The message is clear. “Yes, YES, yes,| YES, yes YES, yes, UH HUH”, they chant.•‘Whitey, whitey, you have got to go, heyhey hey”, and “We gon’ get you”, pointingat awkwardly grinning businessmen pass-j ing on the streets of the Loop. Black highschool students in Chicago are assertingthemselves, and in an aggressive, political¬ly effective way.For the past three Mondays the studentshave boycotted their schools, going insteadto rallies and “Liberation Schools.” Thisweek’s boycott was smaller than the previ¬ous ones — 8,400 out of 60,000 black highschool students in Chicago, compared withabout 20,000 the previous two weeks, butthe students have shown that they have thepower to make their demands felt. The lat¬est rally included a symbolic burial of theBoard of Education and the white powerstructure; the leaders are serious in their1 intention to change the decision-makingstructure of Chicago’s educational system,and to gain a share in the control of theirown destinies.The boycotts have grown in large partout of conflicts between black teachers andwhite administrators over the past fewyears, combined with student and teacherdissatisfaction with the Afro-American his¬tory courses now being offered in theschools. According to Mrs. Barbara Size¬more, former principal of Forrestville High School and a main speaker at one of thefirst rallies, “a lot of this difficulty couldbe alleviated by a fair treatment ofteachers.”One of many teacher-administratorclashes occured in November 1967 when ateacher, Owen Larson, was given an “ad¬ministrative transfer” — sent to anotherposition at another school — by the princi¬pal of Englewood High School for injectinghis black viewpoint into a US history class.The community tried to support him butwas not successful because the supportwas not widely based.In another case, Granville Neal, a teach¬er at Carver Elementary School who hadhis students write letters about Martin Lu¬ther King after his death, was denied per¬mission to have the children read their let¬ters at an assembly. The principal calledsome of the letters “racist”. The commun¬ity boycotted the school for three weeks,but was unsuccessful here also.In these and in numerous other clashesaround the city these teachers have notbeen supported by the teachers’ union, evenwhen they were certified and had tenure,which the majority of black teachers inChicago do not have, due to an especiallydifficult and slow examination and promo¬tion system. White teachers, on the otherhand, have been supported by the union inContinued on Page Three BLACK POWER: Members of the Black Power Student Association of EnglewoodHigh School physically she1' their feelings.MAROONVolume 77, Number 17 Chicago, Illinois, Friday, November 1, 1968 16 Pages, Two SectionsJERRY UPSCH: Conducting election for representative to Student-Faculty Administration Court.Proposals Dominate First SG MeetingDebate on the Student Government (SG)executive council’s “Perspectives for theYear” dominated the first SG meeting ofthe academic year, held Wednesday nightin Business East.The “perspectives” statement was for¬mulated by the executive council of SGand was placed before the entire SG as¬sembly for approval. Jerry Lipsch, SG pres¬ident, introduced the perspectives state¬ment to the assembly.The statement consists of 32 specific SGresolutions, divided among five categories:the University and the community; studentrights and student power; the draft; uni¬versity openness, student jurisdiction anddecision making; and academic affairs.An introduction to the resolutions readsin part, “In order to facilitate the conduct°f an active, aggressive program, we seekto define here some of our goals and objec¬ tives for the coming year.“Some of the objectives take the form ofspecific proposals, while others simply setperspectives for action. But in regard toall of these provisions, we recognize thatwe do not pursue our objective merely bypassing resolution, but primarily by an on¬going political process.”Under the topic of the University andthe community, the perspectives calls foran end to descriminatory urban renewalpolicies as well as initiating student de¬termination of housing practices. The per¬spectives also urge SG compliance with thegrape strike and the black high schoolboycott and opposes the proposed destruc¬tion of Chapel House. A resolution whichcalled for immediate removal of the barbedwire atop the southernmost stretch of theB-J field and parking lot started lengthy de¬bate as to whether SG’s primary responsi¬bility was to remove the fence, in defer¬ ence to the Woodlawn community, whichconsiders it odious, or to allow the resi¬dents of Burton-Judson courts and the LawSchool to decide.Christopher Hobson, off-time graduatestudent in Political Science and the politi¬cal science representative, stated, “Theadministration will do any damn thing itpleases, but as a question of a symbolicgesture of opinion, the issue is whetherthis assembly should consider itself as rep¬resenting only students, in which case weshould defer to B-J, or as also reflectingthe needs of the community, as we pledgedto do in the SPAC platform. I think it’s im¬portant to express and to feel that secondresponsibility.”The section was finally passed with therestriction that action be deferred on theone proposal until at least the position ofB-J and the Law School is known.Continued on Page Five ScheduleSet ForFestivitiesA week of festivities has been scheduledby the University around the Nov. 14 in¬auguration of Edward H. Levi as president.While the university is planning dinnersand receptions, the campus chapter of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society has de¬manded cancellation of a dinner scheduledfor Wednesday, Nov 13, at the ConradHilton.McGeorge Bundy, president of the FordFoundation, who was special assistant toPresidents Kennedy and Johnson, willspeak at the dinner, to which hundreds ofpublic figures, such as Sen. Edward Ken¬nedy and Mayor Daley, have been invited.“SDS feels the University should not becatering to the men who dominate our so¬ciety,” said chapter member Steve Roth-rug.Levi, now Provost of the university, waselected by the board of trustees a yearago to succeed George W. Beadle, whoannounced his return to research activitya year ago last summer.Following the special inauguration con-Continued on Page FiveHALLOWEEN PARTYThe Maroon disassociates itselffrom a retraction now in circulationconcerning the Halloween Party. Inthe Tuesday's issue the Maroon re¬ported that the Halloween Party"was formed by members of theStudents for a Democratic Society(SDS)." To clarify the issue, theHalloween Party was formed at ameeting of the SDS freshmen elec¬tion caucus. The editors are curiousas to why the Halloween peopledid not run as independents if theydid not want to be linked with SDS.*.u* :k * 4* >>*>.f1. Pipe broken?No, I’m trying to findwhere I stashed some dough.2. That’s where you keepvour money?Sometimes I put it inthe flower pot. ■3. What’s wrong with the bank?I’d only take it rightout again.4. But that’s what you’redoing now.Not quite. The beautyof my system is thatI usually can’t findwhere I put it. 5.1 think you’d be a lot betteroff putting some of yourdough into Living Insurancefrom Equitable. It not onlygives you and the familyyou’re going to have alifetime of protection,it also builds cash valuesyou can use for emergencies,opportunities, or evenretirement.I wonder if it could bewith the french fries?For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.™e|EquitableThe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States1285 Avenue of the Americas. New York, New York 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/E © Equitable 1968 Markets nobodyelse knew were theremade Mustang andThunderbird a success.Help wanted:Does the growingyouth market offera new potential ?Situation: By 1972, 46% of the U.S. population will heunder the age of 25. If this is a new market withsubstantial potential, should we base our productconcept on economy or performance characteristics ?Consideration: The under 25 market poses some interestingopportunities. For one, today 142% more youngpeople work toward advanced college degrees thandid the youth market of 10 years ago. That wouldseem to indicate a need for a new car based oneconomy of purchase and operation.But, market affluence and the increasing number ofmultiple car households could indicate that anew vehicle should be developed around high styleand high performance.Need the facts and your analysis of thisassignment for a meeting with managementnext month. Thanks.Want to work on a challenging assignment like this?A new member of the marketing team at Ford MotorCompany does. Today his job may involve probing fornew markets. Tomorrow it might be discovering a newbasis for segmented marketing.To help solve problems like these, our people have agiant network of computers at their service. Completeresearch facilities. The funds they need to do the job right.If you have better ideas to contribute, and you’re look¬ing for challenging assignments and the rewards thatcome from solving them, come work for the Better Idea company. See our representative when he visits yourcampus. Or send a resume to Ford Motor Company,College Recruiting Department. The American Road,Dearborn, Michigan 48121. An equal opportunity employer.GOLD CITY INN* * * * Maroon"A Gold Mine of Good Food”IO %Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT Orders MUSICRAFT SPECIALMODEL S-7600-FET/80-WATTAM,-SILICON SOLID STATEAM-I M STEREO KECKIYKKFEATURING 80 watts Music Power.FET RF and Mixer Stages.Low-Distortion FM DetectorDC Coupled At!-Silicon Power Amplifiers.Main and or Remote Speaker Switching.3-Year Warranty on all Parts.Controls are Sefector. Bass, Treble. Balance. Loudness and Tuning. Rocker-action switches for Siereo^Mono. TapeMonitor. Main Speakers. Remote Speakers. Loudness Contour and (on rear panel) Phono Sensitivity.*»» !340 NOW $249“ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-30052035 W. 95t» St.—779-650048 E. Oak St.-OE 7-4150 Mu&iCiaft2 The Chicago Maroon November 1, 1968Leaflets Distributed at -TLeaflets of unnown origin, informingthe tenants of their rights concerning re¬location of displaced people by the De¬partment of Urban Renewal (DUR), weredistributed last Friday in the apartmentbuilding at 6043-45 So. Woodlawn Ave.The leaflets presented the tenants withthe idea of their building being tom down,informed them of DUR’s responsibility inaiding the subsequent relocation of suchdisplaced tenants, and urged them to “goto the relocation office and stand up foryour rights.”The apartment building, which DUR isattempting to purchase in conjunction withthe redevelopment of South Campus (the strip from 60th to 61st, and Stoney Islandto Cottage), is owned by Miss FrederikaBlankner, an alumna of the College, whois opposing DUR in the city courts.Student Government (SG) is attemptingto file an amicus curiae (“friend-of-the-court”) brief on behalf of Miss Blanknerin order to bring “a dramatic focus on theproblem of urban renewal”, according toG Acts on Autonomymmrl frrtm Parta Ona »Continued from Page OneThe section on student rights and studentpower called for house autonomy in all as¬pects of house life. It also stipulate severaltandards for discipline committees andasked for a University declaration bindingitself to the Student Bill of Rights and ar¬bitration by the Student-Faculty Adminis¬tration Court.The perspectives also called for SG ap¬pointment cr election of Students to Facul¬ty-Student committees and student deter¬mination of general administration appoint¬ments. specifically, the perspectives calledfor removal of the title of “ombudsman”from John Moscow’s position and to callhis position by another name. An amend¬ment was added stating that Jeff Carp isto be designated “student ombudsman forthe administration”, the reverse of JohnMoscow’s position. The section was passed with this amendment.Another topic covered at the meetingwas a report on the elections by JonathanDean, chairman of the elections and ritescomm. Election procedure was accepted bythe assembly with only a minor change inhours at one polling place.Jerry Lipsch conducted the election forvacancies in the Student-Faculty Adminis¬tration (SFA) Court. Danny Cohen, 71, andMark Gilford. 71, were elected to two yearterms and Kristen Carlson 71, and JohnWelch, 70, were elected to one year terms.After the meeting. Bill Phillips, 70 Wood¬ward court representative, stated, “I thinkthis meeting was significant because of achange in organization toward campus is¬sues. The only way you’re going to get SGpower is by concentrating exclusively oncampus affairs.”Now LeMay makes Wallace a moderate as lesser evilism marches on.Don't cop in. Don't waste your vote by voting triparty"And then she said,'Wow,what's that after shaveyou're wearing?"'We keep warning you to be careful how you use Hai Karate® After Shave andCologne. We even put instructions on self-defense in every package. Butyour best silk ties and shirts can still get torn to pieces. That’s why you’llwant to wear our nearly indestructible Hai KarateLounging Jacket when you wear Hai Karate Reg¬ular or Oriental Lime. Just tell us your size (s,m,l)and send one empty Hai Karate carton, with $4(check or money order), for each Hai KarateLounging Jacket to: Hai Karate, P. O. Box 41 A,Mount Vernon, N. Y. 10056. That way, if someonegives you some Hai Karate, you can be a littleless Careful how yOU USe it. 0ur „ai Karat. lounging Jaek.t ispractically rip-proof.Allow 6 weeks for delivery. Offer expires April 1, 1969. If your favorite store is temporarily out of Hai Karate, keep asking, SG President Jerry Lipsch, who was in¬formed of the leafletting of the apart¬ment last week.“SG is continuing its search for thesource of the leaflets,” said Lipsch, whotalked with tenants in that apartment andothers in the immediate area. “The factsthat the leaflets were unsigned and thatthey were directed, as far as we could see,to that specific apartment, makes themappear highly suspicious. If a communityorganization were the source of such aleaflet, it seems to me that they wouldwant to identify themselves as such. Weare, of course, exporing the significantpossibility that the DUR is the source ofthe leaflets.”DUR officials could not be reached forcomment on the source of the leaflets.A quick canvassing of the tenants shedlittle light on the mystery of the leaflets.Only one woman admitted receiving leaf¬lets from a small group of black men inthe lobby of the building last Friday. Mostof the tenants who were available for com¬ment did say, however, that they wereaware of the controversy concerning theirbuilding and Miss Blankner’s court protest,and all expressed the hope that the build¬ing would remain standing as their per¬manent place of residence.Miss Blankner, a graduate of the “Hutch¬ins” College and a professor of classicAdelphi University near New York, couldnot be reached for comment. However,Len Handelsman, who is handling the pre¬sentation of the court brief for SG, statedthat Miss Blankner’s case would not ap- CONDEMNED BUILDING: Site of DUR'sSouth Campus redevelopment.pear in court until November 18, givingSG more time to further investigate thematter.In discussing various aspects of the case,Lipsch added, “The larger issue involvedhere is the problem of urban renewal it¬self. We of SG know that the Universityplans for expansion, dependent on destruc¬tion of the South Campus by the DUR, willgreatly disrupt the lives of many peoplein that area, and we believe that neitherDUR nor the University is taking, or willtake, any concrete steps to relocate thesepeople properly.Oh, oh.Bet my date isthe one with“personality.”"COCA'COlA" AND COKE ARE REGISTERED TRADE MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PRODUCT OF THE COCACOlA COMPANY.Blind dales are a chance. But you can always depend onrefreshing Coca-Cola for the taste you never get tired of.That's why things go better with Coke/ after Coke/ after Coke.loM*4 mdtr ih« ovthority of ti» Co<a-C»ia Company by. Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago - ChicagoAutumn 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: MirroringSpace 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 facultyare available at Central Info. Desk in Adm. Bldg., orat University Extension, Room 121, Center for Continuing Ed¬ucation (Ex. 3137).November 1, 1968 The Chicago MaroonIT'JW, nt frff 5#hEDITORIALThe ElectionsMany problems have arisen since the Democratic convention.McCarthy went off to France, and we went back to school. Nixon,Humphrey, and Wallace toured the country, counting crowds, fend¬ing off hecklers. The public watched the World Series, the newT.V. shows, the new cars, and generally sought ways to allieviateits boredom. Lyndon Johnson, too late to save Humphrey, an¬nounced a bombing halt. The radical left in a last, frustrated,impotent, gesture, called for a boycott of the elections. And someof the black radicals in Chicago asked their people to stay homeon Election Day.The radicals say that voting legitimizes an undemocratic sys¬tem. The choice of candidates was made not by the people, butby the political bosses. Withholding support this time, they say,will cause the politicians to work harder to get their support next| time.But the argument does not work. The public apathy over theelections will overshadow any boycott. But in any case, a voteboycott is not such an appropriate way to register a protest againstan inequitable electoral system. The conventions are partly basedon the votes in the previous election. (Nixon bowed to the will ofStrom Thurmond because the South had a disproportionate amountof power at the Republican Convention—it had been rewardedwith delegates for voting for Goldwater.) If the radicals and theliberals withhold their votes from the Democratic nominee onTuesday, the control of the party will remain in the hands of thesame old forces.The reason behind the decision of many not to vote, is adesire to repudiate Hubert Humphrey and the administration fora sense of national priorities which led to a war policy that hasdone such damage to the United States around the world and athome—and repudiate them without actually having to vote forNixon. And, in theory, it should not be the practice to endorsesuch disastorous policies. But the fact that the disaffected Mc-Carthyites won’t vote for Nixon and Agnew in order to rebukeHumphrey and the war points out the problem. They want to pickup the pieces of the Democratic party in 1972. After four yearsof Nixon, there may be no pieces to pick up. The mood of thecountry is moving away from the liberal programs of McCarthyand Kennedy. Law and order is the byword of the day; and asTom Hayden said, when they say law and order, they mean us.George Wallace may be right when he says, “You dissenters willbe through after January.”So the dilemma is very real. A vote for Humphrey is a votefor the war policy of the Johnson administration (up to and in¬cluding the somewhat questionable peace announced last night.)A vote for Nixon is a vote to return to the mindless fifties. Novote, if it is anything, is probably a vote for Nixon.In the long run your decision will have to be based on youranswers to a few questions. Are you ready to vote for a man whohas very little feeling for urban problems (that is, racial problems,which are, of course, the real domestic issues of this campaign,as ruthlessly ignored as they have been by all candidates)? Areyou ready to vote for a man whose last public record was so strongin the area of repression of civil liberties?The dilemma might have been solved by a fourth party whichmight have scooped up the disaffected McCarthy, Kennedy, andRockefeller liberals and perhaps some radicals. We described sucha party in our August 30 issue as “a new kind of party, a partynot founded on personal power and patronage, but on the issues,a party with a mind, a party that can recognize the emergencysituation in our cities, a party that can understand that violencemust not be the basis of all our policies.” From all indications,Gene McCarthy is ready to quit the Democratic party, perhapsnext week, and to start working to build a new party. We desper¬ately need one. But next week is not soon enough. And in thefinal, agonized, anguished moment we would probably vote forHumphrey. And the next day pledge all our effort to McCarthy’snew party. r.b, CORSO Sets BudgetsThe Committee on Recognized Studentorganizations (CORSO) Thursday night ob¬tained Student Government (SG) assem¬bly approval of a $33,250 budget for theacademic year 1968-1969.The new budget, the largest in CORSO’shistory, represents an increase of $2500over last year’s amount. Also includedin the budget will be an additional $1250which remains from an incumberance forlast summer’s charter flights program.The largest single allocation granted wasto SG, which received $3785. However,CORSO indicated that SG could receivean additional $693 from the contingencyfund which would be used as secretarialsalaries for the second and third quarters.Other large grants included those toWHPK. the campus radio station whichreceived $3500; SWAP, which received$1600 for a summer camp program; andChicago’s National Student Association,which received $1200.Cap and Gown, the presently defunctyearbook, will be allocated $1500. Thishowever, will be used exclusively to payoff past debts.The Chicago Maroon was allocated $2500;however, CORSO generally agreed that ifThe Maroon could attain what CORSOcalled better organization it should receivea much greater subsidy. CORSO statedthat the $2500 was just to pay off olddebts, leaving the newspaper in debt forlast summer’s and this year’s issues.Editor Roger Black stated, “CORSOand The Maroon have been sparring part¬ners for a long time. The Maroon’s dis¬ organization,’ if there is any, is due tofinancial problems. CORSO does not getenough money from the administration —it should get five times as much. As toThe Maroon’s specific finances, The Ma¬roon made neatly $1,000 in October.”Other grants include $1200 to the Wash¬ington Promenade, $1000 to the ConcertBand for the purchase of several new in¬struments, $800 to Blackfriars, and $700 toChicago Review Speakers.The following is a breakdown of CORSOallocations:67-68 Budget 68-69 Request 68-69 AllocationNSA $ 1,500.00 $ 2,000.00 * 1.200.00STEP Camp 517.13 500.00 500.00SWAP (summer) 1,600.00 1,600.00Cricket — 200.00 100.00100.00 loanDamesChessRugbyModern Dance 200.00148.00300.00 220.00250.00438.00473.00 200.00220.00253.00375.00*Blackfriars 400.00 1,619.00 800.00History 400.00 517.00Revitalization 1,500.00 3,500.00 1,500.00* 2000.00 earmarkedSG contingency4,370.00 4,590.00 3,785.00Chic. Rev.Speakers 700.00 900.00 700.00Cap & Gown 1,700.00 3,850.00 1,500.00Maroon 2,425.00 5,900.00 2,500 00Wash. PromGermanics 1,200.00 1,400.00115.00 1,200.00CountryDancersMusical Soc.WHPKWhite WaterClub 143.0050.003,085.00 121.00500.004,064.00484.00 105.00400.00*3,500.00349.00SF Club 500.00 23.00300 00 loanSTEP 401.87 470.00 470.00Visa 400.00 400.00 400.00Concert Band 300.00 2,042.00 1,000.00*TOTALS *19,740.00 *36,653.00 $24,680.00(* denotes a one-time grant - the groups will bereferred to their departments should they requireadditional funds in future years.)BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, November 1LECTURE: ''Republication of Bacteriol Phage X174,"David Denhardt, Department of Biology, Harv¬ard University, Ricketts North, Room 1, 11:30a.m.SEMINAR: "The Past and Future of our Atmosphere,"L. D. Kaplan, Jet Propulsion Laboratory,CalTech, Ryerson 251, 4 p.m.FOLK DANCE PARTY: Intermediate and Advanced,Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: "Morocco" by Josef von Sternberg,Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15, 75c.TRAVELOGUE: Armchair Travelogue to Britain andIreland, International House Home Room, 8:15p.m. ,CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: Allegri Quartet, worksby Britten, Mozart, and Beethoven, MandelHall, 8:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Town and Gown in Hyde Park and Wood-lawn," M. Leon M. Despres, Allderman, FifthWard, Hillel House, 8:30 p.m.Saturday, November 2PIERCE TOWER CINEMA: "Virgin Spring," PierceTower, 7:15 and 9:15, $1.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Laurence Libin, harpsichord.Bond Chapel, 8:30 p.m.RALLY: Hubert Humphrey, Richard Hatcher, AdlaiStevenson, Mahalia Jackson, Ab Mikva, BillClark, Refer Johnson, Ann Howard, Mrs.Gayle Sayres, Fannie Jones, will speak andentertain 63rd and Cottage Grove, 3:30 p.m.Sunday, November 3CROSS-COUNTRY: University of Wisconsin, FerrisState, Wayne State Marquette, and Universityof Illinois, Washington Park, 11 a.m.UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL SERVICE: John A. Wilson,speaker. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 a.m.SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS: Organizational meet¬ing. 5400 Greenwood, Apt. 14, 12:00. Open topeople in the NCD.SUNDAY EVENING AT BONHOEFFER: "Politizationof the University #2: Student Power andTheological Education," Lowell Livesey, Presi¬dent of the Divinity School Student Organiza-THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wandy Glockner, Carotin# Hock,Paula SzewezykSenior Editor- Jeffrey KutaContributing Editor: John MoscowNews Staff: Walter Cipin, Caroline Daffron,Debby Dobish, Ann Goodman, Bruce Grot-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 WiklerFounded 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., Chicaqo, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. tion, Bonhoeffer House, supper 5:30 p.m.,program 6:30 p.m.CONTEMPORARY FILMS: "The 400 Blows," CobbHall, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.FOLK DANCING: International Folk Dancing, IdaNoyes Cloister, 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Law, Order, and Justice," ProfessorHarry Kalvln of the Law School, Henry N.Hart Jewish Community Center, 9101 S. Jef¬fery, 7:30 p.m.RADIO: STONEHENGE REVISED reaches new heights,88.3 FM, midnight.Monday, November 4OPEN HOUSING COALITION: Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.LETTERAs a freshman, I was greatly amused byboth your story and editorial regardingyesterday’s elections.Your editorial stated: . .we do not findit possible to endorse any candidates. Thismeans that the responsibility for knowingthe candidates rests largely on the votersthemselves.” Are you suggesting that in theabsence of a Maroon endorsement the cam¬pus was left ignorant as to the properchoice? I would concur; yet would go amite further. For even with a Maroon en¬dorsement or story a voter is leftbewildered.Anyone can announce a platform, butwhat does that mean? A group of one linestatements wihout faces, emotions, actions,or anything in a personal vein leaves thefreshman \yith a faceless mob of namesfrom which he should select the shiningchampion and feel happily represented forthe duration. Somehow even the pig-bookfails to fill the breach.The entire system of elections is absurd.Self-avowed candidates appear in The Ma¬roon and vanish with only a one line re¬sume or iargony ad to mark their passage.Where is the reality from which the parti¬cipation and involvement you pine for canflow?Armed with my present information,namely a Maroon story, I felt rather ill-equipped to pass judgment on anyone forthe lofty post of SG rep. You ended yourpiece with the words, “vote with some un¬derstanding of whom he is electing.” Per¬haps you might add a paragraph solvingthe minor problem of obtaining that under¬standing before mounting your pedestal atthe next elections.Philip Hess, ‘724 The Chicago Maroon November 1, 1968' Blacks Air Protest on EducationContinued from Page Onethe face of student and community dissat¬isfaction. There is a case at Hyde ParkHigh School now where students have for¬mally registered complaints about a teach¬er whom the union is actively preventingfrom being transferred.Most black high school teachers in Chi¬cago are substitutes or “full time basis”teachers without tenure, many of whom areunprepared to pass Chicago’s relativelystiff exams necessary to become certified,tenured teachers. In the last two yearsteacher strikes have occured and organi¬zations have arisen to protest the plight ofthese teachers.After the transfer of Larson, the Boardof Education held a meeting with Engle¬wood teachers, at which Superintendent ofSchools James F. Redmond promised anAlro-American history course to be avail¬able in February 1967. Letters were sentto eighteen “experts” in the subject towrite a guide for the course. The first draftof the guide was written in three weeks,but the guide has not yet been distributedby the Board, according to a member ofthe committee who asked that his namenot be used, because it was “too black”.Other recommendations by the committeewere that a summer training program inAfro-American history which yas to heldlast summer, be for a full year and notrestricted to seniors only. This has notbeen carried out.The Concerned Black Student organiza¬tion, the group organizing the boycott, wasfirst formed about three years ago. Stu¬dents dissatisfaction became acute this fallwhen the promised Afro-American historycourses proved unsatisfactory to the stu¬dents when teacher-administration conflictscontinued, and when growing emphasis onblack control of black destinies made theseconditions less tolerable than before toboycott leaders. In addition, such things assmaller classes, better facilities, betterfood, more technical and vocagional train¬ing, and more homework are among thestudents’ demands.At Harrison High School students re¬quested more black teachers. Leaders fromHarrison and other schools called for theboycott when their requests were not met,issuing a list of twelve demands which hassince developed into a general call for re- FUNERAL MARCH: Black students parade in a march symbolic of the burial of the Board of Education.structuring the city’s school system to al¬low for community control.Redmond responded by saying that every¬thing possible was being done to implementmost of the demands, that “school princi¬pals and district superintendents are at¬tempting to involve community representa¬tives in the life of each school” and the“InterSchool Councils” are being enlarged“to provide more adequate forums for theairing of and seeking of solutions to studentproblems.” He stated that the Afro-Ameri¬can history course “is continually beingrevised and expanded” and that moreclasses, some for a full year, will be of¬fered during this year. He also appointedseven new black assistant principals andpromised improvements in facilities atcertain schools. At the same time he in¬structed school principals to enforce allattendance laws and urged the city toprosecute people found to be illegally en¬couraging students to stay out of school.Redmond favors a form of “decentrali¬zation” of the schools, but not one as radi-Inauguration Plans SetContinued from Page Onevocation in Rockefeller Chapel at 10:30 amNov 14, a panel discussion in Mandel Hallat 2 pm will discuss the role and futureof the private university.Edward Shils, professor of sociology, willpresent a paper on the subject, which willbe discussed by Nathan M. Pusey, presi¬dent of Harvard University; Kenneth B.Clark, a black sociologist and presidentof Metropolitan Applied Research Center;Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, president ofthe University of Notre Dame; JerryLipsch, president of Student Government;R. Bruce McPherson, graduate student ineducation; and Michael L. Mussa, gradu¬ate student in economics.The cornerstone of the Joseph Regen-stein Library at 57th and Ellis will be laid at 3:30 pm Friday, Nov 15. A reception inthe Reynolds Club will follow.The week’s activities will begin Mondaywith a reception for Levi given by alumniof the law school, in the Prudential Build¬ing.On the afternoon of Wednesday, Nov 13,three receptions for students will be given,one for the College, one for the graduateschools, the third for professional schools.Included in the week’s schedule are sev¬eral cultural events, including a readingby novelist Saul Bellow, professor of Eng¬lish, following an alumni cabinet dinnerin the law school, on Friday, Nov 15, amusical event by faculty and students inMandel Hall at 8 pm Saturday, Nov 16,and an art show of prominent works fromChicago collections in the Bergman gallery.“WORSHIP THE LORD IN THE BEAUTY OFHOLINESS.” Psalm 29:2South Shore Bible Church, 7159 S. Cornell Ave.,Chicago, III. invites you to FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParly facilities to 400"S Pizza ANDERSON’SGulf bulkoHY 3-8282 SERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY GASOLINEItalian 8c American AT LOWEST PRICESDishes SandwichesFEATURING THEDelivery Service BULKO PANTRYOPEN 7 DAYS A complete Grocery StoreCarry-Outs OPEN 24 HOURS1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd 57th & COTTAGE GROVE j&merfcSame Day 5 Hr. CleaningNo Extra ChargeCustom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd 752-6933 I cal as that proposed by students. He hasalready divided the city into three areas,to reduce the distance between the top andthe bottom of the school system. He be¬lieves that “the one administrator close tothe lives of students, teachers, parents andcommunity agencies is the principal”;therefore principals should have more pow¬er in the bureaucarcy, while setting up or¬ganizations to let the community’s wishesbe heard by the principal.The boycotting students and many othersdo not accept these proposals. Philip M.Katz, head of the Caucus of Inner-CityPrincipals, an organization seeking greatercommunity control, has stated that “de¬centralization to date (two years) hasmade no difference in the operation ofschools” He also said that “our point isthat the way the public school system hasbeen operating, only a small segment ofthe public has been represented... The Ne¬gro community has not had a voice...” AtWednesday’s meeting between the Boardof Education and the boycott leaders Bob¬by Wright, the head of the Black Teacher’sUnion, stated that “there is really only onedemand: black control of black schools.”The boycott leaders have scheduled sit-insat schools for this Monday, continuing thepressure on the Board. Students on the street in front of Engle¬wood High School, a school just west ofWoodlawn which has had a large percent¬age of boycotting students, had varyingopinions on the boycott.“I don’t think they should walk out,” onestudent said. “They just hurtin’ their ownself by stayin out of school. — They shouldjust stay in school and let the men up therefigure it out.” Another, wearing an ROTCuniform, objected to the frequent pullingof fire alarms during days when the boy¬cott is not on.Other students were enthusiastic about it.A main objection of these students to En¬glewood was the fact that the Afro-Ameri¬can history course lasts only half a yearand is open only to students preparing forcollege, not to those taking “basic”courses “who need it just as much”, a girlsaid.Leon Steele, a member of the BlackPower Student Association (BPSA) of Eng¬lewood, which is associated with the Con¬cerned Black Students, said “I think theboycott’s mellow. . . We leamin’ somethingabout ourselves...” Gregory Spenser, an¬other BPSA member stated it more gener¬ally: “I think we should boycott forever.Whtiey been kicking us and misusin’ usfor years and its about time they learnsome sense.”NOV. 5TheAmericanWayofDeathStrikesAgain ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELANNUAL UNIVERSITY MEMORIAL SERVICESunday, November 3,1968,11 a.m.Professor John A. WilsonOriental InstituteTHE MANTLE OF ELIJAHService of remembrance of members of theUniversity community who died during thepast twelve months.authorized BMC sales & servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615' foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.November 1, 1968 The Chicago MaroonSheaffer’s big deal gets you through29 term papers, 3 book reports,17exams,52 quizzes and 6 months of homework.Sorry about that. Sheaffer’s big deal means you canwrite twice as long. Because youget the long-writing Sheaffer dollarballpoint plus an extra long-writing490 refill free. All for just a dollar.How much do you think you canThe world’s longest writing dollar ballpoint pen. SHEAFFERk CHRISTMAS CHARTER FLIGHTTOEUROPENew York 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.CAH’T AFFORD HEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREETtopWitzU s Jiower Sli“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREET mi 3*4020Tony Bennett Oct. 4-19 • Ed Ames Oct. 21-Nov. 2Now 60% to 80% Offon top-name entertainmentat world-famous Empire Roomin the Waldorf-AstoriaTHE STUDENT STAND-BY PLAN(HOW IT WORKS)Telephone (212) 355-3000 on the day you'd liketo see the show. If available, your reservationswill be instantly confirmed at the special studentrate of just $2 per person, (limited to ages 18thru 25 and you must bring your student I.D. orairline discount card with you)Special Student Room Rates, Too!Singles •12/ Doubles *9.50 per personTriples *8 per person FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYVWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY Il|AS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYINCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715Park Ave. between 49th & 50th Sts.New York, New York 10022(212) 355-3000Information on Rooms? Stars? Call tha above number! LUCHINOSTUDIO OF THE DANCEFLAMENCO — PRIMITIVEMODERNMU 4-3173 In Harper Court5210 Harper 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.MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.The Chicago Maroon November 1, 1965. \r<*.hn-vci«MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES- For University students,faculty,’ and staff: 50 cents per,ine 40 cents per repeat line.for non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeal 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.59*h St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEiN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266. HI FI COMPONENTS1,000s to choose from.AR2a Speakers: $60.00 ea.DYNA power amps: $40.00MCINTOSCH pre amps: $22.50AR Turntables: $40.00$55 AM-FM AC BATT radios: $30.FM Tuners: $12.50 upBELL deck stereo $40. AMPEXdeck: $75.SCHWARTZ BROS. HI FI1215 E. 63 FA 4-8400CHARTER FLIGHTChristmas Charter to London—$180.New York-London roundtrip departsDec. 16, returns Jan. 5 or 6. Re¬servations must be made beforeNov. 4. Call Ext. 3272, 1-6 P.MM-F. Black MusicTonight and Tomorrow 9:00 P.M.The Blue Gargoyle.come share joy march 8. trishMUSICHOUSE FOR SALE3211 Crandon. Exceptionally well-built house. Fine neighborhood.Ideal for University family. Custombuilt, 8 large rooms, 3 good-sizedbedrooms, m baths, full basement,gas heat. 2 natural fireplaces, 2-car garage. $29,500 by owner. ES 5-6938. CELLO LESSONS—Ronald Wilson,Eastman student. 536-3521.GOD needs an electric bass player.Rock group doing its own & othersthings. Gigs. Must be over 21. CallBob X8382 or 493-0831. Tired of reading Haiku on yourcold floor? Get a beautiful newor u$ed carpet from CARPET CITY,6740 S. Stony Island.Better yet, send him to Texaswhere Madalyn Murray can gether hands on him. Or is she inHawaii?New paperbacks are in the HillelBookshop. Jewish philosophy, his¬tory, literature."Criminals dread his election."Vote for Arnold Lund.The MEDICI has been open forlunch for two weeks now and ap¬prox. 3,599 of you haven't beenthere. Where the hell were you?Uncanned music tonight, 9:00The Blue Gargoyle.Sick of carrying your sweaters tothe cleaner's every month? Checkout the latest selection of T-shirts Heads of the NCD congregate—Sunday, 11/3, at 12 noon, 5400Greenwood, Apt. #14.THE HUNT IS COMING!!!! Forinfo on helping or joining call 955-6777.Charlie Smith got 4% of the votein a Washington State Ass. Primary.Vote for RICK SHATTUC for 1stYear Rep. at SG.An Origami book on the life ofBuddha! The GREEN DOOR, 1450E. 57th St. And while you're there,relax in one of the super-comfort-able new booths at the MEDICI—now open for lunch.Why does Larry sleep in a pre-Nadel position?An answer for every question. 643-7178.ROBERT HERRICK0-id male share 4 bedroom apt.,2 baths, repainted. $45+deposit.Call Ted 643-4821 after 11 P.M. 5327Dorchester.Need 1 grad Stud, to share 3 manapt ir. Hy. Pk. $50/mo. Call 5-7P.M. 684-3644.Female roommate needed to sharelarge apt. close to campus, ownrm. S40 . 667-4639. JON I MITCHELL will appear live,in concert at Mandel Hall, Mon.evening, Nov. 18. If you have neverheard her album on the WarnerBros.-Reprise label, borrow it froma friend ("everyone in Rickert hasit") and listen to it 2 or 3 times.Tickets go on sale Nov. 11 at theMandel Hall Box Office.4 TVs—4 results, ADO, Nov. 5.4 male with long hair?A female who hates the smellof beauty parlors? Make an ap¬pointment with D. Douchet. PL 2-9255.How long has it been since youcould hear yourself think?—The Blue Gargoyle.JUST WATCH WHAT YOULRliSAYING!SKI ASPEN. 8 days. 9 meals, alltows, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec. 14.$199. 764-6264.See Walter, Chet, David and Frankat the same time, ADO, ElectionNight.INCEST BEGINS IN^THE HOME.WRITER'S WORKSHOP—PL 2-837A1972 will be too late!Female roommate wanted. Call363 7322 or 955-7631. $90/mo.FOR RENT GREEN 8. white woolen girls cap.Made in Denmark. Stupendous sen¬timental value. Please call 684-6772.Sublease $85 utilities incl. furn.5407 Wdlawn. Eve. 955-2936.2 bedroom apartment to sublet E.Hyde Park near 56th and Everett.Available Nov. 15. Call MY 3-2647.:, free rm/brd. live 8800S, 2200E. Companion to 10 yr. old. HelenWE 6-6112.SHORT TERM lease, 2 weeks free.Nearby, economical, newly dec.unfurn. apts. 2 & 3'/2 rms. $75,$89.50. Free gas and elec. Clean.Quiet. Williams, 6043 Woodlawn. PEOPLE WANTEDTUTOR wanted for Akkadian les¬sons. 487-6212.GIRL, care for blind-retarded girl,15; live in from Nov. 22nd to Nov.31st, S. Side. Helen KE 6-6112.USHERS WANTED: Monday Lec-tures Nov. 4-25. Call Mr. Gornto,FI 6-8300. Von Sternberg's MOROCCO tonightat Doc Films.Jerry Lipsch dreads his election.Vote for Arnold Lunc.Are you for Daley or SHATTUC?The annual Charles W. Gilkey Lec¬ture, sponsored by RockefellerChapel and Hillel House will beTuesday, November 7, 8:00 P.M.PROF. /MAURICE FRIEDMAN willspeak on THE PROBLEMATICREBEL.Ken—Hands off Barbara!Arnold Lund for SG.YOUNG MAN for light duties inHyde Park music 8. dance studio.Evenings, Monday-Friday, 5:30-7:30.Phone BU 8-3500 between 2 and 6P.M.HYDE PARK’S ONLYIMPROVISATION ANDSATIRE TROUPEIUE NEW OLD FASHIONED BAROQUE COMPASSPLAYERS RETURNS T71IS WEEKEND TO THEHARPER THEATER COFFEE HOUSE, 5238 So. HAR¬PER WITH THE LAKE COUNTRY STRING BAND.FRIDAY & SATURDAY, 9 p.m. — Y’ALL COME! Bored with tedious classroom dis¬cussions and convinced of the ir¬relevance of everything? Be Re¬born?! Experence CREATIVITY!Build your own Stereo with aMUSICRAFT kit. Call 324-3005 formore information.Amy—always remember: no matterwhere you go, there you are. HappyBirthday—Bob.WANTED TO RENTSmall, self-contained apt. in HydePark, unfurn., under $75/mo. 955-5036.Working girl wants place to stayfor 1 mo. Call NO 7-8643, room 303between 5-7 P.M. M-F, 4-10 P.M.Sun.FOR SALEBourgeois buyer for KODAK MO-TORMATIC. 35R4. Unused. CostSI 15, need $82. 493-0499.WEST, like-new port, trans. cart,tape rec; mike 8. earphones; re-chger 8. batteries; cost $135, sellfor $50. Terry 955-6777.GERBILS for sale: small, cute,guiet, easy to care for, cheap: $2each; $3.50 pair. Terry, 955-6777.FRENCH CLASSICAL GUITAR.Hardly used. Under half. $45. 324-6718. HANDSOME grad student desiresto meet attractive, mobile, under¬standing female. KE 6-4300, Ext.320.YOUNG WOMAN to assist motherwith 11 month old boy and do lightchores. $1.50 hour, part time. CallTemaner, DO 3-5112.^DISTRIBUTORSMALE OR FEMALEMust be able to make campusdeliveries. Earn $200.00 per monthand more. Will not interfere withschool activity or study. Iddal forindividual, partners, or marrieds.An appointment convenient for you.PHONE 427-9350SEYMOUR KOHN 330 S. WELLSSUITE 1402 CHICAGO, ILL.TYPING Ed Levi fears Rick Shattuc.MARLENE DIETRICH does herinimitable thing tonight at DocFilms.TRUST MUSKIE!"When blood is nipped and waysbe foul," sit by the fire at theBlue Gargoyle.Enlightened authors! Enlightenedauthoresses! Come to Ida Noyes Advocates allowing selective con¬scientious objection; 4. Supportsexpanded medical and educationalprograms; 5. Has called for aguaranteed annual income. Workfor Mikva on election day (or be¬fore); call headquarters 374-8600.MOROCCO! Josef von Sternberg'sexotic and erotic world comes tolife tonight at Cobb Hall.Dear Allen W. We are forming afan club. Please send us member¬ship cards and autographed wallet-size photos. Love 8, Kisses.Want a change from the uglysaran-wrapped MEAT at your localsupermarket? Go to JESSELSON'S(1340 E. 53rd St.) every week &discover fresh fish and esotericseafoods.There is hope. See for yourself atthe Blue Gargoyle.FUNGUS, R.I.P.Would you trust the man who brand¬ed Stevenson pro-Communist?Lew—how are Kenny, Bonnie, Coo¬kie 8, Pepper?—Judy G.The Profit Motive is alive in theMaroon Business Office. How much is Sue Bos worth?For a complete line of NEW DI¬RECTIONS Paperbacks, go to 1540E. 55th St. 10% Discount for stu¬dents on ALL books!Has anyone noticed how peopleseem to get caried away with ex¬clamation marks near electiontime?VOTE FOR WALLACE AND RE-GISTER YOUR DISGUST.Alternatively, take the advice ofthe underground papers and makeNov. 5 a meaningful day of pro¬test. Once you are in that booth,Do your thing! estec* in working on material fora satirical revue to be presentedWinter Quarter.Not voting helps elect Nixon!Will Bill pick up Elaine in halfHanauer?Enlightened authoresses—call HY 3-4516 and ask for Alan.Students interested in having aCAP 8. GOWN this year. Call Ext.4207.Free Kittens—exotic ancestry. ViPersian—Vi Siamese—V2 Ali. Call667-8974 after 6 P.M.If you eat at Ahmad's please tipthe waitress. Ahmad pays her 50cif he pays her at all. Ahmad'scordiality to customers does notextend to his employees or thosewho buy only cokes.Bo Callaway backs Nixon.Aw, come on, die-hards, Vote HHH.Barbara scorched her mug and nowshe has a Burned Stein.Any student interested in smallseminar on Machine Politics con¬tact Barbara, 955-5036. Likewisefaculty to teach.Dietrich! Von Sternberg! GaryCooper? Yes . . . together for thefirst time in MOROCCO! tonightTrip out with Marco Polo, thetravel agents who are, and willsend you, far out. 1552 E. 55thSt. 288-5944.Keep guessing Allen—after all LesJeux Ne Sont Fait.Eat and socialize while you watchthe returns, ADO, Nov. 5, 7:00—?Defeat the Daley Machine:Vote for Humphrey and ClarkAbstain on local offices.If you really want to snow yourchick, wine and dine her at theCourt House.Need something warmer than apajama top for your 8:30 classes?Come to the UNIVERSAL ARMYSTORE, 1364 E. 63rd St.Alternatively, the MAROON BUSI¬NESS OFFICE.Anyone interested in participatoryart and creating an art environ¬ment for FOTA call 667-5809.Black music.GOOD USED TVs, reconditioned.S24.95 8. up. American Radio. 1300F. 53rd, 53 Kimbark Plaza.Trying to study without music?KLH 11 FM stereo FM 8. photoonly $229.95. MUSICRAFT-campusrep. Bob Tabor 324-3005.DECORATOR FURNITURE and de-luxe Westinghse Frost Free Refri¬gerator and many household goods.BA 1-8717.BMW 500~R51/3-Super-Cycle. Pert.Cond. call: Gary 643-1145.59 POSCHE 1600. For InformationLarry at 955-0575.53 Buick WILDCAT CONv! AHextras, low mileage. KE 6-4300,ext. 320.vw 1963 Good cond. 684-6814.Austin Healy '55 convt. WireWheels, radio, good cond. $675 orutter. 487-6212. Term Papers, Theses typed. IBMElec. 40c/page. Mrs. Cohen 338-5242,evngs.Thesis typing—568-3056, eve.May I do your typing? 363-1104.PERSONALSSAUER'S is for people who areready to leave Hyde Park to getwhat they want In FoodDrinkPeo-ple. SAUER'S at 311 E. 23rd St.225-6171.TOWN AND GOWN IN HYDEPARK AND WOODLAWN. Mr.Leon M. Despres, Aid. 5th Ward.At Hillel House, tonight, 8:30.Jerry Lipsch is fat. Vote for ArnoldLund.Tim: some chicks like to be kick¬ed, fucked and dominated. Somedon't—RHN. “I coughed up blood,lost my taste for foodMy eyesight wasgetting strange!’ You have probably been as sick¬ened reading all the political adsas I have been typing them. Itdoesn't mean a shit one way oranother who gets in. No matterwhat the politician (read: crook)says, he will do his own personalcorrupt thing when he gets in of¬fice. If the public welfare is ad¬vanced as a result of his doinghis thing, then all the better. But,his primary concern is power, per¬sonal and party. Why vote? Allthis talk about wasting your voteis so much garbage. There justaren't enough people around whocare enough to do anything decent,so nothing decent will ever getdone. If you want to kid yourselfthat lesserevilism will do anybodyany good, fine. But don't look forsympathy.The above ad a public service.Not all waitresses in Hyde Parkare snottly and underpaid. Findout at the Gold City Inn (this sideof Harper Court) and enjoy theBest Chinese Food in Hyde Park.Who is HUGO?The manager of the Medici is aflower kraut.If Daley's against him, you shouldbe for him. Vote SHATTUC! Hall at 7 P.M. on Wednesday,November 6. Susan and Alan willbe there.ATTENTION—South Shore residents.Lst March in South Shore. Don'tmiss it. Say NO to HUMPHREY*NIXON*WALLACE. Assemble at71st & South Shore Drive, 1:30 P.M.Saturday, Nov. 2. Hear StaughtonLynd, Rev. Archie Hargraves, andothers. For further information callPolitics fbr Peace. 374-6557.Arnold Lund fears Rick Shattuc.Vote for RICK SHATTUC for SG.Gene McCarthy doesn't want Nixonto become President. Do you?For that much needed "little pipe,"try the Koga Gift Shop, 1462 E.53rd.DON’T VOTE The above comment was paid forby one of our regular classifiedadvertisers. She happened to bein the Business Office tor a halfhour or so and witnessed the mer¬cenary staff accepting any andall dirty things for the classified.All you have to do is pay, andwe'll print any little thing youwant.You can never tell what you mightpick up over a meal at Ahmad's.The only CLEANER with a 10%Discount for students—PUBLICCLEANERS, INC. 1380 E. 53rd or1310 E. 53rd.Persons with ideas for spontaneous,people-involving events for FOTAcall 667-5809.Black Music at the Blue Gargoyle.Enlightened authors—call 684-7037and ask for Susan.ELECTION NIGHT SPECIAL, Al¬pha Delta Phi, 5747 Univ. Freerefreshments while you watch thereturns on 4 TVs, from 7:00—?McCarthy knows this election istoo Important to boycott.November 1, 1968 Strom Thurmond trusts Nixon. Doyou?Develop your affective dimension.493-3721. Small Groups.Read p. 24 of NY Times, Oct. 25.If she eats dog food, will BarbaraGraul?Tired of the Maroon's once-weeklyand often week-old reviews? Fortimely cultural criticism, listen toTHE COMPREHENSIVE CRITICat its new time following the 9:45P.M. Campus News, every day onWHPK-FM 8813, for reviews ofmusic, drama, films, art, litera¬ture, and recordings.Stay up (way up) for STONE¬HENGE REVISITED — 12 Sun.WHPK.Nixon's the wrong one!Out of cigarettes and Ovaltine at11:30 P.M.? MORGAN'S CERTI¬FIED, 1516 E. 53rd St.Special Blackfriars' meeting onWednesday, November 6, 7 P.M.in Ida Noyes Hail for all ipter-~ r t • ,* v iThe Chicago MaroonThey do exciting things. Like mining oil instead of pumping itWorking on air pollution. Making electricity from the atom. HOW MUCH YOU MAYSAVE ON YOUR CARINSURANCE WITHSTATE FARMFrank Spinelli1369 E. 53rd. ST.955-3133»t*M lilll „jgL STATE FARMMutual Automobile Insurance Company•J Home Office: Bloomington, IllinoisBe Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “ Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St.PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVERDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center, . 1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644We’re a petroleum and energy company.But we believe that making our world abetter place to live in makes good senseas well as good business. And this kindof thinking demands individuals with -ideas and energy. People who can seethe potentials—usual and unusual—which our products have for improvingthe world. People like you. Bring yourideals, and your motivation, where they’llOur interviewer will be here next week. Talk to him.making things happenwith energy make good things happen. See ourinterviewers on campus. Or send aresume to: Mr. G. 0. Wheeler, ManagerProfessional Recruitment, 717 FifthAvenue, New York, N.Y. 10022ARCO Chemical DivisionNuclear Materials and Equipment CorporationAtlantic Richfield Hanford CompanyAn Equal Opportunity Employer “THE GLITTER IS GONE. TheCamelot of Jack and JacquelineKennedy will never shine asbrightly again. Whether the Ken¬nedy mystique can be reconsti¬tuted is another question . . . theKennedys are tenacious [injreaching for the high places inthe land. To do so henceforththey may have to renounce themiscreant But that was the riskshe took when ■ For „ frM copy 0,she decided to ■ v.'tr.. 1 Buckl.y'ireturn to real- I NATIONAL RE-ity." I VIEW, writ. D.pt■ J, 150 E 35 Str..t,n.y. 10016.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.8 The Chicago Maroon November 1, 1968Students for a Democratic Society ReplyA Somewhat Round About Reply to LastFriday’s Editorial on SDS.By Mary Sue LeightonOnce upon a time, long ago and far away,there was a country with much-touted pur¬ple mountains’ majesty and shining seasand, alas, also some political ills. As wasthe custom of the planet, the natives ofthis country talked a good democracy butlived nonetheless in a multi-classed societyakin to Earth’s Dark Age Feudalism.There were among the citizens, however,a group which daily mourned the passingof freedom and dwelled at length upon theideas of the Founding Fathers (doubtlessdreamers of the same ilk) and sundryother individuals living before and afterwho had contributed to the body of knowl¬edge intended to help run the country—andothers — in the best way. The group wasknown familiarly as “the Rads.’’Because they were for the most part in¬tellectuals, products of middle-class envir¬onments, they were highly verbal — rappeda lot. Because they were sensitive, percep¬tive, idealistic, informed, somewhat neuro¬ tic, they noticed the discrepancies betweenmodels and realities — they bitched alot.Because they were impatient, weary of al¬ways peace later, miserable with preach¬ing the purist resist and often settling forII-S, they tried to be activists, movingwhenever they could muster concensus.Another group emerging less distinctlyfrom the vast unthinking masses was “theLibs.” These people, being somewhatmore firmly rooted in the “real world,”were forever endeavoring to use the betteraspects of an imperfect system to generatemore desirable qualities. Wars are no good,they were wont to say, but going to jailcertainly doesn’t help to eliminate them.Vote for the Peace Candidate, march onthe Capitol, write your Congressman; inshort, exhaust all the legitimate means ofprotest. There are existing channels to doall you want to — use them, make themeffective.So it happened on many a felicitous oc¬casion that the two groups got together.Forgetting their petty differences, theywould conspire on a plan designed to awak¬ en the sleeping masses between the pur¬ple mountains’ majesty and shining seas,to denounce the decline of social morality,to further their common humanitariangoals. And in their tempestuous way, theRads would volunteer to do the dirty work.Their egoism, confidence, optimism, aliena¬tion from conventional acceptance demand¬ed that they act.The Libs, reasoning that if everyone puthis head on the block, no one would be leftto carry on reforms, promised faithfully toeffect the carry-through, to spread the gos¬pels of Revolution and explain the signifi¬cance of resistance. But if often happened• subsequent to many a felicitous occasionthat the Libs forgot to come, to supportthe action, and having less at stake in thepolitical change achieved therein, failed toget involved.It is true, historians would discoursefrom a cool distance, that the Rads weretoo offensive. They tended to rant and rave,to offend the tender sensibilities of thosewho would have reform — or revolution —in more palatable terms. What they needed was a good PR man and a course in howto win friends. Living as they did in a con¬sumer-oriented society, they should haverealized that the product in the classiestpackage sells best, and should have tidiedup their organization accordingly. Perhapsthey should have had wine-and-cheese so¬cials after their business meetings. Ah yes,historians would say, if only the Rads hadbeen able to work with the Libs, what anage it would have been.Psychologists, on the other hand, foundthe phenomenon fascinating. The Rads,what magnificent specimens of alienation!Was it intuition that told them in order toact in accordance with their consciencethey had to first seal themselves off fromconventional approval? How marvelouslythey did so! Scruffy beards, stringy hair,and hostility toward those who would dilutethe idealism of their actions — all servedwell to isolate them from nearly like-think¬ing but subtly debilitating Libs.And the Libs — what terrific defenses!Continued on Page SevenTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number Six November I, 1968On Dumping The Hump‘Hubert Humphrey clearly offers us now the best chance of find¬ing new directions and new policies in the four years that lie ahead andof giving this country another, perhaps the last, chance to redeem itspromise to its own people and to those longing for freedom every¬where.” Richard C. Wade, Illinois Chairmanfor Kennedy and McGovern“Citizens deserve to get the kind of government they vote for.Those who value compassion, imagination, initiative and understand¬ing will be voting for Humphrey and Muskie.”Robert J. Picken, Illinois Chairmanof IVI“The power of Humphrey's intellect... his energy, spontaneity andcreativity have won him the respect and affection of virtually everyonewith whom he has had contact... He has been in the forefront of everyfight for civil rights... He championed federal aid to education, foughtextremism at every turn. He conceived the Peace Corps, led the fight forarms control and the nuclear test-ban treaty. The story of his politicalcreativity is endless...” Adlai Stevenson III, Vice-Chairmanof United Democrats for Humphrey“If you think you have no choice in November, you better thinkagain. Think about four years of Nixon or Wallace. All because youdidn't vote.” Channing E. Phillips, Nominee atthe Democratic Convention, urginghis supporters to register and votefor Humphrey and Muskie“This is the finest, noblest man in political life.”Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., major support¬er of Senator McCarthy, confirminghis support for Hubert HumphreyThe choice is clear. We urge your support for Hubert HumphreyThe UC Student Coalition for Humphrey-Muskie1463 East Hyde Park BoulevardHelp us this weekend! Call 955-7000 and ask for the Humphrey desk. WHPK-FM 88.3First on your dialUniversity of Chicago student-operated radioWEEKDAYS AT A GLANCE MONDAY 47:00-10:30 a m. Happy Wake-Up ' :00-l0:30 a.m. MillardHowar’Service (News at 8)3:00 Soul (News at 6:00)6:05 Rock (News at 8:45)9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic10:00 Classical (News at 12)12:05 Jazz (until 2:30 a.m.)FRIDAY 1 Wake-Up S.rvice forAmericans (News at 8)3:00 A Stone Thine6:00 News6:05 The Underground8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint:‘‘The Facts On StudentHousing”7:00-10:30 a.m. Dr. Feelgood’s 9:45 Campus news and eventsHappy Sound TherapyClinic (News at 8)3:00 South Side Soul6:00 News6:05 Petticoat Lane8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint:‘‘Nigeria and Biafra -what’s really going on?”9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Chicago Symphony Concert Civili10:00 Joint Session (News at 12) 6:00 News6:05 Tuesday Night at theElections, or The FestiveComprehensive Critic:Records-SchumannLiederkriea, Op. 3?)1 0:00 Blitzina: Brahms-Symphony No. 4, Smetana-Quartet, (News at 12)12:05 Roundabout MidnightTUESDAY 57:00-10:30 a.m. Happy Wake-UpService (News at 8)3:00 The History Of WesternCivilization12:05 Seven Steps To HeavenSATURDAY 2Noon The Flea Market(News at 3 and 6 Sportsat 6:05)9:30 News: Evening Report9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Allegri String Quartet10:00 Listening: BeethovenSymphony No. 9, MahlerSymphony No. 1, No. 2,Wagner-Entrance of theGods into Valhalla(News at 12)SUNDAY 3Noon Conversations at Chicago:Rev. John Fry and HansMattick discuss ‘‘YouthGangs”12:30 Hellhound: Country Blues3:00 News3:05 Sunday Soul Session6:00 News and Sports6:10 African Hign Life andCalypso8:00 Sweet Sound of Soft Soul9:30 News: Evening Report9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Lyric Opera’s Ballo InMaschera10:00 The Om Point12:n0 Stonehenge Revisited Funeral for ElectoralPolitics (until 2:30 a.m.)WEDNESDAY 67:00-10:30 a.m. Cynics Corner(News at 8)3:00 South Side Soul6:00 News6:05 Third World Raspberry8:00 The Blue Gargoyle8:45 News: Evening report9:00 Community Viewpoint:Phone-In Programme9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Downtown Art Galleries10:00 Classical Grooves: PonceBrahms, Debussy. RavelProkofiev, (News at 12) ’12:05 Jazz-MannTHURSDAY 77:00-10:30 a.m. Happy Wake-UpService (News at 8)3:00 South Side Soul6:00 News6:05 The Left Fork8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Drama Review10:00 Eclectic Listening:Poulenc - Stabat Mater(news at 12)1 2:05 One Foot In The GutterCut out this program guide and paste your radio under it.NO WHERE ELSEIN HYDE PARK• lioeujj fyan&ueQeAman Roolt ^buck• c/U SfKi/ie Rihl• fcesdine/uueiAAeComplete. 'Wine. CellarIo&AacoI Quitai MujJttltf,WHY TRAVELTIXBCOURT HOUSEWtOTAURANT vjw tjf* Jft jp. Jft Jp. Jf* jp. Jp»You are cordially invited toa celebrationof the 50th Anniversary ofThe Czechoslovak RepublicFri. Nov. 1st 4 pmIda Noyes Library'tipipipipipipipip'fpipeyesfor thenow sound7Lusdm 97.9 fmsmack dab in the middle of your fm dial fAKTAM-YMfCHINESE-AM ERIC ANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outKEEP INFORMEDRead the ISRAEL andMIDDLE EAST NEWSLETTER. For info andsample copy send SI toP.O. Box 233 I, Sunnyvale,Calif. 940871%e Grey dty JournalOdious Rentier Fights Cold War With TenantsOCTOBER WAS THE crudest month for three scoreUniversity of Chicago students whose apartments havebeen without heat or hot water for the last three weeks.Repairmen say the 31 apartments contained in the L-shaped red brick building which fills the Northwest cor¬ner of 53rd Street and Kenwood Avenue are likely to re¬main without heat for at least another two weeks.Since October 7, when the building’s source of heatand hot water quietly expired and passed into the greatboiler room in the sky, tenants have sought to no availto gain redress for their inconveniences. Their continu¬ing plight may well indicate students’ general lack ofpower in dealings with rentiers in the campus area. Atfirst, tenants were unperturbed when the boiler brokedown. After all, things like that can happen. It was stillwarm outside and comfortable enough for sleeping. Butit soon became evident that no one was mending theboiler. The buildings managers, McKey and Poague, andthe owner, Mr. A. A. Livingstone nonetheless assumedtenants that work was proceeding. Further inquiriesyielded further assurances that heat and hot water werejust around the corner, though only last week did repair¬men make their appearance in the building.As for the building’s owner, he (the owner) main¬tains a small office in the building but can seldom befound there and Mr. A. A. Livingstone has an unlistedtelephone number.In an effort to track him down, several tenants soughtthe address of Levenstein Properties, a partnershipwhich is listed on most leases as the owner of the build¬ing. The County Bureau of Assumed Names reportedthat no such partnership was registered with them,though any unregistered partnerships are in violation ofthe law. A letter to the Secretary of State revealed nocorporation called Levenstein Properties. Tracing thetitle of the building led only to Drovers Trust and Sav¬ings Bank at 1542 W. 47th street, which holds the titlein trust.Receiving no assistance from the owner—who everHe might be—and the managers, tenants turned to othersources. In response to calls, three inspectors from theChicago Building Department visited the structure onseparate occasions. Reports of the lack of heat havereached the Department’s central office, but no action has been taken. Aid was also sought from the Hyde-Park Kenwood Community Conference, The Mayor’s Of¬fice of Inquiry, and Alderman Calude Homan. State Re¬presentative Robert E. Mann agreed to look into thesituation upon receipt of a letter of complaint from thetenants. Tenants called Beeline and other assistanceagencies maintained by the Chicago newspapers. Noaction has been forthcoming.More recently, the tenants have begun to organize.On October 23 and again on October 28, residents of thebuilding met to formulate plans and make collectivedemands. Legal counsel had advised one tenant that arent strike could lead to eviction. As for civil action, aspokesman for the Legal Aid Society told one resident,“No tenant has ever won a suit against a landlord inCook Cbunty.”The tenants did form a committee to meet with thebuilding’s management. An attempt to obtain paid ad¬mission to the YMCA for tenants who wanted to take ashower was rejected, committee members said, becausethe manager did not want it known that the building waswithout hot water. The primary demand—that Novemberrents be reduced because of the October indignities—hasnot yet received a reply.And so, as they say, life goes on at 53rd and Ken¬wood, but under somewhat primitive conditions. Mosttenants keep the oven on in the kitchen and a spaceheater in their bedroom. At night, knocking on randomdoors produces one resident dressed in two sweaters,another studying in a scarf and gloves, and still anotherpreparing to sleep in an athletic sweat suit. Studentsheat kettles for water with which to shave and wash.For baths, they can be seen, towel in hand, heading forfriends’ apartments, the Ida Noyes pool, or the HydePark YMCA.The afternoon sun warms the apartments to a pointwhich makes them tolerable til midevening; then thebuilding begins to cool off, to catch up with the outdoors.By morning, it is colder in most apartments than it isoutside under the morning sun. The tenants know thatChicago’s winter fast approaches. There is much talkat 53rd and Kenwood, as at the Alamo, about “how longwe can hold out.”The rentiers have shown little concern for the wel- Cold 'Water Flatsfare of their tenants. Agencies of government have notresponded. Tenants know that action on their part couldwell lead to eviction, a prospect more harmful to tenantthan to landlord in the tight Hyde Park housing market.But, says one student, “Right now, I’ve got my rage tokeep me warm. Somebody’s got to do something aboutour predicament. They can’t get away with this.”DAVID P. GLICKFilmsRomeo and Juliet: A Second LookIN THE CINEMA there is Shakespeare before OrsonWelles and Shakespeare after Welles and the differenceis truly between bad and good. Welles’s conception of theplays, his ability to transform lines into visual equival¬ents while at the same time keeping both the force andthe meaning of the text, his view of the violence as vio¬lence and not as heroic fighting, has been the basis formost that is good in recent interpretations of the plays.There is a good deal of Welles in Zeffirelli’s Romeo andJuliet, from the first tracking shot up to the sun, to theaudacious cutting that so infuriated the insensitive Paul¬ine Kael.While in many senses, Zeffireli is a pupil, he is alsocleaverly an independent man who knows what to borrowand from whom. In an interview found elsewhere inthis magazine, Leonard Whiting tells us that Zeffirelliis finished; with Shakespeare films, at least for the nearfuture. This is understandable and still very much inkeeping with his Romeo and Juliet: Zeffirelli’s vision isbasically romantic, and romanticism is not somethingthat fits well with most Shakespeare. Romeo and Juliet is, of course, the greatest exception, and moreover, theculminaion of Zeffirelli’s thoughts that avoid an inter¬pretation which sees as the play’s message the force oflaw and which views the deaths of Romeo and Juliet asa necessary if tragic (a necessary and thus tragic?) sa¬crifice. In other words, Zeffirelli has taken seriously theprologue and epilogue, focusing the play squarely on thecharacters of Romeo and Juliet and their attempt toestablish a perfect love within an imperfect world.The central scene in his interpretation then becomesthe one in which the nurse urges Juliet to marry Parisand perjure her marriage to Romeo (III:v). The nurse,who is not at all a fool, has been the adult most respon¬sive to the concept of love. Juliet’s realization that thenurse’s attitude is essentially false makes her realizethat the kind of love she wants can be had only by re¬jecting the adult world. (Priests are not part of thisworld, as Zeffirelli makes abundantly clear.)Thus the suicides are adolescent. It is here thatZeffirelli’s insights are best, if not clearest. The teen¬agers’ love — (neither idyllic nor chaste but manifestlyromantic and real) — can exist only because they areyoung; they die rather than change. The sacrifice pre¬serves love rather than law.But we have been made too much aware of the mean-'ing of death throughout the film to accept these as a res¬olution. Zeffirelli has created a romantic love and a ro¬mantic sacrifice, and the romantic vision is basically atragic one which precludes solutions. A romantic visiongenerates a love relationship beyond possibility (it isfrom this that the central romantic image of the darkwoman has its roots), and while the artist can exalt inthis impossible situation, he cannot provide a way out.We want a happy ending for Romeo and Juliet; wewant one desperately, for they are the only people inthe play for whom we can have complete sympathy. (Oneof the greatest moments in Zeffirelli’s production is hisability to convey the horror of Tybolt’s death while stillgiving us a distanced sympathy for Romeo’s actions.)Zeffirelli leaves us not exalted but bewildered as to whe¬ther there is a possible reconciliation, as to whether theromantic vision is indeed satisfactory. I have so far referred to the film for rather as Iwould to a stage version of the play. This raises someimportant stylistic considerations. The film is weakestwhen it strains to be cinematic.After understanding Zeffirelli’s reading of the text, onewonders wheher a movie can be made out of Shakespeareat all. There is first of all the iambic pentameter, a con¬vention that is certainly far from cinematic. There isalso the fact that we know these works as plays andit has become difficult to think of them in any otherterms.It is necessary to go back again to Welles, I think,to understand how Shakespeare can be done cinemati-cally. Welles was first a theatre director and this back¬ground can be found in many of his films—it is cer¬tainly in Citizen Kane as well as all the Shakespearefilms. What is important is that Welles was capable atnearly congruent stages of his career to make filmswhich were purely cinematic — The Magnificent Am-bersons immediately after Kane; Thee Immortal Storyimmediately after Falstaff. What Welles has taught usis how not to deny theatrical heritage, to incorporate itinto the style of the film.For the most part Zeffirelli has succeeded here ad¬mirably. His actors act in the great style of the modemBritish theater — a style that makes American theater’sadherence to Lee Strassberg’s variations upon TheMethod appear incrdibly banal. Zeffirelli has not usedthe cheap “opening up” of a play to get the camera outof doors or into another room; the Elizabethan stage wasa very mobile one and Zeffirelli wisely followed the textclosely here. Most interesting is Zeffirelli’s lighting inthe film. It is not the lighting which we associate withtheatrical film directors (Welles and Penn) but rathera clear unified light that brings us back to Renais¬sance painting. This sense of light is perhaps Zeffirelli’sgreatest cinematic talent. We are always aware in Ro¬meo and Juliet that we are watching a film of a play,but we also believe that we are watching a damn goodmovie. Given Shakespeare, I’m not at all sure thatthis double sense is a bad thing.T.C. FoxHELP KEEP OURSTREETS BEAUTIFULMAKE YOURimports, inc. NEXT CAR2235 3s2SOAN HUFrancois Truffaut’sTHE 400 BLOWSSunday, November 3, Cobb HallThe Grey Cty Journal November 1, 1968 Student Membership$12.50Special otter to students ataccredited colleges and universitiesto become members at the reducedrate ot $12 SO with full privilegesPrivileges include 4 free Museumpublications, 25-50% discount onMuseum books, reproductions andslides, reduced subscription rateson art magazines, monthly MembersNewsletters, and unlimited freeadmissions.Department of MembershipThe Museum of Modern Art11 West 53 StreetNew York, N Y. 10019Student Membership: $12.50Extra pass for husband or wife: $2.5CMake checks payable to The Museunot Modern Art. Please enclose axerox or photostat copy of a currentschool ID or bursar's receipt.Name (please print)AddressCity, State, ZipCollege or universitydclark ttheatre L- IMHMI Jenjoy ourspecial studentrate75< at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box officedifferent double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow 3 a.m.• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 50clittle gal lery for galsonly• dark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Titnes****Should win Academy AwardLESNER NEWS“A Treasure"TERRY TRIBUNE"Film is a Smash"MARSTERS AMERICAN"Everyone Should See It"JUDITH CRIST N.B.C.TV TODAY SHOW"I Love This Movie"ff- ^.THEV<2rfWOofVStudent rate every $ 1 50day but Sat. |bi ba of Georgetown U.African & Indian clothesbedspreads — sandals, etc.22 East Elm 10%discountFunny 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.Hut though you may not recognize our name, may¬be the name Sylvania rings a bell.1t’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 allox er 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.Equal opportunity employer AThe 5 billion dollar corporationyou probably never heard of.MusicMod Squad Shows It’s StuffI,AST WEEK’S EXPLOSION of contemporary musichere emphasized an aesthetic law central to the musi¬cal hang-ups of the past thirty years: in general, themore refined the response that the artist wishes to evoke,the more complex the moans required, and the smallerthe audience which will be able to contend with it. Beeth¬oven's Ninth, which aims at a broad and generalized ef¬fect, can infect seventy thousand in Central Park. Buteven a century and a half after their composition, hislate quartets (more intimate, subtle, and particularized,although not necessarily more profound) speak to amuch more limited group.Composers are consequently alway faced with achoice—they must sacrifice either sublety or mass ap¬peal. Since the thirties, there has been a general move¬ment toward greater complexity and smaller audiences.Unfortunately, there has been a concomitant tendency toequate this choice of ends with the judgments “good”and “bad.” It is commonplace to criticize Shostakovich,for example, for lack of refinement, while praisingPierre Boulez for uncompromising intellectual integrity.But Easley Blackwood’s Mandel Hall performanceof Boulez’s Second Sonata, followed Saturday by IrwinHoffman’s reading of the Shostakovich Fifth with the Chi¬cago Symphony, was a good reminder that there are many kinds of masterpieces. Genius is not synonymouswith subtlety, and quality is not inversely proportionalto popularity.Listening to the Boulez, for instance, you are constant¬ly challenged, constantly surprised. As with the GrosseFugue or Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire, it is never quiteas you remember it. Try to respond passively, and youlose its threads: it requires constant effort and leavesyou perplexed. Further, the piece isolates you: there isa bond between you and the music that makes you for¬get that you are part of a group of listeners.Infrequency of performance has kept this musicfrom many potential admirers, but it will never becomea “popular” work anyway. Shostakovich’s Fifth is justthe opposite. You can be sure that, like the RhapsodieEspagnole or Casablanca, it will always arouse muchthe same response. This stability gives you the com¬fortable feeling that you possess it, that you havegrasped its totality. If you relax, the music will carryyou by itself; when it is over, words like “dramatic”pop up as adequate definitions of the fuzzy but over¬whelming effect it produces. Finally, it is a communalexperience which makes you aware of the audiencearound you.Yet both are masterpieces: uncompromising, butCulture VultureTHIS WEEK OF culture really doesn’t need any intro¬ductory paragraph. It isn’t even hectic, unless you likeBenjamin Britten and the Bavarian Symphony Orchestraequally. If we were looking for excuses for this, we’dblame it on Halloween, which is the only convenientholiday. So, it looks like this is a week for inventiveness,imagination, and creation of your own escapes. The cityis taking the week easy.MUSICThe Allegri String Quartet is appearing at Mandel Halltonight at 8:30. Cost for students is $2.00.Laurence Libin will give a concert of harpsichordmusic by Francois Couperin Saturday in Bond Chapelat 8:30. The concert is presented by Collegium Musicumand admission is free.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conducted by JeanMartinon, will give concerts Thursday, at 8:15 andFriday at 2:00 p.m. at Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan.The concerts will feature works by Haydn, Brahms, andBartok. Tickets are from 3 to 7 dollars.Curlew River, by Benjamin Britten will be presentedby the Little Orchestra Society of New York at theAuditorium Theatre, Congress at Michigan, Sunday at3:00 p.m. Tickets range from $1-5.The Bavarian Symphony Orchestra will be at OrchestraHall Sunday at 3:00 p.m. for their only Chicago ap¬pearance of the year. Tickets: $3.50-$7.50.The Baroque Ensemble of Schola Cantoum Basiliensiswill be at Ganz Hall of Roosevelt University, 430 S.Michigan, November 6 at 8:00 p.m. Free tickets areavailable from CMC Concerts, Roosevelt University.Princess Ida will be presented by the Gilbert & Sulli¬van Opera Co., Inc. November 8 and 9 in Mandel Hallat 8:30, for evening performances and 1:30 for the Sat¬urday Matinee. The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem (if you’venoticed their ads) will be at the Auditorium tonight at8:30. Tickets: $3-6.Duke Ellington will give a concert of sacred musicSunday at 8:00 in the Auditorium, 70 E. Congress.Tickets: $3-$25.Buffy Sainte Marie will be appearing at OrchestraHall November 8 at 8:30. Tickets: $2.50-$5.50.THEATREThe King and I is being presented by the Lincoln ParkTheatre 2021 North Stockton Drive November 1-2, 8-9,at 8:30 each night. Tickets are $1.00.The Chicago City Players are presenting “Red Cross’and “Fourteen Hundred Thousand” by Sam Shepardbeginning tonight at Baird Hall Theatre, 615 W. Welling¬ton Ave. Curtain times are 8:30 Friday and Saturdayand 7:30 Sundays.“Flora, the_ited Menance” is at the Leo A. LernerThe Salzburg Great Theatre of the World ends Saturdayat the Goodman Theatre, 200 S. Columbus Drive.Psychodrama sessions are being given at the JaneAdams Theatre, 3212 N. Broadway beginning Thursday,November 7 and continuing on consecutive ThursdaysContinued On Page SevenPi-Ayccr’S ti i -M4 i i snow3 PERFORMANCES NIGHTLY THRU DAWN FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURTHURSDAYOctober 10Leslie Coro*<GIG! October 17TNf AMERICANIZATIONOf IMItYFRIDAYOcteker 11TNf lOViO ONI Octeker IIW.ll.om W,l»r ,TNI COUICTO*SATURDAY Octeker 14Sellers KubrickLOLITA October IIMolloween Treo*RASPUTIN AND TNf RfPTILISOctober IS November 1Mtchoel Come Lynn Redgrave Alon BotesTNf WRONG BOXY GfORGY GIRLOcteker IIStanley Kubfck $M STUN6H0VI Octeker ItTNI MWUSHIRS Octeker IIDudlef Moore/ Pet*r CookBfDAZZLfD^^^•Floykty Serial'—Ever, n.8m a New Chopter —John Woynt in ‘The Sign Of The (oglePLAYBOYTHE AT E R H.J1204 N DEARBORN • PHONE 944 3434 nearly perfect crystallizations of opposite aesthetic po¬sitions. To judge one against the other is ultimately fu¬tile: each succeeds in areas where the other is not evencompeting. Yet when compared with similar works, eachdisplays its superiority. Surely, the Shostakovich hasa force which sets it above the music of Franck, Cop¬land, and Rachmaninoff, while the Boulez has an intellec¬tual brilliance absent in the music of Babbitt and Kren-ek. *Other offerings on the symphony program were Ar¬thur Grumiaux’s reading of the Berg Violin Concertoand the first downtown performances of George Crumb’sEchoes of Time and the River. Greatly impressed bythe 1967 Mandel Hall premiere of the latter, I was cur¬ious to see if it would hold up. Would its reliance on“avant-garde” techniques (whistling in the orchestra,playing winds into grand pianos, vague whispers andmutterings through brass instruments) cause it to growstale?Fortunately not. Crumb has a good sense of what isappropriate, and his effects are never over-used ortossed in simply for novelty. Even the third time around,it remains a curiously haunting work. He’s a composerto watch.Since Hoffman deserves credit for trying to introduceOrchestra Hall to the Twentieth century, let us be kindand pass over the performances (especially the Berg) insilllence. Blackwood’s playing, however, demands a stand¬ing ovation—which, in fact, it received. Few other pian¬ists can play as many notes so fast with such clarity ofarticulation. The most intricate rhythms emerge un¬fudged, and each element of even the most complicatedpassages is clearly differentiated from its neighbors.Peter RabinowitzJoin the questfor the world’slargest cheese!Sta/itkM-Franklin Pierce, you will recall, had apet marmoset living with him in theWhite House. Jonathan Swift, on theother hand, observed in Polite Conver¬sation, *' Why, everyone as they like,’as the good woman said when she kissedher cow." President Lyndon B. Johnsonput it another way when, reporting tothe nation in the aftermath of theDetroit riots of July 1967, he observed,"Righteousness and peace must kisseach other." It’s all part of thesame thing. The Italian Waiters’Convention at Yellowstone Parkhad the right idea. They'repart of a Cow Cycle, ofcourse, as is The CradleTomb at Westminster.(It must be admitted,however, that thelatter is part of lan Aborted Cow *Cycle.) Or htM-It’s about time somebody invented anew literary form again. The mantlehas fallen on the manly young shoul¬ders of Christopher Cerf, editor, song¬writer, singer, citizen soldier, filmmaker, and former editor of the Har¬vard Lampoon. He’s had help fromMichael K. Frith, who drew some pic¬tures. These are not to be confusedwith the author's drawings. What moredo you want? Cheese? On to the Wis¬consin Pavilion at the New YorkWorld’s Fair! Once you have readMr. Cerf’s book, you too will com¬prehend as never before the mys¬teries of symbiotic relationshipbetween animals, fruit, girls,dreams, and cheese.I sThe World’sLargest Cheeseby Christopher Cerf $4.95 at your college bookstore•IdoubledayNovember 1, 1968 The Grey City Journalwould you like torecruit top grads fortop jobs with atop company?WILL BE ON CAMPUSTHURSDAY. NOVEMBER 7Hey, that’s our job! . . . and unlesssomebody is trying to tell us some¬thing, we don’t think we’re doing toobadly.Sure, Sun Oil Company needs alot more people—in Exploration, Pro¬duction, Manufacturing, Research,Engineering, Sales, Accounting, Eco¬nomics and Computer Operations.But there are unusual attractions.Besides excellent pay, generous stockplan, and especially good and econom¬ical living conditions in the Phila¬delphia, Toledo and Dallas areas,Sunoco is an exciting company towork for. This is the company that is pio¬neering with Great Canadian OilSands Ltd. the famed Athabasca oilsands project in Northern Alberta—a $235 million project that can multi¬ply the world’s petroleum resources.Also — that sponsors “Sunoco Spe¬cials” and the Penske/Donohue teamin major auto racing championshipsto competition-prove and developSunoco products for the public; thatis planning a new $125 million proc¬essing facility in Puerto Rico; ex¬panded its Toledo Refinery to the tuneof $50 million; pursues a continuingprogram for air and water pollution control; beautifies Sunoco servicestations throughout the land; andrecently broke through the billiondollar a year barrier in sales! Soundinteresting? Sun is geared forgrowth. Perhaps we could use youWrite us for an appointment, writefor our book “Sunoco Career Opportunities Guide,” or contact your Col¬lege Placement Director to see Sun’sRepresentative when on campus. SunOil Company. Industrial RelationsDept. NE. 1608 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 191*03.An Equal Opportunity Employer M/FmarleneDIETRICHvon Sternberg's ,MOROCCO7 15 &4k* with Gary CooperCobb Halldoc F i Ims (TESTIIF I IT . . . Un jour, votre famille aura besoind'argent lorsqu’elle n’aura plus votresalaire, ou bien vous aurez vous-memebesoin d’un revenu pour votre retraite.L’assurance Sun Life peut vous pro¬curer les deux.En tant que representant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter a un moment devotre choix?NOM ET ADRESSE DE L’AGENTRalph J. Wood, Jr., CLU798-0470 - FR 2-2390SUN LIFE DU CANADADependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190. DO 3-9184 1340 E. S3rd NOTICE NOTICE NOTICEADDITIONSCampus Bus Routes and Schedules1968-69 Fall, Winter and Spring QuartersFor the convenience of our patrons thefollowing additions have been made tothe published routes and schedules:NOTE: No currently published routes orschedules have been deleted."E" East-West-Broadview Route"E"-l Schedule9:15 AM. & 9:45 A.M. Starting timeshave been added."N" North-South Route"NM and "N"-5 SchedulesFrom 4:10 P.M. until 5:41 P.M. the follow¬ing has been added to this route:From the starting point at 59th & Kim-bark the bus proceeds West on 59th to EllisAve.; South on Ellis to 60th St.; East on60th St. to Woodlawn; North on Wood-law n to the West bound Midway Drive;West on the Drive to Ellis Ave., then Northon Ellis to resume the normal route."C" Combined Evening Route (Free)The following has been added to this route:When the bus, proceeding North onUniversity, reaches 55th St. it turns Weston 55th to Ellis Ave.; turns South on Ellisto 56th St., stopping at 5524 Ellis, then thebus proceeds East on 56th St. to Universitywhere it turns North to resume the normalroute."S" South Shore-South Campus Route"S"-5 ScheduleAn additional trip starting at 6:10 P.M. hasbeen added to this route."E", "N" & "S" SchedulesThe "E"-3, "N"-5 and "S"-4 scheduleswill start at 12 NOON on the followingdates only.Tuesday, December 10, 1968Tuesday, February 4, 1968Tuesday, March 11,1969Tuesday, April 22, 1969Tuesday, May 20, 1969For those who may not yet have aprinted map and schedule in color, pickthem up at the bus ticket selling locations:Busar's Office (5801 Ellis Ave.)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E.59th St.)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Ave.)Blaine Hall, Rm. 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk(1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk(5706 University Ave.)Law School, Receptionist's Desk(1121 E. 60th St.)Culture VultureContinued from Page Fivefor ten weeks. Cost is $1.50 per session and the sessionswill be led by Holly Gawlick.UNO SO WIEDERThe Paul Taylor Dance Company will be appearing atthe Harper Theatre as part of its Dance Festival, No¬vember 5, 8, 9, 10, at 8:30 and at 2:30 and 7:30 on the10th. Student tickets are $2-$3.50.“In Desponse to Violence in Our Society” a group ofChicago artists and galleries are presenting a programof painting, .sculpture, and mixed media Saturday fromnoon until six, at 601 N. Fairbanks Court and at manyother galleries throughout the city.FILM (as viewed this week by Ken Sherman.)ON CAMPUS THIS weekend are two films very close tomy early development as a “serious” film-goer.Les Quatres Cent Coups (400 Blows) is being shown by,Contemporary European Films Sunday at 7 and 9 atCobb Hall. This is Francois Truffaut’s first feature and,along with Shoot the Piano Player, it is his best. It is apenetrating study of the neglect and mental torture ofa young boy. Truffaut is unbelievably sensitive, relaxinghis adult orientation for just long enough to place theviewer in the mind of a child for the duration of thefilm. This sort of thing has been attempted many times,S.D.S. ReplyContinued from Page OneHaving accepted their dependence cm crea¬ture comforts, friently family relations, acomfortable notion of some do-goodish jobin the hazy future after graduate school,they completely avoided any untidy involve¬ments in the “formative years.” Havingcontended with life amidst the misery ofmany by developing an insensitivity tothat which they “could do nothing aboutnow,” they dodged the last twinges of con¬science by calling the Rads unfriendly andelitist and by refusing on those grounds torecognize common ideals.It happened sadly, inevitably, long agoand far away, that wicked prince succeed¬ed and the political ills grew worse, andthe Land of the Rads and Libs and Unthink¬ing Masses fell further and further awayfrom its dream. The Rads had offered com¬munity and personal payment for freedomsachieved, and turned in the end to elitismand destruction. The Libs tuned out theirdilemma, grew old after their twenty-firstbirthday (when they began voting for thelesser of the two evilest wicked princes)and raised children who could never pic¬ture their parents as real live humanbeings.The common goals of freedom, releasefrom oppression, a chance to do one’s ownthing, to enjoy life and encourage creativ¬ity became part of a body of literaturecalled Utopian. The great Unthinking Mas¬ses kept coming whenever someone calleda war and turning out, on occasion, a think¬er who became variously a wishy-washy Libor an egotistical Rad. And until the mons¬ter from the Third World gobbled them allup, they lived happily, mindlessly everafter. but never with such success. 400 Blows is a classicwhich should not be missed.Virgin Spring (Saturday, 7:30 and 9:30, Cobb Hall),by Ingmar Bergman, is for those who can tolerate thesavage intensity of this tormented director. Those whoare not familiar with Bergman’s work should go in adismal mood, in order to come out of the screeningconvinced that their evaluation of this crappy world(look outside at Chicago in near-winter) is essentiallyaccurate. If you have never seen a Bergman, VirginSpring is a good place to start.Taking a look at what’s happening off campus: If youmissed doc films’ presentation of Bike Boy, directed bynone other than super-nothing Andy Warhol, you havea good chance to support a worthy theatre and see agood flick at the same time. The Aardvark is showingWarhol’s look at a day in the life of a motorcyclefreak (and many other freaks, no doubt close personalfriends of the director’s). This movie is the first oneof Warhol’s I’ve seen, and I was very disappointed. Iexpected it to be boring, trite, superficial and faggy.Instead, it was fascinating (with a ten minute excep¬tion), original, superficial and faggy. After you getpast the ten minute opening scene of the bike boy tak¬ing a shower, the rest of the film is delightful. Thedialogue is weird and wonderful; the color is inter¬esting, especialy in the long scene in a men’s shopthat makes the Man at Ease look conservative; andthe acting, while amateurish, is never dull. Viva, thesuperstar, is on for much too short a time for mytastes; nonetheless, she is a positive delicacy. Unfortun¬ately, the nude shot of her used in the promos is aput-on. In the print of Bike Boy doc films showed, onesees a great deal of Viva, but not nearly as much asin the glossies. Qel domage. In any case, the movie isvery definitely worth a trip to Old Town.At the Playboy All-Night Show tonight is GeorgyGirl. Naturally, everyone reading this has seen it ... ITHE GREY CITYJOURNALThe City White hath fled the earth,But where the azure waters lie,A noble city hath its birth,The City Grey that ne’er shall die.EditorMichael SorkinAssociate EditorsMichael AndreSusan SlottowKen ShermanEllen CassedyEllen KaisseJessica SiegelHowie SchamestT. C. FoxThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Half.HYDE PARK THEATRESTARTS FRIDAY NOV. 1stMENTIONTNEMAROON “LIKE A PUNCH IN THE CHEST”—Newsweek MagazineDirk Bogarde • Stanley BakerThe Joseph Lossy Production ofaccidentWINNER TWO CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AWARDSOne of BERGMAN’S Finest REYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOPTHEVIRGIN SPRING 5706South University Ave.Only shop on campus6 BarbersHours 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.Cobb Hall, Saturday, Nov. 2 7:30 & 9:30 Appts. if desiredExt.3573 beg our pardon, sir, but you say you haven’t? Go Di¬rectly To The Playboy This Morning and see this gem.Pay your dollar to the beautiful but vacuous bunny-cashier, and half-way through the showing, wake up theplump but pleasant bunny-countergirl who is asleep onthe couch (after all it is pretty late you know, even forbunnies) and buy some popcorn.Also on campus this coming week is Morocco, tonight at7:15 and 9:15 in Cobb Hall (doc films). Starring Mar¬lene Dietrich and directed by von Sternberg (as in BlueAngel), this movie was filmed in the thirties on location.The film deals with von Sternberg’s perennial themes—exoticism and eroticism.In a continuing series of monster flicks, doc filmspresents The Black Cat, Nov. 6, 7:15 and 9:15. BorisKarloff and Bela Lugosi star in this film directed by Ed¬gar C. Ulmer (how obscure can you get?).More interesting are two of Howard Hawks’ more re¬cent films, The Big Sky and Hatari! The latter starsJohn Wayne and Hardy Kruger (what a combination). TheBig Sky stars Kirk Douglas, in one of his better per¬formances. The scene in which Douglas’ finger is ampu¬tated by the Indians (Wayne refused to do the samescene in Red River) is hilarious and worth the price ofadmission alone.Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent... it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45% more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero! -, .Try it fast. | J nl^VtPYWhy live in the past? ** , self adjust if>*tamponsPlaytex' invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)November 1, 1968 The Grey Cty Journal 7Vl1!.Hcwv.tointerview#170 companiesin half an hour.Just talk to the man from General Electric.He represents 170 separate GE “companies” thatdeal in everything from space research to electrictoothbrushes. And each of these product depart¬ments is autonomous. Each has its own manage¬ment and business objectives.So a job at General Electric offers the kind ofimmediate responsibility you might expect to findonly in a small business.Right from the start you get a chance to demon¬strate your initiative and capabilities. And themore you show us, the faster you’ll move ahead. As you do, you’ll find that you don’t necessarilyhave to spend a lifetime working on the same jobin the same place. We have operations all over theworld. Chances are you’ll get to try your hand atmore than one of them.Our interviewer will be on campus soon. Ifyou’re wondering whether it’s possible to find chal¬lenging work in big business, please arrange to seecompanies.”him. He speaks for 170VST*GENERAL^ ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employerScandinavianImportSystemNovember Sofa SaleDrastic Reductionson 156 Sofas53 and Lake Park open Sunday 667-4040 OCARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $10used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERY ■JiLEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Koga Gift Shop(Distinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856 Don't sit around the campusagain this weekend, wishing you weresome place else. Be there . . . and back,fast with Ozark.And if you’re under 22, you qualify for Ozark’sYouth Fare. Your Identification Card, goodfor one year from date of issue, costs only $10and you save */6 on confirmed reserva¬tions. Call your travel agent or Ozark.go-getters goOZARKNX (VOLVO)Volvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.I lir Im*M km.1111 fur Imi\ inf: .i \ul\n i« Im'imm-t il la.N mi Inn".t.XiiflK linn Imi" »vf iluii’l "ii'.ii.iiiIiv. lull nrwln klinw lluil uvrr'1-V • uf nil tin- \ul\u. rf-i-tri'fil in llif I nilfil Sl.tlr. in tin* h.tI I yciir. .ire -till mi lli<* mail.Tlif I if*t if.i.un fur I ui \ in" a \ ul vii nun. i> Imimiim* nr liavf■a ff\v in .lurk. \inl I rank I v. ni- ilun'l f\|ifi| |u liavr llifinaruimil Imi Imi".W liii li In in", n11 an inlfri'.|iii" paiailux almitl Ynlvn.. I linfii.luiiifr. likf lu lm\ llifin lifi aii.f ||h*\ la*l. \\f likf lu m-III In-in lifiaiiM' tin-\ ilun’l.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800rmnru a <nnnnnra yyyu a a ayya oba a o-omnnnnnnStudents & FacultyUse this od for10% DISCOUNTon all Dry CleaningatPUBUC 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.SANS 9 P.BJ RflffPfl SURMA Ntt.ff.B.flJUULP.g-QJLB 9 9AAAJThe Grey Cty Journal November 1, 1968 mnnnnr