Students ChosenFor CommitteesOne Section, Eight Paget*■%be concerned with the 18 University pro¬jects there, among them a possible experi¬mental educational district, the WoodlawnMental Health Program, the Child CareCenter, and the Woodlawn model citiesprogram.Faculty members of the committee in¬clude both University administrators andspecial representatives from the variousUniversity projects in Woodlawn. Studentswho have been invited to join are RichardAppelbaum, Jean Armstrong, 71, A1 Jaffe,’69, Jeff Kuta, ’69, John Perry, ’70, ThomasPhilpott ,’68, John Ryan, William Swenson,Thomas Unterman, ’69, and Barbara Yon-dorf, 71. The students were participants inthe university’s summer task force on theWoodlawn model cities program.Levi said: “Most of the students whohave been invited have been closer towhat’s going on than the faculty.”None of those invited have accepted sofar. “We have agreed to send one or twoof our number to serve on the committeecontingent upon the committee’s acceptingrepresentatives of other student groupsthat have shown interest and involvementin Woodlawn,” Appelbaum said.Levi said Monday that the committeewas “no closed corporation.”The South Campus Committee, chairedby Harold Richman, assistant professor atthe School of Social Service Administration,has not yet met. Richman stated that thenature of the committee would not be de¬cided until its first meeting, later thisweek, with the Committee of the Council.Students who have been invited to serve onthe committee are Judy Boggs, MichaelDucey, 71, Barbara Hurst, 71, PeterSwensson, ’69, Lynn Vogel, and Gary Yud-koff, ’69.Appointment of the' two committeescaused some comment among students,largely because they were appointed by theadministration without consultation of stu¬dents. Jerry Lipsch, president of StudentGovernment, said, “This business of moreadministratively picked student committeespoints out a whole view of student partici¬pation in which the administration says,‘what’s ours is ours and what’s your isours to define.’ ” He saw the formation ofthese committees, and the recent designa¬tion by Edward H. Levi, president-desig¬nate of the University, of a student as anombudsman as an indication that “Ed¬ward Levi considers administrativelypicked student advisers as the means ofstudent participation in University affairs.This is wholly inadequate.”JULIAN LEVIWoodlawn Advisor t-* *or*NSF Funds Cut by $2.4 MillionADRIAN A. ALBERT: Dean of the physical sciences division. Maroon “ DAVID TRAV,S University administrators have appoint¬ed members to two new student-facultycommittees which will study problems andpossible action in the community south ofthe University.The Student Faculty Committee on Wood¬lawn, headed by Julian H. Levi, professorof urban studies and executive director ofthe South East Chicago Commission, willoversee and suggest projects in the Wood¬lawn area.Faculty Student Subcommittee of theCouncil on the South Council on the SouthCampus, appointed by President GeorgeBeadle at the suggestion of the committeeof the council, will consist of seven facultymembers and six students — three gradu¬ates and three undergraduates. It will beresponsible to the council of the universitysenate.According to- Julian Levi, the Woodlawncommittee will advise the president onUniversity programs in Woodlawn. It willBy Sylvia PiechockaFour weeks into the academic year therecent National Science Foundation (NSF)cuts are beginning to take their toll, andnowhere is the situation worse than in thedivision of they physical sciences.“This is the biggest nightmare I’ve everhad to deal with,” said Adrian A. Albert,dean of the division. The cut requires thattotal NSF expenditures for fiscal year 1968-69 be no more than $6,391,000 as con¬trasted to last year’s ceiling of $8,712,000.Hence each division must hold expenses to77 per cent of last year’s expenditure level— the amount actually paid out undergrants.Although the University hopes that theoutlay under grants can be “stretchedout” over a longer period and thus notseriously impair individual projects or theoverall level of the research program, theUniversity has had to make substantialreductions in the allocation of money toeach division.The physical sciences have experiencedthe greatest loss, the reduction in researchproject expenditure totaling 1.4 million dol¬lars. More than 73 grants are affected, atleast three of them seriously.Two of these grants involve high energyphysics research at the Fermi Institute,one of them viably supporting the cyclo¬tron. According to Albert more than 1.5million dollars in grant money and tre¬mendous numbers of manpower are in¬volved in these projects alone.“We are trying to keep them going,”MaroonStaff MeetingPlease attend the Maroon staffmeeting this Thursday at 3:30 pmin Room 303 of Ida Noyes Hall ifyou are a member of the Maroonstaff, if you wish to be a memberof the Maroon staff, or if you arenot sure whether you are on theMaroon staff and you want to be.This is the First and Most Importantof the year, so let Roger know ifyou cannot make it. THEFINANCIALCRISISassured Albert, adding that he hoped thatthe appeal which has been made to theFreshmen will have the opportunity toelect representatives to Student Govern¬ment (SG) this Thursday and Friday. Fiveseats are vacant for first-year representa¬tives at-large, one regular seat is vacant atWoodward Court, one seat at Pierce Tower,and one seat at Snell-Hitchcock.Elections will be held in Woodward Court,Pierce Tower, and Burton Judson between7:30 am and 9:30 am, and 11:30 am and 1pm. In the evening, elections will be heldbetween 5 pm and 7:30 pm in Woodwardand BJ and between 5 and 8 in Pierce.The majority of candidates for SG arerunning as independents. However, sevenstudents are representing The HalloweenParty, which was formed by members offor Students for a Democratic Society(SDS).Five members of the Halloween Partyare running for freshman representative atlarge. They are Norman Bimberg, JuanJewell, Sarah Glazer, Alan Mandell, andSue Waysdorf. Juan Jewell, said he hopesto see SG representing the liberal to radi¬cal faction on campus; “I would like to seeSG working more for the left,” he said.Other candidates for freshman-at-large,who had filed by press time are Gerard Le-val, Steveh Wong, Francis Boyle, JeromeCulp, Dennis Wolf, Tom Biersteker, ArnoldLund, Richard Fleming, Rick Shattuc, andRobert Swift.Both Dennis Wolf and Gerard Leval feelthat in order for SG to legitimately servestudents, it needs a proper power base fromwhich it can take on responsibility. Amongthe initiators of the petition to reform SG,will enable SG to work closer with students. NSF will come through.Although the purchase of equipment, in¬cluding a purposed spectrometer, will haveto be postponed and the general level ofexpenditures drastically reduced, Albertsays he will not violate commitments andthat the upkeep of research associates andassistants is “first order priority.” He addsContinued on Page SevenJerome Culp stated that he hoped to seeSG play a larger role in representing stu¬dent views. He is in favor of the amend¬ment. Richard Fleming, also in favor of theamendment, would like SG to effect changeregarding the apathy and lack of cohesive¬ness among SG representatives.Francis Boyle, favors both the amend¬ment and house autonomy. Robert Swift,who also favors both the two house systemand house autonomy, would like to intro¬duce greater and more regular dialoguebetween the administration and students.Arnold Lund would like to see SG morea part of the student body. He is in favorof the two house system.Candidates for the regular vacancy atPierce Tower are Mark Moskowitz, repre¬senting the Halloween Party, and AndrewRedlmayer, Myron Meisel, and A. Shrunt-off, all running as independents. None couldbe reached for comment.Students who are running for the vacantseat at Woodward Court are Linda Killian,representing the Halloween Party, andVem Culberson, independent. Verne Cul¬berson favors the two house system, houseautonomy, a speakers program, and an in¬vestigation of the actions of CORSO.Candidates for the vacancy at Snell-Hitchcock are Stephen Chatsky, RobertStuller, and Sidney Weiss. Chatsky, the onlystudent who could be reached, hopes to seeSG as being effective in a drive for auton¬omy in all aspects of student life. He alsomaintains that SG should be a legitimatevoice of the students, and calls for reorga¬nization of the assembly.SG Elections To Be HeldNo 16 E CHICAGO MChicago, Illinois, October 29, 1968Tnnnrg~e~a~a'a a <nnrsinrinrTnrTnnra 61 ao'a'innrgStudents & FacultyUse this ad for10% DISCOUNTon all Dry CleaningatPUBLIC CLEANERS, INC.1380 E. 53rd., 1310 E. 53rd St„ 1457 E. 51st.While you are there, pick up your per¬manent 10% Courtesy DISCOUNT CARD.I SUL £ fl.PJtJUUt a JLfl-iLgJJLtJUUUULfiJULfl-B -B ■8 998>gJLX„/« sS’mports, o^ic.. , . 2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.Expert foreign Te, 324-2550car service.MUSICRAFT SPECIALSPECIAL SYSTEM AT HUGE SAVINGSRets399.95 NOW$29995ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak SI.--DE 7-4150 MmiOiaft 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500 4-5 rireui ^/miuraio can ao iju mpn. ror 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. ■ iRELLIWe’ll give you a chanceto go out on a limb. FRONTENDBRAKE-MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500ONE WILDPERFORMANCEONLYw57050■ " Complete599.955110With our High Risk/High Reward program for col¬lege graduates. If you qualify, you'll be put into achallenging management position immediately. You’llmake your own decisions. Take your own risks.If you can't handle the challenges, we’ll find outfast enough to keep from wasting a lot of your time.That's the risk.ADC 303A Loudspeaker systemThe Brentwood. 5 year guarantee.Air suspension design.DUAL 1015 Auto/Professional Turntable4 lb. cast platter4 speedswill track as low as l/a gramWith BASE & SHURE M3lE cartridgeMagnetic elliptical cartridge tracks at 1 gramFRI., NOV. I, fi3o p.m. AUDITORIUMTHEATRICLANCY BROS. &TOMMY MAKEMTICKETS: $4.00, $5.00. $4.00, $3.00 922-2110Mall Order* 9a Auditorium Theatre. Coaqress sear Mlchi-9«. Chicane. Ticket* at lai Office; also Ticket Ceatral.212 M. Mlcklqaa A all Ward, Fields aad Crawford Store*.v /THE130 MPH TIRE.For people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.If you do well, you're on your way. Fast. That'sthe reward.If stakes that are a little higher and risks that are alittle rougher are your cup of tea, see our recruiteror write College Relations, 222 Broadway, NewYork, N. Y. 10038.A lot of hard work never hurt anyone.#ji\ Western Electric•aSS*. I MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THF BELL SYSTEMAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERthe Chicago Maroon October 29, 1968Meeting Hears SDS National LeadersOriginal American posters prints andframes too For sale SI to S2U OF C BOOKSTORE5802 S ELLIS AVE“You’ve got to look at police and GI’snot as people, but symbols of what theyare. You’ve got to learn to hate them,”said Mike Klonsky, National Secretary ofStudents for a Democratic Society (SDS)at a meeting in Mandel Hall Sunday night.Mark Rudd, Columbia president of SDSand Tom Hayden, a national official ofSDS, also spoke. Haycen is currently un¬der investigation by the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) for hispart in SDS activities as well as the dem¬onstrations at the Democratic conventionin August.Hayden called for a massive march onthe Loop on election day by University stu¬dents. “It is important that someone otherthan Mayor Daley represent the people onelection day,” said Hayden.Rudd, leader of the Columbia disorderslast April, clarified the position of the Co¬ lumbia students, following a film of theevents.Rudd told of the initial need for action,focused on the construction of a new gym,and how the need was met through theseizure of Hamilton Hall, Low Library, andtliree other buildings. He said, “From aninitial 300 students who went into Hamilton,we grew to a force of over 1,000 in fivebuildings in six days.”Tutor Program Formed in DormsAn experimental residential tutors pro¬gram for first-year women has been start¬ed by the college.Designed to aid students who are havingdifficulty passing one or more commonyear courses, the program is intended par¬ticularly for freshmen whose academicbackgrounds place them at a disadvantage.The tutors will also help the house coun¬cils and resident heads plan cultural andacademic activities.The program is the direct result of a de¬mand for tutoring made last spring bySPLIBS, the undergraduate organizationfor black students.Assistant dean of students James Vicesays that it later became apparent that theproblem of lack of preparation for commonyear courses was not limited to black stu¬dents. Last year, he said, some of the col¬legiate divisions, notably the physical sci¬ences, began organizin'? tutoring programs.Barbara Allen, a residential tutor in Up¬per Wallace, reports that many studentshave come to her with general questionsor specific homework problems rather thanwith requests for formal tutoring. She saysthat she does feel that she is functioningas an integral part of the house, particular¬ly as compared to the usual position of up¬perclassmen in Woodward. The tutors, who were selected by the Col¬lege on the basis of personal qualificationsas well as outstanding academic records,receive board plus an hourly rate for tu¬toring. The students who have been ap¬ pointed are: Barbara Allen, Upper Wal¬lace; Constance Balint, Rickert; DeborahKaplan, Upper Flint; Marcia Lewis, El¬eanor Club; and Rita Wigglesworth, LowerWallace. Hayden spoke in more specific termsabout the coming election and the role thatSDS has played and will play in Novem¬ber. “Humphrey is still suffering from thedemolition job he did on himself after hetripped over us.”“The generation gap is a new form ofclass struggle,” said Hayden stressing thepoint that the youth of this country are adisinfranchised, quite large minority. Healso went on to call Chicago the “pigcapital” of the United States.Klonsky, the final speaker of the evening,brought the largest reaction from thecrowd when he asked to remove the hatof a campusfunds. ‘pig” to pass around forBlackwood Gets Music AwardFor Catalog Value in 1968-69Easley Blackwood, Jr., associate profes¬sor of music, has been selected as one ofthe recipients of an award made by theAmerican Society of Composers, Authors,and Publishers (ASCAP) for the year 1968-1969.The awards are granted by an indepen¬dent panel and are based upon the uniqueprestige value of each writer’s catalogand the performances of his compositionswhich are not reflected in the survey ofperformances.The following is the panel of distin¬guished authorities who chose the awardwinners:• Professor Donald E. Brown, directorof the School of Music of Barrington Col¬lege, Rhode Island and executive vicepresident of the National Church MusicFellowship. • Donald Engle, director of the MarthaBaird Rockefeller Fund for Music, Inc.• Dr. Frederick Fennell, conductor ofthe University of Miami Symphony Orches¬tra and Symphony Wind Ensemble.• Walter Hendl, Director of the East¬man School of Music at the University ofRochester.• Dr. Louis G. Wersen, Director of Mu¬sic Education in the Philadelphia publicschools and President of the Music Educa¬tors National Conference (MENC). Klonsky later said, “Look, I’ve heard alot of people say that the campus pigs areO.K. that they’re on our side. But I tellyou, when the trouble comes, they’ll bringthe guns down on our heads with the restof them. To resist successfully, you haveto have an outright hate for all pigs.”Many people in the audience reacted vi¬olently to Klonsky statements and a typicalreaction was, “If that’s humanism, youcan shove it up your ass.”Jerry Lipsch, president of Student Gov¬ernment and a member of the universitySDS said, “I disagree with what he (Klon¬sky) said in quite a few areas, and withhis approach. In a way, he is right, sincethis is a very over-intellectualized campusand an unsterilized ‘gut’ reaction is oftenlacking. But Klonsky is way off when heurges people to manufacture revolutionaryhate for ‘pigs, faculty,’ etc.”Why would Wade rather switch than fight?Don’t waste your vote by voting triparty.Original Taiwan primitive paintingsscrolls and framed picturesNow on sale at 25°c off CHRISTMAS CHARTER FLIGHTEUROPENew Yoik LondonLondon New York Dec. 16Jan. 5 or 6*180Nov. 11 Deadline for $50 DepositCome to the Charter Flight OfficeIda Noyes Hall, or call Ext. 3272, 1-5 P.M. M-FEligible: Students, staff and faculty of the Universityof Chicago and their immediate family.October 29, 1968..rr ?. i t • ; The Chicago Maroon♦ * 9 « a • • • . • # J oa 3EDITORIALSAppointmentsThe appointment of students to the standing faculty-studentcommittee on Woodlawn and the newly formed faculty-studentcommittee on the south campus, indicates two things about the direc¬tion of the administration, both of them somewhat alarming.The first is the fact that there are two committees to studyone area. Has the University decided that the south campus is nolonger part of Woodlawn? Or have two parts of the administra¬tion busily formed committees without each other’s knowledge?(One student invited to join the Woodlawn committee said thatJulian Levi had never mentioned the south campus committee,didn’t Julian know? maybe Julian didn’t know.) Doesn’t theUniversity recognize that a great part of its problems in Wood¬lawn is its expansion into the area?The second is the method by which the students on the com¬mittee were appointed (or “invited” as they say). Two years agowhen the mild-mannered respensible (read non-radical) TomHeagy was president of student government, the administration,among some hoopla, handed over the job of finding students toserve on a few faculty-student committees to SG. This makessense. SG is the most representative student body on campus; it isconcerned with what students think. But this year neither SG norany other student group was even consulted on the committees.The students appointed to the Woodlawn committee have de¬clined to accept their appointment until interested student groupshave a chance to suggest other members. Not all the facts behindthe appointments have come out, but they should. They seem toindicate a rather off hand disregard for the direction the dis¬regard indicates. And if the indication is correct, we have a lotfarther to go than we thought.Vote!!This Thursday and Friday freshmen will have what is for al¬most all of them their first chance to have any sort of say in howthey will be represented in this University. Of the eight studentgovernment seats to be voted on at that time, seven are eitherfor first year representatives-at-large, or for representatives fromdorms populated mostly by first year students.This could be a particularly easy election for voters to ignore,making a good start on a career as an apathetic student. Becausethe deadline for submitting candidacies comes after the Maroon’scopy deadline, we do not consider it fair or possible to endorseany candidates. This means that the responsibility for knowingthe candidates rests largely on the voters themselves.The procedure for voting is not difficult, requires little effort.Ballots are available in the dorm cafeterias. Go there. Show yourID. Vote.If students hope ever to have any sort of meaningful parti¬cipation in the running of this University, they must prove to theadministration, to the people who control the University, thatthey are capable of electing students to an organization such asSG, and that they are capable of making SG a representative body.This requires that everyone who is eligible vote, and vote withsome understanding of whom he’s electing.Whose Crisis?We are always happy to hear people talking about the Maroon,and the other day in Hutch Commons when we heard the deans(who come there every Thursday to expose themselves to students)talking about the paper, we were happy indeed. They were sayingthat the housing crisis is to a large extent an invention of theMarooon, that they hadn’t heard so many complaints about thehousing situation. If you all are still wondering about whetherthere is a housing crisis, we direct your attention to the excellence,and exhaustive student housing report. Its conclusion points un¬deniably to crisis, and crisis it is. LETTERSDS: A Community?As people who are either new to thiscampus, or were turned off to SDS lastyear, but who are now active in it, we feelcalled upon to answer the editorial aboutSDS in last Friday’s Maroon. We ourselvesdid not participate in SDS last year, par¬tially because we felt it was elitist andisolated. But at the same time, we havecome to realize that our inaction was duejust as much to our lack of real interest in,and commitment to doing politics, as itwas to our disenchantment with SDS. Ournon-involvement in politics went along withour isolation from any campus movementand our lack of any sense of a studentcommunity.One of the ways we have come to realizethis is by our experience with SDS thisyear. When, for various personal reasons,we decided to participate in left activities,we started going to SDS meetings and involving ourselves in the various issuesaround which activity was being gen¬erated. We found no “closed rulingcliques” talking down to us or imposing thetone and direction of the chapter. On thecontrary, it was our willingness to workand commit ourselves that enabled us tohave as much voice in the policies, direc¬tions, and tactics of the chapter as anyoneelse. Proof of this is that three of us, aswell as other new people, are on the re¬cently elected steering committee. Wefound that old members were eager and enthusiastic about having new people par¬ticipating and we believe this is the spiritin which SDS is continuing to operate.SDS is a radical student organization andit has always defined itself as such. We or¬ganize around crucial issues, such as hous¬ing, that affect the lives of all the peopleon campus — conservatives to liberals toradicals — and our aim is to build as largea movement as possible in order to bringabout necessary changes. As members ofSDS, we want to talk to everyone oncampus.Yet we see it as our function an an or¬ganization to present a radical analysis ofthe problems facing the whole campusrather than to serve as a forum for everypart of the political spectrum.There are problems in SDS and no oneknows it better than the people who are init. There are problems which isolate usfrom the rest of the students on campusand we’re trying to overcome them. But aclear distinction must be drawn betweenconstructive criticism and destructive bait¬ing. The only authentic reaction, the onlyone that moves us closer to a real radicalcommunity, is the kind in which we actpersonally to change what we don’t like,and involve and commit ourselves to build¬ing a movement on this campus.Louise Brotsky 71Judy Clark 71Brent Garren 72Natalee Rosen stein 72Call Strike at BerkeleyIn Support of 139XBERKELEY, Calif. (CPS) — In the wakeof two protests that resulted in 197 arrests,'University of California students havecalled for a student strike.The striking students are demanding:• Credit for Social Analysis 139X, theexperimental course on racism in whichBlack Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver islecturing;• That the University regents rescindtheir Sept. 20 resolution, which deniedcredit for any course in which outside lec¬turers appeared more than once and calledfor censorship of campus dramatic produc¬tions, as well as denying credit for theCleaver course;• “An end to university racism” and im¬plementation of demands by the AmericanFederation of Teachers (AFT) for non-dis-criminatory hiring practices and admis¬sions;• Amnesty, including no unversity dis¬cipline and the dropping of court charges,for the 120 students and one professor ar¬rested at Oct. 21’s non-violent sit-in atEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtIssue News Editor: Wendy GlocknerPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck,Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editor: John MoscowNews Staff: Walter Cipln, Caroline Daffron,Debby Dobish, Ann Goodman, Bruce Gres-sin, Con Hitchcock, C. D. Jaco, StephanieLowe, Chris Lyon, Bruce Norton, DavidSteele, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,Howie Schamest, David Steele, LeslieStrauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jean WlklerFounded 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 flees in Rooms303, 304, and 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mall $7 per year. Non-profitpostage pdtd at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. Sproul Hal and for the 76 persons arrestedearly Thursday morning, the 24th, afterholding Moses Hall for 16 hours.The boycott seemed partially effective on24th and 25th although few people expectedmore than 4000 of the Berkeley campuses’28,000 students to participate. The key tothe effectiveness of the strike may be theAFT, which includes about half the cam¬puses’ 800 teaching assistants (TAs). Mostof them participated in the boycott Thurs¬day and Friday, according to Conn Halli-nan, president of the union, and they willmeet Monday to consider going on strike.The chances for amnesty seem slim. Rog¬er Heyns, chancellor of the Berkeley cam¬pus, has placed all those who barricadedthemselves inside Moses Hall on interimsuspension and will recommend to the stu¬dent-faculty committee on student conductthat they be kicked out of school.Heyns has made no recommendation foraction against the persons who sat in atSproul Hall. He also said “All appropri¬ate steps would be taken against each per¬son arrested to recover the full amount ofproperty damages and expenses sufferedby the university.”California political leaders were quick toreact to the protest. Gov. Ronald Reaganpraised the administration for calling inthe police. Max Rafferty, state superinten¬dent of public instruction and Republicancandidate for the U.S. Senate, was blamingthe campus disruptions on “communists”in campaign speeches around the state.Assembly speaker Jesse Unruh, the state’sleading Democrat, said that if Cleaver“provoked or counseled” the Sproul sit-inhe should be barred from lecturing on thecampus. Cleaver, whose course met Tues¬day just before the sit-in began, told stu¬dents to “do their own thing.”SG AssemblyMeetingThe SG Assembly Meeting thisWednesday night, at 8 pm hasbeen moved to Business East 103.All representatives are urged tocome on time.4 The Chicago Maroon October 29, 1968MBA’s at IBM“Believe me,it was worththe extra effort!’IF*October 29, 1968 The Chicago Maroon“When I was in graduate school, I wantedto make sure I’d get to use what I was learn¬ing. That’s why I went into marketing at IBM,”says John Houlihan.John earned his MBA in 1966. He now sellsIBM computers to mutual funds, banks andother financial institutions.“It’s a management consulting job,” hesays. “The reason is, computers affect nearlyevery area of a business. I get involvedw;th a customer’s accounting, finance, andmarketing. Which means I have to knowsomething about each of these areas. So I’mconstantly using the broad scope of knowl¬edge I picked up in graduate school.”Working at the topAnother management consulting aspect ofJohn’s job is the level of people he deals with.“Most of the time,” he says, “I work with vice¬ presidents and the data processing manager.But I also have to deal with the presidentbecause he’s often the only one who can givefinal approval.“And when you’re working with people onthat level, you need the management toolsyou get in graduate school. If a customerstarts talking about a regression analysis, Ican stay with him. Or, I might get involved in alinear programming study to determine theoptimum stock mix for a portfolio. Believe me,getting an MBA was worth the extra effort.”Career areas for MBA’sMarketing is only one of several areas forMBA’s at IBM. Others include finance andengineering. MBA’s in finance can work inFinancial Planning and Control, FinancialAnalysis, Accounting, and InformationSystems. In engineering, MBA’s work mainly in industrial engineering and manufacturing.Whatever area you choose, we think you’llagree with John: “Getting my MBA wasworth the extra effort.”Visit your placement officeSign up at your place¬ment office for an inter¬view with IBM. Or senda letter or resume toIrv Pfeiffer, IBM,Dept. C, 100 SouthWacker Drive, Chicago,Illinois 60606.An Equal Opportunity EmployerCAMPUSNOV.IBMwe werenappywith die worldthe way it is,we wouldn’tneed you.Kids choke on polluted air. Streets are jammed bycars with no place to go. Lakes and rivers are acommon dumping ground for all kinds of debris.This is the way the world is, but it’s not the wayit'has to be.Air pollution can be controlled. Better transpor¬tation systems can be devised. There can be analmost unlimited supply of clean water.People at General Electric are already workingon these problems. And on other problems thatneed to be solved. Problems like developing moreefficient ways of providing power to our cities andfiguring out ways our production capabilities cankeep up with our population needs. But we need more people.We need help from a lot of young engineers andscientists; and we need help from business andliberal arts graduates who understand people andtheir problems.If you want to help change the world, we’d liketo talk to you. We’ll be visiting campus soon. Whynot drop by the placement office and arrange for aninterview? You might be able to turn a probleminto an opportunity.GENERAL ip ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employerSHORELAND 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 Drive (vbr.vo~)Yolvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.Tlir I m*-I iv;iM»n for I MI v ill” .1 \ol\n i' Ihhmiim* il I.M* so |o|»«!.K\.i«*tl\ Imw loll" \\f <loj» I uii.ii .Milor. Kut w»•<!<> know tli.it o\ i*iK.V ■ of .ill tin* Yol\o* iv«»i*trm| in tin* 1 nitoil SLilo in tlit* |.i>tI 1 M ill' ,m* -till <»n ||i«* rn.nl.TIio mm'on for Itiix in*: it \ol\o now. i- Ihn.iii'O wr luivr.1 frw ill 'Ini k. \tlil I l.inkh . \\4* «loii t i*\|Hvt In ||;|\r lllflllilioiiinl ton loiljl.\\ liit li In inu' up .m inlrif'linj: p.n.nlo\ iilioul \olvo>. < )urril'loniri' lik«* In l*ll\ lln tn Imt.iiI'O l|»r\ l.i'l. \\r Iik** to 'flltlliMII lft*i ;|||'<* lliov tlnll I.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800c,SANC£OPEN MEETING■Discussion of Year’s Activities-Sign up for acting, directing, staging, etc.-Refreshments will be served7:30 P.M. Oct. 295615 University Ave.-■IPlease rush me Jthe questionnaire!for CUPID COMPUTERjU. of C.’s computer dating serviceName ..AddressCUPID COMPUTER !BOX 67, !CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS 61820 !You 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 DiscountArt Materials DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist• school, office &fi ling supplies• drafting materials eye examinationscontact lenses• mounting - matting - in the• framing New Hyde ParkShopping CenterDuncan’s1510 E. 55th St.1305 E 53rd HY 3-41 1 1 DO 3-7644 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393The Odd Shopat THOMAS IMPORTSJewelry - African ClothingRobes - Black PaintingComing: Books from Africa10% Student Discount1352 East 53rd 684-6370 Most complete photoand hobby store onthe South SideM00EL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student Discounts6 The Chicago Maroon October 29, 1968! ■% *VMj ^NSF Cuts Trouble Science Divisions 1Continued from Page Onethat the cut will have “a drastic effecton important research for the nation.”The problems the other divisions faceare similar to those of the physical sci¬ences. A project in the biological sciences,for example, involving electronic study ofthe structure of biological molecules willhave to come to a halt until the elec¬tronic machinery is completed. This means that the University may have to make upthe difference between NSF allocationsand the cost of production.Furthermore, the NSF has doubled thenumber of grants to the biological sciencesthis year, but, since the amount that isactually received is based on expendituresof the previous fiscal year, the divisionhas more research than it can support.In addition, there are institutions which have already committed or spent on sum¬mer projects mere than the current ceil¬ing would allow them to. Two notable ex¬amples are the school of education andthe Oriental Institute, which has alreadylaunched two archeological expenditions.The University, therefore, must adjust theentire NSF expenditure level to problemsof this kind.Because it is the University that alio-SDS Members Form FHA FactionDissension within the Fair Housing Al¬liance (FHA) has led to the formation of anindependent housing group.Liberal-left students disillusioned with toe7pbfjav-left students disillusioned with thetactics of the Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) dominated Alliance mef lastSunday to break with the FHA to organ¬ize another group which will incorporate abroader spectrum of political views. According to a spokesman of the dissent¬ing group, SDS domination and inflexibil¬ity of ideas of the alliance made it virtual¬ly impossible for non-SDSers to make theirviews known at meetings.“We came to the first meeting as indi¬viduals concerned with the housing crises,”commented one student, “however, SDScame in full force as an organized groupwhich made it easy for them to take overTuesday, October 29SOCCER: Illinois University. Stage Field, 4 pm.COLLOQUIUM; Gten A, Stack. Research and Develop¬ment Center, General Electric Company,"Phonons, Photons, and Magnetic Ions," Re¬search institute 480, 4:15 pm.FILM: "Liquid Helium It; the Superfluid," Eckart,7 pm ,DOC FILMS: "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" by HowardHawks, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.FILMS; "Why Vietnam" by Department of Defenseend "David Schoenbrun on Vietnam" by Ameri¬can Friends Service Committee, Mandet Hall,8 and 10 pm.FOLK DANCING: International Folk dancing, Inter¬national House, 8-10 pm,Wednesday, October 30MEETING: Draft Sanctuary Committee sponsored bySDS and Hyde Park Anti Draft Union, Ida£ Noyes East Lounge, 4 pm.SEMINAR: Robin Hochstrasser, "Triplet Excitons,"Eckhart 107, 4 pm.LECTURE SERIES: A. van WHnaarden, Director,Strichting Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam.Research Institutes 480, 4 pm.SOUTH ASIA SEMINAR: "The imperial Factor andColonial Nationalism," Anil Seal, Fallow ofTrinity College, Cambridge; Foster Lounge,4:10 pm. REHEARSAL: University Symphony Orchestra, Man-del Hall, 6:30-10 pm.MEETING: T4th Ward Organization for upcomingelection to break Daley's machine, 3rd floorIda Noyes, 7 pm.DOC FILMS: "The Thing" by Christian Nyby, CobbHall, 7:15 and 9:15.FOLK DANCING: British and Scandinavian CountryDancers, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.MEETING: Graduate Women's Group, Ida Noyes EastLounge, 8 pm,LECTURE: Dr. James Hillman, Director of Studies,C.G. Jung Institute, Howard L. Willett VisitingProfessor, Liberal Arts. "Psychology and Al¬chemy." Kent 107, 8 pm.Thursday, October 31LECTURE: Dr. Karen Hilemae, Royal Dental Hospital,London, "Jaws and Teeth in Function, Experi¬mental versus Classical Analysis," AnatomyBuilding 104, 4:30.LECTURE: "Greece and the Limits of AmericanPower," Professor George Anastaplo. SocialSciences 305, 4:30.DOC FILMS: "Only Angels Have Wings," by HowardHawks Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15.FOLK DANCING: Israeli Folk Dancing, Teaching-Requests; Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-10 pm.LECTURE: "Robert Kennedy, the Man. the Leader,"John Douglass, Coordinator of Kennedy forPresident Primaries, Loyola University, 820 N.Michigan. Georgetown Room, 8 pm.Autumn 1968 MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium • 1121 East 60th • 8 P.M.Nov. 4 LEONARD B. MEYER (Univ. Chicago)Marshall McLuhan’s Message:Monism and ModelsNov. II THOMAS F. PETTIGREW (Harvard)The Future of American Race RelationsNov. 18 FRITZ MACHLUP (Princeton)Some Aspects of Academic FreedomNov. 25 VALENTINE TELEGDI (Univ. Chicago)Through the Looking Glass: MirroringSpaca CHARGE and TimeADMISSION: Series tickets $7.50 by mail only (call FI 6-8300).A limited number of complimentary tickets for U. of C. studentsand facul ty are available at Central Info. Desk in Adm. Bldg., orat University Extension, Room 121, Center for Continuing Ed¬ucation (Ex. 3137).Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 KEEP INFORMEDRead the ISRAEL and*MIDDLE EAST NEWS¬LETTER. For info andsample copy send $1 toP.O. Box 2331, Sunnyvale,Calif. 94087INTERNATIONAL HOUSEGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDTobacco.-C andte s-StationeryNewspapera-Wagazines.CoameUcaOpen M-F Noon-6:45 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. toe meeting.”Among other complaints was non-com¬munication with SDS concerning steeringcommittee meetings. One student statedthat he was interested in the housing crisisbut he never heard or was informed abouttoe steering committee meetings.One member of FHA said “I don’t feel itis reasonable to blame SDS for toe lack ofcommunication within toe housing group.FHA’s informal structure complicated com¬munication lines within the group.“As I see it, “continued the member, “ifFHA is to continue as a broad coalitiongroup, it must begin to formalized itself bybeginning to elect a permanent steeringcommittee representing toe various viewsfound in the FHA group.”The Fair Housing Alliance was organ¬ized last month by a broad range of stu¬dents concerned with toe bousing situationand the University’s urban renewal policy. cates expenditure limitations and toe NSF*does not review each project with eachinvestigator, associate dean of the divi¬sion of biological sciences Richard C. Lew-ontin feels that the NSF has abdicated itsresponsibility.FOTA HoldsFirst MeetingThe second general meeting for studentsand faculty interested in participating inthe 1969 Festival of toe Arts (FOTA) willbe held in Reynolds Club Lounge, Tuesdayat 8 p.m.FOTA will sponsor programs dealingwith the creative and performing arts dur¬ing a two to three week period in toespring. Individuals from both within theUniversity community and outside it mayparticipate in the festival.Plans for FOTA ’69 are as yet indefinite.The festival will probably run from May 1to May 16, starting with a salute to the ad¬vent of spring and ending with toe tradi¬tional Beaux Arts Masquerade Ball featur¬ing the Butterfield Blues Band and a lightshow.Peter Ratner, FOTA chairman, ex¬plained, “The emphasis this year will be oncreative talent within the confines of theUniversity of Chicago, and it is hoped thatvarious student organizations with specialconcerns in the performing, creative, andfine arts will take an active part in FOTAThe Films ofHOWARD HAWKSat doc filmsthis week.Tuesday~"GentIemen Prefer Blondes" (Marilyn Monroe & JaneRussell) 7:15 & 9:15 Cobb HallWednesday-'‘The Thing" 7:15 & 9:15 Cobb HallThursday-‘‘0nly Angels have Wings" (Cary Grant & Rita Hayworth)7:15 & 9:30 Cobb HallThe best films being shown in Chicago this week.Plus-free of charge—interesting, informative, witty, nonchalant, edifyingand sometimes absurd announcements at each showing.FOTA 69FESTIVAL OF THE ARTSMEETING TUESDAYOCTOBER 298:00 P.M.Reynolds Club LoungeOctober 29, 1968 The Chicago Maroon *MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENTFemale roommate wanted to sharefully furnished apt. at 53rd AGreenwood with 22 year old femalehigh school teacher; own bedroom,$65/mo. 955-1383 after 6.NEARBY, economical, newly dec.unfurn. apts., 2 and 3Vi rooms.$77.50 up. Free gas and elec. Clean.Quiet. Williams, 6043 Woodlawn.CHARTER FLIGHTChristmas Charter to London—$180.New York-London roundtrip departs WANTED TO RENTSmall, self-contained apt. in HydePark, unfurn., under $75/mo. Bar-ara, 955-5036.Female wants place to live inE. Hyde Park. Leave message at:PL 2-5517.INTIMATE MESSAGESM. C. — Dorothy Parker poemsrot. — D.B. & C.M.Belati contati impachelobelia gamana. PERSONALSCommager on WHY VIETNAM:"It is not history. It is not evenjournalism. It is propaganda nakedand unashamed." WHY VIETNAMand an AFSC ("Friends") filmtonite, Mandel, 8 and 10. uc/nsa.TRUST VAN PUTZ? WHY NOT.Robert Maynard Hutchins Lives!—though his University is dead.Poetry and coffeePoetry and baklavaPoetry and sandwichesPoetry and plays ing poverty and racial discrimina¬tion." — RMH. Yet no person —Hyde Park Liberal or Universityof Chicago student or faculty mem¬ber — will walk four blocks toHyde Park High School to protestthe most rotoriously repressivetracking system in the country.Experimental Dance Workshop.Tues. Oct. 29, Ida Noyes 3rd floor.U.S. Army propaganda film andAFSC rebuttal. 8 and 10 tonight,Mandel. us/nsa.WHAT? A FREE summer andpermanent job service? Sure. Ap¬plications in 202 Reynolds and 209Ida Noyes, uc/nsa.LOST: Blue bookbag w/KodakInstamatic 8. notebook inside atU of C Bookstore. 10/14/68. Reward.Call Drew BU 8-1100 #300.LIBERTE, EGALITE, FRATER-NITE, ET SORORITE."I have no hesitation In endorsingHubert Humphrey for the Presi¬dency." Bayard Rustin, 9/21.The Peace Corps is Hump's baby."Long may our land be bright withfreedom's holey light.Respectable Christians are equallyhorrified by hearing the Christianreligion doubted and seeing itpracticed.Any priest with more than one suitis a hustler. — Lenny Bruce.EXPRESS YOURSELFSing, play, read poetryat the BLUE GARGOYLE.WRITERS' WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377. You have to be 18 or accompaniedby your parents to enjoy PersianStew at Ahmad's.All black kittens—free. Bob, 493-6527.Jazz musicians and people inter¬ested in FOTA program on jazzcontact J. Gordon 752-1335.Between two consenting adults . . .Should read: "Between (or among)consenting adults . . ."A Song Shall RiseBlue Gargoyle Folk NightsWednesday and Friday 9:00 P.M.Let Marco Polo send you 288-5944,1552 E. 55th.Want to read the best newspaperin Canada and possibly the world?The Toronto GLOBE AND MAILmay not be the biggest, but theyare the best. They use the NewYork Times Service to better ef¬fect than the New York Timesitself. The editorials about U.S.(us) are incredibly good. They havethe virtue of the objectivity offoreign comment, yet they aren'tas irresponsible as many Europeanjournals and papers, which oftenare so anti-American that theyare useless except as well-deservedwhipping.The only place you can buy TheGlobe and Mail is at one newstanddowntown, who is always sold outif you get there after 4 P.M. Let'sall get together and get the book¬store on campus to carry It. Askfor The Toronto Globe and Mailnext time you buy a paper there. RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50, cents perline, 40 cents per repeat lineFor non-Unlversity clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cente perepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.All ads must be prepaid.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. TO1:30 P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 34800, Ext. 3266.Take your Mummy out on Hal¬lowe'en: see THE MUMMVs HANDat Breasted Hall on Thursday, Oct.31. 3 shows—7:00, 8:30 & 10:00.Christian Science Meeting, Tues.7:15. Thorndike Hilton Chapel.VAN is running for SG.Why not vote for VAN?Any student interested in smallseminar on Machine Politics con¬tact Barbara, 955-5036. Also facultyto teach.This spacecontained a cutcensored byour printers Remember hew the donkey got its Humph7Don’t waste your vote by votingDec. 16, returns Jan. 5 or 6. Re¬servations must be made beforeNov. 4. Call Ext. 3272, 1-6 P.M.M-F.HOUSE FOR SALE8211 Crandon. Exceptionally well-built house. Fine neighborhood.Ideal for University family. Custombuilt, 8 large rooms, 3 good-sizedbedrooms, l'/2 baths, full basement,gas heat. 2 natural fireplaces, 2-cargarage. $29,500 by owner. ES 5-6938.FOR SALE'62 IMPALA SS $800.60 or bestoffer. NIKKORAAAAT FT 50mmFI.4: $195.00 or best offer. CallBU 8-1100, Rm 1211, Blli.NOTICE Valashki Fabrici"Jeunes femmes rouges toujoursplus belles" — Les Murs ont laParole.PEOPLE WANTEDUSHERS WANTED: Monday Lec¬tures Nov. 4-25. Call Mr. GorntoFI 6-8300.Female who digs groovy childrenand conversation wanted to cookSunday dinners. Please call BU 8-6011 soon. If a machine answers,please leave a message — it's yetanother phase of our motherlessexistence. Love.Male Student to teach gym in smallelem. school on campus 10-25 hoursper week. Salary open. Bob Her¬man, Ml 3-7300, Ext. 61. Thurs. 9:00, Blue Gargoyle.The second sex tries harder.—Grad WomenSKI ASPEN. 8 days, 9 meals, alltours, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec.14. $199. 764-6264.RECON—a nationwide computerizedSUMMER and permanent job serv¬ice—and it's free to you! Formsin 202 Reynolds and Stud. Act.Office, 2nd floor, INH. uc/nsa.The Army vs. AFSC Tonite, Mandel,8 and 10. 50c. uc/nsa.There is a large new stock ofJewish philosophy, literature, andhistory books in the Hillel Book¬shop.N. Norman Birnberg—SGFor lst-yr. rep.I am selling my 1966 Chevrolet for$600 because it is damaged (bodyonly). Next week I will have itfixed and the price will go up.Buy now and save. 955-1795 after5 P.M. or NO 7-4700, Ext. 8326 days.AM-FM Sony pocket-size trans.radio. Nice for walks. 721-2397 eves. DISTRIBUTORSMALE OR FEMALEMust be able to make campusdeliveries. Earn $200 per monthand more. Will not interfere withschool activity or study. Ideal forindividual, partners, or marrieds.An appointment convenient for you. "Me put it in! Maybe you'd likeme to snap it off and crouch withit in the corner of the room whereI won't disturb your meditations."Women is losers.—Janis loplinSing!Remember how you elected Johnson to prevent escalation?Don’t waste your vote by voting4-poster double bed. $20. Call 955-3873.STEREO COMPONENTS AT DIS¬COUNTS: A.R., Dyna, KLH, newand used. MUSICRAFT campusrep. Bob Tabor, 324-3005.Batik Banners, wall hangings.Good: $4-15. Bad ones free. 5340Woodlawn. 493-0856.WANTED TO BUY Phone 427-9350SEYMOUR KOHN 330 S. WellsSuite 1402 Chicago, III.yPEOPLE FOR SALEExpert typing service. Rush Jobs.Judy 858-2544.May I do your typing. Call 363-1104. Wednesdays and Fridays,9:00 at the Gargoyle.VAN PUTZ CARES.I loved him not,And yet now he is gone,I feel that I am alone.Lear, speaking of himself, says:"His body is perfectly spherical,He weareth a runcible hat."What is the nature of God?It is like a tiger, but with manyhorns;Just like a cow, but it has no tail,has no tail.Antique playing cards with un¬usual faces. 288-6795.TV set in good condition. Peggy,285-8239 after 6 P.M.Cheap second-hand girl's bike. Call667-5809. Wondering why there are so fewads in this column today? It's be¬cause the people who advertisedhere got such good response thatthey cancelled their ads. If you'vegot a special skill and you're look¬ing for extra cash, come up tothe Maroon Office and place an ad. What is the relation of God to theUniverse?Wer die ganze Welt mit gott nahme,der hatte nicht mehr, als wenn erGott allein hatte.WITNESSES!An independent Citizens Commis¬sion convened by the ACLU urg¬ently needs your help in document¬ing the events of Democratic Con¬vention Week. It you were a parti¬cipant, contact Larry Bloom, days:CE 6-5622; nights and weekends:752-5868. Anonymity guaranteedupon your request.Versification and dramatizationThursdays, 9:00 P.M.at the Blue Gargoyle.NICEST~BEGINS IN The HOME."There can be no question that thetracking system as It is employedtoday In mixed schools of Negroesand whites is a means of perpetuat-authorized BMC5424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615 sales & servicemi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.18 The Chicago Maroon October 29, 1968 GWEy~doesa perfect size7look perfectonly~21day§everfmontfi?It has nothing to do withcalories. It’s a specialfemale weight gain...caused by temporarywater-weight build-up.Oh, you know...thatuncomfortable fullfeeling that sneaks upon you the week beforeyour menstrual period.This fluid retention notonly plays havoc withyour looks but howyou feel as well.(It puts pressure ondelicate nerves andtissues, which can leadto pre-menstrualcramps and headaches,leaves emotions on edge.)That’s why somany women take PAMPRIN*.It gently relieves water-weight gainto help prevent pre-menstrual puffiness,tension, and pressure-caused cramps.PAMPRIN makes sure a perfectsize 7 never looks less than perfect.Nor feels less than perfect, either.ms