cE CHICAGO MAROON O S WChicago, Illinois, October 22, 1968 One Section, 8 PagesP* ** MUrban Tour Maroon—DAVID TRAVISOne of the many areas of north Oakland toured Sunday afternoon by a busfurnished by Student Government. The tour included most urban renewal areasin south and west Chicago. Tour guides remarked that the section of the lakefront from Michael Reese Hospital to Hyde Park is slated for urban renewal. An¬other tour will be given at a date to be posted. PetitionssSpread COI- N oBy Walter CipinPetitions proposing an amendment tothe Student Government (SG) constitutionproviding for a two-house assembly andan increased number of representativesare being circulated across the campus.The amendment essentially would sub¬divide the assembly into two houses:• A lower house for representation ofcollege,• And an upper house for representa¬tion of the graduate divisions and schools.“The Lower House would provide aplace for undergraduates to go to presenttheir problems and air their views,” saidMitch Pines, former president of Inter-House Council, “and such a place doesnot exist now.”The two houses would meet in jointsessions as a unified assembly to dealwith the broader aspects of the Univer¬sity, much as the assembly does now.Another major change would be imple¬mented in the system of representation.A College house or apartment building with more than 35 undergraduates wouldbe considered one electoral unit under thenew system, as compared to one electoralunit for every College dormitory complex(apartments excluded) with more than 100undergraduates under the present system.Such a change would, according to Pines,“enable the representatives to work moreclosely with the students they represent,something that is missing in the persentsystem.”Jerry Lipsch, SG president, commentedon the idea of a change in SG structure:“Any reform or revision, at this time, inthe parlimentary operation of SG itself isessentially a waste of energy, preventingSG from dealing with its key problem,which is lack of power. Such an attemptto move closer to a ‘utopian’ form of stu¬dent government would only create anillusion of progress which would absorbstudent attention, and divert it from SG’sefforts to become actively involved in themore important issues concerning studentlife on campus.”Fulbright Cuts To Affect StudentsCuts of up to 67 per cent in Fulbrightfellowship funds placed some Chicago stu¬dents in awkward positions.About fifteen Chicago students have re¬ceived grants each year, noted Chicago’sFulbright program adviser, Mrs. Cassan¬dra Pyle. In all, there are usually about900 grants a year. Because of the cuts,she observed, “it’s impossible to say howmany of our students will receive grants.Students will be in a difficult position,said Mrs. Pyle, if they are “at the stagewhere they definitely have to go abroadfor dissertation research.”“Most students use this year for thesisor dissertation research,” she added.The funds were cut because of VietNam, Mrs. Pyle said. No grants will beawarded for study in several countries,including England, Greece, Ceylon, Iran,Malaysia, Japan, and the Phillippines.The State Department’s Bureau of Edu¬ cational and Cultural Affairs curtailed theprogram when Congress appropriated 30million for the agency, 14 million lessthan the Bureau’s request.These cuts do not affect the Fulbright-Hays program that the Office of Educa¬tion administers. Related to the NationalDefense Education Act, this programfunds overseas study for dissertationresearch.Because of the cuts, Mrs. Pyle expectskeener competition for other grants forstudy abroad. These include grants award¬ed by the Ford Foundation, the SocialScience Research Council, and the NDEAFulbright-Hays program.Mrs. Pyle pointed out that legal resi¬dents of Illinois are eligible for the En¬glish Speaking Union’s grants for a yearof study in England.Chances for restoring the Fulbrightfunds, Mrs. Pyle feels, are not good. “I can’t really believe that it’s a one-yearonly,” she remarked.Fulbright grants provide funds for grad¬uate students who want to study abroadfor one academic year.HarassmentThe Maroon has received a num¬ber of reports regarding harass¬ment of students by police. LastSaturday several graduate studentswho were driving in a car distin¬guished by nothing but two Mc¬Carthy stickers, were stoppedby plainsclothesmen in an un¬marked car. The police searchedthem thoroughly and took theirnames and addresses, for no ap¬parent reason. If there have beenany other occurences of this type,please call the Maroon. Also, becareful. Pines, a leader in the drive to put theproposed amendment on the ballot, hasmore than 800 signatures in his posses¬sion, with more petitions yet to be coun¬ted. “We’ve only circulated petitions inthe houses so far, and we haven’t reallyhit the campus at large,” Pines noted,saying that he was hoping that more than2000 signatures could be obtained.According to the SG constitution,amendments may be initiated by petitionof six per cent of an estimated 8500 stu¬dents on campus, or about 510 students.The amendment will be presented to theelection and rules committee of SG, andthe committee, if it confirms the legitima¬cy of the proposal, will then pass the pro¬posal on to the assembly.The committee may or may not suggesta time for submitting the proposal to thestudent body in an election; if not, thisdecision rests with the assembly.The constitution states that such a pro¬posed amendment “shall be submitted tothe student body at or before the nextgeneral election,...”, and SG presidentContinued on Page SevenBlankner Pushes Personal SovereigntyBy Wendy Glockner“I contest the demolition of my buildingby the Department of Urban Renewal be¬cause I feel that the only way to preservedemocracy in this country is to stand upfor rights,” asserts Frederika Blankner,owner of the 6043-45 S. Woodlawn Ave.apartment that DUR wishes to buy. “Thatright for which I am standing is the sover¬eignty of the individual.”In an interview with Miss Blankner, whonow lives in New York, the landlady con¬tested the right of DUR to demolish build¬ings before they have been replaced byadequate substitute housing. She claimedthat “this is not slum property nor is it|n a slum area” and questioned: “Build¬ings which belong to the University arenot being condemned—why should mine?”Miss Blankner’s family has owned thebuilding for 40 years. Her parents firstpurchased it when she was a student atjllle University of Chicago and Miss Blank¬ ner has lived there off and on until now.A major in romance languages and liter¬atures, Miss Blankner received her B.A.and M.A. degrees from Chicago. She hastaught at Vassar and Wellesley and nowis a professor of classic civilization, lan¬guage, and literature at Adelphi Univer¬sity.Miss Blankner says she is concernedwith students “integrating their personalgoals into the goals o. the country.” Sheonce initiated a group of College CulturalMinutemen “whose object is to devoteevery minute of life to constructive actionfor one’s self, one’s country, and theworld.”“You students at the University of Chi¬cago are perfect examples of what I meanby College Cultural Minutemen,” she saidin reference to the “friend-of-the-court”brief which Student Government is filingin defense of her case. “You have taken the theories which you learned in yoursocial science classes, and you have ap¬plied them to the community. You are amodel for the rest of the country.”“I was not sure that I could win thiscase alone,” Miss Blankner stated, “butwith you students, I know we can win. Weare all on the same side: that of law andorder. There is no opposition.”On urban renewal: “I believe that theintention of urban renewal is excellent; butit must always be what its name implies—urban renewal, with fairness to all.”The landlady emphasized that she is notcontesting the urban renewal purchase withany thought of getting rich. She merelywants to “sustain constitutional rights forherself and others.”“I want to defend what the soldiers atValley Forge fought to defend,” she de¬clared vehemently. “Our Lives, our For¬tune, and our sacred Honor.” FREDERIKA BLANKNEROld GloryFSACCSL Hits Village, OmsmanThe Faculty-Student Advisory Committeeon Campus Student Life (FSACCSL) Fri¬day decided to run a series of discussionsprimarily for non-dormitory students on theproposed “student village” housing com¬plex at which representatives of FSACCSL,the Blum Committee on housing, and thearchitect’s office will discuss the plan andsurvey support for it.Dean of students Charles O’Connell re¬iterated at the group’s first meeting thatthe University is not officially committedto the plan of the proposed student villageand, in fact, presently hasn’t enough funds for it. He said that only if there is a stu¬dent consensus in favor of the village willthe administration attempt to raise thenecessary funds.The village is the proposed 900-studentcomplex for Ellis Ave and 55th St. Lastyear the University Senate requestedFSACCSL to formulate recommendationson the proposal, which had been criticizedparticularly among apartment dwellers fornot incorporating enough of the suggestionsof an earlier report of the Blum Committee.The Inter-House Council plans to sponsordiscussions of the plan among dormitoryresidents. Later in the meeting, members ofFSACCSL appeared to agree with O’Con¬nell that the new student ombudsman rep¬resents no particular interest group but isan impartial investigator, and that therewas no need to consult the student body onthe selection because the ombudsman re¬places no existing channel for grievances.They appointed a subcommittee to drafta statement designed to clarify the dutiesand responsibilities attached to the officeand submit the statement to Provost andPresident-designate Edward Levi for hisendorsement. Electionsi i * iFifth week, the first-year class willelect five representatives at-largeto the SG assembly. All first yearstudents are eligible to run andvote in this election. At the sametime, elections to fill vacancies cre¬ated by resignation or terminationof dormitory residence will be heldfor Pierce, Woodward, and Hitch¬cock — one vacancy each. All resi¬dents of those specific dorms mayrun and vote in their respectivevacancy elections. Candidacy formsfor both first-year and vacancyelections are available Wednesday,Oct. 23, in the SG office, IdaNoyes. For more information, callx3274, Jerry.THE MIGHTY MIGHTY-IITE• IDEAL FOR OFFICE OR STUDY DESK• HIGH-LOW SWITCH• BEIGE, WHITE OR BLACK• ADJUSTABLE, HANDY, COOLSALE 4.95 (usually 6.95)BUYTHREEORFOURTHEYARECHEAP!lilltlilWHERE ELSE BUT THE STATIONERY DEPARTMENTOF YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOODUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREON CAMPUS5802 ELLIS AVENUE TONIGHT!F 0 T AFirst Meeting of theFestival of the Arts CommitteeTuesday, Oct. 22 8:000 P.M.Reynolds Club LoungeEveryone is invited to attendSHORELAND HOTEL ■■“““““"“““““IPlease rush me ■the questionnaire!’for CUPID COMPUTER'Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultySingle rooms from $8.00 dailyTwin rooms from $11.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space also Available Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-1000from 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. 5454 South Shore Drive U. of C.’s computer dating serviceNameAddressCUPID COMPUTERBOX 67,CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS 61820FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W ol McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed Sundays GARY COOPER: SERGEANT YORKParty facilities to 400J&ntctis Fifth in a series of twelve films of HOWARD HAWKSTuesday, Cobb Hall 7:00 and 9:30 75<The Chicago Maroon October 22, 1968saw! n - rNSA Requests Suspension of ClassesThe National Student Association (NSA)is asking colleges and universities acrossthe country to suspend classes on Tues¬day, Oct. 29, so students can take “time¬out” to answer the question “Where dowe go from here?”“It is not a strike,” said NSA presidentRobert S. Powell, Jr. “We have billed theevent (Time Out) to underscore the neces¬sity for students (and the nation) to stopfor at least a day during this political fall and begin to plan common goals andstrategies for the coming year.”NSA coordinator at Chicago, Bill Phil¬lips, ‘70, said that as yet Chicago NSAhas not talked about the national TimeOut program. NSA has scheduled a pro¬gram for that night at Mandell Hall oftwo films: an Army flick and a film fromthe American Friends Service Committee.“We haven’t decided if we’re going totie this in with Time Out,” Phillips said.“I think we should do it, considering it’s a national thing. We should participate. Iwould say, though, that our biggest prob¬lem is manpower—manpower and ideas.”Emphasis in the NSA proposal is onlocal issues, handled in a local way, aspokesman said. Flagrantly bad teaching,admissions procedures, university compli¬city with the war, absurdity of socialrules, are some of the issues NSA con¬siders ripe for discussion. Thus a campuswhich has been fighting a battle overmilitary research could have a teach-inSDS Battles Over Press CoverageBOULDER, Colo. (CPS)—Amid the red¬dish-gold falling leaves, Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) foretold the fallof the university and the society sustainingit when they met in Boulder last weekendfor one of their four annual National Coun¬cil (NC) meetings.As they have been doing across the coun¬try, the 450 SDS members did more thantalk ideology and strategy. They acted andreacted to the University of Colorado inways the school is likely to feel for a longtime. A battle over press coverage of theSDS meetings may yet spawn a call byarch-conservative Regent Joseph Coors (ofthe Coors beer family) for the resignationof the University’s president.It was the New Left in microcosm. Theconfrontation portrayed SDS better thanthe two major resolutions approved duringthe three-day NC. There was SDS, therewere the students, the Regents, the admin¬istration, the police and the press whosomehow all got sucked into the controver¬sy over whether tape recorders and cam¬eras should be barred from SDS meetings.Although the university didn’t come closeto falling and no outside police were caiiedin, there was a polarization of administra¬tion, students and virtually all the pressagainst the Regents.'The controversy stemmed from the Re¬gents’ decision to allow SDS use of univer¬sity facilities if their meetings were “publicand open to the press.” The vote on wheth¬er to allow on campus what one Regenttermed “this anarchistic, nihilistic organi¬zation responsible for Columbia disrup¬tions” was part of the “red” carpet treat¬ment reserved for SDS throughout thecountry. Normally (for the Chambers ofCommerce or the National Association ofBankers), lower-echelon administrators de¬cide on use of university meeting rooms.Another question arose on Friday, thefirst day of the NC—were cameras andtape recorders (barred from Regents’meetings) included in the vague university-SDS contract for open meetings? As in Chicago, the coalitions were a bitstrange. The press agreed with SDS thatpress relations were outside the appropri¬ate concern of the university Regents. Theadministration originally sided with theSDS request that meetings be open only tothe written press, not the disruptive lightsof television cameras.The antagonists were the Regents, twoor whom let it be known they wanted elec¬tronic media admitted to the NC. A localradio station reported that Regent Coorssaid he would ask for the “immediate res¬ignation” of University President JosephSmiley if the intent of the call for openmeetings was not enforced.Smiley then reversed the earlier standof his administration and decided to admitfilm and recorders.SDS thought—and acted—otherwise.A reporter from a Denver radio station,enraged by the decision of his colleagueswho announced they would work out pressrelations with SDS rather than the univer¬sity, armed himself with a tape recorderand entered the ballroom where SDS wasmeeting.SDS members swarmed around the news¬man, who couldn’t get further than a footinside the doorway He nervously question¬ed them: “Are you a member of SDS?”“What do you think of their violent tact¬ics?” “Why aren’t you saying anything?”“Why do you keep nodding your head?”“What’s so funny’”Finally the persistent newsman did geta vocal response from SDS members. Oneof them opened up with a bar from “SilentNight,” and 50 persons gathered aroundthe tape recorder to render their versionof the Christmas carol. The biggest smileswere those of the campus police.One more confrontation occurred earlySaturday morning when a security areawas roped off for the press. Another* cam¬pus policeman allowed SDS members toenter the press area, and a brief scufflebetween SDS and the press, flanked by po¬lice, ensued. The press was pushed out ofScandinavian ImportsSPECIAL: we have 20 left from a shipment of 100 rather poorlydesigned Hi-Fi cabinets. Consists of a 2-door chest and 4 pull-outdrawers.• There extremely well built andbeautifully finished.• Can be used as a small buffet,or as a bureau.Original priceCash and Carry $106*69. and Introducing for the first timeThe Scandinavian Rocking Sofain shai vinyl or fabric53rd & Lake Park open Sunday *169667-4040 the meeting room. There were no injuriesalthough an ice-cream cone was smashedagainst a television camera.Shaken by the near-violence, the admin¬istration reversed itself again and decidedto bar film and recorders “except by priorarrangement with SDS.” It was the admin¬istration which convinced four of the sixRegents to avoid unnecessary violence rath¬er than attempt to oust the meeting withthe help of police force.SDS rejoiced that the university had“capitulated.”The issue of the press dramatized thecharacter of SDS better than the drawn-out debates on resolutions. SDS showed it¬self capable of victory in a limited strugglewhere the action of the established poweris blatantly arbitrary.The confrontation tended to push strate¬gic and ideological questions into the back¬ground, although SDS did ask itself aboutthe press, labor, elections, high schools,GIs, campus organizing, draft resistance,liberation of women and internationalismin its workshops Saturday afternoon.Members gathered outside on the leaf-covered campus in groups of about 30. Oc¬casionally University of Colorado studentswould cluster on the outskirts of a discus¬sion to hear and challenge, on an elemen¬tary level, the SDS ideas.There was no neat consensus at the meet¬ings, nor did the plenary sessions attempta more up-to-date Port Huron statement ofideology; their only concrete residue wereresolutions on elections and on organizingwithin the high schools.Members seemed to agree on the needto attract and radicalize other disenchant¬ed elements like high school students, GIs,factory workers, even (through conversion)Wallace fans.Student consciousness, members saidContinued on Page Seven on the university’s involvement. Lengthsto which students will go to have classescancelled or schedule walkouts will alsodepend on the local campus atmosphere,according to NSA plans.More than 1600 schools have been in¬vited to participate in the project. So farstudents on some 100 campuses have indi¬cated they will take part. There is noword on how many administrators havecancelled classes for the day. NSA hasdistributed a memo called “Denial—ThenWhat?” that outlines steps to take ifofficials refuse to suspend classes.The options range from “forget thewhole thing” to a campus-wide strike.NSA officials seem to prefer avoiding aconfrontation now, having instead discus¬sions on the chosen issue in individualclasses or holding a central program sostudents who can cut classes may attend.Elections To FillSG VacanciesThe Student Government (SG) Assemblywill fill four vacancies on the Student-Fac¬ulty-Administration Court at its first meet¬ing of the year, Wednesday, Oct. 30. Thevacancies on the Court, which hears casesconcerning the student code and the stu¬dent bill of rights as well as the operationsof SG, consist of two-year terms andtwo one-year terms for student justices.Students interested in serving on theCourt should send a statement of interest,including the term sought, academic unit,and year in school, to SG in Ida Noyesby Sunday, October 27.Student Government elections for fivefirst-year class representatives and for reg¬ular dormitory representative vacancieswill be held late next week.SG will conduct special elections to fillvacated dormitory seats in Pierce, Wood¬ward, and Hitchcock.Candidacy forms are available from theSG office in Ida Noyes, as of Wednesday,October 23.FOTAThe Festival of the Arts (FOTA)will hold a general organizingmeeting for students and facultymembers interested in planning aFestival of the Arts for next spring.The meeting will be held at Reyn¬olds Club Lounge on Tuesday, Oc¬tober 22, at 8 pm.(voiivo)Volvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.I lie IM '-I I'cnson fill I Ml \ i II” ,l \ul\ii i. Iid.lll-l' it l.l-t- »c> lull".Kmii-iK liim lull" ui'iion'l ilii.ii.imIit. linl \vi' ijo kmm th.it uvri9.V ■ ol .ill tin* \iilvu> r<‘»istrr<il ill tlir l nilril Sl.it.-~ in tin- l,i>t1 I yi'iir* .in -till mi tin- rii.nl.I In- licit ii'.i'ini Im Ihivin" ;i \nhii nmv. i» Invntisf wi' Inni*it fuw in >tm k. \ml li.inkK. ni-iluti't r\|in t tnli.iM-llii'in. 11< II11111 ton lull".\\ liirli In ill"- 1111 mi iiiti'ii'-tiii" |hirniliix .ilmiil \nlvns. * hircustomers liki' to Inn lln-lll lircatlsr llirv last. \\r liki' to ~.*lltlli'lli liei attse lino ilon'l.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800 BIKES LIKEMOTHER USEDTO MAKECheapest prices for Fal¬con, Carlton, Raleigh, Gi-tane, Ranger and RobinHood. “Factory trained”mechanics. Used bicyclesspasmodically. Fly-by-night rentals.Free delivery.2112 N. CLARKLI 9-8863M-F 12:00-8:30SAT. & SUN. 10-8DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-6866KEEP INFORMEDRead the ISRAEL andMIDDLE EAST NEWS¬LETTER. For info andsample copy send $1 toP.O. Box 2331. Sunnyvale.,Calif. 94087October 22, 1968 The Chicago MaroonEDITORIALStudentGovernmentA petition is circulating now which calls for an amendmentto the Student Government constitution, breaking the SG assemblyinto two halves, (one for undergraduates and one for graduates)and adding representation to both halves.This is the best idea for reforming Student Government thathas come along in some time. The people behind it have carefullyscrutinized the constitution and written changes for every part thatwould be affected. It is not simply the blind suggestion that comesup every year that something be done about SG.The object of the amendment is to make SG more representa¬tive. As it is now SG is a fairly boring organization. It meets in¬frequently. It has no power. The members of the assembly are notparticularly representative of the students. The oligarchy whichruns SG is not particularly representative of the assembly. It isa lobby, not a congress. Jerry Lipsch, SG president, is not excitedabout the amendment. Lipsch says that the problem with SG isthat it is powerless. The students don’t get interested in SG elec¬tions because SG doesn’t mean anything. And he is right, it doesn’t.The amendment, if approved, will not suddenly transform Stu¬dent Government into an effective, powerful organization. But itwill at least supply some new energy to the catatonic assembly.And it will create a place where problems peculiar to the collegecan be discussed. (The graduate house will probably atrophy rapid¬ly. In the elections last year a total of 8 graduate students in biol¬ogy voted for two representatives; 17 voted in business, for three'It would be more difficult forthe University to ignore thedemands of students if arepresentative and at leastvocally active Student Govern¬ment were insisting on them!representatives; 8 for one in education; 2 for 2 in social service,and so on.)It will not be easy to make SG both lively and representativewithout giving it any more power. But it is unlikely that the Uni¬versity will be any way inclined to giving SG or any students morepower until SG becomes more representative than it is now. It isa vicious cycle, a cycle that hits the Maroon (in its requests formoney), and that consumed Cap and Gown altogether.It is conceivable (though just barely) that enough interestmight be stirred by a change in SG to attract a reasonable turnoutfor the elections next spring. And for that reason the reformsshould be made. It would be more difficult for the University toignore the demands of students if a representative and at leastvocally active Student Government were insisting on them.But in the long run, a more significant change must be made.Students should have the power to make the decisions in a univer¬sity that affect only themselves. Student Government, as represen¬tatives of the students, would be the logical group to be delegatedthat power. And as soon as it is, it will become representative.What is needed is a commission on restructuring the Univer¬sity. It sould study the way the University is set up now. It shouldstudy the legitimate demands of students.The Maroon is ready to support such a commission, withwhat resources it has. The students are not going to wait forever.They are not going to be satisfied with small reforms for very long. LETTERSUmmmmDue to the article in the Maroon con¬cerning the student ombudsman, many stu¬dents have assumed that the office of Ca¬reer Counseling and Placement has movedfrom the Reynolds Club. I would greatlyappreciate it if you would be kind enoughto inform your readers in some way thatour office continues to occupy the secondfloor of the Reynolds Club, and that onlyminor changes in our space have been af¬fected.Anita SandkeDirectorCareer Counseling and Placement Office Karl's ProblemsIn regards to ex-assistant Dean, new stu¬dent Karl Bemesderfer’s letter on the qual¬ities of fair John, perhaps we need one om¬budsman for the students and another (mefor ex-assistant deans and the like whoseproblems must be far different from ours.Christopher Z. HobsonPut UpI invite Karl Bemesderfer to point outan untrue statement in anything mimeo¬graphed by SDS.Come on, Karl: put up or—.Peter B. Hayward '69ABOUT THE MIDWAYField ProfessorshipThe Field Foundation of Illinois has en¬dowed a professorship in urban education.The chair will carry the name of Mar¬shall Field IV, the late publisher of theChicago Sun-Times and the Chicago DailyNews.In his announcement, President Beadlesaid that the scholar occupying the chairwould study ways to help schools meetthe needs of children studying in inner-city ghetto schools. The Marshall FieldProfessorship is the first of five prospec¬tive chairs in urban studies. The othersinclude urban economics, urban geogra¬phy, social welfare policy, and urbansociology.When the three-million dollar FordFoundation grant for urban studies, an¬nounced in December, 1967, raised the pos¬sibility of partially endowing professor¬ships in areas similar to these. It wasnoted that $1,500,000 would suffice to par¬tially endow five such professorships.New PositionRobert K. Heidrich has been appointeddirector of purchasing and auxiliary serv¬ices, a new position at the University.The job will include responsibility forthe University’s purchasing department,printing department, bookstore, Univer¬sity contracting, general stores, barbershop, and vending activities.Heidrich’s most recent previous positionwas as an associate in production andoperations for A. T. Kearney & Com¬pany, a management consulting organiza¬tion.Heidrich received an AB from MiamiUniversity in Ohio and an MBA fromXavier University in 1958. He also studiedat the University of Cincinnati.Faculty on TVThree University faculty members arediscussing the impact of public opinionpolls on the democratic process during thisweek’s broadcasts “Perspectives,” a newprogram produced by the University andTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John ReehtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wandy Glocknor, Carotin# Heck,Timothy S. Kelley, Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editor: John MoscowProduction Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,Howie Schamest, David Steele, LeslieStrauss, Robert Swift.Founded in 1892. Published by University ofChicago students on Tuesdays and Fridaysthroughout the regular school year and inter¬mittently throughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quarter andduring examination periods. Of fices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0600, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free* df charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profit?oS Press serv'icf00' ***** * WLS-TV, Channel 7. The program is tele¬cast Mondays through Fridays at 7 a.m.Each program will consist of an informalreview of research and opinion in a spe¬cific area.InequalityAn original paperback, “The Quality ofInequality: Urban and Suburban PublicSchools,” has been published by the Cen¬ter for Policy Study. Edited by CharlesU. Daly, vice-president for developmentand public affairs and director of the cen¬ter, the book contains eight essays on in¬equities among school districts and anedited transcript of a discussion on thesubject.Move To ExtendRegister CutoffA dispute over the late registration feeof $25 has resulted in the possibility of mod¬ification in the rule.Following a meeting with Joe Bigelson,’70, and Student Government president Jer¬ry Lipsh, dean of students Charles O’Con-nel has sent a memorandum to the Officeof the Registrar requesting an extensionof the registration deadline until the endof the first week to ten days of the quarter.Bigelson had protested the fee after hearrived on campus after September 27, thedeadline for regular registration, andlearned he had to pay the $25. Lipsch sup¬ported Bigelson and arranged the meetingto discuss drawbacks of the fee and sug¬gest alternatives.During the meeting with O’Connell onFriday, Bigelson described the late regis¬tration fee as being “Symptomatic of theconcern to ease the work of adminis¬tration rather than to advance educationof the students.”He also argued against the fee on thegrounds that the present registration sys¬tem prevented students from visiting class¬es before deciding which ones they want totake. Bigelson described the fee of $25 asbeing “a personal hardship for the stu¬dent.”O’Connell said the late fee eased mattersfrom the administration end and noted thatit was originally raised so the Universitycould inform the Selective Service quicklyand efficiently of a student’s standing uponhis request.He added, however that the present dead¬line “is more harsh than I had everthought.”CleaverEldridge Cleaver, minister of infor¬mation of the Black Panther partyand presidential candidate of thePeace and Freedom Party, will notbe at Chicago this Friday as orig¬inally planned, according to JerryLipsch, Student Government presi¬dent. Cleaver will be in jail at thattime, claims Lipsch. * * < >f ’ 0 f• school, office &filing supplies• drafting materials• mounting - matting -• framing Equal oppoitunity employerComing Sunday at 7:30 & 9:00, CEFROMAN POLANSKI’SKNIFE IN THE WATER trgrnnnnrtnni o a rvrrrm o aStudents & FacultyUse this ad for10% DISCOUNTon all Dry CleaningatPUBLIC CLEANERS, INC1380 E. 53rd., 1310 E. 53rd St.. 1457 E. 51st.0u While you are there, pick up your per¬manent 10% Courtesy DISCOUNT CARD.!mmmjuuuL08.mjuuuu^ji«.ijiji< umiDiscountArt MaterialsDuncan’s"THE FLAP over Eldridge Cleaverhas obscured the story of oneGeorge Mason Murray, anotherBlack Panther whose educationstar is shooting equally high intothe California haze. Murray hasbeen hired this term as teachingassistant in the English depart¬ment at San Francisco State Col¬lege. He says his thinking 'is in¬spired by Che Guevara, MalcolmX. Lumumba, ■ For 0 fr„ copy ofHo Chi Minh M Wm F. Buckley'sand Mao Tse | NATIONAL REVIEW, write: Dept.I, 150 E 35 Street.NY. 10016Tung'.”UNIVERSITYTHEATRE INVITESYOU •to anOPEN HOUSE..WED. OCT. 23from 4 to 6 pmReynolds Club3rd floor TheatrePLANS FOR YEAR!TRYOUT NOTICES!!Coffee &ALL old members,NEW members andinterested peopleareWELCOME!!! asThe 5 billion dollar corporationyou probably never heard of.Funny how big you can get and still remain virtu¬ally anonymous.Somehow we’ve managed to do it.We re a group of over 60 companies, making every¬thing from microwave integrated circuits to color televi¬sion. And we rank number 9 in the top 500 corporationsin the nation.Pretty hot stuff for a nobody.But though you may not recognize our name, may¬be the name Sylvania rings a bell. mIt’s one of our companies. You may even live in one of our telephone companyareas. We operate in 33 states.So here we are, 5 billion dollars strong, growing allover the place, and looking for engineers and scientists togrow with us.Why don’t you think us over with your PlacementDirector.Incidentally, we’re known in the communicationsfield as General Telephone & Electronics.Pssst.Pass it on.GIANT 6 FOOTGREETING CARDor use as aPOWERFUL FLOWERFULLWALL PANELTO BRIGHTEN YOUR “PAD”Write your own“thing” incenter offlowers.Beautiful 5color silk-screenedpaper wallpanel3 feet by 6 feetWHILE THEY LAST!$250 comes insturdy tubeWith extralabel formailingsend check or money order toTHE PAD. box 397.Glencoe. Ill. 60022October 22, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 5PSYCHOLOGISTM. S.Industrial PsychologyBe the Staff Psychologist at the world headquarters of aleading oil company, relocation expenses paid to pleas¬ant Midwestern community. Excellent salary; fringe ben¬efits; opportunity to grow in this important position. Yourimmediate responsibility will be to administer and inter¬pret our current systems and methods of psychologicaltesting, as they pertain to selection, transfer, trainingand promotion; evaluate current tests; design test bat¬teries and validate tests against internal performance.Counsel on human factors and behavioral problems.Requirements: At least a Master's degree in industrialor allied field of psychology. 2-5 years experience pre¬ferred in application of psychological tests and otherrecent behavioral science applications to the industrialscene. Helpful if you have had some work in occupa¬tional and vocational* counseling. Should be keenly in¬terested in industrial applications.Write in confidence to:Mr. D. Class. Dept. UC-1068708 Terrace Hilton Bldg.Cincinnati. Ohio 45202An Equal Opportunity Employer IF 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.MUSICRAFT SPECIALV1 £8PROFESSIONAL quality. The AR turntablemeets NAB specifications for broadcast equip¬ment on wow, flutter, rumble, and speed accu¬racy. It is belt-driven and synchronous.ARxo TURNTABLE2 speed turntableAR-4x SPEAKER in walnutAn improved model of the AR-4, uses an 8" accusticsuspension woofer and a 2/i” wide-dispersion conetweeter. ACOUSTIC RESEARCH 20% OFFThis week only with copy of adAR-2axAR-5AR-3a in walnutin walnutin walnut RegS78. 00 less cartr.$57.00$128.00$175.00$250.00 NOW$62.40 less cartr.$45.60$102.40$140.00$200.00ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.--DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th SI.--779-6500YOURFAVORITEBOOKSTOREIS ALWAYS THEBEST PLACE TO BUY FORSERVICE AND DEPENDABILITYWoodworth’s BookstoreSK X e$/y imports, 3nc.• * 2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.Expert foreign "Feh 326*2550car service.The Chicago Maroon Most complete photoand hobby store opthe South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student DiscountsOctober 22, 1968 SGSDSREVITALIZATIONent 113S)IDA NOYES8 30 P.M.FRIDAY, OCT. 25Tickets 5175UC Students $1soOn sale Tues. at SG ONE WILDPERFORMANCEONLYFRI.f NOV. I, 8:30 P.M. AUDITORIUMTHEATRECLANCY BROS. &TOMMY MAKEMTICKETS: $4.00. $5.00, $4.00. $3.00 922-2110Moll Orders to Auditorium Theatre, Csiqreis near Mlcki-90s, Chicago Tickets at lai Office; also Ticket Caatral.212 H. Mlcklgaa ft all Ward, Fields end Crawford Stares.doc Films presentsCaryGRANT KatherineHEPBURNinHOWARD HAWKS’BRINGING UPBABYThursday,Oct. 24 7:15 & 9:15754THE130 MPH TIRE.For people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursStraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It’ll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It s less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Easy.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We’re tubeless.Other radials use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it’s tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us. KT!ZTZ!ZI!^a*llRELLIA***FRONTENDBRAKE-MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500Continued from Page Onejerry Lipsch stated that this proposal, ifofficial, will probably be placed on theballot during the general elections in thespring. A majority of votes cast at the electionis required to adopt the proposed amend¬ment, “provided the total vote is at least15 per cent of the student body.”If such a proposed amendment would be submitted to the student body during thegeneral elections in the spring, Pines in¬dicated that a large campaign would bemounted to urge the adoption of theamendment.SDS Calls November Student StrikeContinued from Page Threeagain and again, can be radicalized by re¬defining issues. University research on bi¬ological warfare should not be attacked pri¬marily on the grounds that secrecy violatesacademic freedom; victory on that basismerely means the research is continuedsomewhere off the campus. Instead, suchresearch should be vitiated in itself by exposing the inhuman theoretical and fi¬nancial stance of a government rationali¬zing death through courtship with “nation¬al defense.”Some of the SDSers saw disruptive strat¬egy as a means of de-legitimizing the so¬ciety’s institutions—the electoral process,the schools, the entire government.National secretary Mike Klonsky saidBULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, October 22MEETING: College Faculty, Quantrell Auditorium,3:40 p.m.LECTURE: Mr. Philip H. Ashby, "Hinduism and Con¬temporary Indian Youth" Swift Hall CommonRoom, 4 p.m.DOC FILMS: "Sergeant York," by Howard Hawks,Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m., 75c.LECTURE: Claude Simon, French novelist, "Problemesdu nouveau roman," Social Science 122, 8 p.m.EDWARD MONDELLO: Organ. Works by Bach, Franck,Hindemith, in Rockefeller Chapel, 8:30 p.m.NATIONAL THEATRE OF THE DEAF: Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m.LECTURE: Mr. Philip H. Ashby, "An Example of Pop¬ular Esoteric Indian Religion Today: The RadhaSoami," Swift Hall Common Room, 8 p.m.MEETING: Initial general organizing meeting for stu¬dents and faculty members interested in Festivalof the Arts for next spring, Reynolds ClubLounge, 8 p.m.RECRUITING VISIT: New York University GraduateSchool of Business Administration, for appoint¬ments call ext. 3282.RECRUITING VISIT: Peace Corps, call ext. 3282 forappointment.RECRUITING VISIT: Asiatic Petroleum Company, callext 3282FILM.AND DISCUSSION: "Give Me a Riddle" (film)followed by discussion of "Cultural Imperialismand Foreign Aid" with Walter Carrington,Deputy Director for Africa Region Peace Corps,Classics 10, 7:30 p.m.FOLKDANCING: International Folk Dancing, Interna¬tional House, 8-10:30 p.m.SEMINAR: "Electron-excited Luminescence in Mineralsand the Development of Luminescence Petrogra¬phy," Rosenwald Hall, Room 27, 3:30 p.m.Call J. V. Smith NO 7-4700 ext. 8110 for furtherinformation.MESA COLLOQUIUM: "What is Measurement?," GeorgRasch, visiting professor of education andstatistics, Judd 126, 4 p.m.Wednesday, October 23REHEARSAL: University Symphony Orchestra Re¬hearsal, Mandel Hall, 6:30-10 p.m.LECTURE: "Psychology and Alchemy," Dr. JamesHillman, Kent 107, 8 p.m.DISCUSSION: JCC Probes Student Revolt, TempleJudea, 8610 Niles Center Road, Skokie, 8:15p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: British and ScandanavianDances, Ida Noyes Dance Room, 8-10 p.m.LECTURE: "The Next Four Years: With Nixon orHumphrey in Darkest America," ProfessorGeorge Stigler, Cobb B-15, 7:30 p.m. and plan anti-machine activities in the elec¬tion, Blue Gargoyle, 7:00 p.m.CONFERENCE: Twenty-first Annual Federal Tax Con¬ference, Prudential Building Auditorium, 130E. Randolph, 9:30 a.m.MEETING: Physical Sciences, Eckhart, 133, 3:30 p.m.MEMORIAL SERVICE: Mrs. Dorothy Gaehr Wright,wife of Dr. F. Howell Wright, Bond Chapel,4:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: "The Bride of Frankenstein" by JamesWhale, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.LECTURE: "The Hindu Promise and its Dilema," Mr.Ashyb, Swift Hall Common Room, 8:00 p.m.Thursday, October 24MEETING: Graduate Women's Group. Organization anddiscussion of problems of graduate women. Opento all graduate women. Ida Noyes, 8 p.m.LECTURE: Middle East Center Students' Association."American Policy Toward Developing Nations."John F. Root, Director, North African Affairs—U.S. Department of State. Kent 103, 3:30 p.m.HOLY EUCHARIST: Lutheran Church Reformation Day.Augustana Church, 7 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel House, 8-11 p.m.LECTURE: "An Existential Experimential Approach toPersonality." Eugene Gendlin, department ofpsychology. Cobb 209, 11:30 a.m.MEETING: For Pre-law students, Reynolds Club 4 p.m.DOC FILMS: "Bringing up Baby." Cobb Hall, 7:15 and9:15 p.m. 75 cents.COLLOQUIUM: J. R. Jokipii "Random Magnetic Fieldsin Space" Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.MESA COLLOQUIUM: Georg Rasch, professor anddirector of Institute for Statistics, University ofCopenhagen, "What is Measurement." Judd Hall126, 4 p.m.CONFERENCE: 21st Annual Federal Tax Conference.Prudential Bldg. Auditorium, 9 a.m.RallyEugene McCarthy and AttorneyGeneral William Clark will appearat a rally on behalf of Clark's can¬didacy for the US Senate Tuesdaynight at 7:45 at Northwestern Uni¬versity in Evanston. The rally, forwhich there is no admissioncharge, will be held in McGawMemorial Hall next to Dyche Sta¬dium on Evanston's Central Street.MEETING: Students for an Open Chicago/ to discussauthorized 8MC sales & service -5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113 ABANDONChicago, illinois 60615HOPE^foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.A*' Vyou 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 . the NC meeting clearly showed that “SDSis embarking on a pre-election program.”One of the approved resolutions, entitled‘Boulder and Boulder’, calls for a nation¬wide strike of high school and college stu¬dents on Nov. 4 and 5, regional demonstra¬tions in major cities, and support of Na¬tional GI week Nov. 15. GI Week is a proj¬ect of the National Mobilization Committeeto End the War in Vietnam, whose purposeis to show support for GIs who don’t sup¬port the war.Another resolution described the atmos¬phere of high schools in America as “re¬pressive, non-productive and inhumane.”It provided for organizing in high schoolsto move students to overthrow the system. Pines said, “One of the big problemswill he getting enough students to vote.Student interest in SG activities has beenlagging during the past few years.”Pines further stated that the change inSG structure could enable SG to workmore effectively, but that SG can improveits relationship with the students only ifthe representatives devote more time andenergy to their jobs.Kissinger AcceptsArmy InductionFormer SDS National Secretary C. ClarkKissinger will speak to a rally markinghis induction into the army at 6 am onOctober 24th at 615 West van Buren.Kissinger, who is 27 and has two chil¬dren, was re-classified and given an in¬duction notice after turning in his draftcard last December 4. He has decided notto refuse induction, but instead to workfrom within the army by organizing GI’s.Peace Corps To Recruit Students On CampusThe Peace Corps is on campus thisPeace Corps is on campusweek to recruit students.According to Paul Harrison and MarySue Hundt, both ex-Peace Corps volun¬teers, “Students see volunteering in thePeace Corps as an exotic experience. Theydon’t use it as relevant to themselves.“We would like to make the contributionto the campus of relating things which hap¬pen abroad to your campus,” they con¬tinued.A movie, filmed in pre-civil war Nigeria,is being presented Tuesday evening by thePeace Corps representatives. According toHarrison, the film gives the story of thegrowth of Nigeria in the past few years,and ends with a speculative presentationof its future.The program will be presented in Clas¬sics 10, at 7:30 pm.Language Aptitude Tests for the PeaceCorps will be given Wednesday and Thurs¬day at 10 am and Friday at 3 pm at theffarSf%r$t\e$(%rif*r3r>r&(*eie*rSt*r9a*p* *p* jp* jp* jp* jp* jp career placement office in 200 ReynoldsClub. Persons who wish to get in touchwith the Peace Corps representativesshould contact them in the placement of¬fice at Ext. 3282.NSA Plans Fast for BiafraFriday, Oct. 25 has been designated asa Fast for Biafra, set up by Chicago’sNational Student Association (NSA). Stu¬dents have been asked to give up mealsat contract cafeterias; the money ordinar¬ily spent on meals will be used to pur¬chase food for the people of Biafra.Chelsea Baylor, ‘70, NSA coordinator atChicago, introduced the Fast bill at the21st NSA Congress this summer, callingfor a national student movement.The Chicago plan has received the co¬operation of Residence Halls and Com¬mons, who will arrange for the $.60 costof the average dinner meal to be appro¬priated to NSA.Special!Style Cue —Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-85311 BLACKST0NE BANQUET ROOM . HY 3-1933 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED866 664-5858No. Wabash Ave. UNIVERSITY THEATRE P RESENTSTHE NATIONALTHEATREOF THE DEAFwithTHE WESTERN WORLD’S FIRSTPROFESSIONAL COMPANY OF DEAF ACTORSA Japanese Kabuki Drama.A Program of Poetryand Sheridan’s THE CRITICONE NIGHT ONLY!! MANDEL HALLTuesday, October 22nd 8:30 p.m.- Tickets UT Office, Reynolds Club Ext. 3581The Odd Shopat THOMAS IMPORTSDependable Service Jewelry - African Clothingon your Foreign Car Robes - Black PaintingComing: Books from Africa10% Student DiscountHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 1352 East 53rd 684-6370- You won't have to putACE HARDWARE your moving or storageEYE EXAMINATIONS 1320 E. 63rd problem off until tomor-FASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSES • Paint • Housewares• Tools • Electrical row if you call us today.DR. KURT ROSENBAUM & Plumbing Supplies• Glass & Installation PETERSON MOVINGOptometrist • Lock & Key Service AND STORAGE CO.53 Kimbark Plaza Serving Hyde Park— 12655 S. Doty Ave.1200 East 53rd Street Woodlawn since 1901HYde Park 3-8372i HY 3-2788 646-4411October 22, 1968 The Chicago Maroon• 4‘ ».v h . . .. i, ( » • .IMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: 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. REGISTERED NURSES—all shifts.Pediatric Hospital for children withlong term illnesses. Multi-Disciplin¬ary services. Associated with aUniversity program. Excellent sal¬ary and personnel policies. LaRabida Sanitarium, Mrs. Scanned— DO 3-6700.APARTMENTS FOR RENT3 room 10 month sublet. $150/mo.5400 S. Harper Ave. 955-1692.74th St. & Exchange Ave. 2 bedrm. Ahmad's isn't worth it.Eat at the BLUE GARGOYLE.That was pretty nasty.THE MUMMY'S HAND! BreastedHall, Oct. 31.Bandersnatch circus of the under¬ground. 5:30 to 12:45 nightly.May the grass grow at your doorand the fox build his nest on yourhearthstone. May the light fadefrom your eyes, so you never seewhat you love. May your own eligible. Reg. dorm vacancies inPierce (1), Woodward (1), andHitchc. (1); all residents of respec¬tive dorms eligible. Forms tomor¬row from SG, Ida Noyes. Info., callx3274, Jerry.Have you noticed how much theBee-Gee's latest single sounds ex¬actly like Sonny and Cher used to?This is progress? Yeccch.THE BREAD IS RISINGI Bake-In.Wednesday, Oct. 23, 8 P.M. —11 P.M., 5468 S. Ellis; (493-3721).Ahmad's doesnt have to stoop to Runcible spoons?Yogurt?To R.B.E.I.C. If it's not women,what are you doing Saturday night.— J.S.E.I.C.Phi GammaOctober 23. Delta. Rush SmokerTired of asking "So what do youdo in the New Collegiate Divisionanyway?" Buy the NCD Journal atthe Bookstore in limited editiononly 50c. Young Republican Club sponsorsCongressional Candidate Tom Ire¬land and Candidate for AppellateCourt, Paul Wisner. Tues., Oct »at 8:30 in Ida Noyes.Angie Lee SingsFriday at the BLUE GARGOYLE.Tickets for Second City, Mon., Oct28, available, 10 A.M. to 4 PmMandel Hall Corridor. Only $2 forUC students. $2.50 for all others.Any student interested in smallseminar on Machine Politics Con¬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.• BORIS KARLOFF inBRIDE OF FRANKENSTEINjames whales’ THEWANTEDWednesday, Cobb HallCheap, old VW. Ken DO 3-6297. 7:15 and 9:00 75< doc Filmsor quiet room with bath. Immediateoccupancy through Dec. Call. X3781.EMPLOYMENT WANTEDEdit. 8> type papers; manuscripts;dissertations. Exp. Also English, heated in new bldg. Near I.C.Call SO 8-0444.Room for girl. 3rd fl. of prvt.home. S40/mo. MU 4-5076, 5-9 P.M.or wkends.SPACIOUS BASEMENT in Victor-ian townhouse at 60th & Black-stone. $50/month. Private entrance.French & Spanish lessons and trans¬lations. 363-0980.Minnette's Custom Salon. Altera¬tions, dressmaking. 1711V2 E. 55th.493-9713.French Tutoring available by FrenchPh.D student of Paris. 288-0449. All utilities paid. Call Univ. Ext.3266 or 324-9358 evenings.FOR SALEIf a RECORD is listed in Schwanns,I'll discount It. Even If it isn't,I probably can. Sanford Rockowitz288-4204. blood rise against you, and thesweetest drink you take be thebitterest cup of sorrow. May youdie without benefit of clergy; maythere be none to shed a tear atyour grave, and may the hearth¬stone of hell be your best bedforever.And may a camel fornicate withyour mother til smoke comes outof her ears.Belati contati impachelobelia gamana.Valshki FabriciMake November 5 National ErectionDay! "There are more ways to votethan with a ballot."ATTENTION Hump, Tricky Dicky,Ungoreous George — Second Cityis coming to UC — Mon., Oct. 28.Beware! Tickets at Mandel HallCorridor daily, 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.SFA COURT VACANCIES: Two 2yr„ two 1 yr. justices to be electedby SG Assembly this month. Inter¬ested students must submit state¬ment of interest, length of servicedesired, name, acad. unit, i. year,to SG, Ida Noyes by Oct. 27. CheckHandbook, p. 10, for descript, ofCourt. More info., call 3274, Jerry.Still listening to WFMT In mon¬aural? KLM 11 FM; stereo FM &phono only $229.95 at MUSICRAFT.Campus rep Bob 324-3005.Americans, make yourself heard!Do not let the Yippie-sociallst co¬alition steal at home what we arefighting for abroad! United Patriotsin Viet Nam! Victory in the streetsof America! Victory against Com¬munism throughout the World!Trust Humphrey.Trust Muskie. knock its competition. It's just afine place to meet and eat."Mr. Sherman—We are lonely up here in the atticof Reynolds Club.We WANT to have an OPENHOUSE — and give away coffeeand cake and ideas and care!PLEASE help us to do that.PLEASE run our ad: "UT InvitesYou" — even You, Mr. Sherman."Yogurt served with runcible spoonsat the Bandersnatch. The Mummy Kharis is alive! Alive!You're so low you could walk undera snake's belly with a top hat andan umbrella.Psychological study being conductedon the problem of self-control. Re¬quire students who wish to cutdown on the number of cigarettesthey smoke. If you are at all in¬terested contact Mr. Frankel: Ext.4711 and 4713. After 5, call 363-5267.WRITERS' WORKSHOP — PL 2-8377. tact sweet Barbara, 955-5036.wise faculty to teach. LikeWhen a man accepts his own death,which he bears with him in bloodand flesh and in his desires, thenhe can truly begin to live, andthen he can truly hope for some¬thing new, for some relief fromboredom.That's pretty heavy stuff.Yeah, I used to be in philosophy.Went tott)e river, hoping you’d comeYour eyes M of li§l)tin§,your bair all undoneMad River 1:3Exp. photographer needs part-timepermanent employment (15-20 hr.).Marc Pokempner 624-5558.Part-time — clerical 8> lite book¬keeping. NO 7-7609 after 6.May I do your typing? 363-1104.Female, 24, seeks bearable part-time employment. Qualifications:degree in art history, wide inter¬ests. Ext. 3265 or 324-9358, evenings.CHRISTMAS CHARTERFly Chicago-London roundtrip for$240. Call Ext. 3272, 1-5 P.M. week¬days for details.EMPLOYMENTPART-TIME BARTENDER. Willingto train. See Dave at the CourtHouse, Harper Court.You don't have to be Jewish toen|oy Levi's.WAITRESS for the Mad Hatter,53rd 8, Hyde Park. Pleasant sur¬roundings. 10:30-4:00, 5 or 6 days/wk. Drop in or call 955-2229.Excellent Youth Leadership posi¬tions afternoons, evngs. and Sun.Chicago Masada, Youth Group ofthe Zionist Org. 973-3232. FENDER elec. 12-string with case:$250. GIBSON amp. rev 8> trem:$75. BU 8-6610 3225 Mike.TYPEWRITER SCM Electric 110.Age: 9 months. FA 4-8200, Rm. 850.Full-size BED, mattress, boxsprings, frame. Good condition.Orig. $110 — yours for $20. BA 1-1068 or 374-1389 after 4.'62 Volkswagen 1500, FM radio, newtires, excellent shape. $900. FA 4-8200, Rm. 364.'60 Ply. Valiant runs good. $150takes it. 752-7516 Rich.Old office typewriter for sale —needs cleaning. $15 firm. MaroonBusiness Office, ext. 3265.Batik Banners, wall hangings. Ourwalls got full. $6-15. 5340 Woodlawn.493-0856.TRYOUTSOpen casting for Genet's TheBalcony — to be prod. 1st halfwinter Qr. Sat. 1-3:30 P.M., Mon.8, Tue. 7:30 to 9:30. RCT.PERSONALSREVITALIZATION presents SecondCity — "A Plague on Both YourHouses' — Mon. Oct. 28, 8:30 P.M.Mandel Hall.INIERNATIONAL SHERRY HOURSocial Science TeaWednesday 5 00 P.M.Cosponsored by;lntenu,ti°n<1| Students OrganizationAll Graduate Students and FacultyCordially InvitedThe Chicago Maroon No country can remain free unlessits people are permeated with ajoyous disrespect for most of thelaws and for all of the authorities.— Richard Needham.EXPRESS YOURSELF.Sing, play, read poetry at theBLUE GARGOYLE.Went to the river, hoping you'dcome. Your eyes full of lightning,your hair all undone.International Sherry Hour. SocialScience Tea. Wednesday 5:00 P.M.All invited.Don't mess around with Barbara.If shes not picking it up, she'spassing it out — Sis.P.L. — You're so low you haveto look up to see down. — R.B.SECOND CITY AT UC. Oct. 28.Mandel Hall — only $2 for UCstudents.Elaborating on his proposed curesfor the cities, Mr. Agnew said hehad no plans to visit any Negrocommunities or ghetto areas ashis Democratic vice-presidential op¬ponent, ^uskie, has done."I don't feel there's any par¬ticular gain to be made by de¬bating on a street corner," Mr.Agnew said. "You don't learn fromthe people who are suffering frompoverty how to cure their problems;you learn from experts. If thepoor knew what was wrong theywould have cured It long ago."UC Science Fiction Society. 7:30Tuesday, Oct. 22, Ida Noyes SunParlor.You can never step over the samewoman twice.Physics majors: go get a real go-getter! Vote for Kent Bsse todayand tomorrow, Eckhart 208A.Trip out with Marco Polo 288-5944.An alternative to the Daley ma¬chine? Hear about the Republicanslate — Tues. at 8:30 In Ida Noyes.The cobra strikes.Ambrose — your face Is so ugly youought to shave your ass and walkaround backwards — B.H.A horrible Hungarian person smokescamel dung.SG ELECTIONS FOR FIRST-YEARREPS AND DORM VACANCIES:Fifth week. First-year class electsfive at-large; all 1st yr. stud.October 22, 1968 MAD RIVERBOOKING INFORMATION:. Harry Sobol • P O Box 3256 • Berkeley. California 94781 * (415 ) 235-9842*4