for eachproject. Instead, it represents an exten¬sion of the time in which the moneycan be spent. That is, according to thosesources, the money must be spread overa longer period of time, but is not beingtaken from the holders of the grants.Grants are normally awarded for a cer-taken from the holders of the grants,tain period of time, with the monetarydispersion spread over that period. Thisyear the NSF is unable to fund all theawards it made for this year during pre¬vious years.One of the problems with the ceiling,according to both Mr. Schoen and var¬ious Chicago administrators, is that itfails to take into account either new grants or renewals of old grants. That meansthat under the Chicago ceiling, there isessentially no room for large new grants,as they will take away money from exist¬ing projects. The ceiling represents themaximum amount of money that the NSFwill give to Chicago during the presentyear — fiscal year 1969. New grants willbe accepted, however.Chicago administrators are extremelydisturbed about the cuts, which were an¬nounced August 16. A. Adrian Albert, deanof the physical science division and Moore,Professor of Mathematics, said, “I regardthe cuts as a disaster. They will have avery bad effect on research in the divi¬sion.” Commitments were made on per¬sonnel early in the year, he added, thusincreasing the effect of the reduction onother possible research expenses.Research assistants and research asso¬ciates were hired before the ceiling wasannounced, Albert said, and those com¬mitments must be kept. “Part of ourjob is a research training job and weout that with the funds already committedthere was no freedom as to where thenecessary cuts would come. He addedthat he anticipated such a celing nextyear, but that fewer research assistantContinued on Page'Three THEHOUSINGCRISISTHE CHICAGO MAROONVolumne ?6, Number 6 Chicago, Illinois, September 27, 1968 36 pages, 3 SectionsHousing Shortage ReachesCritical Level on Campus> *Left Fights Columbia Urban ProjectBy Susie SchmidtCollege Press ServiceNEW YORK—After a sharp re-evalua¬tion of their demands and goals, ColumbiaUniversity radicals have decided that theirprotest must be of the fundamental wrongsthey see at the university and their impli¬cations for the larger surrounding society.In strategy sessions a week ago Thursdayfollowing the Wednesday shutdown of regis¬tration and illegal use of a building, thestudents agreed that their emphasis onamnesty for 30 suspended students as a pri¬mary demand had drawn, attention from“the real issues” during this fall’s openingof the university. They said the pressurethey felt to “prove to the mass media thatthe Columbia revolution wasn’t dead, thatsummer couldn’t kill it” had made themmove too hastily without analyzing theiractions.The university’s reaction to theirmarches and sit-ins Wednesday over thesuspended students had also, in the wordsof one, “made us look mindless and unco¬ordinated, like kids who were looking foran excuse to riot. Officials’ tactics so farthis week have been to leave the protes¬ters pretty much alone. When registrationwas blocked, they simply closed up shop.Later they “punished” the demonstratorsby revoking the campus privileges of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society (SDS), butwhen the students broke into the SocialSciences Building to hold a meeting thereanyway, nothing was done to stop them. The administration has apparentlylearned more from experience about howto deal with protests than the studentshave about planning them. By applyingtactics used by other college administra¬tors and ignored by many police forces—“ifrioters are not provoked, there’s a goodchance serious trouble will be averted”—theColmubia officials made the students looka good deal worse than they did duringApril’s massive strike.Now, however, the students say they willconcentrate not on the narrow issue of stu¬dent amnesty, but on the more widespreadone of the university’s involvement withcorporate interests and its control overmuch of the city surrounding its campus.Their specific target now is Columbia’surban renewal projects, the latest of whichmay make $180 million for the firm of twoColumbia trustees.The “Piers Project,” as the renewalscheme is called, is a pla nto tear down a40-block area north of the Columbia cam¬pus, now occupied by apartment buildingswhose tenants are more than 10,000 stu¬dents, old people and Puerto Ricans, andto construct in their place a complex oflight manufacturing, research buildings forgovernment projects, recreation facilities,and middle-income housing for 3000persons.Conflict of Interest?The project is sponsored by the Mom-ingside Renewal Council (MRC), a coali¬tion of city institutions (a majority of themEurope's Students HaveProblemsUS StudentBy Brian BraunCollege Press ServiceEurope is divorced from American stu¬dents by an ocean, at least six hours and$500 or more. While the continent is nomore monolithic than Berkeley is like BobJones College, in the educational spheresimilar problems haunt most Europeancountries.“In Vienna and all over Europe, the prob¬lems are the same. University facilities areinferior, we have no access to our profes¬sors, professorial appointments are deter¬mined by other professors, students have novoice in university government, course re¬quirements are rigid and overcrowding isrampan,” Walter Leinmuller, a Universityof Vienna student said.Students in Greece, Italy, Spain and toa lesser degree France are faced withgovernment interference in their educa¬tion. education of Spanish students, likestudents in many communist countries ispolitically controlled particularly historyand the social sciences.One student complained that “the gov¬ernment regulates our curriculum and con¬fines our education to such strict guidelinesthat objective education is possible only inthe physical sciences. When Franco protectshis regime we get what is roughly equiva¬lent to a Communist line.Dr. Papisca Antonio, assistant professorof international organization at the Univer¬sity of Parma (Italy) and a former Adlai E. Stevenson United Nations fellow, said,“There are only two free universities in It¬aly—the rest are carefully controlled by thestate. He added, “All professional chairsare political issues in this country. Profes¬sors decide who will occupy any given chairand they are advised by the governmentas to who is acceptable and who is not.”Liberalization in FrancePrior to the May revolution at the Sor-bonne, French students found their educa¬tions similarly controlled. With the appoint¬ment of Edgar Faure as minister of educa¬tion, the French academic community ishoping the ministry will abandon its formerrole of educational dictator and assume therole of government-education liaison asFaure has promised.Vienna student Leinmuller’s charges re¬flect the problems faced by nearly everycountry on the continent. In Italy, Antonionotes that despite the fact that “wily 10-15percent of my countrymen are afforded theopportunity to attain a higher education,nearly every one of our universities isfrightfully overcrowded.”Giusepe Della Grotte, an assistant pro¬fessor doing research work in Venice, said,“In some of the larger Italian universitieslike the Universities of Rome (70,000 stu¬dents) and Milan (45,000) the conditions areso bad that sometimes as many as 50 or 60students have to stand in back during lec¬tures.” schools connected with Columbia) inter¬ested in “upgrading the environment oftheir neighborhood. The MRC is generallyacknowledged to be controlled by Colum¬bia, it recently awarded the Piers Projectcontract, valued at between $160 and $180THESTUDENTREVOLUTIONmillion, to Uris Buildings Corporation. TwoUniversity trustees, Percy Uris and AdrianMassie, control that corporation.That such examples of university controlby New York financial interests are stillcoming to light, after faculty deplored suchuniversity activities and many officialssaid Columbia was changing its polices,illustrates the students’ point.The university seems at this point to becaught up in a web of involvement fromwhich the best of intentions are powerless to extricate it. Andrew Cordier may wantto drop trespass charges against 400 stu¬dents, but City District Attorney FrankHogan (also a Columbia trustee) will notdrop them.The university may want to drop its roleas slumlord of Morningside Heights, butas long as the members of its board oftrustees stand to benefit from that roleas long as almost every major financial in¬terest in New York is represented on theboard, it may be impossible.A Change Is NeededRescuing Columbia from its entangle¬ments in ghetto real estate and with busi¬ness and government will require moresweeping structural changes than the plac¬ing of students on faulty comittees andletting professors have an AcademicSenate. It will require replacement ofmany of the men who now rule Columbia,and a change in philosophy on the entireBoard.Such a change is what the students saythey want to fight for. To accomplish it,they will try to appeal to members of thecommunity around Columbia (who theythink are being victimized by the univer¬sity’s practices but are afraid to fight).The Gern Systemcharming, versatile. . . inexpensive.These well-constructed modular units will help youcreate just the storage you need at most reasonableprices. Each of the ten different units, from book¬cases to TV storage to chests of drawers, is finelyfinished in white lacquer, with brass hardware oncabinets and drawers.The cabinet, 28" x 15V6" x 291/2,\ $41; thedesk, 28" x 15Vi" x 6V4", $14; the 5-drawer chest,28" x 15V2" x 29V2", $49. Bookcases and shelf unitsrange from $16 to $33. All pieces are fully assembled.Public response to our merchandise has been so great that we may be sold out of some unitsDo come in . . . we are receiving week to week shipments on our re-orders from Scandinaviaorm52ND & HARPER • 324-9010in harper courtMONDAY, THURSDAY. FRIDAY 9-9TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, SAT 9-6sorry, no phone or mail ordersHave you heard . . . ?— Something New has come to Hyde Park . . . . DiscountArt MaterialsA real book store!Widest selection of quality books, magazines and posters in the area.BOOK CENTERin Harper Courtcall us first for all your reading needs — Ml 3-1880rl —mr r—r rrr> rr f f ■ r tCHICAGO MAROON September 27, 1968 “ • school, office &filing suppliese drafting materiale mounting - matting -framingDuncan's1305 E 53rd HY 3-4111NSF Reduces University's AllocationContinued from Page Oneand associate positions would be open as aresult, thus cutting into the future pool oftrained scientists.Albert noted that the Physical Scienceswould suffer a cut of at least 35 percentfor the rest of the year, as no ceilingwas instituted for the first two monthsof the fiscal year. Expenditures weremade, he said, before the magnitude, orindeed the actuality of the cut becameknown.In the division of the social sciences thesituation is worse in the eyes of Dean D.Gale Johnson, also professor of economics,who is counting pn a cut of approximately50 percent in appropriations for his divi¬sion. He said that most funds have alreadybeen either spent or committed — includ¬ing money that the department of educa¬tion spent on its summer institutes beforethe ceiling was announced. The commit¬ments include hiring faculty, and support¬ing students around the world who areworking in their dissertations. He pointedout that the cuts for this year would haveto come from other areas, such as therenting of computer time for researchwork.If the ceiling continues into next year,Johnson added, it would probably strikehardest at the research assistants in thedivision. He expressed the hope, however,that it would not be necessary to bring students back from foreign countries dueto a lack of funds.Graduates Hurt..“The cuts will have a significant im¬pact on the research done this year andnext year. They will cut support for thegraduate students for next year,” John¬son stated. The uncertainty caused by thelate announcement may also have someeffect on the University’s future budgetplans, he remarked.One of the major problems in dealingwith the cut, according to several Chicagosources, is that over a period of yearssupport for scientific research has beengrowing at a rate of about 10-12 percenta year. There has been a leveling offof the growth rate recently, but everyonein the universities expected that previous¬ly made commitments, such as those ofthe NSF, would continue to be honoreddesipte any budget cuts. In this expecta¬tion they were disappointed.The effect at Chicago, although seriousin the eyes of the administration, has notbeen as bad as it has at other schools.At those schools where NSF money hasbeen used to pay salaries, for example,there is no possibility of cutting expenses,and those schools face serious financialdifficulties this year. At Chicago mostmoney has been for other expenses, al¬though a good deal has gone into theresearch assistantships. Future Possibilities UncertainIn regard to the future budgeting plansof the University, all administrators areworried about the uncertainty attendantupon federal grants. Not only NSF moneyis involved, actually, and even with regardto funds from the NSF, other areas thanthose directly concerned suffer followinga cut. Other agencies such as the nationalInstitute of Health and the Office of Edu¬cation, together with the Office of Econom¬ic Opportunity and the National Aeronaut¬ics and Space Administration have alsohad their budgets cut this year. Further¬more, as funds for each project are cut,those cuts relating to salaries are themost expensive, since a bonus equal to46 percent of the money for salaries wentinto a general overhead fund for universitymaintenance. Chicago’s loss in this areaalone, regardless of the scientific projects$200,000 this year. This was an unexpected financial blowat a time when the University needs mon¬ey badly. Although the Campaign for Chi¬cago thjree-year attempt to raise $160million — was coming along on schedule,despite less federal support than had orig¬inally been expected — the University hasrun up a deficit during both of the pre¬vious two fiscal years. Authorities in theoffice of the comptroller expect a farlarger deficit this year than in the twoyears previous due to the cut in income.Cut Came From CongressThe cut in the NSF budget came as aresult of Congressional pressure on Pres¬ident Lyndon Johnson to cut back ines¬sential items in the budget before theywould approve a tax surcharge.Mr. Schoen with others at Chicago, ex¬pressed the opinion that the new Congressmight be even more hostile to fundingthe NSF than is the exisitng one.March Permit GrantedA permit has been obtained from the cityfor Saturday’s march to protest the warin Vietnam and the police activities duringthe Democratic National Convention hasbeen granted to the Chicago Peace Coun¬cil (CPC), spokesmen announced Thursday.The permit allows the maerhers, organ¬ized by the CPC and the Citizens for aFree Chicago, to assemble at State andWacker, and to march in the street, downMichigan Avenue to Grant Park. A spokesman for the Chicago Park Dis¬trict told the Maroon that a permit wasoffered to the Peace Council for a rallyto be held immediately south of the LoganStatue, after the march.He stated that the qualifications for anypark rally included a $200,000-$500,000 Li¬ability Bond, but that the bond could beobtained from almost any insurance com¬pany for about $200. EUCTCIC TYPEWRITER OFFER180°°GREAT NEW 250Regular list price $250Full 12” carriage with Auto ReturnAll repeat functionsStudents and Faculty onlyFOR INFORMATION CALL 928-7829*This offer good only through J & R Office Machines,authorized distributor m office typewriter division.The TotalFemaleAnimal!■ASTMANCOLORULTRARCOPRHYDEPARKTHEATRETHEBOOKHOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount.1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75II thegarmentdistrictI to I n. well*ehieatfw. HlinoiftfaNhion invention* UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOHyde Park CommunityBookstoresTHE BOOK NOOK THE BOOK CENTERHYDI PARK SHOPPING CENTERHARD COVER,PAPERBACK &MODERN LIBRARY BOOKS-CARDS- 5211 S. HARPER COURTLARGEST SELECTION OFBOOKS, POSTERS & MAGAZINESIN THE AREAGREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 I. 57th ST.OPEN 12 to 12Paperbacks, Hardcovers, Medical Books,N. Y. Times on Sunday STAYER, BOOKSELLERS1301 {. 57th ST.Quality Cloth and PaperbacksSocial Ss.f Humanities, Physical Sc.RUDOLPH VAN TELLINGEN JOSEPH O’GARA5235 5. HAUER COURTGeneral Used BooksOPEN DAILY & EVENINGS 1360 E. 53rd ST.Used and Out of PrintScholarly BooksOPEN 2 P.M. to 9 P.M.REID MICHENER5309 5. RIMIARRGeneral and ScholarlyUsed BooksOPEN 6:00 P.M. to MIDNIGHTSeptember 87/1968W/7 v&Mtyrt CB1VAGV MATH)ONV Ci J A ft tj / A 3 . a 0It takes about threeweeks te tfscover usFIRST:You’ve got more importantthings to do now.SECOND:You bought some of yournew clothes before the termbegan, (but, cleverly, not all)THIRD:You must give yourselfenough time to make ajudgement about the rightthing to wear at the Univer¬sity of Chicago.Soon our name and/or ourlabel will begin to turn upfrequently. When (if) you docome, we think we knowwhat you’ll be looking for. . . and we have it in vastarray.We carry every worthwhilename you’ve seen in Play¬boy, Esquire, Gentlemen’sQuarterly and a few unpub¬lished numbers that are ex¬clusively ours. As a special inducement tocome in soon, we have twovery attractive special off¬ers -G-E SNOOZ ALARMreg $4.98 ONLY $1Repeat alarm wakes you -then lets you snooze beforewaking you again.Yours with any purchase of$50 or more in our TOWN &CAMPUS Shop, while oursupply lasts. Limit one to acustomer.FOOT LOCKERreg $16 ONLY $1Keeps all your belong¬ings organized, neat & safe.Nickel plated steel hard¬ware. Practically indestruct-able.Yours with any purchase of$150 or more in our TOWN& CAMPUS Shop, while oursupply lasts. Limit one to acustomer.Cohn & Stern®num Sc GlammiBShopIN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings ’til 9CHIC AG O MAROON___ September 27,. 19688&1 .,r4University Publishes Housing ReportThe University this summer hired threeUniversity students to make a study andprepare a report on the student housingsituation here.The University funded the statisticalprogram on housing last spring, after theAd Hoc Committee on Housing, a studentgroup, suggested that the University hirea student housing researcher.The survey was conducted by Alan Jaffeand John Wertmer, second year graduatestudents in Urban Studies, and Brad Rog¬ers, a fourth year psychology major inthe College. Their findings will be avail¬able in a report to the University thatwill appear in the next two weeks. Theresearch was conducted through the Centerof Urban Studies.Jaffe termed the project an attempt “todetermine what students really want inhousing.” As part of their research, theyhave prepared a sixteen page question¬naire to be distributed to students atregistration.Jaffe strongly urged that students takethe time to complete the questionnaire,which he described as long but notcomplicated.The researchers studied similar housing studies at other universities, particularlyat the University of California. Jaffe em¬phasized that it was an unpolitical survey,designed to find “only what students wantand what opinions are.”Areas of investigation included mappingwhere all University students live, aver¬age student rent levels, which the re¬searchers discovered to be about $55 permonth, and the reasons that certain apart-Three teenagers were found guilty Wed¬nesday night of the April 22 slaying of Chi¬cago senior Roy D. Gutmann.After eight hours of deliberation, a juryof eight men and four women handed theverdict to Judge Frank J. Wilson, who setan October 24 sentencing date.Gutmann was struck in the head by ashotgun blast as he returned to his HydePark apartment from a part-time night jobat the Social Sevrice Administration Libra¬ry. His body was found by a passerby at56th St. and Kimbark Ave.Subsequent widespread concern over se- ments contain high concentrations ofstudents.The researchers’ report will make cer¬tain recommendations to the University.The researchers discovered that an ac¬ceptable type of student housing would below-rise apartments with four residentialstories over one story for parking.Commenting on the Student Village, theUniversity’s recently proposed dormitorycurity precautions in the neighborhoodcaused University officials to take suchmeasures as strengthening the campus po¬lice force and temporarily stringing uplights along dimly illuminated streets.Although Gutmann was not robbed, po¬lice theorize that he was the victim of anabortive holdup attempt.The three convicted youths are LamarrMasse, 17, of 5743 S. Calumet Ave.; JesseDavis, 17, of 312 E. 50th St.; and Theo¬dore Collins, 18, of 4951 S. Forrestvilile Ave.Their attorneys promply moved to file mo¬tions for a new trial, which they said they complex, and on the housing situation ingeneral, Jaffe stated, “If the Universityhad the money, they’d build. The expenseof the Student Village and the lack ofdonors indicate the University is not beingpractical.” In making their recommenda¬tions, Jaffe stated, the researchers con¬sidered such factors as cost, financingtechniques, security, speed of construction,urgency, and present supply.expected would result in “an easy rever¬sal of the decision.”During the trial a state witness, Joe Rob¬inson, 17, of 4925 S. Forrestville Ave. deniedhe signed a statement accusing the defend¬ants of killing Gutmann which was pre¬sented by Assistant States Attorney Wal¬ter Parish, the prosecutor. The statementsaid that Collins had come to Robinson’shome with a shotgun in a paper bag thenight of the killing and told him he hadshot a white man in Hyde Park.Parrish predicted the youths would notget the death penalty since their convic¬tion was based on circumstantial evidence.Convict 3 Youths in Gutmann SlayingWork in EuropeAmerican Student InformationService has arranged jobs,tours & studying in Europe forover a decade. Choose fromthousands of good paying jobsin 15 countries, study at a fa¬mous university, take a GrandTour, transatlantic transporta¬tion, travel independently. Allpermits, etc. arranged thru thislow cost & recommended pro¬gram. On the spot help fromASIS offices while in Europe.For educational fun-filled &profitable experience of a life¬time send $ 2 for handbook(overseas handling, airmail re¬ply & applications included)listing jobs, tours, study &crammed with other valuableinfo, to: Dept. 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SEDGWICKWH 4-8865M-F 12:00-8:30SAT. & SUN. 10-8The Magical Mystery Turinjg%;£I StudentCo-opBookstoreService #1OFF CAMPUSHOUSING FILE% Hrs.9 A.M. - 10 P.M. %Reynolds Club ATTENTION ■■Candidates for Teaching Positionsin Chicago Public SchoolsNATIONAL TEACHER EXAMINATIONSfor Elementary (K-8)and Selected High School AreaslCHICAGO CREDENTIAL ASSEMBLY DEADLINE DATE:Friday, October 4,1968, 4:30 p.m.Chicago Public Schools will use the scoresas part of their 1968 certificate examinations for:Kindergarten-Primary Grades 1-2-3(N.T.E.-Early Childhood Education)Intermediate and Upper Grades 3-8(N.T.E.-Education in the Elementary Schools)High School English(N.T.E.-English Language and Literature) High School Mathematics(N.T.E.-Mathematics)Homemaking Arts-Grades 7-12(N.T.E.-Home Economics Education)Industrial Arts-Grades 7-12(N.T.E.— Industrial Arts Education)All Candidates Must Take the Common Examinationand the Teaching Area Examination Relevant tothe Certificate SoughtApplicants for teaching positions in theChicago Public Schools should:1. Register with the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, NewJersey to take the common examination and the relevant teachingarea examination.2. Indicate on the N.T.E. form, line 10, that scores should be sub¬mitted to the Chicago Board of Examiners,Chicago Public Schools.3. File application for certification examination (form Ex-5) withthe Board of Examiners. The following credentials should accom¬pany the application (Ex-5), if not already on file: Official copy ofbirth certificate, official transcript of aJJ college work attempted.The application and credentials must be filed byFriday, October 4,1968, 4:30 p.m.The National Teacher Examinations will beadministered Nov. 9, 1968 on 400 college campusesFor additional information: Board of Examiners, Room 624CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601or the Office of Teacher Recruitment,Chicago Public Schools or Teacher Placement OfficePlease send me information about theNational Teacher Examinations for:□ Kindergarten-primary grades 1-2-3□ Intermediate and upper grades 3-8□ High school (subject area)Nameray State ZipCollege •p’aytfe .ft th* of IMer«*t.O"*l Pi*,I*. Corp . Do*". Oet ^ 1968 Inter**! 0"*l P'*,t*. ZorpPlaytex* invents the first-day tampon ”(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent.. .it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind.the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45% more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. 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Ji < V O A v'1 \ V * September 27, 1968•V, v ia *\ y>'University, Two Join To Fight CityBy Jeffrey KutaThe Woodlawn Organization (TWO) andthe University are in the final stage ofdrawing up a model cities proposal thatcould mean several million dollars forWoodawn—on its own terms.The two organizations have been coop¬erating throughout the summer in an effortto present what they call an acceptablealternative to the official City of Chicagoproposal, the planning process for whichhas been criticized widely for lack of mean¬ingful citizen participation.A proposal for one-and five-year modelcities prgrams is expected to be readyearly next month following community¬wide discussion of a rough draft, beforecompletion of an equivalent proposal bythe city.It was in April that TWO asked the Fac¬ulty Woodlawn Committee to assist in thepreparation of its own model cities pro¬posal. While TWO set up standing com¬mittees of neighborhood residents on hous¬ing, employment, education, and so on, theUniversity organized corresponding taskforces of faculty and graduate studentsbased at the Center for Urban Studies,many of them involved in the University’sdemonstration projects in Woodlawn.These task forces attended joint meetingswith TWO’s standing committee givingtechnical assistance in the formation ofsub-proposals that are now being united in¬to a comprehensive framework by a co¬ordinating committee.Students Gather DataMeanwhile, a team of graduate studentsand undergraduates at the center had beenaccumulating data on Woodlawn that wouldbe helpful in the planning process. And theNational Opinion Research Center is pre¬paring to undertake an extensive survey ofthe Woodlawn population. The University’sinvolvement is being financed throughfoundation support.The tone of the cooperative effort was set early in the summer when Julian Levi,professor of urban studies, speaking at St.Cyril’s Church in Woodlawn, told an as¬sembly of neighborhood residents that“you’re going to decide, not the city andnot the University, what kinds of solutionsyou’re going to propose for Woodlawn’sproblems.”Daley was also reported to have been at¬tempting to woo support from influentialWoodlawn groups in exchange for consider¬ation in the city’s proposal. No TWO rep¬resentatives sit on the Mayor’s advisorycitizens’ committee for the Woodlawn tar¬get area, one of four throughout the city.City’s Effort CriticizedThe city, whose application for a plan¬ning grant was approved by HUD lastyear with subsequent alterations, has sofar released only a statement of problemsand goals. The city’s effort has been criti¬cized by such groups as the CommunityLegal Counsel for lack of compliance withthe federal “widespread citizen participa¬tion” requirement and for insufficienttechnical assistance to its citizens’ advis¬ory committee.TWO and the University are hoping thattheir proposal, in terms of citizens partici¬pation and technical expertise, will be con¬sidered so much better than the city’s thatthe city can be pressured into submittingit instead of its own on the Department ofHousing and Urban Development (HUD),or at least into making major concessionsto TWO.If this happens, according to TWO andUniversity spokesmen, the Woodlawn com¬munity would have a greater voice in theModel Cities program and Daley wouldhave less control of the purse strings.Being considered for the TWO-Universityproposal are such projects as a multi-func¬tional community development corporation;new low-income housing with few high-risesconstructed before rehabilitation of manyexisting structures; an industrial park as well as other devices for attracting industryinto the community, promoting black own¬ership and management, And in generalaugmenting outside investment; a guidanceand counseling center for job placementand a training center for vocational andsemi-professional instruction with child¬care facilities; a Middle School with ex¬tensive advisory programs; and similarlynew health, welfare, legal and otherservices.The Woodlawn target area is bounded by60th St., 67th St., Lake Michigan, and Cot¬tage Grove Ave.The University’s RoleThe University’s own motives for assist¬ing TWO, according to involved sources,include the desire to create a stable black community on TWO-University terms; toshow the country that relations with theghetto here are excellent, unlike at Colum¬bia and elsewhere; and consequently tostrengthen its social science departmentsby attracting more of the best faculty andstudents and financial support for programs.Levi has also taken pride in pointing outthe students’ significant role throughout thesummer and into the academic year, call¬ing the work done by the data-gatheringteam, task force members, and partici¬pants in Public Affairs 291-2: The ModelCities Program in Woodlawn “constructiveactivism.” He and students and faculty in¬volved in the effort discussed its implica¬tions in a Wednesday evening discussionin Ida Noyes Hall.you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don’twant to think, there’s good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .^ 5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET BOOM HY 3-1933 jU. C. itKARATECLUBProfessional Japanese InstructorOrganizational Meeting8 P.M. • Oct. 2, East Lounge * Ida Noyes HallClasses in Ida Noyes HallMonday and WednesdayBeginners 7 P.M. Advanced 8:15 P.M.Starting Oct. 7LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 COTTAGE GROVE AVENUE955-45454*M ax (Brook.CO.Phones: CLEANERS • TAILORS • LAUNDERERSserving campus since 1917Ml 3-7447 J0I3- 17 E. 61st ST., near EllisFA 4-3500 * 174 E. 55th ST., newr Woodlawn ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★******** MARCH FORFREEDOM! ******** Saturday September 28March down Michigan AvenueRally at Grant Park 3:00 P.M.Assemble at State & Wacker 1:30 P.M.SHORELAND HOTELSpecial RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultySingle rooms from $8.00 dailyTwin rooms from $11.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveTOYOTA TEST DRIVE ONE - YOU’LL BE SWITCHEDALL MODELS - IMMEDIATE DELIVERYBOB NELSON MOTORS 7722 Stony Island 374-4555The Joseph R. Shapiro “Art To Live With’’ collection will be.on display September 30th through October 4th in Ida NoyesHall, to be distributed to students, faculty, and staff on October 4th.September 27, 1968 CHICAGO MAROON 7NEW TEXT BOOKS USEDSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS*—NOTE BOOKS—STATIONERY—ATTACHE & BRIEF CASES—SPORTING GOODS—STUDY LAMPS—GRAPH PAPERS—NY TIMES—MAGAZINES—GIFT ITEMSTYPEWRITERS SOLD—RENTED—REPAIREDPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH'SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57«h STREET2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANOEL HALLSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sunday 10 AM to 2:00 P.M.Special!For Back-toSchoolStyle Cut —Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400You won’t have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 bi ba of Georgetown U.African & Indian clothesbedspreads — sandals, etc.22 East Elm 10%discount SEPT. 28!Model DL22Robin Hood LightweightCB $07»5 *«■Made by Raleigh *Looking for a high-quality touring bicycle?This world-famous bicycle has all the features you want.Reliable Sturmey-Archer 3-speed hub with triggercontrol. Brooks leather saddle, Dunlop AmberwaHTires, front and rear caliper brakes, all steel tubingconstruction, front lamp bracket, pump, touring bag,double stay mudguard, three point chain anchorageand shock-stop rubber grips. Boy’s andgirl's models available in a choiceif sizes and colors.Only a Raleigh is [sally a I RaleighStArt's Cycle & Hobby Shops1634 E. 55th St.1710 E. 87th St. 363-7524SA 1-5883CHICAGQ MAROONin September 27, 1968 ... the new lightweight bikethat draws the sheers!kM * * >y<r it. 3 - BJW *: :SCHWINN RACERSCHWINN RACERBUY NOW ONEASY TERMS•ike riding time is herel And whatbetter way than to step out on thisnew lightweight with 3-speedgears, caliper brakes, Schwinntubular rims, and many other fun-filled features. 1 H! I\ m S Hi■■■■*«v.y* ^'v- v'-yare com-Art's Cycle & Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th St.1710 E. 87th St. 363-7524SA 1-5883SG Panel Attacks the AdministrationA broadside attack was made on theUniversity Tuesday at a Student Govern¬ment (SG) panel discussion of housing,women’s rights, University-Hyde Park re¬lationships, and other issues. About 250students turned out for the discussion.Len Handelsman, a graduate student insociology urged students to consider them¬selves as having the same interests aspoor black tenants since students likeblack people are temporary occupants. Hecharged that the University is using stu¬dents to create a high rent, middle-classneighborhood in Hyde Park.He also criticized what he charged isan administration plan to put 70 percentof Chicago students into dormitories withinthe next 20 years.Other speakers included Bill Jones, blackWoodlawn community organizer; David Ai¬ken; former Maroon editor; Sally Yagol,representative of Women’s Radical ActionProject; Jerry Lipsch, President of Student Government; and Robert Skeist, and RayTownlee, both of the Hyde Park Anti-DraftUnion.‘Whites Stay Out’Jones criticized what he called the in¬vasion of white interests into the Wood-lawn area. “If you’re white,” he said,“you better take the advice of he ad¬ministration and stay out of Woodlawn.If you’re black, Woodlawn is the placeto be.”He suggested that instead of sending peo¬ple into Woodlawn to ameliorate relations,the University should to work within itsown institution to end racism.Lipsch attacked the Student DisciplinaryCommittee for its “wholly paternalistic,Kafkaesque” nature, charging that thecommittee decided how to punish a per¬son by the type of person he appeaerdto be—proof of guilt beyond reasonabledoubt not being a requirement forpunishment. Lipsch also attacked the members ofthe committee as having no understandingof civil liberties or of life styles otherthan their own. The Dean of Undergrad¬uate Students, he said, who is the com¬mittee’s chairman, is also the interrogatorand the prosecutor.Sexual DiscriminationMiss Yagol, defending women’s rights,said that society is completely orientedShe cited as an example of the female’ssubordinate position the fact that fe¬male University employees must find andpay for babysitters while they work. She maintained that, if men were regardedas equals, services would be provided forthem.Miss \agol further criitcized the factthat a husband and wife cannot hold po¬sitions in the same department in the Uni¬versity and that, when a conflict of thistype arises, the man usually gets the job.Skeist called the draft the “channeling ofa student’s body and mind.” Townlee, de¬scribed the Guerilla Theater, a group thatuses drama as a means for discussion ofthe draft and related subjects.Aiken gave a history of Hyde Park-Woodlawn urban renewal.Campus Security GuardKilled by Unknown YouthAn air of tension prevails on campus inthe wake of the shooting of a security guardin front of the American Bar Center Sat¬urday.Students, already afraid to walk aroundoff campus, have become increasingly fear¬ful of being accosted on campus.Rumors of a black youth gang plot tokill “a cop a week” have spread amongcampus police, but the rumors are not sub¬stantiated by the details of the case madepublic.The guard killed was Walter W. Lovell,58, an employee of the Wells Fargo divi¬sion of Central Watch Service in Chicago.He was to go off duty at midnight, and heapparently walked out to his private car infront of the center (near Woodlawn and60th) to await relief. He was alone in thecar. University policeman Kenneth Burger,heard shots while riding on 59th and cameover to investigate. He found Lovell witha bullet wound in his chest and a slash onhis left arm running from wrist to elbow.Burger reported seeing three black youthsrunning from the scene as he approached,but police are unwilling to say positivelythat the youths were black.Lovell was dead on arrival at BillingsHospital.Although Lovell emptied his revolver athis assailants, there was no blood aroundthe scene to indicate whether he had wound¬ed any.Area 1 Homicide has several detectivesworking full time on the case, and they re¬port some definite leads. Police officialspraisied the “tremendous assist” they havereceived from the University policie.OFFICER’SCHAIR r- DIRECTORS# lib “"T 2f © mm-lllll CHAIR 1 ft *\_CREATIVEPLAYTHINGS CONTEMPORARYFURNITURE& ACCESSORIESBaldwin Kingery105 EAST OHIO 644-9103SEMINARY COOPERATIVEBOOKSTORE, INC.• theology •philosophy• political scienceand related fields• course books in philosophyL and political science5757 So. University Mon.- Fri. 12 noon 4 P.M. *P<n <uUtf (pity untotycu com tear9*eclatAiccU yuit&ii&t*ck aU tfAicufo ...*76* gOftK0? 'ZO'kSZ ^ettaunciKt5211 SouOt 'rllcMfier (?6wU667-400%minimum ujttn, etiuuvi howiSeptember 27, 1968 CHICAGO MAROON 9EDITORIALA TimeFor ReasonIt used to be that when a new school year began everyonewould sit around speculating on what the football seasonwould be like.Now they sit and speculate on when the first sit-in willoccur.The deans huddle and exchange opinions about what theadministration should do if a building is seized.The freshmen wonder where the action will be.The daily papers and the mens magazines call up theMaroon and ask what the issue is, who the agitators are,where the violence will be and if the University can survive.Since Columbia (you have heard that phrase before,haven’t you, “Since Columbia . . .”), the academic world andthe media have caught on to the idea of a student revolution.And that is fine. Students have been pushed around for toolong. It is time that they react. It is time that they demanda part in the decisions that affect them. Police Will FaceA Brutality TestThere is a demonstration tomorrow pro¬testing the behavior of the Chicago PoliceDepartment during the demonstrations lastmonth at the Democratic Convention.There will be charges of “police brutality”and charges that the Chicago Police De¬partment used force to suppress politicaldissent. One of those charges is untrue,the other true.There was very little police brutalityduring the demonstrations. Brutality im¬plies a lack of directing effort, and a sensethat the force involved is being used atrandom. That was quite obviously not thecase in Chicago last month. The policeknew what they were doing, which makestheir efforts all the more horrendous.What was involved here last month wasan effort by Mayor Richard J. Daley, en¬thusiastically supported by his policemen,to suppress dissent. It is true, of course,that there was provocation — studentswearing long hair, preferring peace to war,singing songs, holding hands, and evencalling other people dirty names — but itwas not the sort of provocation that causestrained men to retaliate. According to theChicago police forces their men were welltrained for demonstrations. Trained in ANALYSISeverything but standing still and listening,it appeared at the convention.Systematic Law BreakingWhat was most disturbing about the4Police Department’s actions in the dem¬onstration was their systematic qualityThe patrolmen violated their own regula¬tions, and the laws they are sworn to de-xfend on several occasions that this writersaw. In front of the Conrad Hiton, forexample, eight patrolmen were countedwho were not wearing their name tagsjTwo of those were not wearing theirbadges either, so that identifying them wasamost impossible. Other poicemen wereobserved fully ready for battle. Some werewearing non-regulation gloves of blackleather, so that they could hit demon¬strators and not hurt their hands.Continued on Page FifteenLETTERSBut we should be careful that we aren’t carried awaywith the mere idea of a student revolution. We should notplunge in and try to completely re-arrange this Universityonly because that’s what they’ve done at Columbia. And whenwe move we should know what we’re doing, and have a clearunderstanding of what we hope to accomplish.Certainly students at the University of Chicago have griev¬ances. The housing situation is impossible. The neighborhoodis unsafe. The bureaucracy is thick and callous. The communityis atomized. Students have little voice and no vote in thedecision-making even in the areas that affect only them.But as we look at our University we should be thinkingnot “Rebellion is the way students are changing their uni¬versities, so let us rebel,” but “There are certain, numerous,irksome problems, at this University; how can we solve them?”It may be that in the long run rebellion will be the answer.It may be that the administration is intransigent; that thefaculty is too jealous of its power to give any of it away; isis doubtful that the bureaucracy can be made to prove at all.But so far the University has been eager at least to talk aboutanything that angers the students. They yielded after a whileon the rank and IDA. They set up a student life committee tomeet with the dean of students. Last spring they replied withsurprising speed to the demands of the Black Student Allianceand the Committee for a Responsible University.It could be wrong. At least it is the faculty running theUniversity instead of some arbitrary board of regents. Thefaculty are here; they see students; every day; most of thembelieve very strongly in reasonable discourse. We LoveMayor DaleyAfter hearing the complaints of the radi¬cal left-wing element of our country againstthe recent police action in Chicago, we feelcompelled to review the shrewd reasoningbehind Mayor Daley’s impressive directionof the situation.Difficulties began when several groupsasked permission to use public facilities tovoice their opinions on matters of interestto the Democratic Party and the nation asa whole. Mayor Daley, anticipating the dis¬ruption this would inevitably cause, im¬mediately denied permits to any suchgroup. This included the hippies, the Yip-pies, those for an open convention, Mc¬Carthy and McGovern supporters, and allTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger Black"Business Manager: Jerry A. LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board:Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck,Timothy S. Kelley, Paula SzewczykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editor: John MoscowAssistant Business Manager:Ken ShermanAnd reason is still a force in the University. The teachersand most of the deans (if none of the bureaucrats) know thatand will use it to resist violent change. The professors havethe power; if they think they are right, the kind of violencestudents are likely to confront them with will not change theirminds.But reason and logical arguments are also forces for change.Demonstrations can call attention to the issues; taking overbuildings can dramatize them. But pure, unthinking voilenceis an anathema to the University." If the student cause is tosucceed here, reason must be our first and chief weapon.CHICAGO MAROON September 27, 1958 Founded in 1892. Published by Uni¬versity of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool year and intermittently through¬out the summer, except during thetenth week of the academic quarter andduring examination periods. Offices inRooms 303, 304, and 305 of Ida NoyesHall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III.60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free ofcharge. Subscriptions by mail $6 peryear. Non-profit postage paid at Chi¬cago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. Sing it a little better. such professional rabble rousers. Daley,like the Humphrey faction, early realizedthe need for uniformity of opinion. We can¬not support the simpering of the McCarthypeople who expect to be freely given theirright of expression.Daley’s clear view of the circumstancesis proved by the eruption of the violencethat was predicted by implication when heannounced the heavy security measuresthat would be taken. The mayor’s dutyis to uphold the law and protect the public,through police action, if necessary. Thedissenters did not have permits to be wherethey were and thus were there illegally.The law applies equally to all, and report¬ers who were present deserved the samebeatings necessary to disperse the demon¬strators. A number of newsmen, by theirshaggy hair and unkempt appearancesshowed themselves supporters of the at¬tempt of nihilistic hippie radicals to over¬throw the city. Government police is madeby those in government and these commonpeople, if they were truly concerned fortheir country, would have the considerationto refrain from injecting their disruptivethought.Not only the police action itself, but theform it took has been subjected to unfaircriticism. The police were forced by thehippie dissidents to use tear gas, Mace,and billie clubs with vigor. In all fairness,how can one expect a policeman, confrontedwith a seething, bloodthirsty .mob, to dis¬tinguish between demonstrators and thosewho are peacefully obeying police orders?It is obvious that in such a situation theinnocent must suffer if order is to be main¬tained. The restraint of the police may ac¬tually be admired when one considers thecrowd’s vile obscenities, to which theywere forced to listen. One wonders how farout of hand the criminal element of thiscountry has gotten when it becomesnecessary for police to continue to bealthose who are lying on the ground gassed,those entering police wagons, and those al¬ready arrested, until they are bloody andmaimed, in order to control them. We canfeel only disgust and sadness when we seehow the democratic way is being destroyedby those criminals.At least we can be thankful that thereare still people in this country with thecourage to say who can speak and whecannot.Greg Hartman 71Terry Langhoff '7111,1 t » i i t l : ■ J > - i > * •Guilt Catharted in NSA DelegationBy SUSIE SCHMIDTCollege Press ServiceWASHINGTON (CPS) - To judge fromtheir behavior at the 21st Annua) Congressof the National Student Association, thestudents who are called the “leaders” oftheir college and university student bodiesare feeling guilty:Guilty about their middle-class originsand the values they inherited from theirparents;Guilty about the contempt and hostilitytheir society and their schools have shownblacks and other minority groups in thepast, and those institutions’ remainingcomplicity in racism today;Guilty about their avoidance of a directconfrontation with the hated draft by theacceptance of student deferments;And mostly guilty about their own yearsof passing resolutions against what theywere ashamed of, instead of workingagainst it in an active and committed way.The 900 students from 250 schools whogathered at the University of Kansas lastmonth for their annual meeting cathartedtheir guilt in many ways: they participatedin “sensitivity training” and role-playingsessions; they inhaled great quantities ofmarijuana; they burned a handful of draftcards; they took a collection and gave themoney away to local citizens driving pastthe campus one night; two of them evenhad nervous breakdowns.Institutional RacismProbably their deepest guilt feelingswere aroused by what has come to becalled “white racism” — the roots ofhatred and discrimination in the heart ofsocial institutions as well as in overac-By SUSIE SCHMIDTWASHINGTON—Next month the Su¬preme Court will hear a draft case thatmay affect hundreds of young men aroundthe country, whose verdict will almostsurely deal a blow to the Selective ServiceSystem and the procedures it has followedduring recent months in reclassifyingprotesters.In an unusual development for such acase, the defendant, a 24-year-old divinitystudent, and the prosecution, attorneys forthe Justice Department, have both recom¬mended the same holding: that the decisionof a lower court to uphold his reclassifica¬tion to 1-A and his subsequent inductionbecause of his protest activity be reversed.The Justice Department, in recommend¬ing reversal, has collided with the Selec¬tive Service and its director, Lewis B. Her-shey, who maintain that local boards havea right to reclassify “those who engage inillegal activity” as delinquents—an actionthat puts them at the head of the list ofpriority for induction.The American Civil Liberties Union,which represents Oestereich, is fighting thereclassification on several grounds and onseveral levels. It argues that:• The declaration of delinquency and re¬classification is invalid because it is puni¬tive and therefore cannot be undertakenwithout the due process safeguards to theregistrant required by the Constitution(counsel, confrontation and cross-examina¬tion, and impartial tribunal and so on).• That the act of returning a draft cardis speech protected by the First Amend¬ment. Evidence here, among other things,is the fact that in the original Selective Ser¬vice Act after World War I “failure to pos¬sess (have on one’s person, as it is now in¬terpreted) a Registration Certificate (draftcard)” was not on its face illegal, but wasmerely evidence (to be investigated) of fail¬ure to register, which was illegal.The ACLU lawyers would like to seethose sections of the draft laws that providefor violation for not having a draft card onone's person (rather than not having reg¬istered) and that provide for delinquencyreclassification for persons who have failedto perform some step in the registrationprocess declared unconstitutional, and they tions. When a black student from the Uni¬versity of Alabama challenged his school’sdelegation to the Congress on the groundsthat it was all-white and had not soughtblack students to come to the conferenceand be active in student government, theCongress voted to place him on the Ala¬bama delegation and throw one of theregular delegates off, even though theblack had not applied for the position orshown interest in the student governmentat school. The students seemed to thinkthat the student government should haverecruited black delegates actively, andshould be penalized for not having done so.In the spirit, other delegations beganshallenging their own right to representbecause they had no blacks in their ranks.One group, from Maryland, issued a state¬ment giving up their voting rights because“we realize that the University of Mary¬land is inherently a racist institution inits admission policies, student attitudes,and administrative and faculty personnel.”The Congress passed a resolution calling“institutional racism” — the subconsciousperpetuation of discrimination by most so-cal institutions and the complicity of mostuniversities in this process — “the mostcritical problem facing our society.” Itsaid that in order to be seated at nextyear’s Congress, each delegation will haveto show that they have “done somethingtoward ending racism on their campus”— and, presumably, will have to containblack representatives.The delegates also directed the NSA na¬tional office to plan programs during theyear aimed at attacking institutional rac-raise in their brief, filed with the Courtlast month, far-reaching questions aboutthe consistency of draft provisions withConstitutional guarantees.Justice Dept. Cites ExemptionThe Justice Department brief, filed lastweek, admits that inconsistencies existedbetween the provision for exemption(which, according to Solicitor General Er¬win Griswold, is guaranteed by Congressand not subject to local board interfer¬ence) and the provision for reclassification.It suggests, however, that in such casesas this one, where individuals have per¬manent exemptions, those exemptions musttake precedence over the board’s right toreclassify. Thus, the case would not applyto students who have only deferments un¬til they are out of school, not exemptions.The Justice Department says, however,that serious question may be case on theconstitutionality of delinquency reclassifi¬cation as a general procedure by such afinding in this particular case.ACLU Charges UnconstitutionalitySuch unconstitutionality is the ACLU’smajor contention, because of a third pro¬vision in the Selective Service Act whichprohibits court review of draft disputesbefore induction. The lawyers say delin¬quency reclassification fits the definitionof punishment set down in previous courtcases (retribution and deterrence, amongother things) and therefore is illegal sincepunishment cannot be meted out in thiscountry without a trial and due process oflaw.The prosecution never really deals withthis question (other than saying it mightcome up), but recommends that the Courtavoid having to decide that difficult legalquestion by merely saying the exemptionof divinity students takes precedence inthis case over a board’s reclassification.That “easy way out’ of a thorny case isprobably exactly what the court will dowhen it hears the arguments and rules inOctober, since the practice of the court isto decide the case by the least controver¬sial and upsetting route. But if the justicesdo it that way, the question will doubtlesscome up again—next time the defendentwill be someone who doesn’t have the ex¬emption and can fight on the issue. ism and at determining its sources andcures.Frustrated PoliticiansThe students who attended the Congress,a majority of them connected in some waywith “student government”, have also felt“left out” of the political action in thisyear when students are more interestedin politics — both electoral and issue-oriented — than ever before. NSA itself(which in many important ways is anentity quite separate from its constituents,although it is theoretically owned and con¬trolled by them) is staffed by intelligentliberal-to-radical former students who thisyear have found themselves frustrated bytheir non-participatory political position.That non-participation has been forcedon NSA by its tax-exempt status. As anon-profit organization which accepts gov¬ernment and foundation grants, it is pro¬hibited by law from legislative lobbyingand other political activities.The August Congress decided to do some¬thing about the frustration of non-partici¬pation by dividing NSA into two corpora¬tions. The first, which will retain the nameNational Student Association, will be tax-exempt but will not accept grants. It willtherefore be allowed to engage in a formof political activity on a national, localor state level except the endorsing of spe¬cific candidates for public office.NSA will be supported financially bymembership dues (ranging from $21 to $250depending on sdhool size) and NSA’s ex¬tensive services division, which offers suchthings as a student record club, discountson travel and lodging in Europe, studentinsurance, and booking of speakers andbig-name entertainment.The Justice brief also puts much of theblame for the tricky legal situation on Gen¬eral Hershey. The Department has pre¬viously argued that his October 24 letter tolocal boards, recommending that they re¬classify and induct protesters posthaste,was “a statement of personal opinion only”and not mandatory or binding. In casesbrought against Hershey last spring by theNational Student Association, the courtruled that local boards were not legallyaffected by that directive.Now, however, the Justice Department,in a deviation from its spring position,agrees with the opposition that Hershey’smemorandum, for all its “informal” status,was indeed in effect “inviting local boardsto use their reclassification powers in apunitive way”—using them to “get the badguys.” It urges the court to take into ac¬count when it considers the case the factthat (as the ACLU counts) at least 76 of the650 men who turned in draft cards in Octo¬ber are now involved in legal proceedingsbecause they have been reclassified, andmany others probably just went into theArmy because thy couldn’t afford courtcosts—all of which goes to show that theletter had some effect on the boards, andthy weren’t “just acting randomly andindividually” as was claimed last spring.Decision Will Have Wide EffectThe Oestereich case is the first of allthese, perhaps the only one, to reach the“court of last resort,” the Supreme Court.Its decision will affect hundreds of othercases now in court. If it decides on thenarrow point of law recommended by theJustice Department, that will still affectperhaps 1000 cases, according to officials.If it should decide to tackle the whole prob¬lem of inconsistencies and illegalities in theSelective Service law in general terms, asadvocated by the ACLU, its ruling will af¬fect every reclassification instance now inprocess.Either way, General Hershey has losthis battle this time. Although the JusticeDepartment gave him eight pages in itsbrief, explaining his side of the story andstating the Selective Service case for up¬holding the reclassification, it would not lethim enter his own brief to the Court. The second corporation to be called theNational Student Institute will in effectbe the old NSA. It will operate a pro¬grams funded by foundation and govern¬ment grants. NSI will not have membersas such but will offer services only toNSA members.Perhaps the most significant of NSI’sprograms will be a new Center for Edu¬cational Reform which will pull togetherand extend NSA’s past activities in theacademic area. Educational reform — stu¬dent participation in determination of cur¬riculum, teacher evaluation by students,independent study programs, experimentalcourses, free universities — has alwaysbeen NSA’s strong area of activity. Itstutorial projects in the South, though oftenunpublicized, have been operating foryears, and it has been doing research onexperimental education almost since theorganization was founded. Its work is nowbeing expanded into the Center through athree-year $315,000 grant from the FordFoundation.NSA: Another SDS?!More exciting to most of its members,however, will be the activity of the newNSA — the “political activist” half of theorganization. Its first project, accordingto Congress coordinator A1 Milano, will beraising money to campaign in as manystates as possible this fall for specificissues.“We want to get students working onstate and local levels for issues like the18-year-old vote and stopping the war,”Milano said. The first targets for such ac¬tivity will probably be New York, Oregonand California (where another issue wall beGovernor Reagan’s attempts to raise tuitionand clamp down politically on the stateuniversity and colleges).The local political activity may serve an¬other purpose for NSA — making it an or¬ganization that gets action instead of talk,that has some effect in activating students.The feeling many NSA staffers and evenmore members convey is that they wouldlike to be another SDS in some sense—withthe same success in giving a sense of pur¬pose and demanding the same loyalty.Many of them don’t like the SDS rhetoricand haven’t yet accepted violence as anoperating tactic, but they agree with theradical group’s conclusions about the evilsof institutions and the goal of participatorydemocracy.“The difference,” Milano says, “is oneof style. We’ve been saying the same thingsabout Columbia that SDS has, but wecouldn’t get the organized effect thatcaught national attention and got results.And a national organization shouldn’t havethe power to do things on that level. Thereason SDS can do them is that it worksthrough local situations, not through thenational office.”Now NSA would like the same kind ofpolitical leverage for students on a locallevel. It hopes its new “activist” Corpor¬ation can accomplish that by establishinga “meaningful student political arm” onmany local fronts, or (even more impor¬tant) working to encourage and help thosethat already exist.In fact, of course, NSA remains identi¬fied in students’ minds as a “straight,moderate” student group—legacy of its in¬volvement with CIA money and its legalidentification with stolid student govern¬ment organizations. An example of the dif¬ference is the organization’s willngness totake and work with the “chickenshit liberalmoney” of foundations and such govern¬ment agencies as the Office of EconomicOpportunity that is offered so freelv to it(not to SDS) in the wake of such things asthe Columbia upheaval. NSA believes itshould take the money and use it to furtherits gials, rather than reject it on principleas would SDS.That willingness may symbolize the future of NSA—it will indeed enable it i >work for student power and educational re¬form, but it will probably keep it out of thepolitical activist mainstream where it solongs to be.High Court Draft Reversal PossibleJiSeptember 27, 1968 CHICAGO MAROONDINNER& SNACKSHeadquarters ForU. of C. StudentsRIBSBIBS5300 DORCHESTER»PICK UP★DELIVERY20 Different ItemsCALLFOR MAILED MENUOPEN 7 DAYSEncounterFor those interested inexploring Sensation a-wareness first hand agroup oceanic experiencewill occur at the Mc¬Cormick YWCA, 30WestOak, Auditorium, 2ndF loor.$2.00 contribution8:00 p.m, Oct. 12.»vTiV vav /ay• /Wv v.w,BE PRACTICAL/BUY£ UTILITY CLOTHES| Complete selection of^sweatshirts, rain parkas,!r 5tennis shoes, underwear,,.| jackets, camping equip-jiment, wash pants, sport?[shirts, pajamasI shoes, sweat pants[etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE ft| OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30 - I *>I 364 E. 63rd PL 2-4744?StudentCo-opBookstoreService #4SoonStudent LoansHrs. 9 A.M. - 10 P.M.g Reynolds Club:Same Day 5 Hr. CleaningNo Extra ChargeCustom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd. 752-6933 Hyde Pa.rU Y.M.CfiMoo E. 53rd. St.Coni ac If;FREE - EDISON LIGHT BULBSwith billHOUSEWARES-PAINT-HARDWARE-SHELVINGEVERYTHING FOR YOUR APARTMENTOVER 35,000 ITEMS IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES(German d ^ce Jdardv1377 53rd Street!wareBU 8-2132V% 12 FACULTY FAMILIESENROLL YOUR CHILD INA SECULAR JEWISHSUNDAY SCHOOLSOUTHSIDE SCHOOLOF JEWISH STUDIESFull Curriculum1st thru 9th Grades• Jewish History• Literature• Song and DanceClasses Meet At TheHYDE PARKNEIGHBORHOOD CLUB5480 S. Kenwood 10:30 A.MFOR INFORMATION CALLLois Soglin ES 5-2831Lawrence Bloom, Director752-5868CHICAGO MAROON September 27, 1968m•ifrr Two Appointedin Public AffairsCharles U. Daly, vice president for de¬velopment and public affairs, Wednesdaynamed Eddie N. Williams and Michael E.Claffey assistant vice presidents for devel¬opment and public affairs.Williams is now director of the Office ofEqual Employment Opportunity and specialasisstant to the Deputy Undersecretaryfor Administration in the State Department.Claffey is the director of public informa¬tion here.Williams was born in Memphis, receiveda B.S. degree in journalism from the Uni¬versity of Illinois in 1954, and was a re¬porter and editor before being appointed tonumber of government posts. He was a fel¬low of the American Political Science Asso-a number of governmetn posts.In 1961, Williams served as a protocol of¬ficer in the Office of the Chief of Protocolin the State Department. During 1964-65 hewas a staff assistant to the Assistant Sec¬ retary of State, Bureau of Near Easternand South Asian Affairs.Claffey has been director of public infor¬mation since 1967. He has been at the Uni¬versity since 1965, serving first as editor ofChicago Today and director of developmentpublications. Secondary Pupils AidedWelcomeBackStudentsandStaffANDERSON’SBULKOSERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY GASOLINEAT LOWEST PRICESFEATURING THEBULKO PANTRYA complete Grocery StoreOPEN 24 HOURS57th & COTTAGE GROVE Welcome Back! Students and StaffWALLERGALLERYinvites you to browse through the largestselection of graphics in Hyde Park• Chagall• Mio• Kollwitz et al.finest custom framingreasonable prices5300 So. Biackstone The special Summer school Program, toincrease black student enrollment has end¬ed and Special Activities Program has be¬gun. Both are part of a four-point programoutlined last spring to increase black stu¬dent enrollment, funded with $750,000 outof general University funds.Directed by Larry Hawkins, the seven-week summer program consisted of a tutor-ing-educational program for 83 Chicagohigh school students, and was staffed withseven University students and ten Chicagoarea administrators and teachers. Hawkins,who teaches at Carver High School, is apart-time employe of the Chicago Boardof Education.A full-time summer school, the programincluded testing, lecture discussions andcourses in black history as the fundamen¬tal academic studies involving all students. Supplemental tutoring in basic academicswas also offered.The student body was divided into sevengroups of eleven to 15 students each ac¬cording to age and individual interest. As¬signed to each group was a teacher andan undergraduate assistant.Group activities included tours of thecity’s museums, tours of University build¬ings, visits to theatres, and luncheons inethnic restaurants to familiarize studentswith University faculty, high school prin¬cipals and other guests.The Special Activities Program, basical¬ly an extended summer program on a part-time and strengthened tutoring basis, isdesigned to augment the public school edu¬cation enough to allow all students in theprogram to gain admission to colleges.Weekly contact with parents is made.DO 3-7446-sS Burlapcomes in 12 colors atThrows fabyar 89< yardfrom Indian prints and stripes$8 and $10fabyar /HARPER COURTSomething More> banjos• dulcimers• guitars• instructionclass & privateharmonicas•mandolins* records• song books• instrument building classesaccessories A«_ _the fret shopin Sight and SoundRecordersand qualitiesail sizesKungMoecketc. ft5210 So. Harper HARPER COURT NO 7-1060September 27, 1968V*. ' ) <■<•>» > I : 4 CHICAGO MAROONk l I > ‘ i ' ’ 13OPEN HOUSE FORGRADUATE STUDENTS* * *Sunday, October 134.00 - 6.00 RM.Hillel House 5715 WoodlawnWE RENTEVERYTHINGIN TOOLSUTILITY TRAILERSFOR RENT CAN’T AFFORD NEW FITRY THECATH0UC SA1VA6E MlTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DA3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41s JRNITURE ? |HADilLY iSTREETHfjttzies Jiower Shop"FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREET MI 3-4020 | KARATE ! !'1 Inexpensive | jil 1 Expert | ;| | Instruction 'r ;1 1 U.C. Karate Club Jr jLAKE PARK RENTALS, INC.6633 SO. COTTAGE GROVE AVENUECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60637DAILY 7 A M. TO 8 P.M.SUNDAY 8 A M. TO 3 P.M. PHONE667-8700• Leica • Nikon • Pentax• Bolex • Zeiss • Canon• Tape Recorders24 hour processingMost complete photo shopon the South Side1342 E 55th HY3-9259INTERNATIONAL HOUSEGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDT obacc o s-C andie s- StationeryNewspapers-MagazinesCosmeticsOpen M-F Noon-6:45 lentCo-opBookstore!Service #5Buy or take onConsignmentYour BooksHrs. 9 A.M. - 10 P.M.|Reynolds Club ^FENSIN LAMPANDSHADE SPECIALISTSDesk and study lampsLamps repaired—custom made shades5210 So. Harper 324-7722 Only the ancient craft heritages of Africa, LatinAmerica, India and Asia can offer the diversity andwealth of shopping excitement you find atSticks and Stones. Everything is handcrafted.Everything is something very special.“Come discover your special treasure."A new international arts and crafts centerJEWELRY * HANDICRAFTS * SCULPTUREHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324*7600Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. daily; Noon to 5 p.m. SundayWORSHIP ON CAMPUS AND IN THE COMMUNITYBAPTISTSundays11:00 A.M. — First Baptist Church, 935 E. 50th Street11:00 A.M. — Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 Woodlawn Avenue11:00 A.M. — Woodlawn Baptist Church, 6207 University AvenueCHRISTIAN SCIENCESundays10:45 A.M. — Tenth Church of Christ Scientist, 5640 Blackstone AvenueDISCIPLES OF CHRISTSundays11:00 A.M. — University Church, 5655 University AvenueEASTERN ORTHODOXSS Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church7351 South Stony Island AvenueSundays9:30-10:30 A.M. - Matins10:30 A.M. - 12:00 M. -- Divine LiturgyHoly Days9:00-10:00 A.M.EPISCOPALSundays9:30 A.M. — Sung Eucharist at Joseph Bond Chapel(Adjacent to Swift Hall) (Breakfast following)10:00 A.M. — St. Paul’s and The Redeemer Parish, 4945 Dorchester Ave.Wednesdays7:30 A.M. — Holy Communion, Brent House, 5540 Woodlawn Avenue(Breakfast following)Thursdays12:00 P.M. — Holy Communion, Joseph Bond ChapelJEWISHSabbath Services at Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn AvenueFridaysSundown — Orthodox7:30 P.M. — Reform7:30 P.M. — ConservativeSaturdays9:15 A.M. — Orthodox9:30 A.M. — Conservative-Liberal (weekly discussions) LUTHERAN (Cont'd)Sundays10:00 A.M. — St. Gregory of Nyssa Campus Parish (Missouri Synod),Communion at Graham Taylor Chapel, 58th Street andUniversity Avenue (Parish Dinner following)Wednesdays9.50 A.M. Chapel at the Lutheran School of Theology Auditorium1100 E. 55th Street7:00 P.M. — Communion at Augustana Lutheran ChurchThursdays7:00 P.M. — Communion at Augustana Lutheran ChurchMETHODISTSundays11:00 A.M. — Hyde Park Methodist Church, 1451 E. 54th Street11:00 A.M. — St. James Methodist Church, 4611 Ellis Avenue11:00 A.M. — Woodlawn Methodist Church, 1208 E. 64th StreetPRESBYTERIANSundays11:00 A.M. — First Presbyterian Church, 6400 Kimbark Avenue11:00 A.M. — United Church of Hyde Park, 1448 E. 53rd Street11:00 A.M. — Sixth United Presbyterian Church, 1210 E. 62nd StreetROMAN CATHOLICMasses at Calvert House, 5735 University AvenueSundays8:30 A.M., Calvert House; 10:30 A.M. and 12:00 M., Breasted Hall;5:00 P.M., Bond ChapelDaily7:30 A.M., 12:00 M., and 5:10 P.M. at Calvert HouseSOCIETY OF FRIENDSSundays11:00 A.M. — 57th Street Meeting House, 5615 Woodlawn Avenue12:00 M. — Convention,-singing or forum12:45 P.M. — “Potluck” LunchUNITARIANSundays11:00 A.M. — First Unitarian Church, 5650 Woodlawn AvenueROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPELLUTHERANSundays 59th and Woodlawn9:15 and — Augustana Lutheran Church of Hyde Park THE UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE11:00 A.M. (L.C.A.), 5500 Woodlawn Avenue Sundays — 11:00 A.M.A non-denominational service held each Sunday the University is in session, and open to the publicUNITED CHURCH OF CHRISTSundays11:00 A.M. — United Church of Hyde Park, 1448 E. 53rd St.11:00 A.M. — Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 Woodlawn Avenue11:00 A.M. — United Church of Christ, 4608 GreenwoodAvenue14 (rtM'C'A AVtJt'oVw' aaffertbeHflr'iwfv mmsis* M1 BROTHER Aids Starving in BiafraCAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CPS) — Impatientwith the failure of governments to cometo the aid of the starving in Biafra, agroup of students, churchmen and NewEmgalnd citizens have banded with Eu¬ropean groups to send a ship filled withfood and supplies to the tiny Africanstate this month.The project, called BROTHER, begun about a month ago, is under the directionof Phil Whitten, a married graduate stu¬dent at Harvard University. BROTHER isa loose alignment of several dozen Biafraaid groups which sprang up around NewEngland after reports of starving childrencaught world-wide attention.The group is working with Catholic andother benevolent groups in Western Eu-Protest Brutality TomorrowContinued from Page TenOthers, more menacingly carried tworevolvers — one their service revolverand the other non-regulation. Presumablythis was carried so that persons could beshot, and the autopsy not show a bulletfrom a service revolver. It makes onewonder about the charges coming from theblack ghettoes all the time, how kids al¬legedly draw guns on policemen and arethen shot down, having “threatened” thepolicemen. How many of the kids are shotby policemen’s private pistols, with theirmurders unavenged?We can do nothing about the Mayor ofthis city for several years, but we can puthim, and the rest of the city, on noticethat flagrant violations of the law will notbe tolerated by self-constituted S. A. orS. S. men any more than by the Mafiaor the rioters in the street that so manypeople are worried about.We can go down to Grant park tomorrowto protest, but that is only a token. Everystudent, every faculty member of this uni¬versity is a citizen of a city where localauthorities think the U. S. constitution in¬applicable. This can not be permitted tocontinue. Legal means, including personalliability suits against the responsible au¬ thorities and against the city of Chicagoshould be filed by those people who wereinjured during the demonstration. In futurecases everyone must be prepared to coun¬ter-attack — legally — against those whoviolate the law in the name of the law.Since they have the preponderance of force,and since for most of us the goal is notimmediate violent revolution we must usesuch legal means for change as are yetavailable.Friday, September 27STUDENT ACTIVITIES NIGHT: Various student orga¬nizations offer freshmen an opportunity to discovertheir merits at 7:30 p.m. In Ida Noyes.Saturday, September 28MARCH: Buses to Free Chicago March leave Wood¬ward Court Parking lot at 12:30. March will as¬semble at State and Wacker at 1:30.CONCERT: Paul Butterfield Blues Concert. MadnelHall, 8:30 p.m. Remaining tickets $4. Standing roommay be sold.Sunday, September 29FOLK DANCING: International Dancing, Ida NoyesCloister Club 7:30 p.m.HILLEL: Open House; For new and returning stu¬dents, a buffet supper. 5715 Wood lawn 5 p.m.Monday, September 30SDS: First Chapter meeting Ida Noyes 7:30 p.m.Broaden your Epicurean HorizonsMurat Somay’s9atop the Hyde Park Bank BuildingTurkish DelicaciesKilich Shish Swordfish'Shish KebabKaridex Shish "Shrimp''Lule KebobPatlijan Kami Yarilk"Stuffed eggplant"Fun CocktailsComplete Wine Cellar1525 East 53rd Street 955-5151 rope to fill and staff a ship and send it toBiafra, distribute the food and supplies,and bring back 1000 orphan children.The ship, a Danish liner named KingOlaf V, is due to depart from Copen¬hagen September 30 with 1500 pounds offood and 300 volunteers from the U. S.and Europe abroad.It will land at Calabar on the Africancoast, a port city now under Nigerian con¬trol since Nigeria has been working tocrush the revolt of Biafrans who secededfrom Nigerian control. According to Whit¬ten, Calabar is the only place they canland since Biafra has no ports; but hesaid the group has received assurancesthat they will be able to unload since theirmission is nonpolitical: “We’ll feed any¬one who is starving, no matter whichside he’s on.” icopter and truck. The 300 volunteers (whowill be half Americans, half Europeans)will be in charge of distributing the foodin villages and towns. Most of them,Whitten said, will stay in Africa for severalweeks; a few, more highly skilled in firstaid and other social work, may stay aslong as a year.So far, Whitten says, the group, whichincludes students from Harvard, BostonUniversity, Wellesley, Brandeis, Smith Col¬lege and Tufts University, and a WestCoast contingent from UCLA, Santa Fe,raised about $3,000 in six days’ work.The ship’s stock will be unloaded by hel¬ “It’s interesting,” he said, “that the oneday we stood in the Commons area atBoston, we collected $1100 in an afternoonWhen we stationed someone downtown inthe financial district, we got almost nocontributions.Putting you first, keeps us firstSEE IT NOWTHE NEW 'ANTI-THEFT’’69 CHEVROLET5500 LAKE PARKDo 3 8600DAILY f-9OPEN SUNDAYRIGHT ON CAMPUSFOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS URGE ORSMALL - AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL¬MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICEIII LOBBY" AD” BUILDINGTEL Ml 3-0800,EXT. 2301, 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICESEXCEPT NOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETSSft*mbef,Zl, 1968 CHICAGO MAROONAact*polt<Hv &uwvd kimba h k ll53net Stneet at *7tJoac(lauMt^¥(fde Pan£& 'puendltf, S&ofifautfy (fatten,WITH COUPON1 Qt. HYDROX POPDiet orRegularLIMIT ONE 11< (PLUSDEPOSITALLFLAVORSMR. G.CERTIFIED SUPER MARKET1226 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.WITH COUPONPay Regular PriceFor CAR WASHGet second oneFREEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4WITH COUPON9 VoltTRANSISTOR BATTERY006*1REGULAR 394 EACHAMERICAN RADIO & TVLABORATORY1300 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. For The BestPizzain Hyde ParkNICKY’S RESTAURANT & PIZZA1208 E. 53FOR TAKE OUT ORDERSPHONE FA 4-5340WITH COUPOHRAIN BONNETSREGULAR 29cLIMIT 2 12*PAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.WITH COUPONFREE DUPLICATE KEYBuy one Key at Regular Price 35<t2nd Duplicate KeyFREEANDERSON ACE HARDWARE1304 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. WITH COUPONCOUNTRY DELIGHTIce Cream A A aVz Gallon O O VLIMIT ONEMR. G.CERTIFIED SUPER MARKET1226 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.ALLFLAVORSWITH COUPONPk. 3 FLASH CUBES$2.25 LISTLIMIT 2 99*PAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.with couponIMPORTED FROM FRANCEBEAUJOLAIS BURGUNDY66 Vintage98*FIFTH53 KIMBARK LIQUORS1214 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. WITH COUPONCREST TOOTH PASTEREGULAR 35CLIMIT 2 19*PAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4WITH COUPONONE SWEATER CLEANED65*2ND SWEATER CLEANED FREEKIMBARK PLAZALAUNDERETTE & CLEANERS1213 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.WITH COUPONPay Regular PriceFor CAR WASHGet second oneFREEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.WITH COUPONUP TO 36” LIGHT IVORY PLASTICWINDOW SHADE6 FT. LONG 98*(Cut to measure 25* extra)ANDERSON ACE HARDWARE1304 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. WITH COUPONBeautifully Cleaned PressedTROUSERS OR SKIRTS 85<tSECOND FREEREGULAR TOTAL VALUE $1.70LIMIT 4 PIECES EACHPUBLIC CLEANERS1310 E. 53-1380 E. 53-1457 E. 51GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. WITH COUPONCOUNTRY DELIGHTBREAD21*WheatWhiteRyeSandwich REGULAR 28*MR. G.CERTIFIED SUPER MARKET1226 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. WITH COUPONJOCKEY BRANDMOCK TURTLECOTTON SHIRTS*i 99ASSORTED COLORSLIMIT 3REGULAR $2.50GABES INC. FOR MEN & BOYS1216 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.WITH COUPON15< OFFon Gallon ofMILKMR. G.CERTIFIED SUPERMARKET1226 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. j WITH COUPONYour Choice Of M50Worth Of FlowersForOO*1MITZIE’S FLOWER SHOP1308 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4. J WITH COUPONBLATZ BEER6-12 OZ. NO DEPOSIT BOTTLES79*53 KIMBARK LIQUORS1214 E. 53GOOD THRU MON. SEPT. 30. WITH COUPONREGULAR 29CBUFFIRIN15*PAR REXALL DRUG STORE1204 E. 53GOOD THRU FRI. OCT. 4.:*6ABOUT THE MIDWAYNew Stagg Field NamedA new Stagg Field, named for the“Grand Old Man” of sports, received freshcovering of historic topsoil from the oldStagg Field. Dedication of the new field,the first step in a planned modernizationof athletic facilities, took place at 10:30a.m. Saturday, September 21.New Stagg Field, as it is called, islocated at the western end of a five-blockarea bounded by East 55th and East 56thStreets and Cottage Grove and South Green¬wood Avenues. Planned for the remainderof the area is a “Student Village.” *Facilities in the new field include:• A 440-yard running track;• A combination football-soccer field in¬side the track;• A baseball field, east of the track, forvarsity inter-collegiate games;• Four touch football fields east of thevarsity baseball diamond to be used forintramural football and softball contests;• And six regulation-size tennis courtsand six practice courts located west of therunning track.Stagg, a football, baseball and trackcoach at Chicago for 41 years, is in theFootball Hall of Fame. But Stagg is mostdearly remembered for his moral feats. A proponent of the “Behave Yourself’philosophy, Stagg never smoked, drank orswore. Stagg’s sense of morality had sucha profound effect on his players, that evenafter graduation they would snuff out theircigarettes when they saw him approaching.“Live in a way that makes you feel goodand get your fun out of feeling good,”Stagg preached. He died on March 17, 1965at the age of 102.Sachs Name to Fermi PostRobert G. Sachs, the theoretical physi¬cist, has been appointed director of theEnrico Fermi Institute at the University.Sachs Professor of Physics at the Uni¬versity and in the Enrico Fermi Institute,will succeed Roger H. Hildebrand. On Oc¬tober 1, Hildebrand has resigned the Fer¬mi Institute directorship to devote moretime to his research in high energyphysics.Hildebrand, who has served as directorof the Fermi Institute since 1965, will bea Guggenheim Fellow at the Universityof California at Berkeley during 1968-69.Sachs left his post as associate labor¬atory director for high energy physics atArgonne National Laboratory o nJuly 1.Sachs joined the University faculty in 1964, shortly after he became an associatelaboratory director at Argonne Nationalof physics at the University of Wisconsin.His book, Nuclear Theory, published ear¬lier in his career when he was workingin nuclear physics, is considered a stan¬dard work in this field.New Rules on 'Incompletes'George Playe, dean of undergradu¬ate students, announced that appropriateruling bodies of the College have adopteda new regulation concerning the removalof incompletes for graduating students.The regulation states that a student whohas grades of incomplete in courses re¬quired for graduation must make up the in¬complete at least one quarter prior to thequarter in which he expects to receive adegree.A student who receives an incomplete inthe quarter immediately preceding thequarter of graduation must remove the in¬complete by the end of the fourth week ofthe following quarter, i.e. the quarter ofgraduation. It is the responsibility of thestudent to ascertain from the registrarwhether the instructor has submitted aquality grade. Students for whom this regulation pre¬sents special problems with respect tograduation in December, 1968 are urged toreport these problems to their adviser. Theregulation will be in full force as of theMarch, 1969 commencement.PRC Gets $450,000 from FordThe University has received a $450,000grant from the Ford Foundation for theUniversity’s Pouplation Research Center(PRC).Phillip M. Hauser, professor of sociologyand director of the PRC, said the grantwould provide:• $237,000 for salaries, equipment, andexpenses to support the work of PRC staffmembers;• $170,000 to help provide fellowshipsfor some 20 students seeking degrees in so¬ciology while concentrating on demograph¬ic research, and• $43,000 to allow the PRC to act as con¬sultant and liaison to similar programsthat are being started at the University ofthe Philippines, the University of Singa¬pore, and Chulalongkorn University in Thai¬land, and to be an adviser to other pro¬grams.MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856 HOBBY CENTERSLOT RACING HDQ.CHEMICAL APPARATUS “H.O” “N” TRAINROCKETS &ROCKET SUPPLIESARTS & CRAFTSTOYS, MODELS,GAMES, ETC.OPEN SUNDAYS2116 E. 71st 493-6633 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorA MEMORANDUMTO: STUDENT AND FACULTY WIVESRE: UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT (An Invitation)At The University of Chicago, wives of students, faculty, residents and interns, constitute a highly appreciated group among the severalthousand people employed on the regular staff.University SALARIES are fully competitive, with provision for regular merit increases and frequent pay range improvements. (Add to thisthe transportation savings in both time and money.)University regular employment BENEFITS are better than competitive, including 3 WEEKS VACATION, PAID SICK LEAVE, REDUCEDTUITION for University courses, FREE BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD and many others. Employees also participate in the University'smany activities and functions.There is a great variety of employment opportunity at the University. Typical positions include:TECHNICAL POSITIONS in research and clinical laboratories for those with experience and/or with several courses inchemistry, bacteriology, microbiology, etc. (Call MI 3*0800> ext. 4446)OFFICE POSITIONS of many kinds for those with good typing, lite shorthand, dictaphone, bookkeeping or related skills.(Call MI 3*0800, ext. 4442)Although we have some openings for part*time workers, the greatest choice of employment is for those who can work full*time, and whoplan to work for a year or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the University Personnel Otfice at 956 E. 58th Street.Hours: 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday.Of course the University is an equal opportunity employer.*17'Sdptethb6i‘my'4*8 <CE»I CAOOMAR OONRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28' charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3266.SITUATION WANTEDMay I do your TYPING? 363-1104.Experienced programmer and keypunch operator seeks freelance workin research. 493-1366 after 6 P.M.MOTHERGrad student needs surrogate motherfor 2 yr old child. Live in Mon-Thur.Rm./brd, stipend. Call for intv. 525-2479.LESSONSRUSSIAN taught by native teacherRapid method. Free trial lesson. CE6-1423. 9-5.CLASSES IN GUITAR: folk instru¬ments. Inquire immediatelyr. FretShop. NO 7-1060.EMPLOYMENTHYDE PARK THEATRE needs cash¬iers, etc. Must live in area. 2-3 nightsper week. 427-0142 or NO 7-9071.ARTICULATE SCEPTIC, wanted topresent his case and answer questionsinformally for an evening withChristian college students. Sendbrief of position and qualificationsto Dr. C. Seerveld, Dept, of Philos.,Trinity Christian College, PalosHeights, III 60463.TUTOR in 2nd-3rd grade academicswanted 4-5 day/wk., 9-12 or 1-3, for8 yr. old with learning disabilities.DO 3-6627. FOR SALEUSED FURNITURE-by Service Bu¬reau, UC Service League 5316 S. Dor¬chester. 10-1, Sat. Sept. 28. Bringyour ID.USED TYPEWRITERS—$10 up. 684-1784.AUDIO CONSULTANTS Tel: 864-9565517 Davis St., Evanston.New Equipment Specials:AR Amplifier: $175 (1 only) • Dualchanger: $69 • Sherwood stereo re¬ceiver: $229 • AR2ax speakers: $96• Scott S9 speakers: $25 • Sherwoodamp: $129.50 • Koss headphones:$19.95 • Denou stereo receiver with2 speakers: $129.Used Equipment:Marantz 8B stereo power ampl. likenew: $149 • KG870 amp: • KG895120W amp: $99 • Rek-o-kut T.Tablewith base 8> cartridge: $49 • Weath¬ers T.Table with base 8i cartr: $25• Telefunken AM-FM Radio: $25.AUDIO CONSULTANTS517 Davis, Evanston. 864-9565GRUBBY BUT CHEAPSpacious basement in VICTORIANTOWNHOUSE. Parking, kitchen, closeto school. $50/mo. 324-9358 or Ml 3-0800, ext. 3265.CAMPING EQUIPMENTCamping equipment for RENT:Tents, Sleeping bags. Stoves, Lan¬terns, etc. Contact HICKORY atExt. 2381 or 234-1499. I, the editor of the Chicago LiteraryReview, was once the delivery boyfor the Maroon—mea culpa, meaculpa, mea maxima culpa—I will goand mend my ways.—Jeff Schnltzer. Israeli folk dancing starts Thursday,Oct. 3rd at Hillet House.SEPTEMBER 28-be at Ida Noyesparking lot at 12:30 with 50c for one¬way bus to State & Wacker.OINKIHappy New Year Ed Levi.Daley supports Mikva supports Hum¬phrey supports Mikva supports Daley.Help elect TOM IRELAND to Con¬gress: Join Young Republicans. 493-7521.Humphrey has the disadvantage ofbattling two opponents so patentlyabsurd that they cannot effectivelybe hurt by anything he says. PERSIAN STEW—Ahmand's,57th St. 1440 E.WRITER'S WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377The only unnatural sex actwhich you cannot perform. is thatThe world is a vacuum—it sucks.Urban renewal is people removal.The Maroon Business Office isfestival? a FallPEACE.UC Karate Club.Humphrey Isn't absurd, |ust frighten¬ing.Phd. Special—hash browns with aneducation at the Mad Hatter.PERSONALSIf you are fed up, make Nov. 5 yourday of protest. Vote for Wallace."I am happy to report that everychapter is increasing its membershipat a greater rate than was antici¬pated." Military Order of the PurpleHeart newsletter.Eat it—at the Bandersnatch.Walter is hanging Chagall, Rouault,Miro and the rest of the Shapirosagain, Monday, Sept. 30th to be dis¬tributed Friday, October 4th in theIda Noyes Museum of Edwardian Art.BABYSITTERS wanted—Student Co-op.CAMPUS REP. for Record Club ofAmerica. Write: Ed Benovy, CollegeBureau Manager, Record Club ofAmerica, Club Hdqts., York, Pa.17401.PLACE TO LIVEThird ROOMMATE WANTED—7 rm.apt. 2 baths/ $52/mo. prefer gradstud, apolitical only. 752-6151 after 6MYSORE SliGANDKi DHOOP FACTORY1. :Copv Right M. S.O.F. BOMBAY, 3.CONDOM INIUM—5537 Hyde Pk. Blvd.6 rm, 3 bdrm, 2 baths. Bldg. 8> apt.compl. remod. $22,500 Possession now.363-6842.HOMELIKE—Irg. 8. small rm. Tea¬chers or students at 61st 8, Unlv.Mrs. Cannon 667-2591.HOUSE FOR SALE—8211 Crandon.Custom built. 8 large rooms. 3 good-sized bedrms. lVS* baths, full base¬ment, gas heat, 2 natural fireplaces,2-car garage. $29,500 by owner. ES5-6938.TENANT REFERRAL SERVICE—reasonable Rentals Desirable Apart¬ments Lake Front Community Ex¬cellent Transportation. UC bus directto campus. Efficiencies from $85. OneBedroom from $110. Furnished andunfurnished. Also Large DeLuxeApartments. South Shore CommissionA Non-Profit Community Organiza¬tion. 7134 S. Jeffery. Was your vote asphyxiated in somesmoke-filled rooms? The decent thingto do is to show that you mourn if.Send one dollar for 2 badges stating:"I WILL NOT VOTE." They're edgedin black. Box 464, Skokie, III. 60076Death to all opponents of oceano¬graphic research!There are flies on me, and there areflies on you, but there are no flieson Jesus.Babysitters wanted — Student co-opStop water pollution — eat shit.GAY GUYS and GIRLS. At last apersonal, confidential matching serv¬ice for you. JM Enterprises, Box1148, Culver, Calif.SUPPORT MAROON ADVERTISERS—an expensive newspaper in a free(sic) (sick) university.Set Huey free.THE TRUMPET—Digest of Indepen¬dent Liberal Thought. 1 year (12issues)—$1. Box 822, Rockford, III.61105.There are three colors in Americatoday—BLACK, WHITE, and RED¬NECK. An overwhelming majority ofChicago's policemen are in the lastcategory, which is so district fromthe others that it warrants a separ¬ate phylum.MARCH FOR FREEDOMIA free newspaper in a cheap univer¬sity. —Find the Boat Pond near 51stand the Lake.—Write a metaphysical poem.—Wear a mask (STICKS ANDSTONES, Harper Court).—Try steak and black mushroomat the GOLD CITY INN (HarperCourt).—Visit a Greenhouse (PLANTSALIVE in Harper Court).—Rocky Road? Daiquiri Nut? 31FLAVORS (Harper Court).The Bandersnatch happens tonight¬s'.SUKKOTFestival Meals in the Sukkah will beavailable noon and evenings. Reser¬vations and payment must be madein person at the Hillel House in advance.$160 million for a great universityand not one cent to support its news¬paper.Do your thing in the Maroon classi¬fied ads. You pay, we print.News management is news manage¬ment whether it is done in order toaccomplish good or evil. News man¬agement is, per se, more destructiveof a democratic society than anypositive result it could achieve orany negative result it may prevent—WBAI-FM.Believe me, it's no picnic.Today Malone is a teenybopper.YOGA—Meditate, relax.Hatha. Sri. Nerode, DO 3-0155.GIRLS WELCOME at half price. USKarate Club.THE SABBATH AT HILLEL. WorshipFriday Sundown—Orthodox7:30 P.M.—ConservativeSaturday 9:15 AM.—Orthodox9:30 A.M.—ConservativeLiberal Weekly discussions, studentplanned.Hillel House. 5715 Woodlawn.Jeff Schnitzer is not the MaroonDelivery Boy.Does anyone want to be? You canmake lots of money by working forsadistic boss. Contact Maroon Busi¬ness Office.On is not where you turn me. Do you think Daley will replaceWalt Disney?At Hillel a variety of seminars, textclasses, and language groups areplanned including Jewish ReligiousThought, Hasidism, Mysticism, Bible,Theology, Modern Hebrew Literature,Hebrew and Yiddish, and Talmud.Sign up at the Open House, Septem¬ber 29th (Sunday), 5:00 P.M. 5715Woodlawn.Libel claims will be rejected as un¬solicited mail.AHMAD'S Persian delicacies. Outof sight at 1440 E. 57th St.Bander (flower) snatch (power)SNACK SHOP.My life is a wet dream.They repossessed my brain.Karate is not flower power.The Maroon is a mediocre news¬paper and a poor asswipe.Today is the first day of the rest ofyour life.I've heard that.Better acid than base.The Maroon is the only UndergroundCollege Newspaper.Special investigators hired by theAssociation report that at least 50%of long-distance truckers use "ben¬nies" regularly."— National TruckersAssociation.Speed kills.This message will last 60 seconds.The missiles are on their way. Ifyou had started running when youstarted reading this, you might havemade it.Our 4th glorious year.UC Karate Club.•T1958 MERCEDES BENZ 190SL. Not3 beauty, but runs wall. Talk toEllen. 326-2550.HI FI SPECIALSSHURE M3D Cartridges: $8.88$49.95 Columbia Casette Recorders:$30.$30 Panasonic FM-AM AC Radios: $20AR Turntables (Demo's): $58.Used Ampex Stereo Deck; $75.Used McIntosh Mono Preamp.: $22.TRADES INVITEDSchwartz Bros. HiFi 1215 E. 63rd.FA 7-8400ZONK. This year, the Maroon mustoperate only on adve Using revenue.We will receive no subsidy from TheUniversity. Therefore it Is more im¬portant than ever that you mentionthe Maroon to our advertisers.Come on, you cheap bastards, sanda subscription home. "The greatest accomplishment theNegro has made in 1968 is to exist."—WVON.Bandersnadth—theChicago. Wall Drug ofDon't discriminate—patronize MarbonAdvertisers.Take the monotony out of monogamy.How come Tribune reporters neverget beaten up?Reflect once again that John Kennedywas murdered and no one knows whowho did it.The Shapiro Collection will be onexhibit from Sept. 30th to Oct. 4 inIda Noyes Hall. On Friday morning,Oct. 4th, numbered registration cardswill be distributed at 8:30 A.M. on afirst-come basis, indicating when theloanee will be called to choose apainting at the 4:00 P.M. distribution.Since it is not always possible toacquire a first choice, it is sug¬gested that several choices be madeduring the exhibition. Validated ID'Smust be presented when the loan ismade. be trapped by Hyde Park’sfirst and finest BoutiqueTHE MOUSE TRAPjewelry, hip clothing, craftswe custom-make clothes atincredibly reasonable prices1453 E. Hyde Park Blvd.363-9215—Buy a bucket of chicken at theCHICKENEATER (53rd and Har¬per) or an order of Rib Tips atRIBS AND BIBS, (53rd and Dor¬chester) and spend a quiet eveningeating in the Harper Court Court¬yard.—Check out ART DIRECTIONS(Harper Court) in the early after¬noon for colors, beads, and smoothglass stones.—Take a course at the Hyde ParkArt Center.—See a Doctor about IT, or ashrink, or a vet.—Go to the Point and don't bringa frisbee.—Don't say anything for a longtime.—Try not being Cool for awhile.—Learn to play a Balalaika . . .FRET SHOP in Harper court, ofcourse.—Follow the beat of a differentdrum.—Check out Hyde Park's onlyDepartment Store, the DRUG¬STORE at 53rd 8, Kimbark.—Find a street brick (in an alleyin Woodlawn) marked EGYPTIAN.—Try to go through a whole daywithout saying "Daley is a pig."—Visit the CLEVELAND MUSEUMOF ART and, on the trip back,try to figure out why it's 10 timesas good as THE ART INSTITUTE.—THE MAN AT EASE LOVES YOU.—Order a pizza from the Point.—Paint your front door.—Ask the AARDVARK why theydon't advertise In the Maroonanymore.—Take the I.C. to the IndianaDunes.—Rent a canoe, SKOKIE LAGOONS, Winnetka.—Apply for Food Stamps.—Gargle with Rare Cognac,Cask No. 16.—See bagels being made at 1519W. Devon.—Take a Drawing Course with Mr.Haydon.—Visit the Hawthorne MellodyFarm.—Watch the planes landing fromthe AQUARIUM (at night).—Learn Wff 'n Proof (ACCENT,53rd 8, Blackstone).—Spend the afternoon at theChildren's Zoo at Brookfield.—Don't wait for Godot.—Talk to someone under 8 yearsold.—Think up new answers to questionslike "Why do they call It Plais-ance?" and "Are THOSE Black-stone Rangers?"—Visit Bushman at the NaturalHistory Museum, also see theSuper Exhibit of Primitive ArtIn the Basement and the ChineseDrum and Art upstairs.—Paint your celling with a squltgun.-DON'T WAIT.HUMILITYI wish to apologize for the "un¬official" mailing sent to enteringfreshmen and to emphasize that itwas not the product of any institu¬tion Inside or outside the university.I hope that the letter will be recog¬nized as a sincere, if clumsy, at¬tempt to introduce new students toa different point of view. I re|ectand disclaim all responsibility forthe enclosed questionaire.—P.B.Put everyone on your trip—in theMaroon Clasified Ads.Don't miss the mosiac on the out¬side of the Orthogenic School—it'sreally fine.LOVEUC Karate ClubYenta Is a yiddish concept.ESCAPES'Patronize our Advertisers'-Visit JAN AAAZARYK at the EastEnd of the Midway.—Get high and—Visit the Fountain of Time atthe West End.■Ride a horse.—Celebrate with wine and cheese.—Learn Karate and be the first onyour block to be able to wipe outyour block.—Buy the wine and cheese at thePARTY MART, 2427 E. 72nd.—Take a freighter to Tangiers.—Decorate a rock with Acrylics(they paint on anything) . . .DUNCAN'S, 1305 E. 53rd.—Go out in drag. PLEASEREADTHISNeither the Maroon nor StudentGovernment had any connectionwith the letter and survey distributedto freshmen recently. The wholething was engineered by the in¬famous John Siefert, and all replieshave been turned over to him.If anyone in the future decides toappropriate SG stationery and con¬duct a survey, please do not havereplies returned cl o the Maroon; wecannot be held responsible for them.r» ri h k t) sktin* 18 CHICAGO MAROON A, September 27, 1968BANDERSNATCH4* ^ welcome donp A€zir ^ #Expert foreign <J&esly imports, sSfnc.2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.Tel. 326-2550###^ &zt/* cuffing a/it/| 1541 £ J4yde Park 8H. pj! 2-9255 fappointments 4§*pipipipip'farfaiprfaipipip'fetyrfe'fpipipipipiprtertoip'Sp'fcip'toipiipTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristprescriptions fillednewest styling inframe sin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 u of C. BOOKSTORE HOURS(Fall Quarter Openings)FRI.-SEPT. 27-8:00 AM-8:00 PMSAT.-SEPT. 28 - 8:30 AM-5:00 PMMON.-SEPT. 30- FRI.-OCT. 48:00 AM-8:00 PMSAT.-OCT. 5-8:30 AM-5:00 PMMON.-OCT. 7 & TUE.-OCT. 88:00 AM-8:00 PM-ALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDEDBOOKS & SUPPLIESU. OF C. BOOK STORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE VolgaGenuineV.V. Vodka$2.79 fifth CaliforniaTable Winefull gallon$1.39Burgundyor Rhine MillerHigh Life Beer6-12 oz. cans97<Cash & Carryi Gill's6 year oldi StraightWhiskey\ $3.09 fifth Hannah andHogg$3.39 fifth100 proofbottled inBond DewarsWhite LabelScotchWhiskey$12.49’/a gallonCash and Carry on Specials Only2 - Drive in Windows - 2WEDELIVER GILL & CO. WINES & LIQUORSheadquarters f or casf uoybRs1238 E. 47th ST. KE6-6500 Gill'sDroit Beer$155 „JL gallon'/j Gallon 79<Don't confusethis beer withcheap brewerybottlinFAMOUSGILLSBEERVa bbl.$10.50V2 bbl.$19.95 DELIVEREDALL BEERNo FoamSee it Filledthe only original ownerand licensee in this type of business in Hyde Park-Kenwood since 1933this alone should warrant your confidence.3TAhSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-I062Read the I S R E A L andMIDDLE EAST NEWS¬LETTER. For info andsample copy send $1 toP.O. Box 2331, Sunnyvale,Ca. 94087HYDE PARK VALET SERVICE1492 E. Hyde Park Blvd.BU 8-8811CALL and DELIVER IN A CRISIS, it takes courage tobe a leader . . . courage to speak out... to point the way ... to say,“Follow Me!” In a crisis, it takesaction to survive . . . the kind of de¬cisive action that comes from a manof sound instinct, as well as intelli¬gence.If America is to survive this crisis... if the youth of America are toinherit a sane and even promisingworld, we must have courageous,constructive leadership. The kind ofleadership that only George G.Wallace—of all Presidential can¬didates—has to offer. That’s whyyoung Americans who really thinksupport Wallace. THEY KNOW that it takes cour¬age to stand up for America againstthe pseudo - intellectual professors,the hippies, the press and the entireliberal Establishment. And they’vegot that courage.Thousands and thousands oftomorrow’s leaders—the thinkingyoung men and women of Americawho have courage and who arewilling to act — are joiningYOUTH FOR WALLACE. Youshould join, too.There are no dues. Send in thecoupon to receive your membershipcard, the YFW Newsletter and acopy of “STAND UP FORAMERICA,” the story of GeorgeC. Wallace.YOi V7S Ti^tLityV youth for v/allaceI am years old and pledge to support George C. Wallace for President.Please send me my membership card in YOUTH FOR WALLACE and theNewsletter. 1629 K St., N.W.Washington, D.C. 20006(202) 296-8192PRINT NAME.MAILING ADDRESS.CITY, STATE, ZIP_SIGNATURE. PHONE.Seotember 27. 1968 CHICAGO MAROON 19accent's fall special selling/STARTS TODAY - SEPT. 25«tl. THRU OCT. Sth.f■ jphonemi 3-7400 Mailing Service For Your Convenience.No Charge for Gift Wrapping. ■AKITCHEN CHAIRS. . . blacksteel frame . . . oiled walnutback rest . . , vinyl coveredseat . . . choice of black, bit¬tersweet or royal blue . . .reg. $14.95 . .now . .. $12.95 FURNITURE(A) ACCENTS BUTTERFLYCAMPAIGN CHAIR . . strongblack metal frame ... washablecanvas slings in choice oforange, yellow, olive orblack .' $9.95replacement slings only.$4.95(Immediate delivery).(B)FOLDING LOUNGE CHAIR. . . woven hemp seat andback. . . walnut-finish beech-wood frame . . . reg. $30. . .now $24.95(Immediate delivery).LOUNGE CHAIR with arms,self-adjusting black and seatare of woven hemp. . .beech-wood frame is walnut-finishedreg. $35. . .now $24.95(Immediate delivery).(C) CONTOUR LOUNGECHAIR AND OTTOMANimported from Italy. . .hand¬some brushed steel frameandblack vinyl upholsteryreg. $1 40. . now $119.95(A limited supply for immedi¬ate delivery).(D) POLO ARM CHAIRPalembang rattan from HongKong . . . black metal legs. . .(Immediate delivery). . $13.95(E) COUNTERS. . . 18" by 48". . . white marproof tops . . .double pedestal back •steelbase; your choice 29" tableheight or 36" bar height. . .rea. $45. . . now $39.95G H(F) In the Barcelona tradition,this classic chair is beautifullyreproduced in heavy chromeand finest vinyl. Foam cu¬shions are wrapped in polyes¬ter. This outstanding value. . .black $229.95SLAT BENCH. . .well-desianedsturdy bench . . . hardwoodwith walnut-finish(G). . .30" bench reg. $14. . .now . . . . $10.95(H). . .48" bench . . . reg. $17now $1 3.95(I) DINING TABLE. . folds t08 inches for easy space handl¬ing or storage. ..hand-rubbedwalnut finish . . . seats 2 to12... reg. $1 20. . now $94.95FOLDING DINING CHAIRS ..cane back and seat. . . verysturdy . . . folds for space¬saving storage. . . beechwoodwith walnut finish . . . reg. $20now $15.95ACCENTS CONTEMPOGLASSWARE set of 24:8 cocktails, 8 old fashior\ed8♦welve-ounce tumblersreg. $5 now $3.95 GIFT WARES(J) ADJUST-A-TABLE importedfrom England . . folds foreasy storage . . . and excel¬lent reading or s*udy table . ..its 25'/2 x 15 3/4” top adjustsup or down and can be tiltedfor maximum comfort.. .strongenough to hold a typewriter..reg. $36 . . . Accent's intro¬ductory price $29.95FONDUE COOKER . . Accentoffers an outstanding value infondue equipment.COLORA, fond ue server, alu¬minum-enameled in yellow,orange or avocado with rose¬wood handle. . . holds I ’/iquarts . . . black stand. . .alcohol burner and matching♦ray $10.95FONDUE FORKS . . Save 20%on your choice from Accent'swide selection of contempor¬ary fondue forks:se-t of 6 with colored plastichandles reg. $4.50 now $3.60set of 6 with rosewood handlesreg. $5 now $3.95set of 6, rosewood handles,colored tips & stand, reg. $6now $4.80set of 4 with rosewood standreg. $6 now $4.80set of 6, imported from Francereg. $1 1.50 now $9.20(K) WHITE PORCELAIN DIN-NERWARE ch oice of coupeor cylinder cup . . . 20-pcstarter set includes 4 cups andsaucers, 4 dinner plates, 4salad plates, 4 soup or cerealbowls . . . reg. $20 now $16.95CREATIVE PLAYTHINGS!Accent is proud to announcethe expansion of its toy de¬partment and bring to HydePark thefamous Creative Play¬things, educational, fun toysfor children of all ages. Weinvite you and your childrento visit our new CreahvePlay¬things *oy department ond en¬joy this good experience withus.(L) CORA FLATWARE ...18/8stainless steel from Holland...5-pc place.setting ... reg. $7.95now $5.95(M) COCKTAILS FOR TWO . .smoked crystal martini pitcher. . . stirrer and two cocktailglasses imported from Den¬mark . . . reg. $8. . .now $5.95BAR GLASSES . .smoked crys¬tal from Sweden . . . contem¬porary design . . . .40% off.single old fashioned reg. $2.50now $1.50double old fashioned reg.s2.50 now$1.50highball reg. $2.50 now $1.50cocktail reg. $1.75 now $1.05cordial reg. $1.50 now $.90COASTERS . . set of 8 woodcoasters with cork lining inplastic holder . .. reg. $2. . .now $1.50set of 4 plastic tortoise shell,cork lined, American walnutrack . . . reg. $6. now $3.99set of 6. . . plastic tortoiseshell with colorful hemp liningreg. $4 . .now $2.50 LAMPS(N) HIGH INTENSITY LAMP ..transformer powered . ..Hi-Loswitch . . . bulb included . . .collapsable arm assembly.Available in black, mocha andwhite $6.95(O) ASTRO-DOME STUDYLAMP . . . sight-saver 200watt bulb included . . . satinwhite glass difuser. . . U/Lapproved ... choice of mocha,yellow or green ...Floorlamp. . . introductory price.. $12.95Desk lamp. . . introductoryprice $8.95TREE LAMP . . swivel mountedmetal shades bring light todesired focus . . . equippedwith 4-way control switch. . .$15.95FLOOR LAMP with 700 wattsof lighting . .. polished chromebase and s*em . . . lineri shade. . . takes four 100 watt bulbsfor direct lighting and one300watt flood lamp for indirectlighting reg. $65now $59.95ONE-OF-A-KIND lamps.. .withceramic, teak or walnut bases: . .all 40-30% offWALNUT SHELVING. . . oiledwalnut shelves — edges band¬ed on four sides:8” by 36” reg. $4. now $3.758" by 48" reg. $5.50 now$4.9512" by 36" reg. $5.95. . . .now $5.50IWASTE BASKETS. . . bamboobaskets from Taiwan . . . avail¬able in orange, brown andolive . . . choice of 4 sizes:10" x 8" $1.2910Vi" x 9" $1.9911 Vi '* x 10" $2.9913" x 11" $3.99Complete nest of 4 of a singlecolor . . . reg. $10.26 now$7.99STRAW HAMPERS. . . fine qua¬lity . . . closely woven .. .madein Mexicosmall (21" high) $4medium (23" high) $5large (25" high) $6BENNINGTON OF VERMONTSTONE WARE — Open StockSale . . . Save at least 50%on plates, butter dishes, cups,saucers, platters, mugs, pit¬chers, bowls, casseroles andmany other one-of-a-kind ser¬ving pieces from this famoushouse of New England pottersAll items .will be sold at 50%or greater discounts on a firs*come, first served basis untilour entire stock of Benningtonis cleared to make way fornew patterns. SALAD SERVERS. .. handsome2-piece stainless salad set. . .reg. $2.50 now $1.9518-8 stainless servers withblack bakelite handlesreg. $3.95 now $2.95NO SALE IS FINAL UNTIL YOU ARE SATISFIEDSTORE HOURS: Mon. thru Wed. 10-6:30, Thurs. and Fri. 10-7:30, Sat. 9-6:00iAnd mlX_ uideto the.Universityof ChicagoA Special Orientation SupplementMortimer AdlerA crony of Hutchins. The Great Books Man.BandersnatchTired of the same old expensive slop youreceive in the dormitories? Go to the Ban¬dersnatch in Ida Noyes Hall where new in¬expensive slop, good people, and an occa¬sional movie and other entertainment isthe general rule.George Wells BeadlePresident of the University since 1961, willretire November 14. Beadle is a NobelLaureate in chemistry (he is a geneticist).During his administration the Universityhas improved in every aspect.The Blue GargoyleCoffee shop run by friendly volunteers inthe University Church of the Disciples ofChrist, catty-corner from Reynolds Club.You get to take your coffee (or your pea¬nut butter and jelly sandwiches) into anarea alongside the nave, where the light ispouring through, and it is really very nice.It is also fairly cheap.Wayne C. BoothDean of the College since 1964. He has dis¬tinguished himself in the areas of fictionwriting, literary criticism, college teach¬ing, and the guidance of a leading educa¬tional institution.Campus Bus ServiceThe University's campus bus service began its 1968-69 schedule Monday, Septem¬ber 23, with two new buses added to thesix that carried a quarter-million passen¬gers on the campus last year.The orange buses, marked “Campus Geoj-ge Wells BeadleBus” in large black letters, wind their waythrough Hyde Park, Kenwood, and SouthShore neighborhoods on routes worked outby a student-faculty-staff committee.The fare is by ticket only, so that infre¬quent users should carry a ticket for emer¬gencies.A complete schedule, maps of the routes,and the seven locations where tickets maybe purchased are carried in a full-page ad¬vertisement in this Chicago Maroon.The fare is 15 cents for the Hyde Parkroutes and 25 cents for South Shore. Thecombined evening route is free. Commutertickets cut the cost further.Important: there is combined eveningroute running from 6 p.m. until midnight at Robert Maynard Hutchins30-minute intervals.This run is free, but identification mustbe shown to the driver. The bus makeseight stops, but will stop in midblock foryou if you wave your hand. The bus blink¬ers are operating all evening, for easy iden¬tification.Chauneey BoucherA dormitory on 53rd and Ellis (formedGeorge Williams University which movedto the suburbs). Chauneey Boucher him¬self was dean of the college during thetwenties. (He remarked once that the chiefbenefit, of the college was that it providedthe graduate departments wih an oppor¬tunity to select promising research stu¬dents and helped bring in money. Ernest DeWitt BurtonThe president after Henry Pratt Judson(who was the president after Harper). Hewanted to move the College south of theMidway and have done with it.An elected university-wide organizationwhich investigates student issues andmakes suggestions. This quarter theStudent Life CommitteeFSACCSL will be concerned with the Kal-ven Committee on Discipline and in theStudent Village.Jerry FreseJerry Frese, assistant to the provost, is Ed¬ward Levi’s right hand man. Joining theFaculty in 1964 as an instructor in English,he was appointed to his present position in1965.William RanneyHarperYale Ph. D. at 18, he was the first presi¬dent of UC, and more than any other man,formed what it is (It was he who madethe University first of all a research insti¬tution). Using Rockefeller money, he hireda faculty away from the eastern collegesgot Silas Cobb to draw up a master archi¬tectural plan.Robert MaynardHutchinscoy wonder, Hutcnins became president u1928 and turned the University completedover. It was divided into five divisions: College (then a two-year institution), Biological Sciences, Physical Science, Humanitiesand Social Sciences. It was Hutchins wheinstituted general education, comprehensiveexams, all onthe theory that “EducationContinued on Page Twcimplies teaching. Teaching implies know¬ledge, Knowledge is truth. Truth is Every¬where the same. Hence education shouldeverywhere by the same. In the thirties Chicago was an exciting place, but World WarII decreased enrollment, the neighborhoodbegan to decline, and Hutchins after twen¬ty-three year, left.Chicago’s first expansion was to theSouth and by the 1890s Hyde Park, Wood-lawn, and Kenwood were fine, flourishingcommunities, with large homes, and grandapartments. The world’s fair clenched thedevelopment of the South Side. The Colum¬bian Exposition, as it was called sprawled,extending along the lake shore south of the“loop” all the way to 59th street where ablock was cleared for a big “Midway”with foreign shops, rides, and the firstFerris wheel.The fair left behind the Midway (withthe depressioin in the middle, originally in¬tended for a canal), the Museum of Sci¬ence and Industry (rebuilt in marble afterthe original staff and plaster museum pa-villion), Lexington Hall (one of the manytemporary rest rooms at the fair — notethe two doors, one for Gentlemen and onefor Ladies; and the “Art Colony” whichstood along 57th Street between Stony Is¬land and the IC tracks.Theodore Dreiser, Carl Sandburg, Sher¬wood Anderson, and Thorsteini Veblen alllived in the Art Colony, another relic ofthe fair, which Louis Sullivan said setback architecture 50 years at one time oranother. Its candy-cotton Gothic decora¬tions were the mark of Hyde Park duringthat half century. In the fifties the last ofthe colony was torn down and the crafts¬men that lived and worked there (or theirsuccessors) have moved to Harper Court,the culture-commerce center off 52ndstreet.It was the late forties that was the turn¬ing point for Hyde Park. The 1947 SupremeCourt decision barring racially restrictivecoventants in real estate sales literallybroke the borders of the ghettos which hadgrown up around Hyde Park. As blackpeople moved into homes south of 47thStreet, whites began to panic and flee tothe suburbs.The University was not particulary in¬terested in the community. The grass-rootsHyde Park-Kenwood Community Confer¬ence organized in 1950 to reduce racial ten¬sions met with a stony Chancellor RobertMainert Hutchins. (At one meeting, Hut¬chins arrived and said “lam sorry to haveto be abrupt but I have another meetingwhich I’m obliged to attend. All I can sayis that I am strongly personally in favor of a Universiy policy of racial non¬descrim ination.”But in 1952 Lawrence A. Kimpton suc¬ceeded Hutches as chancelor and madesaving the neighborhood one of his pri¬mary objectives. The problem by then hadbecome urgent. The crime rate had soared.Housing was deteriorating. Facuty mem¬bers were eaving because they feared forthe safety of their famiies. Parents oftenobjected to letting their children attendChicago because of the neighborhood.Community leaders approached Kimp¬ton for help; they scheduled a mass meet¬ing in Mandel hall for March 27, 1952.The night before the meeting, an in¬structor’s wife was kidnapped and the re¬sultant publicity for the meeting producedan overflow crowd.At the meeting a “Committee of Five”including Kimpton was chosen to draw upa program. It met and proposed a neworganization to deal with crime and otherproblems, the South East Chicago Com¬mission (SECC).SECC would get much of its money fromthe University; Julian Levi, brother of cur¬rent Provost and president-designate Ed¬ward H. Levi, was chosen to run thecommission.Don T. Blackiston, a criminologist, wentto work compiling files on the crimes andcode violations comitted in Hyde Park. Heis said to have data on all persons in thearea who have been arrested or convicted,and can sometimes help police faster thantheir own investigators.The University’s connections with insur¬ance companies, banks, and other businesswere used to make real estate speculatorstoe the line.1953 and early 1954 were devoted to pre¬liminary planning by the SECC andHPKCC on the community’s needs, and togetting support for a renewal programfrom City Hall. It was agreed that the Uni¬versiy and SECC would cooperate with thecity, working closely with HPKCC, in draw¬ing up renewal plans.This unusual arangement gave dutiesto these semi-public agencies that havesince been assumed by city governmentalagencies which were then still under¬staffed.Through a $100,000 grant to the Univer¬sity from the Marshall Field Foundationin 1954, the SECC set up a full-time plan¬ning unit whose director, Jack Meltzer, nowhead of the University’s Center for UrbanStudies, worked closely with local institu¬tion, community organization, and privatecitizens. The famous Hyde Park before and after pictures. 55th Street in 1955 . . .Student Co-opB ookstoreService #3► RIDES & RIDERS► MISC. FOR SALE BOARDSHr. 9 A.M. - 10 P.M.Reynolds Clubeye examinationsFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd Plaza.HYde Park 3-8372Chicago's most complete record store—Every label in our huge inventory always at adiscount—Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed—Large selection of importand hard to get records.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS, INC.201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)GOOD FOR 38% OFFLIST LIST5.794.79 NOW3.592.97ON ANYClassical *Ail labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONVERVEFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP. etc. ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYJazz * Folk Music * Spoken * Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDRED^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiujii THIS COUPON GOOD FOR =38% OFF LIST PRICE* ON 1Any One Time Record |Purchase At fdiscount- records, inc. || 201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake) |CE 6-2187 1Good until Oct. 31, 1968 =iiHiiniwnwirmiMinviiiifMONO OR STEREO All labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.JUST BRING THIS COUPON!!Browse our budget binsDiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX • RIVERSIDE • PRESTIGE • SCALAETERNA • MGM CLASSICS • VERVE • URANIAEVEREST • CONCERT DISC • PRESTIGE FOLK MUSICMONITOR • VERVE FOLKWAYS • COUNTERPOINT* Sorry, due to manufacturers price policy imported LP*s cannot be allowed in this offer. FREE!withOlivetti Underwood'sPermanent PortablesTHISS|Q951872 page.Funk & Wagnalis.thumb indexed.EncyclopedicCollege DictionaryHURRY!The offer is limited.Olivetti Underwood’s Perma¬nent Portables always havebeen great typewriters at agreat price — starting at$69.50*Now you can get two bar¬gains for the price of one.BUT HURRY.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueFall Quarter Opening HoursFri. Sept. 27, 8:00 A.M. • 8:00 P.M.Sat. Sept. 28, 8:30 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.Mon. Sept. 30 • Fri. Oct. 4,8:00 A.M. • 8:00 P.M.Sat. Oct. 5, 8:30 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.Mon. Oct. 7, • Tues. Oct. 8,8:00 A.M. • 8:00 P.M.All required and recommended Booksand Supplies.. . . and in 1960HPKCC’s role has been described asmainly a “transmission belt from the plan¬ners to residents, and, more importantfrom residents to planners. The conferenceprovided an actively interested populace away to influence plans in several instances.Metlzer was ready three months afterhis appointment with a plan for 55th street,which then was lined with seedy-lookingapartments with mostly rundown storefronts.The first step was to tear down thebuildings on the comer of 55th and LakePark Avenue along the Illinios Centraltracks.A new shopping center, a high-rise “lux¬ury* apartment development, and rows oftwo-story town houses were then built inthe area. Since then, the complete destruc¬tion of most of the rest of the buildingsfronting 55th street has proceeded apace:now Pierce Tower stands almost alone onthe south side of the street where once theCompass tavern stood as a neighborhoodcultural institution.While the urban renewal program hasbeen successful in reaching its goals of astable neighborhood, success was notachieved without costs.One of the problems of urban renewalin Hyde Park is summed up by the phraseof comedian Mike Nichols, an alumnus:“Hyde Park — white and Negro, shoulderto shoulder against the lower classes.” Inthe process of renewing the neighborhood,the substandard housing was cleared, ofcourse.The buildings that sooner or later re¬placed the cleared buildings, however,were almost uniformly designed for occu¬pancy by middle or upper income families,not the low-income families that had beencleared out, and not the lower incomestudents.Inter-House CouncilAn organization which is concerned withevery aspect of dormitory life. While moreconservative than the majority of organiza¬tions on campus, the IHC has managed tomake some improvements in the dorms.IntramuralsThe 1968 fall Intramural program is readyto roll with touch football, tennis and fallgolf leading the way. Touch football entriesare due on October 3, and other entries aweek later. Entry blanks may be obtainedfrom the Intramural Office, Room 102,Bartlett Gymnasium.Officials for fall sports have been askedto meet in the Trophy Room at Bartltt onMonday, October 7 at 4 p.m. Assignments,rules and other information will be givenout at that time.Fall golf is an addition to the programand will be a two man, best ball, team af¬fair similar to that recently played by theleading professionals at Oklahoma City.Edward H. LeviA University of Chicago product, born in1911 in Hyde Park, son of a Hyde Park rab¬bi, educated at University High, the Col¬lege, the Law School (he has a J.S.D. from Yale). He became an assistant law profes¬sor in 1936, professo rin 1945, dean of thelaw school in 1950, provost in 1963, and willbe president on February 14. Levi is gener¬ally credited with all intelligent innova¬tive, and sneaky decisions that the adminis¬tration has made while Beadle has beenpresident. Most people think Levi will makea fairly good president. But he will befaced by problems on all sides. The Univer¬sity, to begin with, is broke. (It lost $2,000,-000 last year and the National ScienceFoundation reneged on another million. Thefaculty is revolting because of the neigh¬borhood. The students are universally dis¬sident and may at anytime bum the placedown. Woodlawn will not stand much moreencroachment to the south. The city ofChicago (read Richard J. Daley mayor) isits usual irrascible self (it would like to seethe University do all of the urban renewalthat needs to be done). And so the Univer¬sity is moving into its most crucial period,perhaps as crucial as the early fifties whenit serious considered moving or closingdown. And even Edward Levi will have ahard time running it during this time.Mrs. Montag andMr. MottierThe Scylla and Charybdis of the Bursars’Office. Be nice to them or you will findyourself hopelessly screwed. (Mr. Mottierhas been known to suggest to a student thathe take his business to the Universiy Na¬tional Bank.) (See the University NationalBank).Lazy radicals. About the best thing theNational StudentAssociationNSA does is send you to Europe at grouprates. They are also concerned with dis¬count and insurance.Charles D.O’Connell, Jr.Dean of Students (a man with “long exper¬ience and a genuine concern for today’sstudent”). O’Connell succeeded WarnerWick in 1967.Anthony T. G. PallettDirector of admissions is responsible forundergraduate admission and scholarshipprocedures and policies, and for their inter¬pretation to the public. It’s his fault you’rehere. REVITALIZATIONJohn D. RockefellerOur founder.The Old University of ChicagoA baptist school located on Cottage Grovenear 35th donated by Senator Stephen A.Douglas. It went bankrupt in 1886.Salisbury Cricket ClubBaseball, football, basketball, hockey, etc.All part of the American establishment,right? Then, try the great English gameof cricket with the Salisbury Cricket Clublocatde at Burton-Judson Dormitory. Student GovernmentThe institutionalized arm1 of radical igoupson campus. SG, when it gets around tomeeting, discusses subjects of occasionalrelevance to student affairs.University NationalBankOwned by a consortium headed by RoyCohn, Joe McCarthy’s legal aid.WoodlawnIt is hard to decide whether to be san¬guine about the condition of Woodlawn, theUniversity’s black neighbor to the south.The usual plights of black ghetto areasafflict the 80,000 persons in the area from60th to 67th between Cottage Grove andStony Island. There is overcrowding inhousing, poor municipal services, strainededucational facilities, a high crime rate.Two teen gangs, the Blackstone Rangersin the eastern part of Woodlawn, and theDisciples in the western half, are poten-tialily constructive forces which have so farbeen used destructively. Despite the roleof Ranger leadership in keeping the area“cool” for the past two summers, the Po¬lice Department’s gang “intelligence” unitis out to throw in jail as many gang leadersas they can.If they can’t make trumped-up charges ofconspiracy to commi tmurder stick, theyinvite Sen. McClellan’s Senate to “probe”the gang’s relationship to a job trainingprogram.Far from being intimidated, however,gang members continue to “recruit” newmembers through coercion.And the life of the rest of Woodlawn’sresidents goes on much as before: badjobs, if any; bad housing; bad education.Stability AheadNevertheless, many people see increasingreason to think the neighborhood is on theway to “making it” as a stable community.There are hopeful signs:Residents of the precinct along 63d be¬tween Dorchester and Kenwood voted theirarea “dry” two years ago, ending the blightof a row of bars known as “Baby SkidRow.”Plans for renewal of the Baby Skid Rowarea are proceeding, along with a projectto build housing along Cottage Grove from60th to 63d.Most of all, community leadership hasjoined with outside resources in projects tohelp residents. University faculty are in¬volved in a number of programs, includ¬ing:An experimental school district, cov¬ering at present three elementary schools,ultimately to include ten. Policy for the dis¬trict is set by a board with representa¬tives from the University, The WoodlawnOrganization (TWO), and the city schoolsystem.A child health center on 63d Street,directed by a University medical schoolstaff member and employing Woodlawnresidents.A mental health center, also directed by University staff, but supervised by awidely based community advisory board.Planning for more programs to bestarted when Model Cities money becomesavailable.A social service center, to be built at61st and Ingleside, which will provide fam¬ily casework, a day care center for chil¬dren, advice on family planning, legal aid,and other services with federal money.Helpful NeighborThe hope of the University is that theseservices will help alleviate the hardshipsof living the life of the ghetto, where ade¬quate education, health care, and expertisein dealing with government bureaucraciesare often lacking.How to interpret the University’s activ¬ities in Woodlawn is, as are so many things,a matter of dispute between liberals andradicals on the left. Is the University play¬ing the role of helpful neighbor, or of whitecolonialist?In a sense, the University is only doingwhat it can to help Woodlawn resi¬dents, without trying to control them.It is consciously playing a secondaryrole, behind that of The Woodlawn Organ¬ization, in the neighborhood’s affairs. Juli¬an Levi, who has been a sort of Universityemissary and lobbyist to the institution’sneighbors, explicitly stated this policy lastspring when pressed on the issue by stu¬dents critical of administration policytowards Woodlawn.Both Levi and TWO’s leader, the Rev.Arthur Brazier, have been quoted on thispoint, in almost identical language.Much To Gain“The University has a great deal to gainin working with a community organization,and TWO feels it has a great deal to gainby having the University as a neighbor,”Brazier has said. “I would not say thateverything is great, but I think we com¬plement each other.”Levi, in turn, has said, “No one seeksto usurp the role of public authority. Noone has any right to view Woodlawn...simply as a laboratory. No effort, no mat¬ter how well planned or motivated, cansucceed unless the community is a com¬plete part of the team.”Thus, for example, the educationists inthe University’s department of educationwaited while extensive interviews wereconducted, asking Woodlawn residentswhat they thought about their children’sschools before making firm plans for theexperimental school district’s program.Willard Congreve, former principal ofUniversity High School, now the head ofthe local school district, has described thepurpose of the project as “bringing to¬gether parents, teachers, administratorsand students into a mutuality of effort fordevising improved school programs.”Thus, the University, in one view, issimply making its great store of resources— in the form of knowledge — availableContinued on Page FiveUrban RenewedSeptember 27, 1968 ORIENT k'T I d ft SUPPLEMENT 3;s) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTH CAMPUSMonday through Friday except on University HolidaysFall, Winter, and Spring Quarters • 1968-69stm snmejM.STARTBUS ROUTE AND SCHEDULEEffective 9/23/68(Approximately 60 minutes round trip undernormal driving conditions. Stops at oil inter¬sections upon signal from patron.)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts ot 67th and Jeffery andproceeds South on Jeffery to 76th Street;East on 76th Street to Exchange AvenueNorth West on Exchange to 71st StreetWest on 71st Street to Crandon AvenueNorth on Crandon to 68th Street; West on68th Street to Stony Island; North on StonyIsland through Jackson Park Drive to 59thjxcxsom Mirand Stony Island; West on 59th Street to Ellis Ave¬nue; South on Ellis Avenue to 60th Street; East on60th Street to Stony Island; then South Eost throughJackson Park Drive to 67th and Jeffery, the Starting -*Point.SCHEDULEA.M.Starts at 67fh & Jeffery"S“-1 "S“-2 "S“-36=40 7=00 7=20*7=40 8=00 8.20*8=40 9=00 9=20*(lest trip ends at 60th & Stony)P.M.Starts at 59th & Stony"S"-4 ~S"-J "S"-d2304=10 -* 5=10 5=11*3=304=305=30December 23 rd through January 3rdflat* trip mos ot 68th & Stony) I 497M S7WFT jBi r nnnni—inmnnTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICEEFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 23, 1968Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron,buses will stop to take on or discharge passengers at any intersection. The "N," "E," and "S"Buses will operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on official University holi¬ days. The "C" Evening Bus will operate 7 days a week except on University Holidays. Schedulesare subject to change without notice.Because of legal restrictions, use of the above transportationservices is limited to members of the University faculty, staff,and students. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle uponsurrendering a ticket to the driver, except on the "C" Bus, whereUniversity identification must be presented. The driver will not bepermitted to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as astudent, faculty member, or employee will be required when pur- WHO MAY RIDEchasing tickets. One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and MonthlyCommutation tickets at $4.50 each for the "N" and "E" routes,and at 25 cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50each for the "S" route, are sold at the following locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Avenue) Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets,tickets are accepted on all routes). 'S" routeROUTES AND SCHEDULES(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEWMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under nor¬mal driving conditions. Stops at all intersectionsupon signal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony Island bus proceedsWest on 59th Street to Cottage Grove Avenue;goes North to 57th Street; then East on 57th Sreetto Stony Island; North to 56th Street; West on56th to Lake Park; North to 55th Street; East on55th to Cornell; North to E. Hyde Park Blvd. (51stSt.); East on 51st to S. Hyde Park Blvd.; South to57th Drive; then S. W. to 57th and Stony Island;then South to 59th Street, the Starting Point.NOTE: All runs make pickup stop at the Broad¬view.SCHEDULEA.M. Starts at 59th & Stony SCHEDULE"E"-2 A.M. Starts at 48th & Greenwood6:45 7:00 "N"-l "N"-2 "N"-37:15 7:30 6:50 _7:45 8:00 7:20 7:21 7:22*8:15 8:30 7:50 7:51 7:52*8:45 — 8:20 8:21 8:22*(Last trip ends at 57th & Stony) 8:50 8:51 8:52*P.M. Starts at 59th & Stony 9:20 — —"f"-3 "E"-4 (Last trip ends at 57th & Ellis)* 1:30 Tuesday only*2:00 Tuesday only*2:30*3:00*3:304:004:305:005:30 4:154:455:15(Last trip ends at 57th & Stony)* These runs will not be madeDecember 23rd through January 3rdnorMarch 24th through March 28th.Interim Periods. (N) NORTH-SOUTHMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normaldriving conditions. Stops at all intersections uponsignal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 48th and Greenwood, Bus proceeds Eastto Dorchester; goes South to 53rd Street; then Eastto Harper Avenue; South to 54th Place; West on 54thPlace to Dorchester; South to 56th Street; East on56th Street to Lake Park Avenue; South to 57thStreet; West on 57th Street to Dorchester; South to58th Street; West on 58th Street to Kimbark Avenue;South to 59th Street (a Loading and UnloadingPoint for Lab School patrons). Then the Bus proceedsWest on 59th Street to Ellis Avenue; North to 57thStreet; East on 57th Street to University Avenue;North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.; East to Woodlawn;North to 49th Street; West to Greenwood and thenNorth to 48th Street, the Starting Point.NOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th and Kimbark but runthe same route.P.M. Starts at 59th & Kimbark"N"-4 "N-4" "N"-5 "N-5‘12:00* 3:25* — 3:26’12:30* 4:10 — 4:111:00* 4:40 — 4:411:35* 5:10 — 5:112:05*2:40* 5:402:41* 5:41(Last trip ends at 58th & Dorchester)* These runs will not be madeDecember 23rd through January 3rdnorMarch 24th through March 28th.Interim Periods. (C) COMBINED EVENINGROUTE(7 days per week except on University Holidays)NOTE: This service is free to University of ChicagoStudents, Faculty and Staff upon presentationof University identification.(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under nor¬mal driving conditions. Stops at all intersectionsupon signal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 59th & Dorchester, bus proceeds Westto Cottage Grove Avenue; South to 60th Street;East on 60th Street to Woodlawn Avenue; Northto West bound Midway Drive; Midway Drive toEllis Avenue; North to 57th Street; East on 57thStreet to University; North to 53rd Street; Weston 53rd Street to Greenwood Avenue; South to54th Place; West on 54th Place to Ingleside;North to Hyde Park Blvd.; East on Hyde ParkBlvd. to Dorchester; South to 53rd Street; Easton 53rd Street to Harper Avenue; South to 54thPlace; West on 54th Place to Dorchester; Southto 55th Street; East on 55th Street to S. HydePark Blvd.; South to 56th Street; West on 56thStreet to Lake Park Avenue; South to 57th Street;West on 57th Street to Dorchester; South to 59th& Dorchester, the Starting Point.SCHEDULEP.M. Starts at 59th & Dorchester"C"-l No 9:10 Run6:10 9:40*6:40 10:10*7:10 10:40*7:40 11:10*8:10 11:40*8:40 12:10** Specific pickup stops at:59th & Kimbark 60th & EllisIda Noyes Hall Law SchoolHarper Library 57th & Ellis59th & Ellis Reynolds Club(Last trip ends at 57th & Dorchester) (S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUSMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 60 minutes round trip under nor¬mal driving conditions. Stops at all intersectionsupon signal from patron)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and pro¬ceeds South on Jeffery to 76th Street; East on76th Street to Exchange Avenue; North West onExchange to 71st Street; West on 71st Street toCrandon Avenue; North on Crandon to 68thStreet; West on 68th Street to Stony Island; Northon Stony Island through Jackson Park Drive to59th and Stony Island; West on 59th Street toEllis Avenue; South on Ellis Avenue to 60th Street;East on 60th Street to Stony Island; then SouthEast through Jackson Park Drive to 67th and Jef¬fery, the Starting Point.SCHEDULEA.M. Starts at 67th & Jeffery"S"-J "S"-2 "S"-36:40 7:00 7:20*7:40 8:00 8:20*8:40 9:00 9:20*(Last trip ends at df'th & Stony)P.M. Starts at 59th 8= Stony"S"-4 "S"-5 "S"—62:30 —3:30 4:104:30 5:10 5:11*5:30 —* These runs will not be madeDecember 23rd through January 3rdnorMarch 24th through March 28th.Interim Periods.(Lost trip ends at 68th & Stony)Further information may be obtained from the Department of Buildings and Grounds, 960 East 58th Street, Mr. A. Herbster, Midway 3-0800, Extension 3082.E. L. MILLER, Director, Plant Operations4 ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT September 27, 1968I I ti jl 1 • !<-/ * ' i • > 1.1. >. .T.K, ‘,ci JJWOli "itri»VWi% 94f\ ftinllWV O' t’e U • * i JGfl *.) t=i I T r £l s?CX Jk'lfContinued from Page Threeto Woodlawn residents to use as they de¬sire. This, many feel, is the responsibilityof a center of learning located in a cityteeming with problems.Blacks CriticizeNevertheless, there are many who offersharp criticism of the University’s activ¬ities in Woodlawn. Among them are blackresidents of the area, who developed deepdistrust of the University during the yearswhen it was considered an “enemy”; andsome of the activist students in the Uni¬versity itself, who sympathize with theblacks and have complaints of their own.Few argue that the social, educational,and medical services provided throughUniversity resources are bad in them¬selves. Yet some have the interpretationthat these are efforts of a “colonialist”power to “buy off the natives,” tokeepthe peace among those who might other¬wise become restless.Clearly, it would be to the University’sdiscomfort for Woodlawn residents to re¬act to the conditions in which they liveby resorting to violence, since the GreatGrey Gothic Campus would be an easytarget of an such violence.Even without impugning anyone’s mo¬tives, it is not hard to interpret efforts ofthe faculty members involved in such proj¬ects as arising from the guilt complex towhich liberals are addicted. Many radicalsfeel that any such efforts to do things forblack people are likely to smother theurges of black people to do things forthemselves — such as getting together tochange the system which is oppressingthem.Expansion FearedAdded to this radical dislike for liberalprograms is the deep mistrust of Wood¬lawn residents for the University and itsmotives. Ironically perhaps, the birth ofThe Woodlawn Organization, now workingcooperatively with the University and thecity, was spurred by opposition to the Uni¬versity’s efforts to expand. per cent of South Campus since 1903, butwanted to obtain the rest for expansion.Object to ProcedureSpokesmen for the United Woodlawn Con¬ference, a moderate citizens’ group .ob¬jected to the commission, said they werenot opposed to all clearance, but wanted anopportunity for the residents of the com¬munity to be consulted before beingevicted.A group of ministers and other residents,Woodlawn, in 1960 invited “professionalagitator” Saul Alinsky and his IndustrialAreas Foundation to see what he could doabout getting people in Woodlawn together.The issue Alinsky used was the attemptedencroachment of the Universiy. This was amenace which attracted many residents tothe common rallying point of The Wood¬lawn Organization.While there was much in common be¬tween the aims of TWO and the University,TWO based its pitch on “self-determina¬tion.”After TWO had acquired a wide base of support and broadened the range of issueson which it acted, and after Alinsky hadquietly moved out of active involvementwith the organization, an agreement wasreached between the University and TWO.Pact ProvisionsThe pact, ratified in a meeting in MayorDaley’s office in 1963, specified that TWOwould join with the private Kate Mare-mont Foundation in building a housing de¬velopment on Cottage Grove between 60thand 63d. The University would wait to ac¬quire most of the land it wanted until otherplaces were found for residents of the SouthCampus area. In addition, land for a newVeterans Administration hospital would beprovided between 60th and 61st, offering thepossibility of many new jobs for arearesidents.Since the pact was ratified, many apart¬ment buildings in the South Campus areahave been demolished by the city’s urbanrenewal program. Meanwhile, p!ans for the63d-Cottage Grove project, which wouldprovide 540 apartments and town houses, have been progressing, although slowed atfirst by city red tape.Clearly, however, not all people livingin South Campus will be able to line in the63d-Cottage project. There’s not enoughroom, and rents (100 a month for three-bedroom apartment) are too high for some.Evict StudentsStudents are among the people beingshoved out of the South Campus area.There have always been students in manyof the buildings, but many students movedto the area in the last few years as fami¬lies moved out of buidlings that were to beurban renewed.This new clearance of places where stu¬dents, liberals and radicals alike.Some who are deeply distrustful of theUniversity harbor suspicions that it se¬cretly covets even more land in Woodlawn,such as parcels as far south as 63d. That isa matter of speculation, however; and hasbeen knocked around for many years.David L. AikenJOINTHE MAROONIt's a new Maroon this year. It's wide open. And free. If you'd like to join us, check off as manyboxes as you want, write your name, phone number, and any comments about yourself on the backof this sheet, and take it to the Maroon office on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall (1212 E. 59th),Battle lines between Woodlawn and theUniversity were drawn in 1960, but theUniversity’s involvement in Woodlawnreaches back before that.In the 1940s, the University subsidizedwhite residents’ groups which sponsored“restrictive covenants.” These were argu¬ments by landowners that they would notsell land or rent apartments to anyoneother owners didn’t like.A group called the Woodlawn Conserva¬tion Corporation, describing its aims as“among others, the promoting of real es¬tate values in Woodlawn,” drew up “con¬servation agreements” in which propertyowners promised to give 30 days’ notice tothe corporation before making any ‘un¬conditional sale” of land or apartmentspace. If a member of the corporationdidn’t like the people to whom some othermember wanted to sell, he could file anobjection charging bad faith, or get thecorporation to buy the property at a high¬er price.Blacks Moved InThis worked fine until 1947, when theU.S. Supreme Court declared such cove¬nants unconsitutional. After that year,black people who had been kept in nearbyghetto areas moved into Woodlawn in in¬creasing numbers. Between the 1950 and1960 censuses, a little less than 40,000whites left Woodlawn as almost 40,500blacks moved in. Most of this change tookplace in the early fifties.An unknown but presumably large num¬ber of blacks who moved into Woodlawnduring this period had lived in Hyde Park,which was being urban renewed into amiddle class, integrated area which had noroom for the poor.Other than proposing a sunken express¬way at 61st street to speed traffic to andfrom the lake fmot—and to make It moredifficult for Woodlawn residents to get tocampus — the University did little thatachieved publicity in its Woodlawn rela¬tion until 1960.In July of that year, it asked the ChicagoLand Clearance Commission—the agencythen in charge of urban renewal—for helpin acquiring land in South Campus. Thisis the mile-long block-wide strip from 60thto 61st between Cottage Grove and StonyIsland. The University had bought up 60 [ ] News staff.The backbone of the Maroon.Writes news stories. Workswith Barbara Hurst, thenews editor, and with thevarious members of thenews board on such 'beats'as:[ ] Student politics[ ] Academic affairs[ ] National student news[ ] Woodlawn and Hyde ParkI n the next few weeks thenews staff will be working intask forces on these majorstories:[ ] The Campus SecurityProblem[ ] The Housing Crisis[ ] The Chicago Police[ ] The ThickeningBureaucracy[ ] A series on research invarious fields[ ] The Student Movementin Chicago[ ] Layout staff.Designs the Maroon and theJournal, and follows throughtheir production. Works with John Recht, the managingeditor.[ ] Editorial staff.Is in charge of the editorialpage and writes columns,analyses, and editorials.Works with Roger Black,the editor.[ ] Photo staff.Supplies photographs toillustrate news stories andmagazine articles. (Oftenthe writers supply storiesto illustrate the photgraphs.)We intend to give more spacethis year to photographsand will not hesitate torun whole pages of them.Works with photo editorDavid Travis.[ ] Copy staff.Reads all the stories andarticles produced by theMaroon and the Journalto see that they havesome relation to theEnglish language and to anequally nebulous thingknown as 'Maroonstyle.' [ ] The Grey City JournalThe weekly magazine of theMaroon. Can and often willcontain almost anything.Usual format: one majorlead article, plus severalshorter reviews and articleson cultural, political, andparapolitical events inChicago (the 'Grey City.')Works with MichaelSorkin, the editor of theJournal. Regular reviewsare run about:[ ] Films[ ] Theater[ ] Music[ ] Pop[ ] Dance[ I Architecture[ ] RecordsHas a hip column summingup (or down) all the culturalactivities in town and called:[ ] Culture VultureFrom time to time themagazine will print gangprojects such as theforthcoming:[ ] The Quotations of RichardJ. Daley Mayor.rrs free.Visit us tonight during Activities night. Ida Noyes. 7:30.1 | U I 1 ■ . I M ' 1 ■ >T-«ORIENTATION SUPPLEMENTT , , . .... ■.».«.V.V.V-'-V.V’ • W *September 27, 1968<V| 1A111 LlVl ULL3I * 3 *. a 1Skippers do it!English feather.For men who want to be where theaction is. Very intrepid. Very mas¬culine. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION.$2.50, $4.00, $6.50. From the com- 1plete array of ENGLISH LEATHERmen's toiletries.I’KOm.'ll Ol Ml MU . v>Kim ui. \ i n*t, MR. PIZZAFIVE SIZES OF PIZZAS TO CHOOSE FROMAll Our Pizzas have a Tomato and Cheese BaseCalifornia Vino Ripened TomatoesHY 3-8282Italian & America*fotiheJ £anfaickeADelivery ServiceOpen 7 Days- 4:00 PM. To 2:00 AM.Hrs. Fri. & Sat.- 4:00 PM. To 3:00 AM.Sunday - 2:00 PM. To 2:00 AM.Can^OuUt4S9 S. Wide p*u su. 12”SERVES 1GROUND BEEF 1-85SAUSAGE ».85A Gourmet’s DelightDelicotely spicedGREEN PEPPERSelected GardenFresh Bell PeppersMUSHROOM 1.85French ImportGARLIC 1.85Rich & Pure Cloves, finelyground & sprinkled evenlyONION or TUNA 1.85Each an American beautyANCHOVY 1.85Imported from PortugalCHEESE 1.85A pure Mozzarella Chwese ..with that full creamy flavorHALF <S HALF 1.85OLI V E-Spanish import 1.35 14”22.352.35 16"33.353.35 18”4-54.354.35 20”6-85.355.351.85 2.35 3.35 4.35 5.352.352.352.352.352.352.352.35 3.353.353.353.353.353.353.35 4.354.354.354.354.354.354.35 5.355.355.355.355.355.355.35FOR THOSE WHO LIKE SOMETHING DIFFERENTCONEY ISLAND 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00PIZZA - Souioge,Mushrooms. Groen PeppersPEPPERONI 2.35 2.85 4.15 5.15 6.15For those who likethe spicy things in lifeSHRIMP 2.35 2.85 4.15 5.15 6.15The last word-fresh dailyBACON 2.35 2.85 4.15 5.15 6.15Crisp, yet tender EACH EXTRA ADDED INCRED. TO PIZZA IS EXTRA.50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Prices Subject To Change Without NoticeI I! U. of C. BOOKSTORE HOURS!(Fall Quarter Openings)FRI.-SEPT. 27-8:00 AM-8:00 PMSAT. - SEPT. 28-8:30 AM-5:00 PMMON.-SEPT. 30- FRI. -OCT. 48:00 AM-8:00 PMSAT.-OCT. 5-8:30 AM-5:00 PMMON.-OCT. 7 & TUE.-OCT. 88:00 AM-8:00 PM-ALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDEDBOOKS & SUPPLIESU. OF C. BOOK STORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEHILLEL FESTIVAL SERVICESYOM KIPPUROctober 1 October 2Reform 8:30 p.m.Conservative 6:00 p.m. 9:30 a.m.Orthodox 6:00 p.m. 8:30 a.m.In addition, arrangements have been made to enablestudents to attend local Reform, Conservative andOrthodox synogogues. 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Lake Perch...1.75Italian Dinner FestivalsSPAGHETTI, homemade meat sauce 1.35with Meat Balls, Sausage or Mushrooms 1.65RAVIOLI, with meat sauce 1.35with Meat Balls, Sausage or Mushrooms 1.65MOSTACCIOLI, with meat sauce 1.35with Meat Balls or Mushrooms 1.65Sandwich StandoutsMEAT BALL fine/, green pepper) 70ITALIAN BEEF find, green pepper) 80SAUSAGE find, green pepper) 70HAMBURGER 60 CHEESEBURGER 70AccessoriesFrench Fries (order).... 25< Cole Slaw (pint) 50<Broasted Potatoos(order).35i Onion Rings (order) 50<Salad(garlic or Fr.)pint.. 50< Peppers (order) 50<Rousing RefreshersSpumoni (per pint) 95< Connoli 35tSOFT DRINKS AND COFFEEDELIVERY CHARGE - 50* MINIMUM ORDER - $1.50PHOENIXHASITTHE SAVAGE MINDby Claude Levi-Strauss. P325 Oct. $3.25$1.50$1.75$1.75$1.75$1.95$2.50$1.95$1.25$1.95P317 Oct. $3.95P320 Oct. $2.95P321 Oct. $2.95THE COMPLETE GREEK TRAGEDIESAESCHYLUS I Oresteia P306AESCHYLUS II Four Tragedies P307EURIPIDES I Four Tragedies P308EURIPIDES II Four Tragedies P309EURIPIDES III Four Tragedies P310EURIPIDES IV Four Tragedies P311EURIPIDES V Three Tragedies P312SOPHOCLES I Three Tragedies P313SOPHOCLES II Four Tragedies P314ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAby A. Leo Oppenheim.THE CHOLERA YEARSby Charles Rosenberg.JUSTICE ON TRIALThe Case of Louis D. Brandeisby A. L. Todd.TOLSTOY ON EDUCATIONTranslated from the Russian by Leo Weiner, with an In¬troduction by Reginald D. Archambault. P315 Oct. $2.95PEDDLERS AND PRINCESSocial Development and EconomicChange in Two Indonesian Townsby Clifford Geertz. P318 Oct. $1.95TOUCHby Thom Gunn. PP11 Oct. $1.45HERITAGE OF SOCIOLOGY SERIESTHE CITYby Robert E. Park, Ernest W. Burgess, Roderick D.•McKenzie, with an introduction by Morris Janowitz.P323 Oct. $2.45MAX WEBER ON CHARISMAAND INSTITUTION BUILDINGEdited and with an Introduction by S. N. Eisenstadt.P322 Dec. $3.95E. FRANKLIN FRAZIER ON RACE RELATIONSEdited and with an Introduction by G. FranklinEdwards. P324 Oct. $3.95REFLECTIONS ON THE PHILOSOPHYOF THE HISTORY OF MANKINDby Johann G. von Herder. Abridged, and with an In¬troduction by Frank E. Manuel. Classic European His¬torians. P316 Oct. $2.95 THE PROVINCES OF THE ROMAN EMPIREThe European Provinces by Theodor Mommsen. Ed¬ited and with an Introduction by T. Robert S. Broughton.Classic European Historians. P305 Oct. $3.45THE SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY STAGEEdged by Gerold Eades Bentley. Patterns of literaryCriticism. PLC6 Oct. $3.45THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHYVolume IV: The Seventeenth Century by EmileBrehier. Translated by Wade Baskin P3I9 Sept. $2.45THE DRAFTEdited by Sol Tax. Paperback Special. Oct. $3.95FOLKTALES OF THE WORLDRichard M. Dorson, General EditorFOLKTALES OF NORWAYEdited by Reidar Th. Christiansen. FW5 $3.45FOLKTALES OF ENGLANDEdited by Katharine M. Briggs and Ruth L. Tongue.FW3 $2.95FOLKTALES OF CHINAEdited by Wolfram Eberhord. FW2 $3.45FOLKTALES OF IRELANDEdited by Sean O'Sullivan. FW4 $3.45FOLKTALES OF GERMANYEdited by Kurt Ranke. FW1 $3.45PAPERBACK TEXT EDITIONSSLAVERY, Second Editionby Stanley M. Elkins. Sept. $1.50tTHE SOVIET SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT,Fourth Edition, Revisedby John N. Hazard. Sept. $3.25tGENERAL PALAEONTOLOGYby A. Brouwer. Translated by R. H. Kaye. Oct. 29 $2.45CLINICAL STUDIES IN READING, IIIEdited by Helen M. Robinson and Helen K. Smith.Dec. $5.00tNOTES AND COMMENTS ONVERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGYby Alfred S. Romer. Oct. 29 To be announcedMIDDLE AGE AND AGINGA Reader in Social Psychology. Edited by BerniceL. Neugarten. Nov. To be announcedPrices subject to change,- Mext discountFor complete catalogue write toTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO PRESS5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637September 27, 1968♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Student Co-op Bookstore ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦The Other BookstoreStudent owned — Student run14,000 TEXTS and GENERAL READINGALL USED, MOST AT 50%♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Hours 9 AM. - VO PM.Reynolds Club BasementMMtioa this ad, a cranny aovel free ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦The Daily World isAmerica's only professionally produced daily news¬paper with a radical orientation.The Daily World isthe voice of the Anti-war, black liberation and rank-and-file labor movementsThe Daily World isa complete newspaper with sports, cultural news,political analysis — everything except society notesand stock quotationsThe Daily World hasa 12-page supplement every weekend Coming Sept¬ember 27: a special supplement on “Radical Activityon the CampusesLook for it at your newsstand or contact:MIDLAND NEW CO.27 E. Monroe StreetChicago, III. 60603RA9-8168The DailyW®)RLD 205 W. I 9th StreetNew York, N.Y. 10011One daily Marxist newspaper in the U.S.A.1 Year $15 Student special 1 Year $5Trial subscription 3 tnos. $2NameAddressCity State .Zip.School(for student subscribers)(Make checks payable to the DAILY WORLD)SJSJSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd ACCUTRON"«25" Water¬proof," sweepsecond hand,applied romannumeral dial$135.00Or gain.We’ll give you that guarantee when you buy an Accutron" timepiece. It’ll be accurate to within a minute a month.t An average oftwa seconds a day. Other watches have their own notions about howlong a day should last. Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours and 56minutes. Or make it last longer than the usual 24 hours. Accutrondoesn't believe in making time. Or losing it. Just keeping it.ACCUTRON^ by BULOVA ^ It goes hm-m-m-m.1422 East 53rd St. Phone: 363-0161 VOLVO SALES&SERVICECENTER,INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649RE I -3800IS 1 MATTER OF...Sun Life Insurance is a sureway to financial independencefor you and your family.As a local Sun Life representa¬tive, may I call upon you at yourconvenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street,Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390- 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY •x£mxjxW❖jv& :>>x•iiiwSliSilS:;:® £•»»»»:LUCHINOSTUDIO OF THE DANCEFLAMENCO — PRIMITIVEMODERNMU 4-1173 In Harper Court5210 HarperSiiafeWter'stW''"w*»TjTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOK STOREALL RECOMMENDED AND REQUIREDBOOKS AND SUPPLIESFOR ALL U. of C. COURSES★ Stationery ★Typewriters ★Photography Supplies★Gifts ★Candy & Tobacco ★Snack Bar★Newspapers ★Magazines ★Greeting Cards★ University Memorabilia★ ★ ★U. OF C. BOOKSTORE HOURS-(FALL QUARTER OPENING): FRI.-SEPT. 27 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PMSAT.-SEPT. 28 ....8:30 AM TO 5:00 pm ;: MON.- SEPT. 30.. 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PMTUE.- OCT. 1 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM: WED.- OCT. 2 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM i: THUR. - OCT. 3 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM; FRI.- OCT. 4 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM :SAT.- OCT. 5 8:30 AM TO 5:00 PMi MON.- OCT. 7 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM i! TUE.- OCT. 8 8:00 AM TO 8:00 PM iWED.- OCT. 9........ REVERT TO REGULAR HOURS jThe University Of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueORIENTATION SUPPLEMENT September 27, 1968EMTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL The City White hath fled, the earth,But where the azure ioaters lie,A noble city hath its birth,The City Grey that ne’er shall die.A Bellow of Dissent,A Call for HelpEugene WilldmanOF COURSE I would forget where it came from just atthe moment when I need it. However, a Nigerian poet-playwright, whose name has fled with the memory ofwhere iiis words are, has put the issue of the writer'spredicament perfectly. His view, if not his exact words,comes down to an irreducible and unarguableproposition:It isn’t enough to write a revolutionary song. Youmust be part of the revolution itself. You must be one ofthe people.Put in such a form it becomes clear that we are allbeginning writers and that the same problems face usall—from the plumed sturgeon to the millions of lessgifted onanists. The real issue is, which side of the fenceare you on? How big is the gap between what you sayand where you are when you say it? Poverty, after all,is an industry in this country. People have had theirreputations made thanks to urban “unrest.” The grantsgo to the writers about poverty, not to the people whoare poor. Alas, that even goes for some black writers.But in the end their skin may make them purer thantheir hearts. In the end your motives matter less thanyour acts. Where were you when? You will write aboutthat, whether you intend to or not. And there is no ques- by Eugene Wildmantion of faking it. Your acts will locate your feelings withprecision. Where were you when Genet and Ginsberg andMailer were?Most of all, let’s not delude ourselves. All of us areaways beginning. The writer is not unique in that. AsBrecht showed very learly in Galileo, you are alwaysoperating in a political context. When you drop a cube ofice in a bucket of water, you are making a political ges¬ture. A social order i s hidden there somewhere. And nouse pretending eithe: You will be found out. If you aregood and you work for a university, they will discoverthey don’t need you t xt year. If you are better yet, youwill be framed and ;oiled. Nor is it any use to featheryour nest now and ; later take care of itself, certainlyan attractive altem; ive. Two factors operate here. Inthe first place there is history. One thing about history isthat it has an accelerator, and delayed outcomes arebitter indeed. (Witness the history of the United States.)The second factor, and not one to be lightly considered,is where you stand.. Your insides are your merchandise,and souls are fragile things. So, are you in or are youout? Whose side are you on? Hollywood isn’t the onlyserpent.Writing a novel in seclusion is a political act. It isn’ta matter of TV appearances and whether that is yourgroove or not. It’s simply where were you when? Thereis no use paying lip service to Brecht, thus to progress,thus to freedom, by permitting performances of TheGood Woman of Setzuan when we demonstrate lack ofconcern and lack of good will through hearings and in¬vestigations whose sole purpose is to shore up those verysame drop-in-the-bucket social views that Brecht so sav¬agely attacks. Where were you then, when the hearingswere being conducted? Watching Macbird? A fearfulthing it must be for a politician, to see a man go homefrom a play and know full well that that very same manwill attend another play the following week! What athreat! And what might that man be doing in the inter¬im? Could he be in seclusion?No one is asking anything new of art. They aer ask¬ing something new of artists—what they are asking ofthemselves, what they are asking of politicians, whatthey are asking of teachers—that all those people whohave gotten fat off speaking for them or about themcome down from the top floor and join them at groundlevel. Join us is the key. Share the dirt, and the gas, andthe clubbings. Be of us. If you want to seclude yourselfup there, well do so. But the action is down here.It has never been enough to be a nice guy. Even niceguys, like the aristocrats of The Caucasian Chalk Circle,sooner or later flee to the suburbs. It’s dull out there,but it looks safe. Where can it De shown that the witty,the great, Gunter Grass has materially contributed tothe lot of the unemployed or the unskilled worker? Isculture not a contribution? No. Because it was never in¬tended to touch the lives of millions. Where was GunterGrass when Jean Genet was? But the enemy is hardlyGunter Grass. The wicked cook is the enemy.The wicked cook is the anachronistic alienated bour¬geois asirtt, the myth of whom we insist on maintaininglong after his actual physical decay. The haunted sons ofthe bourgeoisie don’t have to kvell in public and retreatin private. Seclusion is clearly an arrangement of life.It has deep historical roots and tremendous political,economic and social implications.Writers imagine that they are immortal too much. Butpaper goes fast, and people even faster. And if the writ¬er, or his works at least, aren’t immortal, why write? Idon’t know. Why be a sturgeon? Fill in your own an¬swer. These delusions, fostered by our particular socialsystem, however, encourage the writer to keep aloof andto maintain his aristocratic pretensions. He is special. Saul BellowThe support for all of this is individualism, a highly un¬democratic concept. It is relevant to the subject of whatproblems fact the beginning writer that there really is nowhite community to speak of. On the other hand, therecertainly is a black one. A black person will devote hismost creative and productive years to his communityand his people. His white counterpart devotes his bestyears to self-seeking, and then when he nears the agefor retirement will decide to “go into politics.” The be¬ginning writer has his choice: he can “go into politics”literarily (and by implication, socially and politically),or he can put his feet on the ground and live in whateveris happening. The writer can join in the work of creatinga community.The big difference is that most of us are no longerup there looking down, but are down here and movingout. Gravity will take care of those up there. The ques¬tion of should I sell out, and when? is really an academ¬ic one. A revolution in sensibility is taking place. It willcarry all else with it. Art is not a thing, art is aresponse. It does not compete with history, it is the re¬sult of history. It doesn’t duplicate history, it conveysContinued on Page SeverPABLO PICASSOJAMES JOYCEIGOR STRAVINSKYJACQUES TOURNEURJACQUES WHO?Jacques Tourneur. Like the others, a great 20th centuryartist. You haven't heard of him because, unlike the others,Jacques Tourneur makes movies.For some reason, our audience isn’t very adventurous.Every time we show a Fellini or a Bogart movie, they lineup half-way across the Midway. But when we show filmslike Ford's SEVEN WOMEN or Olni’s IL POSTO, the aud¬ience consists mostly of our members (who get in free),other film society members, and the fire guard (who gets infree, too). Yet when these films were shown at the LondonFilm Festival, they packed the house. See what you missed?This quarter we’ve scheduled 26 great movies, plus a fewsurprises. For six dollars (the best movie bargain in Chi¬cago) you can buy a Doc Films associate membership whichwill admit you to every film we show this fall.Even the one by Jacques Tourneur.Oct. 4:BIKE BOY/Andy WarholOct. 8:THE BIG SLEEP/Howard HawksOct. 9:KING KONG/Merian Cooper & Ernest ShodesackOct. 10:MONKEY BUSINESS/Howard HawksOct. II:VIRIDIANA/Luis BunuelOct. 15:I WAS A MALE WAR BRIDE/Howard HawksOct. 16:FREAKS/Tod BrowningOct. 17:BARBARY COAST/Howard HawksOct. 18:KING AND COUNTRY/Joseph LoseyOct. 22:SERGEANT YORK/Howard HawksOct. 23:THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN/James WhaleOct. 24:BRINGING UP BABY/Howard HawksOct. 25:LA STRADA/Federico FelliniOct. 29:GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES/Howard HawksOct. 30:THE THING/Christian NybyOct. 31:ONLY ANGELS HAVE WINGS/Howard HawksNov. I:MOROCCO/Josef von SternbergNov. 5:HATARM/Howard HawksNov. 6:THE BLACK CAT/Edgar G. UlmerNov. 7:THE BIG SKY/Howard HawksNov. 8:ALEXANDER NEVSKY/Sergei EisensteinNov. 12:BALL OF FIRE/Howard HawksNov. 13:THE CAT PEOPLE/Jacques TourneurNov. 14:RED LINE 7000/Howard HawksNov. 15:INTOLERANCE/D. W. GriffithPLUS KUBRICK’S DR. STRANGELOVE! (Date to beannounced)DOC FILMS: Whereelse could you see afilm by Jacques Tourneur? V% r/featuring TODAY MALONE— With the "Acid Rock" Music ofCOUNTRY JOE • QUICKSILVERSTEVE MILLER • MOTHER EARTHProduced and Directed by JACK 0 CONNELL • f lecutme Producer ROBERT LEOERA Robert) LederCo Omcron fitms Product** • COLORI SXNOTRACK ALBUM AVJUU&E ON MUTED MUSTS KCMtOS |“EXTRAORDINARILYBEAUTIFUL) — N Y. POST“WHERE HAVE ALL THEFLOWER CHILDREN GONE.THE FILM SHOWS THEMTURNING ON.” -n.y.tmesA DIZZY PSYCHEDELIC TRIPTO FANTASY LAND.” daily newsENOUGH TO MAKE YOUCURSE THE HIPPIES ORWISH YOU WERE ONEOF THEM.”-w//vs STARTS SEPT. 20LIMITED ENGAGEMENT ATTHREEPENNYCINEMAit 2424 N. Lincolnor Fullerton-Hoistedlone block eo$t ofFullerton “El" stopTel.: 528-9126FREE PARKING2438-40 N. HoistedLooks great...writes great...is great!EBERHARD FABER’SNOBLOr DESK SETwith your college emblemTwo famous NOBLOT Ball-Point ^Pens—one black, one red —set mJ Hrlin modern chrome holders ondeep-lustre black base.Handsome, handy, perfect for bis,ore o„,yyour desk. 7Pick up an Eberhard Faber TR 35™ porous point pen. too.With Perma-Moist™ Point. Writes with a thin,strong line every time! Eight colors. 69«.Off AND •'NCR COUNIRlCSe. WILKES BARRE PA • NEW YORK • CANADA - GERMANY - VENEZUELA - COLOMBIA Opening Tuesday, Oct.Thru Sunday, Oct. 6ELVIN JONES TRIOJOE FARRELLTenor, Flute JIMMY GARRISONBassIn a tribute to JOHN COLTRANENightly 8:30 til 2:00 A.M.Tejar Supper Club1321 South MichiganzJVLad HatterRestaurant & Cafe“ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE TRACKS”Enjoy your food listening to classical music — OurMenu is exquisite and reasonable e SteakburgersFrench Pancakes e Hoppel Popple e Homecookeddinners e Fabulous Vala’s Ice Cream, Sodas, Pas¬tries and Coffee e1656 E. 53rd STREET 955-2229.2 .(JR,E,YLCI;TY J.OURNAL September' 27, 1968Grey City’s Gustatory GuideTHERE ARE MANY things you can do in HydePark, but eating at a really outstanding restaurantisn’t one of them.On a four star scale-four being the highest ratingfor any restaurant within walking distance of theUniversity—here is a guide to the rest of them. Notethat a few, Effendi, O’Tooles the Famingo SteakHouse, and the new Enrico’s have been left outbecause we haven’t made it to them yet. These,and many other Chicago restaurants will be cover¬ed in a weekly column.VALOIS, 1518 E. 53rd. Classic! SEE YOUR FOODand an unusually good assortment of “Hyde Park Peo¬ple”, mostly old and strange. Food is cheap and cafe¬teria style. Chicken, gravies, roast beef sandwiches,and desserts (esp. rice pudding) are especially good.It’s a tradition to eat at Valois for at least one quar¬ter. ** (2 stars)fashioned fun. Smedleys used to be where it wasREALLY happening. Now it’s where it all hangs out.Food and mixed drinks poor, service occassionally agas. Very popular place for ’“Pink Ladies.” *BAROQUE, 1510 E. 53rd. Though the Baroque no long¬er serves food except pretzels, the atmosphere is lessHeavy than Smedley’s (with live entertainment, Wed.-Sunday) Sand the mixed drinks are usually fine. Couldbe a good place if all the Beautiful People would kind¬ly start hanging out there again.**EAGLE, 5311 S. Backstone. Food good though a littlehigh priced. Drinks good also. The atmosphere is stilla bit too self-consciously something—highbrow? Few hippeople there...where did all those people go who usedto frequent SMEDLEY’S AND THE BAROQUE and noware only rarely seen along the walls at JIMMY’S?*”’JIMMY’S (WOODLAWN TAP), 1172 E. 55th. Bewilder-ingly close to Campus, unlike EVERYTHING ELSEin Hyde Park URBAN RENEWAL not only meantSTUDENT and BLACK REMOVAL, but also all otherbars and restaurants). Beside being dull and dank(honest!), the only other thing to recommend it is thehuge selection of Domestic and Imported Beers.*¥2No bar in Hyde Park carries any good Wines...youhave to hitch or take the I.C. or campus bus to theParty Mart at 72nd and Exchange ... A First Quartermust...cheeses selected for you to match your wine.SURF AND SURREY, 50th and South Shore. Unfortu¬nately, they’ve discontinued their super-fine break-fasts(please.. .), but still have good food in the expen¬sive category. Let Mommy and Daddy take fyou whenthey visit. Service is good. (What Hyde Park reallyneeds is a restaurant that delivers breakfasts...).***GORDONS, 1321 E. 57th. Since the University and Jul¬ian Levi “renewed” 55th and 57th streets, it’s the closestrestaurant. Sauteed Chicken Livers best thing on themenu, also Salad Plates and sandwiches often good.Breakfasts served with horrible syrup. Vanilla icecream only. Indifferent service. Prices really O.K.Always closed on Tuesdays. **HASTY GRILL, 53rd and Kenwood. Five greaseburgersfor a dollar. Knock yourself out and if you don’t,someone else might ... Be VERY Cool. The closestHyde Park can come to a Soul Restaurant and thatONLY because of the patrons. The interior is the mostdistinctive in the Hyde Park.*for atmosphere.HOBBY HOUSE, 1342 E. 53rd. DAWN TO DAWN, you’restill just a few steps away from food poisoning andpederasts at the Hobby House. Surprise, the food isalso still interesting..the patrons more, so, especiallybetween 2 and 6 A.M. (my apologies to the Boys in theBand). Open 24 hours. Inexpensive. If you’re high,check out the mirrored room in the back. Avoid wash¬rooms. *NICKY’S RESTAURANT AND PIZZA, 53rd and Kimbark.Fair to good Italian and American food. Exception isNicky’s Special Pizza, which is outstanding. Heartrending-ly slow service. Have it delivered. Mixed drinks and beer.Walls are splattered with not-to-be believed paintings.•*%.LARUSSO’S, 1645 E. 53rd. A really fine Italian restau¬rant in a sombre second floor parlor. Veal Marsala,Bracciole, in fact, every entree is excellent. Quiet withgood service. Prices average. Cheese antipasto aloneworth the trip. Good drinks. Choice of spaghetti or rav¬ioli side dish with dinner. One of a very few places inHyde Park where you can Escape, Relax, and Eat.***%Continued on page sevenGREY OUT Y (JG»U RN*AJL 3CHICKENEATER, 53rd and Harper. OLIVER TWIST,DON QUIXOTE, CAROL’S, this year, the CHICKEN-EATER! The jinx may be broken since the CHICKEN-EATER seems to be surviving while serving goodchicken at a moderate price. Far better than Col.Sanders which may be a Minuteman Front to poisonlong-haired pinkos & intellectuals Take out orEat in.**COURT HOUSE RESTAURANT, 5211 S. Harper. Prideof the Hyde Park Establishment, the Courthouse servesexcellent continental food. Moderately expensive, but areal bargain at lunch and late evening. Fine, relaxedatmosphere, occasionally live Classical Guitar, Smallbut well chosen wine cellar. Don’t miss the Pommard.***YMCA CAFETERIA, 53rd and Dorchester. InexpensiveYMCA food*.KIM-THOMAS REXALL DRUGSTORE, 53rd and Back-stone. Shelters yet another Hyde Park hamburger place—this one clean. Breakfasts O.K. Barton’s candies, con¬fections, and dredels at counter. Friendly newspaper¬man outside. *JANE LEE, 1316 E. 53rd. Fairly good and reasonablypriced Cantonese Food. Quiet and unobtrusive. Wonder¬ful service. **MORTON’S, 56th and South Shore, Unfortunately, Mor¬ton’s has become run-down, with unexpected thread¬bare carpets and indifferent cleanliness. Food remainsexcellent. ***CAMPUS CERTIFIED FOODS, 57th near Kenwood Al¬ley. A grocery and take-out delicatessan featuring thebest sandwiches in Hyde Park, the friendliest employees(though they’ll try to sell you the store while you’retrapped at the cash register), fine imported foods,excellent aged steaks, and, when not crushed in cello¬phane and/or left to sit over-night, some fine bakerygoods...but not like the good old days when the windowwas overflowing with freshly baked treats. Also, superchopped liver; made with schmaltz. **¥*CHANCES R, Harper Court. If only the music wasn’tsuch a nearly unanimous Bummer, this would be thebest bar-restaurant in Hyde Park. It probably is any¬way, which gives you some idea of the selection excel¬lent charcoal broiled hamburgers and cheeseburgers,Michelob on tap, and some of the best waitresses andbartenders in Hyde Park. Still, the music is too loudand everyone yells like fcrmhands at a carnival. Pea¬ nuts featured with sheels tossed on the floor for that old-fashioned FUN feeling. ***WIMPYS, Co-op Shopping Center. If you’ve forgotten whatHoward Johnson’s is like, drop in. ¥4*HYDE PARK COFFEE SHOP. 53rd and Hyde ParkBoulvard. Unpretentious, dare I say wholesome, AmericanFood. Service sporadic. Reasonably priced...however, be¬ware, they are always out of something you want.*¥>.MAD HATTER, also 53rd andHyde Park Boulevard. Finefood, especially at night when chef uses his own recipes.Onion soup, Protein salad, Daily Specials, and, of course,Little Pleasures-Type Fountain Creations(Made with HydePark’s favorite Ice Cream) are all highly recommended.A fascinating place for liaisons. ***LEONARD’S DELICATESSAN, 51st near Harper. Small,inexpensive, sandwich counter with bakery treats. Whileyou’re there, check out the custom clothes at the Mouse-Trap. *STATION IBD, 51st near Harper. Quiet, relaxed atmos¬phere with good food, especially any kind of beef dinner.Fairy high-priced though a good deal if you like areally good lunch. Some claim it’s still Hyde Park’sbest...***SARNAT’S DRUG STORE, 57th and Blackstone. Goodmalts and shakes. Sell wine and beer, but NO Robu-tussin. *RIBS ’N BIBS, 53rd and Dorchester. Laugh now at thename, but by the end of Winter Quarter, you’ prob¬aby have the phone number memorized. Ribs, Bibs,Chicken, Sandwiches all good and barbequed. Fairlypriced **Take out and Delivery.PIZZA PLATTER, 53rd West of Harper. Reasonablytasting, big pizzas witha heavy flavor of tomato andoregan. ** Take out and Delivery.MR. PIZZA, 1465 E. 51st. Big, good pizzas on the thinside. ** Take out and Delivery.SMEDLEY’S, south of Harper Court. Speaking of old-«Spptemberl7vJ9$8 j/WCX)1411 E. 53rd. St.Clochtai IJ4 ioutat our New BarComplimentary Hors D'veuvres4 • 7 DailyHY 3*5300i i! U. of C. BOOKSTORE HOURS!(Fall Quarter Openings)FRI.-SEPT. 27-8:00 AM-8:00 PMSAT.-SEPT. 28-8:30 AM-5:00 PMMON.-SEPT. 30-FRI.-OCT. 48:00 AM-8:00 PMSAT.-OCT. 5-8:30 AM-5:00 PMMON.-OCT. 7 & TUE.-OCT. 88:00 AM-8:00 PM-ALL REQUIRED & RECOMMENDEDBOOKS & SUPPLIESU. OF C. BOOK STORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEOPEN HOUSEFOR NEW AND RETURNINGSTUDENTSSunday, September 29 - 5:00 p.m.Buffet Supper at Hillel $1.00Information available about programs andstudy groups. To be followed by OrientationWeek Program.HILLEL HOUSE 5715 WOODLAWNAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards 'Helga’ CONFIDENTIAL QUESTIONNAIREPLEASE FILL OUT AND HAND IN AT THEPLAYING “HELGA lAfsjBfeDi n CITY PARKINGWWKLU AT DOOR410 SO. MICHIGAN u^»rr»«iKO«r.9.(DO NOT SIGN YOUR NAME)HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THESE IMPORTANT ISSUES? TRUE FALSE1. Pre-marital sex experience is beneficial.4 rj^ J\2. The “pHI” is a practical answer to birth cq/)troL ' ^3. Sex is better learned by experience than in school_ v -yapi t • v' • < inr4. Sex should be taught in the public schools.5. Parents are better equipped to teach the facts of fife.^^y*6: Too much knowledge about sex i!> bad for young children.*■*7. There is no such thing as too much knowledge about s^***8. There is more immorality today than ten years ago. '■'ft'; ■ , f9. Most women need more sex instruction. 'ml :10. Most men need more sex instruction.ir11. T oday’s young people have the wrong idea about sex.12. There is too much nudity in public today.13. I completely understand the process of conception.■Jjj&ry.'G.* ,.14. I completely understand the functions of boththe male and female sex organs.©1960 American International PicturesWhatever your opinions NOW they may change after you see "HELGA’HELGA” IS CANDID, PROBING & FACTUAL! IT IS A MOTION PICTURE THAT COULD HAVE BEEN FILMED INEUROPE...AND IT EVEN SHOCKED THEM THERE! CUT OUT & RETURN THIS QUESTIONNAIRE TO OURSURVEY BOX IN THE WORLD PLAYHOUSE LOBBY OR BRING IT WITH YOU WHEN YOU COME TO SEE“HELGA” OPENING FRI., SEPT. 27// A * INSTRUCTION BY AN OUTSTANDING FACULTYt/vm/Mis members ofChicago Symphony, Grant Park and Lyric Opera OrchestrasPrivate Lessons in Cello, Clarinet, Flute, French Horn, Oboe,Piano, Trumpet, Violin, Viola, VoiceClass Lessons in RecorderChamber Music - Meets twice monthly - alternate weeks(Rehearsal at Studio)Instruction by Sheppard Lehnhoff andDon Moline of C. Sym.INSTRUCTION BY FACULTY OF DISTINGUISHEDPERFORMERS AND CHOREOGRAPHERSJazz & Ballet by Lou Conte (formerly with Theatre in theRound — also Broadway shows.Special courses for Actors and those interested in Theatre. Wednesday & Friday.MODERN — by Joanna Hall, Master in Dance, University of IllinoisInstructor at University of IllinoisMens & Women — Beginners and AdvancedTuesday & Thursday evenings1438 E. 57th ST. BU 8-3500 CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Times****“It should win an AcademyAward”LESNER NEWS“A Treasure”TERRY TRIBUNE“Film is a Smash”MARSTERS AMERICAN“Everyone Should See It”JUDITH CRIST N.B.C.TV TODAY SHOW“I Love This Movie”TlAKJofUfStudents $ 1.5a with ID CareGood every day but Saturdayrfarfar&tyeforfArinrStyetipriAefrwjw wjv* Wj* JJw vjw^ domed 3Lisl juJy 1645 E. 55th STREET•^CHICAGO, ILL. 6U6I5#Phone: FA 4-1651 directions'lvllL 1nJUil !Ut\mS ln HARPEROrwoo^- UJL oamL_^3/it oVoiL, oprii ■ fcrrv? ‘♦'t-vSTCiSn*.world miM'Ene incm<sli$hiHUGO VON' N0?MANt<Sri4AL SFESHVAL HAY5ZI| HARPER TH£SALZBURG;i£/f T TH£7ITR€OFTH6WORLD3TW''-1EOGAHUANUsLSV/HM DINA MAU-CRNA Ha t/A UHk^E COPELANDfllflhMy**. .2,Malt. 2.1/0 y 10 A 17GoccrnanThsctreTOOK ColuirLjcUrivu.CfjfvW.ltC nVT iokt Co«u*l ?i2N Michigan Ave.GREY CITY JOURNAL September 27FilmsA Filmed Play and a Played FilmDeathwatch (Aardvark)Deathwatch, originally a Genet play, suffers from agarbled soundtrack, a scholarly translation and, gener¬ally, an inadequate transmutation into cinematic terms.It is partialy redeemed by the text and the acting.Paul Mazursky plays the soiled fag with proper bitch-ery. As the illiterate but muscular Greeneyes, MichaelForest has, frighteningly, the carriage and appearance toshift in a twinkling from maudlin love to murderous an¬ger. Leonard Nimoy, as the Genet surrogate, playing amore complex part, plays it less satisfactorily.These characters are confined in an 8x10 prison cell.Such a situation ressembles a “No Exit” written by ear¬ly de Sade. The struggling of these characters is harsh,fierce; their filthy environment, their brutality and theirsexual perversion envelope it in sordid imagery; and,at least in the play, these images—this, after all, iswhat Genet is about—should in turn produce the nauseaof the characters in the audience.Genet tends to phrase explicitly the implicit motiva¬tion of the characters. The translation, as I indicatedearlier goes too far in this direction for it confers a loftyarticulation even on the illiterate. Genet himself over¬steps these bounds in presenting the final murder, whichhas psychological motivation, as a ‘gratuitous act.’ Sucha philosophical deus ex machina produces bathos. Per¬haps part of the dissatisfaction felt with Nimoy was dueto this fault in Genet.Cinematically, Deathwatch is merely a filmed play,and, at that, amateurishly filmed. The atmosphere ofthe play might be described as salacious angst. Its bru¬tality and perversion and filth shock. Yet what alienateson the stage is merely tepid on film: the resources of aplay, such as an actor who baits the audience, differfrom the resources of a film, such as the ability to beblatantly pornographic. The director, in short, shouldhave created a cinematic equivalent for Genet by turn¬ing, for example, to underground techniques. Instead,we have an amateur’s film of a professional play. Death-watch, no more than the crib of a real piece of art, isthe product of a falsely reverential, utterly unoriginallittle-theatre-group mentality.MICHAEL ANDRERevolution (Three Penny)REVOLUTION is a case study in cinematic schizo¬phrenia. On one level, it attempts a documentary-likeapproach to the “revolution” of values among youthin the Haight-Ashbury. At the same time, the movieis designed as a trip, recreating the effects of hal¬lucinogenic drugs.Just as each of the parts of a split personality arefundamentally inadequate, so the film does not achieveeither of its purposes. The Documentary is faulted byits obviously pro-dope attitude and many of its evenmore obviously feigned interviews. And the Trip itselfis frequently a bummer because of the abortive effortat objectivity.But perhaps I am taking the film too seriously.It was meant as a showcase for the talents of sixfilmmakers in collaboration. If we overlook the sloppystructure imposed on them by the director, there ismuch to be enjoyed.The camera work is consistently interesting. Ex¬perimental methods are used liberally, often effectively.Much of the innovation emulates light show techniques.There are several idyllic scenes the equal of ElviraMadigan. We see nude girls swinging gently from ropesin trees. The camera (slow motion) focuses on themthrough a beautiful patchwork of foliage.Another scene shows the rolling tide being trans¬formed into brilliant deep, blood-red Super Stuff. Onecan almost feel the texture.One aspect of the film which was particularly ex¬ceptional was the score. Whenever Country Joe andthe Fish perform, the music becomes the focal pointof attention for the audience.THE GREY CITYJOURNALMichael Sorkin, EditorContributing Editors:Rachel KarlinSusan SlottowMichael AndreKen ShermanThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in coopera¬tion with The Chicago Maroon, invites staff participationand contributions from the University community andall Chicago. All interested persons should contact theeditor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall. Looking back, it seems a shame that the moviewasn’t much better. After all, Jacques Cousteau hasdemonstrated several times the possibility of producingdocumentaries which are art in themselves. Revolutionhad the potential of doing for the hippies what Cousteaudid for marine life.If I’ve given the impression that there was nothingvaluable in the expository scenes, let me correct itnow. There are redeeming qualities in some of theinterviews.One such is an encounter with the director of aguerilla theatre. While masked figures on a stage be¬hind him perform grotesquely, he explains what theyare trying to do, and makes explicit his good-naturedRevolution.Another successful interview is with a spokesmanfor Momingstar, a commune in the hills. A featureon the imaginative architecture of this community ap¬peared in Life some time ago. It appears from the filmthat the inhabitants of this commune are as naturalisticas their homes.But, for every effective interview, there were half a dozen others of mediocre or poor quality.The interviews are mostly script-reading affairs. If,instead of feigning candidness, the director had per¬mitted his cameramen to use Pennebaker hand-heldtechniques more often, the movie would have been muchmore convincing and enjoyable. As is is, when thistechnique is used (as in very effective shots of Love-Ins), the joy of California drop-out life is engaginglydepicted.A final criticism. The decision to feature TodayMalone was extremely unfortunate; she looks likeHayley Mills and acts like a latter-day Annette FunicelloAll in all, if you see Revolution under the properconditions (i.e. go with small expectations and gostoned, you will have a good time.As an added treat, the short with Revolution is thatold Lester classic The Running, Jumping, and StandingStill Film. I’ve waited a long time to see this, and itwas worth the wait. This little delight reveals thegenesis of Lester’s genius as later demonstrated in suchfilms as The Knack and A Hard Day’s Night.KEN SHERMANTheaterOvercoming the FlawsON A RECENT Sunday evening we happened upon a itative and anticeptic manner was ony slightly decora-Special performance of Court Theatre’s last play of the ted with the wit that Shakespere supplied so abundant-season, As You Like It. The actors’ voices did not quite ly to her lines. Rosalind, witty and womanly, does notcut through the heavy mugginess squatting in the court,so we found it necessary to sit very close to the auster¬ely appointed stage. In a mood that wanted enter¬tainment we were not disappointed—we came, we saw,and we overcame the flaws. Although not one of Shake-spere’s more polished comedies, it is a very amusingstory of true love, and love of another variety, in the for¬est of Arden there shepards and fools are philosophers,and a disposed court trie to maintain the gallent trapp¬ings of a previous day. Directors James O’Reilly has tak¬en full advantage of the many opportunitiesfor sight gags, especially in the play and games betweenTouchstone and Audrey. Touchstone’s “Lie Direct” be¬comes a noble achievement when uttered to Audrey,though in response to a question by Jaques.Patrick O’Gara, a veteran of several Court Theatreseasons as well as the Old Town Players, is highly skill¬ed and is superb as Touchstone, one of Shakespere’smost original creations. We sincerely hope that Mr.O’Gara will grace future University Theatre productions.Buxom Audrey, country copulative, bucolic bailer andpoor virgin is delightfully done by Barbara Broderick.Another frequent player in U.C. Theatre, Donald Swan-ton, is quite suited for the blustery role of Jaques, thethick-tongued but nevertheless eloquent Jaques.We found the portrayal of Rosalind somewhat dis¬appointing in its overemphasis of manliness in Ganymedewhere wit alone should suffice. Rosalind must be, ofcourse, in complete control but Kathleen Ruhl’s author- need to be heavy handed in order to deal with Orlandoand others in the guise of Ganymede. The license on thepart of Hymen played by James Prendergast, we foundextreme to the point of silliness. The swordfight inTwelfth Night is a place where slapstick will work inShakespere.Very good performances by Cecilia O’Reilly, who wefound completely charming and charming in her bitchi¬ness as Phebe who would love Ganymede, and byRobert Janosik as Sylvius, made a fool by love forPhebe added greatly to the play as a comic tradition.Orlando was played by Willem O’Reily for this spe¬cial performance. O’Reilly has appeared often both hereand in Notre Dame in Indiana and, as always, gave asolid and craftsmanlike performance. As Lebeau dur¬ing the regular season O’Reilly showed equal commandthe foppishy humorous role.Although a small part, William, Audrey’s cloutishsuitor, was played admirably by an old favorite of CourtTheatre — Joel Cope, whose Bishop in Joan of Arc, andthe Singer Arkadi Tscheidse in The Caucasian Chalk Cir¬cle were nobly done.The sound effects and music were tastefu,l and mostdetails were well thought out. The shorter scenes wereby nature more like blackouts and very wittily executed.The play came off and the first year students seemedpleased enough with their first taste of theatre at theUniversity of Chicago.DALE GOODSeptember 27, 1968 5GREY CITY JOURNALNORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYPRESENTS:THECHARLESLLOYDUARTET8:00 p.m.Saturday, Oct. 5Northwestern U.Cahn Auditorium600 Emerson St.Evanston, inois Tickets $3 in advanceat Scott Hall$3.50 at the doorIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.coursein...JEWELERY: Oct e,h-Oec. 10*^ on tuesdoy nightsfrom 7:30-10 00; $35.00ENAMELING: o<». io*-1D«e. 19*" on thursday nightsfrom 7:30-10-00; $35.00register call 493-6158chard Abernethy prop. * <*> <vBill-Techne Studio:5225 S. Harperzip 60615Please rush me ■the questionnaire!for CUPID COMPUTER!iU. of C.’s computer dating service BName ..AddressCUPID COMPUTERBOX 67,CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS 61820GREY CITVY JOURNAL' *J h'A H 0 3 \ f'? 1.1 yjXO J;. -* i.‘ ‘ Sep tem her 1Z7,J 19*8 VV*Hutchinson Commons Coffee ShopMonday — FridayBreakfast 7 am - 10 amLunch 11 am - 2 pm Monday — Friday10 am - 11:30 pmSaturday10 am - 4 pmthe most relaxed atmosphere on campus CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-79981 Has what you need from a $1 *'used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERYThe Odd Shopat THOMAS IMPORTSJewelry - African ClothingRobes - Black PaintingComing: Books from Africa10% Student Discount1352 East 53rd 684-6370If you need a phone, you may have towait longer than you expected.We’re behind on installations becausewe’ve been short-handed.The telephone strike, you know.And that’s why we won’t have anyService Representatives on the Universityof Chicago campus this year.You can phone your order in.Just dial 734-9100 and ask for a ServiceRepresentative.We’re working around the clock but westill have a backlog of orders. But we’lldo our best to get you hooked up as soon aspossible after we hear from you.Just hang on.Illinois Bell Telephone~ L Part of the Nationwide Bell SystemA message from the phone company:We’re installingas fast as we can.ge r mUSIT* •' C % * MrH ▼ ♦- « * ♦ • ^ * •-f ^ * *Culture VultureWHETHER THIS IS YOUR first fall inChicago or a return to the Grey City,you’re no doubt already hopeful to dis¬cover interesting things to do and see allover the city. As the seasons progress,many events center around Hyde Park andthe University. Now the University is justopening up, and the less seasonal segmentsof the city have already started.On campus the quarter starts tradition¬ally, Activities Night tonight: representa¬tives of dozens of campus organizationsdisplaying their wares, recruiting newmembers in Ida Noyes. Tomorow nightthe Paul Butterfield Blues Band returnsto UC (reminiscent of 0-weeks long past)to play in Mandel Hall at 8:30. Now, whatelse is there to do in Chicago?Tomorrow afternoon in rememberanceand protest of last month’s encounter, aMarch to Protest Daley’s Cops is planned,from State and Wacker to Grant Park,sarting at 1:30.TheaterThere are a number of plays this week¬ end. The Players at the Shoreland continuetwo one-act plays, The Drag by contem¬porary British playwright Vivien Welbumand Austin Strong’s The Drums of Oude;Friday and Saturday at 8:30, Sunday at7:30. Shoreland Hotel, 5454 South ShoreDr.Hull House Theater’s Jane Addams The¬ater, 322 N. Broadway, offers the midwestpremiere of two one-act plays by IsraelHorovitz, The Indian Wants the Bronxand It’s Called the Sugar Plum; at 8:30Friday and Saturday, 7:30 Sunday. At HullHouse’s uptown center in Leo A. LemerTheater, 4520 N. Beacon St., Flora the RedMenace by George Abbott and Robert Rus¬sell; at 8:30 Friday and Saturday, 7:30Sunday. The Playwrights’ Center, 222 W.North Ave., presents The End of the Line,a new play by William Lederer; Fridayand Saturday, 8:30, 7:30 Sunday.FilmAs always, films loom large on the urbanentertainment scene. Ulysses at the HydePark, if you haven’t seen it yet. Belle du our starring lovely, lovely Catherinei De¬neuve at the Playboy, 1204 N. Dearborn.Gone with the Wind has come back to theMcVickers, 15 W. Madison. Rachel, Rachelat the Esquire, Oak near Michigan. 2001still at the Cinestage, 180 N. Dearborn.Revolution at the Three Penny Cinema,2424 N. Lincoln.IndiansThe American Indian Festival at theField Museum including dances, a canoerace, live handicraft demonstrations (carv¬ing of a traditional Kwakiutl totem pole,making of porcupine quill headdresses,kachina doll carving, belt beading,feather-bustle making . . .) continues. Thecanoe race is this Sunday; opening in Wil¬mette at 7 a.m., the twenty-mile racefinishes at Burnham Park.ArtThe Art Institute’s exhibit of works donein the past year by students in the ArtInstitute School opens this Saturday. AlsoPhotography Before 1914, prints from da¬ guerreotypes through World War I photo¬graphs closes this Sunday.The Museum of Contemporary Art, 237E. Ontario, once again has a fantasticshow, Options, participatory art which canbe manipulated, changed, walked on andthrough.MusicThe Lyric Opera starts its 1968-69 seasonwith the gala opening, 8:30 this evening,of Salome. Felicia Weathers sings the titlerole tonight and again on Monday night.Wednesday Elena Suliotis wilil sing thetitle role in Norma.The Chicago Symphony begins its sub¬scription series with concerts last night,this afternoon at 2:00, and tomorrow at8:30 featuring the Hungarian conductor Is-tvan Kertesz. The Program includesMozart’s Symphony No. 98, Bartok’s Suitefrom “The Miraculous Mandarin,” andSchubert’s Symphony No. 9.On the subject of music, one last men¬tion of Paul Butterfield tomorrow night atMandel Hall.Wild ManContinued from Page Onethe essentials of predicaments and feelings about thosepredicaments.Inevitably we come to the question of the univer¬sities. On the one hand it is clear that the library andthe street cannot be kept separate. Moreover, the librarymust be made to serve the street, not the special inter¬ests of isolated, self-seeking individuals. One the otherhand, the schools foster careerism, serve the special in¬terest of individuals, maintain the separation betweenstreet and campus (not to limit it to the library alone),and whether deliberately or not, create taste offered inthe guise of truth. The question of universities is thequestion of establishments in general. So. can you re¬spect yourself? If you can’t, you won’t respect yourwriting either. LeRoi Jones cultivated the sacred Grove.And he paid the price. You can be driven mad in thesame way. By university appointments. By large pub¬lisher’s advances. By rubbing elbows or famous crotches.Do you stand for truth or taste? Are you concernedwith the library or are you concerned with the street?This is not a question of scholarship. It is a question ofrespect for your own work.Shakespeare called his theater the Globe. He hadhis characters acknowledge that they were actors.Plato’s figures seem to have been carefully drawn fromlife. Conrad lived the life he wrote about. Faulkner livedthe life he wrote about. Malraux lived the life he wroteabout. Mailer lives the lives he wrote about. Baldwin’sessays are better than Baldwin’s novels, because Bald¬win speaks in the essays.What alternative are we confronted with? WillHeshie be able to screw Natalie if he goes to Fire Is¬land, or will the Jewish flute wail its Analytic RebateBlues in the john of the stage Sunday night? Sellingout means passively supporting political candidate x ory, and not really being able to handle that Negro boylooking at the Gauguin paintings. Which is not to saythat Philip Roth’s preoccupation with Jews and Jewishsexual problems cannot lead to great literature. It isonly to say that first-rate literature about Heshie andNatalie’s mututal ineptness is not very likely when thecontext is singles weekend at Grossinger’s or Arty andMarty’s Rockaway bungalow.The impulse of art is always to be real, either byreplacing life, which it cannot do, or by joining it, whichit can do. History cannot be avoided. Art touches lifeor it is just doodling. But what does this mean? We knowthat we live in a world of things. We take it for granted.We compete for them. We possess them. Those who arenot yet finished with their analyses may even love them.How incredible, then, when you see that these thingshave had their eye on you too. When you make thediscovery, in an instant, that you are too are an object ina world of objects, that you are surrounded by objects,some of which are at that very moment reaching outto touch you. Lives change at moments like that, evenfor the naive who have managed to grow up to the age of,say, six, oblivious of their true phenomenological status.Objects, candles with doused flames, are coming at me.I am going to call the police. I am excommunicatedfrom existence, in an instant of self-discovery. There isno one at all to whom I can report this. They themselvesare coming at me. Life is irremediably clear at thoseinstants when you know on which side of the world theother things of the world have placed you.All the rest is obvious. Everyone knows what to do.Write. Keep on writing. Send stuff out. When it comes back, send it out again, even right back where it camefrom. A different reader might see it. Or a good lookinggirl might have just walked into the office. Take noth¬ing personally. (Andre Gide rejected Proust) an ailingego belongs in the psychiatrist’s office. And editors andreaders are not super-egos, though we all tend to actas though they were. At any moment when a work isbeing rejected, you should by rights be typing. Mean¬ing that the work, not you, has been rejected. So: don’tover-identify with the work. You read enough good stuffin school. Out of school read quarterlies, the less re¬spectable the better. Read lots of them. See if there aj*eformulas, even unconscious. Does someone have to getlaid once a story, take a trip, get framed for murder?Then avoid the formulas. Don’t sell yourself. Get an.agent if you feel ready and have a lot of stuff. If you'renot ready to deal with publishing houses, you probablydon’t need one. Keep on writing some more. The pointis to write, not to think “I’m a writer.” That will getyou a crotch to rub but you won’t get much work done,the crotch will have to be awfully dumb, and when theword is out that you’ve stopped producing, even thedumb ones will start shying away. You need luck, con¬tacts, ability, timing, and more writing. That’s the ob¬vious formula. Work.What else is there? Life again. Not just subjectiv¬ity or empathy from a distance. Our wonderful Ameri¬can race relations show us how impossible that is. Formco-ops. Put out mimeo mags. Don’t leave it all in theirhands. History has been met, life has been touched,when the artist is in it and the work comes out of ex¬perience. All men are actors, even the man whose actis one of withdrawal. An artist who is not an actor isan impossibility. Even an artist is a man, after all.The conclusion that I am left with is that there issomething about time, about history, that accounts forus but that cannot be accounted for by us. I find thatbefore having read them, I have used Fanon’s exactwords in one place. A play I wrote over amonth agoused concepts and phrases which I read for the firsttime today in that same book by Fanon. This is not anew occurence. To remain with what has de facto be¬come my text of the day (or more accurately, I sus¬pect, what has apparently selected me as its reader ofthe day), I find that quite without choosing, I have chos¬en. The choice is objective. We find ourselves, like Fa¬non, “embarked.” And in motion we discover both whowe are and the form of our art.The Grey City Journal has asked a number of Chicagoarea artists to write about their notions of their art andabout being an artist in Chicago. Eugene Wildman’s ar¬ticle is the first in this series. Wildman, a product of theCommittee on Social Thought, is former editor of theChicago Review and currently teaching at the Universityof Illinois. Part of his novel, The Subway Singer, ap¬peared recently in an authology of young American writ¬ers.DeluctablesContinued from Page ThreeJACKSON INN 1607 E. 55th. Cantonese Food on a levelwith Jane Lee. Good combination dinner prices andservice, not-so-good soup. **WAH HING, 1368V2 (?) E. 53rd. Good Cantonese foodto take out. Don’t have it delivered unless you enjoyit cold.TAI SAM YON, 1318 E. 63rd. Super Chinese food withcity-wide reputation. Avoid on week-ends. Seaweed soupis excellent, but try everything. Above all, don’t be putoff by University propaganda, aboqt tbe ,location...it'st > • * j -j 1 - • t >■September 27, 1968 worth the Trip. While you’re on 63rd Street, check outAce Hardware for your apartment needs. *** for both.HOUSE OF ENG, 53rd and Hyde Park Boulvard. HydePark version of the well-established near—North Eng.Magnificent view from the penthouse of the Del PradoHotel. Food is uninteresting. For the Real Thing—May¬be the Ultimate Thing—in Chinese Food, don’t miss.THE GOLD CITY INN, 5228 S. Harper. Ask Bing orhis delightful daughter for daily not-on-the-menu specials:beef with black mushrooms(mmmmm), steamed lobstertails, whole steamed fish with black bean sauce, BigShrimp, or crab meat with lobster sauce. All superb.Try the lotus root soup when it’s in season. Note:seafood arrives on Saturday, gone by mid-week, Reason¬ably priced-about $3.00 per person, less if you choosestandard fare. Food to take out. **TANNENBAUM PHARMACY, 55th and Cornell. In therear of Mr. Tannenbaum’s establishment is a fine lunchcounter where you can get beautiful service, freshlysqueezed orange juice, super cheese omelettes, and old-time franks and beans. Check out Mr. T’s skin mags.Also hav take-outs.UNIQUE, 53rd and Harper. The best restaurant/deli-catessan in Southeast Chicago, though usually crowdedand unnaturally frenzied. Avoid full dinners unless wait-ress-hassing is your bag. Also avoid French Friesand banana splits sometimes served without bananas.Bagels, lox (!), pickled fish, herring, potato salad,chopped liver, salad plates (only when season) lettuceis in sandwiches recommended. Blintzes are also good,but often served partially cooked and everyone getspissed off if you complain about anything (No one isperfect is a oft-heard cliche in the Unique). 65 centBreakfast Special featured before 11 A.M. If Half ofthe Lights were Turned Off, the atmosphere would bereasonable; as is, it’s a surgical theater. Sporadic hours,depending on what’s happening on 53rd Street, I guess.Unadvertised specials: Vala’s Ice Cream in the Freezerand imported cigars and cigarettes at the counter. (Woe,what Hyde Park still needs is a Tobacco Sore.)**O’NEILLS, 61st and Ellis. Horrid food. Horrid service.Cops eat there. No stars.WALGREENS CAFETERIA, Co-op Shopping Center.Better than nothing. Richard’s Wild Irish Rose avail¬able in paper bag at the Liquor Department for thosenot days at the Point. %*AHMAD’S, 1440 E. 57th. If you want to see the onlyauthentic looking hippies in Hyde Park since PlatoJones split, sit for awhile in Ahmad’s. Food is dis¬tinctive and very well-prepared with Persian delica¬cies featured. Prices reasonable. **VzCIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI, 1612 E. 53rd. The atmosphereis cheap and unnerving. The waitress can make or breakthe evening; if she’s lousy, even the food-which canbe really good—doesn’t make it. Specially recommendedfrom the extensive quasi-Polynesian menu are cold meatplatters and seafood dishes not cooked in a sauce.Prices moderately expensive. Quiet bar. **MEDICAL, 1450 E. 57th. Good quality food, but, due totransient, migrant chefs, often not well-prepared. Offersa super selection of excellent teas, coffees, and choco¬lates plus fine breakfast lunches and dinners. Un¬fortunately,no more fresh orange juice through thesqueezer remains to haunt everyone. Cold in winter andhot in summer so come prepared. Desserts are veryspecial, competitive with the Mad Hatter especially theNever on Sunday Sundae. After dinner, there’s always thepleasure of new Green Door Books—don’t miss THELIFE OF BUDDHA in Origami. *** (P.S. Please,please, allow the awitress to change the radio station-at least to WLS-FM; WFMT and “The Midnite Special”just don’t make it anymore.) * ♦ , *GREY CITY JOURNAL 7bdwofe lvzM avert mutx to s^rueri self bsrabgcnd bas mxjqua Jud ,£»‘*t Mate auqrnsD «buo?. io ‘naa -h!< ,.|-,.,(jf;ri Srr* v>*"Y'A *^?V '*? *»' w^. *-> ^r.-*.t >tnv iV^ •»» qy^-v s ijia1! cioii bsuaitacOthe’IN' lookcAROUND CA1VIP*I_JSFREEPARKINGFOR1000CARS BAKERY...Bumy Bros.BOOKS...Book NookCANDIES...Fannie MayCLEANERS...Flair CleanersDRUGS...Walgreen5 & 10 STORE...Woolworth’sFOOD...Hyde Park Co-OpBurny Bros.HOSERY...NeumodeMEDICAL CENTERMEN'S WEARCohn & Stern/MONEY...Hyde Park Federal Savings & LoanHyde Park Co-Op Credit UnionLake Park Currency ExchangeOPTOMETRIST...Dr. A. ZimblerSHOES...Cohn & SternShoe CorralSHOE REPAIR...Whitmore Shoe RepairTRAVEL SERVICE...Marco PoloWOMEN'S APPAREL...Alberts-First for FashionPleasant Shop-Women's WearV155th & LAKE PARK STORESOPENTHURS. &FRI.NITESTTTTTTn T A T /» 3 X H 0 dbQ.f ,?$