THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 77, Number 24 Chicago, Illinois, Thursday, November 28, 1968 Fill Out Questionnaire on Page SevenApathy Sentences'69 LAC To Dieexpected more students would work on it,”he said. ‘‘I was really quite disappointedto find that so many students used thetime to leave campus and go skiing.”Last year’s LAC was largely planned byKarl Bemesderfer, former assistant deanof the college. Bemesderfer also felt thatstudent reaction to the conference was dis¬appointing. ‘‘We took out a full page adand two half page ads in the Maroon ask¬ing for student help,” Bemesderfer stated.‘‘We get around eight responses. Eventual¬ly, I found myself planning a campus-wideactivity with an ad hoc committee of aboutfour members who were never the same.That’s not student involvement. To methat’s a damning comment on student in¬terest.”Attendance at last year’s LAC was par¬ticularly low, never above 600 for anyevent. Many LAC events were cancelledlast year because of the assassination ofDr Martin Luther King. Both pointed out,however, that the conference’s value hadbeen in question prior to last year, andthat there had been trouble getting classessuspended for last year’s conference.Booth does not feel that the past confer¬ences have been a waste. “For the stu¬dents who did participate in them,” hesaid, “I think they were worthwhile.”Booth also feels that the idea behind theLAC is not dead. He pointed to the CollegeForum, a recently begun bi-weekly semi¬nar series, as a continuation of the conceptbehind the liberal arts conference.Booth attended the first College Forum,held last week, and thinks that eventuallyCollege Forum could carry on the LAC tra¬dition.The major expense of the LAC has beenone of time taken from regular classesrather than money. The past two liberalarts conferences have cost approximately$5000 each, although the first cost “consid¬erably more,” according to Bemesderfer.Ong To Teach Hum Senior SeminarThe humanities collegiate division hasannounced a new senior seminar to betaught this winter by Walter J Ong, S J.Father Ong, English professor at St LouisUniversity, will be the Willett visiting pro¬fessor for winter quarter.The seminar, “Literature and the Natureof the Word,” will be limited to 25 studentswith preference given to fourth year stu¬dents in the humanities division. Thecourse, which does not appear in thecourse descriptions of the humanities colle¬giate division, is Humanities 298 and willbe given Mondays and Tuesdays,2:30—4:30.The main text for the course will be Fa¬ther Ong’s “The Presence of the Word.” The course will deal with verbal commu¬nication-oral and written, in literatureand philosophy, transmitted electronicallyand traditionally. Some other authors re¬ferred to during the course are MarshallMcLuhan, Edward Sapir, and Plato.In addition to the course, Father Ongwill deliver four public lectures on “Wordand Reality.”The Willet chair was funded last year tobring eminent scholars to the Universityfor one quarter. The Willet professor forthis quarter has been James Hillman, di¬rector of studies at the C G Jung Institutein Zurich. Father Ong will be the first pro¬fessor to teach in the humanities divisionunder this program. ArsonPhoto by David TravisThis abandoned apartment building at 60th and Harper was destroyed by arsonSaturday night. The building was scheduled to be torn down soon for urban re¬newal in accordance with the University's south campus expansion plans. Aspokesman for the fire department stated that the blaze was started in four orfive places at once and attributed the work to vandals.Photo by David TravisLAST LAC: Dean of the College Wayne C. Booth addresses students at a liberalarts conference (LAC) seminar spring quarter. There will be no liberal arts conference(LAC) this year. Dean of the CollegeWayne C. Booth, who initiated the idea ofthe first LAC four years ago, decided dur¬ing the summer not to request support forthe conference this year.For the past three years LAC has been afive day period in the spring quarter de¬voted to the exploration of topics per¬taining to the University and the nature ofknowledge. Classes were suspended duringthis period, and lectures, panel discussions,special cultural events, seminars, and in¬formal student-faculty meetings took theirplace.Booth’s decision resulted from what hejudged to be insufficient student participa¬tion to warrant suspending classes. “I hadBy Wendy GlocknerThe (m)oral controversy of the Univer¬sity had its origins in the historical andculinary development of the “two majorJewish delicacies”, the latke and the ham-entash, agreed a panel of faculty membersTuesday night.At the 23rd annual Latke-HamentashSymposium, the panelists delved into theclimatological aspects of the latke andhamentash.The variety of conclusions whichemerged from the debate, which was mod¬erated by “symposiarch” Rabbi Max Tich-tin, included “go out and eat your ownthing”, “you are what you eat”, and “theoverall significance of the latke will de¬pend mainly on the weather.”Faculty participating in the symposiumincluded Norman Bradbum, director ofNational Opinion Research Center,(NORC), Bernard Cohn, professor in de¬partments of history and anthropology,George Glauberman, associate professor ofmathematics, Richard Lindzen, associateprofessor of geophysics, and Jonathan ZSmith, assistant professor in history andphilosophy of religion.Glauberman, delving first into the moralcontroversy of the University, and theninto its relationship to the latke and thehamentash, mathematically described thetwo sides of controversy. Citing the com¬munity (CM) as one side of the moralcrisis (MC), and education (E) as the op¬posite side, he concluded that “CM equalsMC and E equals MC too.” Glauberman described the history of edu¬cation and community relation at the Uni¬versity in terms of the latke and ham¬entash. He called the words of presidentBurton J Latke: “Rockefeller Chapelshould be made nonsectarian; even forpersons who don’t worship Rockefellers.”Glauberman created a picture of an en¬tire University having constantly devouredlatkes and hamentashen. “All was not bliss,however.,” he said. “There was heartburntoo.”However, he mourned the present de-em¬phasis of the latke-hamentash tradition:“We must act now and save the Universityfrom this madness. Let us all get togetherand form a committee.”Cohn, approaching the culinary deli¬cacies from historical aspect, describedthe hamentash as symbolic of Jewish assi¬milation in Europe, and the latke as sym¬bolic of “unassimilation”. Questioning theeternal problem of intermarriage betweenthe latke people and the hamentash people,he delved into the differences between theunderlying structures of both.“The latke Jewish mother is not all thatshe seems,” he asserted. “She kills notwith love, but with cholesterol.” Thus,while the latke mother symbolizes destruc¬tion, the hamentash mother representscreation. “You are what you eat”, he con¬cluded.Lindzen approached the “profound in¬fluence” of the latke from a geophysicalaspect. “Latkes are narcotic depressents,”he said, citing the work of the Chinese paleo-climatologist Ha Man Ta Shan. How¬ever, he emphasized the “fact” that theysap strength in tropical climates, whilethey stimulate in arctic regions.Smith explored the etymology of ham¬entash. Many falsely interpret hamentashas “Hamen’s heas,” he said, thus relatingit to “acid head” or “grass head.” How¬ever, he noted that “Tash” originates fromthe German word for pouch. Thus, in Eng¬lish, hamentash means Hamen’s bag. How¬ever, according to Smith, ancient Hebrewsspelled Hamen with no vowels. Thus, heconcluded that hamentash could reallymean “human bag.”Within the “human bag,” he said “is aconglomeration of poppy seeds to show usthe way out.” He advised students to usethem and “enjoy them and see if it doesn’twork.”Profs Debate Potato vs Poppy SeedSmith Resigns as San Francisco State PresidentRobert R Smith, president of San Fran¬cisco State College, resigned Tuesday after“inability to reconcile conflicts” on thetroubled campus.S L Hayakawa was unanimously ac¬cepted Tuesday by the state board oftrustees to succeed Smith. Hayakawa, anoted semanticist, is a professor at theschool.Meanwhile, classes have been called offat San Francisco State College for this en¬tire week following continued outbreaks ofviolence last Friday when city police cameon the campus. on campus in mid-afternoon after standingby since the reopening of the school onWednesday of last week by former presi¬dent Robert R Smith.The police were called on campus after ascuffle broke out between plainsclothes po¬licemen and a number of student activistswho were accused of disrupting classes.Two shots were fired into the air by theplainsclothesmen after the students hadoverpowered one of them. Leaders of the BSU and white activistsof the Third World Liberation Front calledon students to close the campus “by anymeans” at an outdoor rally later in theday.At the rally the student radicals decidedto keep the strike going and repeated theirdemands, including the establishment withsufficient staff and funds of a black stud¬ies department this spring, instead of nextfall as is now planned, amnesty for those who participate in the strike, work on acollege of ethnic studies, admittance ofmore minority group students, and reins¬tatement of George Murray, a Black Pan¬ther who was fired from his post as anEnglish instructor because of his militantpolitical statements.“The students on campus feel that someof the demands are legitimate, but theydisagree with the tactics,” said the Gatereditor.Janzen and Esposito Named Bio Assistant ProfessorsAn editor of the Daily Gater, San Fran¬cisco State’s newspaper, said, “The facultydecided to hold a convocation on Mondaythrough Thursday and a cooling off periodover the Thanksgiving vacation.”“All the departments in the school, eventhe physical education department which isthe most conservative on campus, supportthe idea of the convocation. All depart-men t s individually called off theirclasses,” he added.The violence Friday began when blackstudents walked out of a convocation calledto discuss the problems existing betweenstudents and administration. Approximate¬ly 50 policemen of the tactical squad came Daniel H Janzen and Michael Espositohave been appointed assistant professors inthe department of biology. The appoint¬ments were announced by Dr Leon 0 Ja¬cobson, dean of the biology division andthe Pritzker School of Medicine and theJoseph Regenstein Professor of medicaland biological sciences.Janzen’s appointment is effective imme¬diately. Esposito’s appointment is effectiveJanuary 1, 1969.Esposito’s research deals primarily withbiochemical and genetic regulation ofyeast. Janzen is primarily interested inecological research on the interrelationshipof plants and animals. Esposito earned his BS degree cumlaude from Brooklyn College in 1961 andhis PhD from the University of Washing¬ton, Seattle, in 1967. He has served as ateaching fellow in general biology, in¬tegrated science, and botany at BrooklynCollege and general genetics at the Univer¬sity of Washington. From 1962 to 1967 hewas a United States Public Health Servicegenetics trainee at the University of Wash¬ington. From 1967 to 1968 he was an NIHpostdoctoral fellow in the molecular biolo¬gy laboratory of the University of Wiscon¬sin.Janzen received his BS from the Univer¬sity of Minnesota in 1961 and his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley in1965.He has served as a course co-ordinatorfor the Organization for Tropical Studies inCosta Rica (February to August, 1965) andco-ordinator of the University of Kansas-Universidad de Oriente, Venezuela, Pro¬gram from September, 1965, to June, 1966Also from September, 1965, until coming tothe University of Chicago, he was an assis¬tant professor of entomology at the University of Kansas.Janzen was president of the Kansas En¬tomological Society in 1967-68 and hastaught tropical ecology courses periodically for the Organization for TropicalStudies.Cool it. Things could be worse. You couldbe out of ice-cold Coca-Cola. Coke hasthe refreshing taste you never gettired of. That's why things go better withCoke, after Coke, after Coke.voder th# authority of Th# Coca-Cola Company by:Coco-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago - Chicago, IllinoisAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’s.free technical adviceTape Recorders - Phonos - AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards Examinations for Teachers’ CertificatesCHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLSDate of Examination: THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1969Deadline for Filing: MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, I968,4:30 p.m.(Applications postmarked December 1, 1968 will be accepted.)Title of Examination:LANGUAGEHigh School GermanHigh School SpanishHigh School FrenchMUSICVocal Music-Grades 7-12SCIENCEHigh School BiologyHigh School General ScienceHigh School ChemistryHigh School Physics SOCIAL STUDIESHigh School GeographyVOCATIONAL AND PRACTICAL ARTSHigh School DraftingHigh School Machine ShopHigh School Wood ShopSPECIALChild StudyPublic School HealthSpeech CorrectionLibrary Science - Grades 7-12Physical TherapySPECIAL NOTICE:A candidate for a teaching certificate may make application forthe examination if he has courses in progress leading to a Bachelor’sDegree, and which will make him fully eligible by February 1, 1969;or if he has a degree from an accredited college or university andwill complete all requirements, including student teaching, to makehim fully eligible by February 1, 1969. Evidence of registration incourses designated above must be presented by the filing deadlinedate.Applications and required credentials (birth certificate and offi¬cial transcripts) MUST be in the hands of the Board of Examiners notlater than Monday, December 2, 1968, 4:30 p.m.CANDIDATES ARE REQUESTED TO FILE APPLICATIONS ASSOON AS POSSIBLE.Place of examination will be included in letter of admission toeligible candidates. The next examination for High School and TradeVocational areas will be offered about the end of February, 1969. Atpresent, we DO NOT anticipate offering an examination for HighSchool Certificates in April, 1969.Applications may be obtained by mail or in person from:Board of Examiners, Room 624CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601Please send me application for Examination forTeacher’s Certificate in:Subiect area:NameAddress _ Playtex invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent... it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45 % more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero!Try it fast.Why live in the past? playtextampons2 The Chicago Maroon<*>•>.% ,\v-.' >. ‘ V|1 November 28, 1968‘ ' 1, V, \ ^ i « - . * | «4O'Donnell Calls Hubert'Disillusioned'By Mitch BobkinKenneth P O’Donnell’s forecast for theNixon administration is succinct: “Thehoneymoon will last about one day.”Adressing an overflowing crowd in Kent103 last Friday, O’Donnell, a former ad¬viser to both John and Robert Kennedy,spoke on “The Election, Nixon, and theTwo Party System.” The lecture was spon¬sored by the Undergraduate Political Sci¬ence Association.O'Donnell, who was in Chicago to ad¬dress a dinner of the Catholic InterracialCouncil on the legacy of John F Kennedywas a leader of the minority peace plank at the Democratic National Convention andwas, as he put it, “with John Kennedymore often than anyone, except his wife”during his three years in the Presidency.After the assassination of John F Kenne¬dy, O’Donnell decided to leave Washingtonbut stayed through the ’64 election becausehe “thought that a Gold water electionwould have been a disaster.” After theelection, he left the new Johnson adminis¬tration “because of the escalation of theVietnam war.”In December 1967, O’Donell heard fromSenator Eugene McCarthy who told him“about his concern where the US was go¬ ing.” McCarthy invited O’Donnell to joinhis team, but he declined the invitationand decided to wait and see if Robert Ken¬nedy would run. Kennedy’s decision to runfor the Presidency was finalized, accordingto O’Donnell, in February, 1968 when GenWestmoreland returned from Vietnam andtold President Johnson that he needed 250,-000 more men if the war was to be won.The Kennedy team opposed this escalationbut thought it better not to run in the NewHampshire primary because “it would looklike a definite anti-Johnson move.”After Kennedy’s assassination, O’Donnellwent to work for the Humphrey organiza-FSACCSL Hears Housing ProposalJerry Lipsch, president of Student Gov¬ernment (SG), presented a proposal forstudent determination of University hous¬ing policies to the Faculty Student Com¬mittee on Campus Student Life (FSACCSL)Monday. Lipsch asked that the committeerecommend his plan to dean of studentsO'Connell.In the text of his proposal Lipsch stated,“1 urge the University to commit thepresent and future plans for student hous¬ing to a broad process of systematic con¬sultation through small group discussionamong students on the dorm-house andresidential-block level, to be conducted byStudent Government with the cooperationof the IHC (Inter-House Council), the IFC(Inter-Fraternity Council) and otner orga¬nizations. The University must beforehandannounce its serious interest in complyingas best it can with the results of thesecommunications.”Lipsch elaborated on the procedure forimplementing his plan. The entire studentbody would be divided into discussiongroups of approximately 20 participants.Each group would elect a representative toa student housing congress. The function ofthe congress would be to synthesize theviews taken by the student body into sev¬eral concrete proposals. These proposalswould then be voted upon by those studentswho have attended at least half of theirdiscussion sessions. According to the plan,the results of this referendum would thenPreminger To VisitFilm director Otto Preminger will visitthe University of Chicago campus Friday,December 6, at the invitation of the Docu¬mentary Film Group. Preminger, who willalso be in town for a pre-release screeningof his new film “Skidoo,” will hold a ques-tion-and-answer session after a Doc Filmsshowing of his 1957 film “Bonjour Tris-tesse.”The screening of “Bonjour Tristesse,”which is free and open to the public, willbegin at 7:15 pm in Cobb Hall’s QuantrellAuditorium. The discussion will be heldimmediately after the film, and the entireprogram will end around 10 pm. Pre¬minger’s appearance on campus is a pre¬liminary event in connection with a retro¬spective of his films which Doc Films will determine what form of student housingthe University will build.An agenda for proceeding with the planwas also submitted. The initial group dis¬cussions would commence around the thirdweek of the winter quarter. They would bepreceded by a panel discussion and infor¬mational meetings concerning the Univer-isty housing situation. This first series oftalks and discussions would center aboutthe social context of student housing. Dur¬ing the fifth or sixth week a referendumwould be held to set the political and socialgoals of the housing to be built. The archi¬tect would then formulate designs alongthese guidelines. About the seventh weekof the winter term, a second series of dis¬cussions would begin to determine if thesedesigns are acceptable or how they mightbe improved. Finally, the architect’s planwould be submitted to referendum con¬ ducted in a manner similar to the first.Lipsch estimated the process would befinished by the second week of the springterm. He asked for a subsidy from the of¬fice of dean of students of $3,500 to providefor secretarial, clerical and consultationexpenses. The money would also pay forchartering buses for student tours of de¬pressed neighborhoods.Several weak points in the plan were dis¬cussed at the committee meeting. The ar¬chitect could never design an entire stu¬dent housing project in the short time pro¬vided for in the agenda. The entire processwill be invalid if the predictable studentapathy precludes extensive participation.Furthermore, all the expense and effortthat has already been expended in creatingthe Student Village plan would be wasted.The FSACCSL will act on the proposal atits next meetings.Student Government Gets a Quorum,Passes Housing Proposal 25-0By Sue LothA quorum of Student Government (SG)representatives unanimously passed a pro¬posal for campus-wide student decision¬making on the student housing complex forthe north quadrangle at SG’s second meet¬ing of the academic year, held Tuesdaynight at the United Disciples of Christchurch.The proposal calls for student decision¬making “both as regards the concrete de¬sign of student housing and the politicaland social context in which that housingwould have to be built.” It would consist oftwo “separate but intimately related”series of discussions and referenda on thehousing’s social context and concrete im¬plementation, respectively.The proposal will next be formallypresented to the Faculty-Student Com-mittee on Campus Student Live(FSACCSL), advisory committee to deanof students Charles O’Connell. Informalconsensus at the meeting was that the pro¬posal was “not likely to be passed” by theFSACCSL.Tuesday’s meeting broke recent traditionas it was the second consecutive assemblymeeting of the academic year, to obtain aquorum. Last year only three SG meetingsachieved quorum. Read but not voted upon at the meetingwas Exec 22-7, “Proposal for a StudentGovernment Vice Squad.” The proposal,which representatives met with enthusias¬tic good humor, epxressed the shock ofmany students who learned at PresidentLevi’s inaugural dinner that “the facultyand administration are taking large over¬doses of dangerous drugs—alcohol.”Feeling that such acts are “not con¬sonant with the goals of the life of themind and the community of scholars,” theproposal called for a SG vice squad to sur¬vey and regulate faculty and adminis¬tration social behavior “to prevent (them>from becoming too involved in their unbe¬coming excesses.”“Everyone should understand,” the pro¬posal continued, “that it is not our in¬tention to punish the offender; rather wewish to work together with the offenders toshow his his problem and to make him seethe value of the life of the mind.“Since then, the vice squad’s effort is‘cooperative’ rather than punitive, we feelthere is no reason to specify any proce¬dures of due process. As the Student Dis¬ciplinary Committee has demonstrated, wein the University community are all peopleof good faith, and therefore need not bebothered with formal protections.” tion. “There was no one, except maybeSenator Mansfield, who was closer to JFKthan Humphrey,” he said. “No one wassadder or more disillusioned than HubertHe felt that he didn’t win a thing at theconvention,” O’Donnell added.Speaking on the Humphrey campaign,O’Donnell said, “The anti-administrationfeeling throughout the nation neveremerged in the polls because the questionswere never properly asked. This led toJohnson’s withdrawal and Humphrey’scandidacy. Humphrey was supported by allthe elements that LBJ could muster. Therest is history.“The campaign was devoted more to theissues of the 1930’s and the 1940’s than theissues of today. Social security and min¬imum wage became the issues instead ofVietnam and racial problems. I toldHumphrey to talk about the problems oftoday because this nation now understandsthat the President of the United Statesholds the fate of this world in his hands. InOctober Humphrey began talking aboutwho would be the man in the President’schair,” O’Donnell said.He further added that the bombing halthurt Humphrey more than it helped himbecause “most of the people I talked tothought that the bombing halt was a gim¬mick. Why was something done four daysbefore the election that couldn’t be done inAugust?”Facing the prospect of the Nixon admin¬istration, O’Donnell said, “I think thatStrom Thurmond will be the first one overthe side, without a ripple.” Coming downto the issues he added, “We are now facingthe problems of law and order and the dif-fernces between the races.” On the inter¬national scene, he said, “We have to reachan agreement with the Chinese, Russians,Japanese and all the people of the FarEast. In eastern Europe, it is obvious thatthe Russians aren’t going to stand for anyray of hope or freedom.”Speaking on the military picture for thenext four years, O’Donnell stated, “Nixonwill strive for military superiorly. This isridiculous.”When asked about Nixon’s apparent un¬popularity in the election, O’Donnell said,“He was aware of his own image.I am horrified that we never forced him in¬to a definite stand on Vietnam. Actually,Mr Humphrey was the candidate of changein this election. Mr Nixon is more of aon Vietnam than LBJ.”—Photo by David TravisKENNETH O'DONNELLNixon CriticThe Student Co-Op is °Pen 10 AM - 9 PM is in The Reynolds Club Basementto buy your books for cash offers to help you find a place to liveto buy your books on consignment to help you find a rideto sell you text books to help you find ridersto sell you general books to help yog sell your arnolt-bristolto loan you money or whateverNovember 28, 1968 The Chicago MaroonI 1i ir ft* . fThe Bntoersitg of Chicago juju:.§k ■ ■ST- .:£•£- ,, U3? *r ** 3ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELFIFTY-NINTH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUEMESSIAHby George Frederick HandelTWO PERFORMANCESSunday afternoon * December 8, 1968, at 3:30Tuesday evening • December IO, 1968, at 8:00RICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of Chapel MusicROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAL.AURY CHRISTIE, Sopano DONALD DOIG, TenorPHYLLIS'UNOSAWA, Contralto HENRI NOEL, BaritoneEDWARD MONDELLO, HarpsichordTickets: Reserved $4.50 General Admission $3.50Students $2.50 UC Faculty/Staff $3.00On Sale: Ticket Central at 212 North Michigan Avenueand all Montgomery Word StoresKendall College, 2408 Orrington, EvanstonUniversity of Chicago Bookstore, 5802 Ellis AvenueWoodworths Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetCooley’s Candles, 5211 Harper CourtMail Orders: Oratorio Festival, 5810 Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable to The University of Chicago and enclose stamped\ self-addressed envelope.The Chicago Maroon November 28, 1968Racism Charged in Biology ReadingBy Sylvia PiechockaSeveral discontented students in Biology105 are waging a controversy over an as¬signed reading which they feel has racistelements. George Simpson’s article,“Biology and the Public Good,” has beencalled everything from “bull shit propa¬ganda” and “petty burgeoise idealogy” toa “fine article which does not express rac¬ist views.”Janet Tinney, leader of the movementand organizer of the special panel dis-By Ken ShermanAbbie Hoffman is the prototype of a newkind of hero — the young idealist whoworks full time at magic, the magic of de¬stroying the Machine Society by creatingan alternative life-style alongside it. Theidea is that the evil greater system willcrumble when confronted by the virtuoussmaller one. This new virtue is an inherentpart of Abbie’s extremely effective publicimage, which almost shouts: “I’m one ofyou.” His long hair, hippie-style clothes,complements his informal public man¬ner-informal to the point that he absent-mindedly scratches his groin on stage.He is very much a leader, despite hisprotestations to the contrary. He has donevery hip things at exactly the right time.His part in the forming of a Yippie move¬ment was so appropriate that the Yippiesalmost immediately replaced the hippiesas being “where our young people are at,”as Time might phrase it.The selection of a pig as the Yippie pres¬idential candidate exemplifies Hoffman’sastute choice of appropriate symbols. Thereaction of the Chicago police was ex¬pected—they quickly arrested half a dozenYippies and the pig on trumped-upcharges. The pig is such a perfect embodi¬ment of American political life that theYippies will stage their own inaugurationin Washington. More important than theseput-ons, however, is Hoffman’s willingnessto get into the front-lines of the revolution..He has been arrested numerous times.Recently he was sentenced to 30 days injail or $100 fine under a new law prohibit¬ing “desecrating the flag of the UnitedStates.” Hoffman’s crime was 'to wear ashirt (purchased in a store) which had a cussion about Simpson on November 11,feels that the article is “not value free orscientifically based on opinion or fact.”According to George Rosenthal, chair¬man of Bio 105, the article was chosen be¬cause it presented “an overview of biolo¬gy.” Arnold Ravin, master of the biologycollegiate division, added that “it provideda fairly recent expression by an eminentbiologist of the distinction between biologyand the physical sciences, showed the sig¬nificance of considering biological knowl-ANALYSISpattern similar to the stars and stripes. Heis currently in Chicago to face Federalcharges stemming from his being found onAugust 28th with the word “fuck” writtenon his forehead. It is Hoffman’s defiance inthe face of police persecution that earnshim the respect of politically aware youth.It is his humor in the face of this per¬secution that earns him love.Even if, as Abbie says, he does not con¬sider himself a leader, the role is beingforced on him, willy-nilly by the press andthe police (as well as by his own actions).The kind of harrassment which results insuch absurd charges being laid is oniy suf¬fered by those whom the Fpl consider na¬tional figures. It won’t bej the last timeHoover’s hu morless boys in grey create anational menace.In Mandel Hall last Sunday about 300students showed how much they fearedthis menace by laughing with him, ap¬plauding him, and giving serious thoughtto his criticism of anyone who was inschool to get a degree and a job ticket.Obviously, most of the audience was infundamental agreement. They were thefaithful, listening to a prophet of the prom¬ised land. The film, Yippie-Mob ChicagoAction Film was received very well, aspropaganda was what we were immersedin that night. (“Propaganda” understoodnot as a derogatory term but as a descrip¬tion of ideas already believed by those edge to human problems, as well as thegeneral significance of biology in mattersof public policy—not because of Simpson’sviews on evolution in the ghetto.”The statement under controversy, how¬ever, does not deal with purely scientificquestions. It reads as follows: “We canmake some reasonable guesses about thesort of people who are likely to leave themost descendants under increasinglycrowded and extremely needs conditions oflife. It seems to me that most of thesehearing them.) Anyone not already con¬vinced of the rightness of the Yippie ver¬sion, or the student version, of what hap¬pened during the convention, would nothave his mind changed by anything seenor heard in Mandel. Truth is difficult toconvey—it must be experienced from with¬in, not absorbed from without.If the only people who see the movie arethose already convinced, what is the pointof showing it? Certainly not to get con¬verts. What is the point after all of anyYippie action: convention demonstrations,creating communes, etc.? If the goal is tosignificantly change society, then all suchactions are almost useless. The giant bu¬reaucracies of government, business andeducation are here to stay. What can beaccomplished is someting that should begood enough as an end in itself: to createwhat Paul Goodman calls man’s work, ac¬tivity that is valuable in the doing, regard¬less of external achievements (it is not ac¬cidental that this sounds like Zen: “youreveryday life”).As this activity (the Movement) grows,it may be necessary for it to go far under¬ground, which would change drasticallythe nature of the game to genuine revolu¬tion. Whether that will happen is unpredict¬able but what is sure is that Abbie Hoff¬man will do more inspiring things, more ofhis kind will appear, and more youth willbecome committed. This is all to the good.Success may be dreamed of but not ex¬pected. If the Movement succeeds, anarchywill be likely. I think that it would be bet¬ter than what we’ve got now.Ken Sherman is the Maroon assistant busi¬ness manager and a film reviewer for theGray City Journal. people are going to be lss intelligent, lessprovident and less cooperative than the av¬erage in the present population.”Tinney feels this statement is racist.“There is no word at the present time fordiscrimination against poor people. But, asis usually the case, most poor people arenon-white, therefore, even in the strictestsense, Simpson is racist.”She adds that her major objection is thatthis is “the one article relating biology tosociety.” Tinney agrees that a discussionof biology to society is important but not inan “offhand manner.”Both Ravin and Rosenthal agreed thatSimpson’s non-scientific judgments werenot scientifically valid. They did not findhim racist, however, only worried aboutconditions in the slums.Ravin feels that the only mistake thatthe faculty made was to present the articleso early in the course. “It was intended asan entre, meant to whet the appetite ofnon-science students by showing the sig¬nificance of studying biology.”“The idea ironically boomeranged be¬cause for the proper and adequate dis¬cussion of the questions that arose as aresult of this article, the paper should havebeen assigned during spring quarter whenthe topic will be genetics and evolution.”Ravin added that the current professors ofthe course are not equipped to handle thekind of discussion this kind of paper de¬mands and therefore did not do so inclass.”The fact that there were no class dis¬cussions was resented by many students,among them Janet Winikovv, 70, who feltthat the reason for doing so was becausethe “faculty did not have the grace to ad¬mit its mistake.” In addition she viewedSimpson’s article as being “clearly in poortaste.”“Simpson used a regrettable set of char¬acteristics,” said Carl Sunshine, 71, “inhis distinction between what was desirablefor preservation and what was not, butthey were not racist.”AddendumDavid Vigoda wrote the "GhettoSchools" article in the Gray CityJournal on Friday, November 15.Vigoda, a '68 University of Chicagograduate, is' a teacher in a ghettoschool/Abbie Hoffman Leads To AnarchyX es/y imports, 3nc.c , . 2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.Expert foreign Te, 326-2550car service.PizzaHY1-42S2Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry-OutsIgL^Hyda Park BlvdlThe Carpet BaraA division of Cortland CarpetWe have an enormous se¬lection of new and usedwall-to-wall carpetings,staircase runners, rem¬nants and rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine andAmerican orientals).We open our warehouse tothe public for retail saleson Saturdays ONLY from1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)243-2279 DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St,DO 3-7644DR. LONNYMYERSPresident of Illinois Committoo forthe Medical Control of AbortionDecember 2, MondaySwift CommonsflcOO P.M.EVERYBODY WELCOMESame Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeSCMM QiAMSCustom Quality Cleaning 10% Student Discount1362 E. 53rd 752-6933 NEW for RINGDESIGNS . LEADERSRings to put on!Huge and petite ringsto wear single or by the■ twos and threes. Exoticharem rings, princess rings,Taxco silver bands. Many excitingdesigns in abalone and preciousstones carefully handcrafted in gold and• sterling silver and imported for youfrom Africa. Asia and LatinAmerica. Many one of a kind.Come in today!Popular Prices from7.50 to 99.50tmcEs skitesA new international arts and crafts centerJEWELRY • HANDICRAFTS • SCULPTUREHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324*7600Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. dai ly; Noon to 5 p.m. SundayJESSELSON’SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdNovember 28, 1968J.'/J //. rcde.eaJfjfS The Chicago Maroont><*/'${?> 3 .fit' 5LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONOmbudsmanThe following statement was adopted,with no dissenting votes and one absten¬tion, by the Faculty-Student Advisory Com¬mittee on Campus Student Life at itsweekly meeting of November 11:• Due to several misconceptions in theUniversity community about the new of¬fice of ombudsman, the Faculty-StudentAdvisory Committee on Campus StudentLife (FSACCSL) feels that clarification isnecessary.• The office of ombudsman has beenestablished to deal primarily with griev¬ances of individual students. The ombuds¬man is not meant to be a substitute forany existing channel of communication.No student should feel that he can no long¬er see an administrator or faculty mem¬ber. Instead, the ombudsman is an addi¬tion to the present lines of communication.• The ombudsman is an independentagent with no representative ties to anyUniversity group; he is no one’s advocateand his other connections with the Univer¬sity are only incidental to his role as stu¬dent ombudsman. The title “student om¬budsman” is meant to underscore his roleas a channel for individual student griev¬ances. The ombudsman, however, does notnecessarily have to be a student.• The ombudsman deals with individualcases. If a case should arise that suggestsa need for actual policy or rule changes,it is the ombudsman’s job to channel thechange, with suggestions he might have,to the appropriate policy-making body. Al¬though he can make such a policy recom¬mendation, his main responsibility is todeal with just the individual case.• The FSACCSL would like to review theposition of ombudsman next Spring (1969).We shall use the ombudsman’s quarterlyreports, and if necessary, we shall talkwith the ombudsman himself.I hope that this statement of the om¬budsman’s role will prove helpful to stu¬dents and others who have expressed in¬terest. It was reached after discussion bymembers of FSACCSL with me, the of¬fice of the provost, and the ombudsmanhimself. The ombudsman has seen thestatement and described it as generallyconforming to his own concept of the om¬budsman’s job. He noted, however, thatindividuals other than students have cometo him with specific ' problems and thathe has and will continue to try to be ofassistance in such cases.Because it is in the very nature of theposition, of course, that the ombudsmanbe independent and, to a large degree, de¬THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RochtNews Editor: Barbara HuntPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board:Academics: Caoline HeckStudent Organizations: Wendy GlocknerThe Movement: Paula SzewczykCommunity: Bruce N-vtonSports: Mitch KahnSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaAssistant Editor: Howie SchamestContributing Editor: Johr. MoscowNews Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Marv Bittner, Deb-by Dobish, Chris Froula, Con Hitchcock,C. D. Jaco, Kristi Kuchler, Chris Lyon,Sylvia Piecbocka, David Steele, LeslieStrauss, Robert Swift, Leonard Zax.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,David Stoelo, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jean WtklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. fine his own role, “canned” definitions ofthe job are difficult. FSACCSL’s clarifi¬cation, however, may be of help.Charles D. O'ConnellDean of StudentsStudent VillageAt this time the Open Housing Coalitioncan neither endorse nor oppose the studentvillage of the Barnes plan.In itself, the Barnes plan is inadequateto deal with the housing crisis that hasbeen created by the expansion of the Uni¬versity and the resulting destruction ofhousing. We ask that the University stateofficially that the Barnes Village is onlypart of a much larger effort in the area ofstudent housing; an effort that will includeapartments elsewhere in Hyde Park andthe south campus for single undergraduateand graduate students. We ask that apart¬ments be at the plan development stagebefore final approval is given to the Barn¬es plan.It is unfortunate that the valuable infor¬mation of the questionnaire on the type ofhousing that students desire is not yetavailable for analysis. This is necessaryfor any rational approach to student hous¬ing. We ask that no decision be made onthe Barnes plan until the desires of thestudent of this University have been deter¬mined.We ask that the University guarantee therelocation within six blocks of campus ofthose who will be dislocated by the de¬struction of housing in the north quad-angle. We also ask that destruction ofthis housing be postponed as long as pos¬sible.Even though we cannot yet endorse oroppose the Barnes plan, we have studiedthe plan in detail and have a number ofrecomendations to make. On a basic lev¬el, we think that the Barnes plan tendstoward sterility and is not sufficiently ad¬venturous.There is no one type of University of Chi¬cago student; nor is there any one type ofhousing that will meet the needs of all stu¬dents at this university. The north quad¬rangle should contain a variety of housingtypes, as it does. We feel, however, thatthe ratio by which these types are com¬bined in the quadrangle should be read¬justed, first, because it is grossly out ofproportion with student preferences, andsecond because more equitable ratioswould improve the life of the Village itself.We recognize that the north quadranglewill not be the primary site for meetingstudent apartment needs. Nevertheless, thenumber of apartments in the Villageshould be increased.Specifically, the present apartment com¬plex in the quadrangle should be extendedalong 55th street to Ellis avenue, replacingthe wall which now closes off the court¬yard of the northwest quadrant from thestreet.A greater variety of apartments shouldbe available in the student village. Threeand four man apartments should be built,reducing the number of efficiency and twoman apartments. The north tower shouldbe changed into suites with kitchenettes.Furthermore, we ask that the universitycommit itself to open the apartments inthe Village to graduate and undergraduate,faculty and students, men and womenalike, chosen perhaps; on a lottery system.In that students want privacy, the suitesshould be designed in such a way that theyare separate from the rest of the floor sothat only the residents would have accessto their suites. The residents should beable to keep their own doors unlocked,while the door of the suite itself would belocked. To accomplish this, the gang bath¬rooms in the four central towers should bedivided to give each suite its own privatebathroom.The University should not discriminateaccording to sex. The Village should be co¬educational. Houses should have bothmens’ and womens’ floors. (Alternatelyperhaps.)Mandatory board contract is a violation of an individual student’s freedom to eatas and when he pleases; hence the necessi¬ty for mandatory board contract should notbe built into any additional Universityhousing plans. Kitchenettes — for snacksand light meals rather than for cooking ona regular basis — should be added to eachsuite.Since the abolition of a mandatory boardcontract and the planned cafe will reducethe demand for cafeteria services, wethink that a change should be made in theplans. A dining hall should be built tomake use of the Pierce kitchen (Whichwas built to accommodate two Pierce tow¬ers.) This will save the University a con¬siderable amount of money in unnecessarykitchen facilities. An expanded commonkitchen should be moved to a more centrallocation, perhaps in the basement. Morelockers should be made available. Thearea evacuated by the movement of thecafeteria should be used for a student cen¬ter, with TV lounges, a game room, andother recreational facilities, along with of¬fices for the Maroon, WHPK, SG, and otherstudent activities.The Open Housing Coalition is open tochange regarding these or other sugges¬tions and will be interested in taking intoaccount the views of any student or groupof students who wish to make their voicesheard. If you have any opinions, likes ordislikes and so on, about what we havesaid, or concerning University housing pol¬icy in general, please call Steve Weston, inWoodward Court.The Open Housing CoalitionThe Open Housing Coalition is a group ofa dozen students who formed an indepen¬dent housing group, which plans to in¬corporate a broad spectrum of politicalviews. Several students joined the groupbecause of their disillusionment with thetactics of the Students for a DemocraticSociety — Fair Housing Alliance.Academic FreedomMr Booth has somehow never beenable to understand, perhaps because of anundue emphasis on formalism, that thetransformation of protest into formalizedtalk is one of the most corrupting featuresof academic life. The president of YaleUniversity put it perfectly when he said inWashington a few weeks ago that the uni¬versity ought to be as diligent in per¬mitting talk as it would be in stamping outthe action which would follow inevitably ifthat talk had any meaning at all. The en¬tire intellectual life has become a pursuitof rhetoric. The emasculation of men ofintellect is not an academic freedom thatanyone ought to be grateful for.When Mr Flacks is congratulated for his“splendid needling” he is made out to be afool. He is a court jester, titillating on oc¬casion, but never to be taken entirely se¬riously. That that should be confused withacademic freedom is the most grotesquekind of travesty. If he takes that as an offerof freedom, he is free to drink himself todeath, put a pistol to his head, throw him¬self out the window. But isn’t that whatacademic freedom has been about? Menlocked up inside themselves and dis¬integrating minute by minute as humanbeings.The problem has reached such seriousproportions that a group of university pro¬fessors across the country has decided toissue a pamphlet which will be distributednationally. The controversy at Chicago,which mirrors what goes on elsewhere,will become a teaching case. It will all beperfectly fair and objective. The letter byMr Flacks will be printed in full. Followingit will be the texts, in full, of Mr Booth’sreply and Mr C Arnold Anderson’s reply,which wonderfully illustrates the feats ofintellection that we can expect from anacademically “free” man. Let the fictionof rhetoric speak for itself. Ours to redeemor make an end.Eugene WildmanInstructor, University of IllinoisDepartment of English Inevitable ProtestMy letter of November 15, indicating theparticipation of University of Chicago fac¬ulty in Citizens for a Free Chicago, and theSeptember 28 protest march and rallymight be misinterpreted as defending ourfaculty against Mr Lewontin’s charge thatthey were apathetic in the face of Daley’s“monstrous behavior.” My intent was rath¬er to imply that if Lewontin is such anexception to the general apathy, how is ithe wasn’t aware of the mass protest dem¬onstration that was organized from thiscampus and received wide publicity?I believe that many more faculty wouldhave participated if it had not been vaca¬tion time and I had tried harder to enlistthem, but I have noticed that few seem tobe interested in taking action in Chi¬cago-even though it has become obviousthat our city’s regime is a central bastionof reactionary power in American politics.It is not merely apathy that afflicts ourfaculty. Professor Richard Wade, for example, could not be called politically apa¬thetic. In September, when I read in Vir¬ginia Kay’s Daily News gossip column thatWade was furious about the filmed inter¬view of him being used in Daley’s officialTV film on the convention disorders, I immediately sent him a Citizens for a FreeChicago statement—thinking he would wel¬come the opportunity to sponsor the pro¬test along with Professors Hans Mor-genthau, Robert Havighurst, Robert Farwell, Gerhard Kasper, Wayne Booth andothers. He did not reply. (Even Abner Mik-va, who owes more to Daley, managed towrite a letter refusing to sponsor the pro¬test.) Perhaps Professor Wade has his ownmore discreet ways of settling scores withMayor Daley—or maybe he does not thinkthere is any score to be settled.As we move toward a military-policestate supported by racist public opinion, itis going to be more important than everthat left-of-center faculty members involvethemselves in political activity, of whichprotest will inevitably be a major part Idisagree with Dick Flacks and others whobelieve that the University itself is a sig¬nificant area for such protest or the University administration a relevant target.Private universities, like private art mu¬seums, have always been a cultural off¬shoot of the business establishment, andthere is no secret about it: every Univer¬sity of Chicago catalogue says, “Foundedby John D Rockefeller.” It is ridiculous tocriticize the University president for hobnobbing with anyone who has money thatmight be given, when that is his job; heshould be criticized if he allows the donorto dictate unacceptable terms for spendingthe money. But the University’s internal af¬fairs seem to me so inconsequential com¬pared with the political-radical crisis ofour city and nation. I sometimes have thevision of militants winning the fight forstudent power at the University of Chicago(big decisions about dormitory space andthe bookstore) as the blacks and dissidentsare hauled away to concentration campsby the Daleys and Nixons. This is radi¬calism?The most significant arenas for resistance and other forms of political activityfor faculty members seem to me to be inthe city of Chicago, where injustice flou¬rishes openly everywhere from the slumsto the City Council, and the nation-widescientific community, which still supportsthe military with vital knowledge and skillOn the latter point, the time has come forthe scientific community at large to emulate Kistiakowsky’s example when he resigned (very late) as the Defense Depart¬ment’s top science adviser. Academic sci¬entists should take the lead in severing tieswith the Defense Department, beginningwith resigning from consultant positionsand membership in advisory boards, thenrefusing to participate in research con¬tracts. This is already urgent because theContinued on Page Seven6 The Chicago Maroon November 28, 1968Ties:By John MoscowA university is supposed to be an educa¬tional institution, dedicated to the increaseand transmission of human knowledge. Itis supposed to be a place where scholarscongregate around a library, and wherestudents come to learn from the older,more knowledgeable men. Traditionallyuniversities have been places where the freest, most “frivolous” inquiry cantake—inquiry designed to do nothing morethan increase the store of knowledge.Under such a definition it makes a cer¬tain amount of sense for the older, moreestablished scholars—those we call profes¬sors—to have the dominant say in what theuniversity does. Of course it should do verylittle if anything as a collective entity, forLETTERS TO THE EDITORSContinued from Page Six.current budget slashes the National Sci¬ence Foundation and other civilian scien¬tific agencies, while the Defense budgetcontinues to expand. The danger is that theDefense Department will, as McNamaraand Clifford have proposed, take on a vari¬ety of new functions in the internal affairsof this nation just as it has taken overforeign policy from the State Department.Scientists are in a privileged position notonly to prevent the Defense Departmentrule of this country in the future, but evento weaken the present war effort as well,by depriving DOD of their knowledge andskills. If a mass-resignation campaign didnot receive enough support from academicscientists, the next step would be publicexposure of the collaborating professorsand a campaign of pressure from their col¬leagues and students alike to get them tosever all ties with DOD.1 would like to emphasize to studentswhat this last point indicates, viz, that it isthe professors and not the university ad¬ministration who are responsible for com¬plicity with the war effort. Why wasteenergy harrying the clerks and adminis¬trators who do minor things like letting theDow Chemical Company onto the campus when some of the professors are provid¬ing the intellectual basis for the garrisonstate?Robert A. LeVineStudents and WorkersA lot of us janitors at the University ofChicago don’t have respect for some stu¬dent groups. We don’t like SDS becausethey put up their stickers (like for the elec¬tion strike) on walls and bathroom fix¬tures. Maybe these student groups don’tknow how much the Buildings and Groundsmen do for the University? Otherwise tneywouldn’t make extra work for us cleaningoff stickers and writing. Some studentswrite in chalk on our beautiful buildings,and it won’t come off easy.Your support when we thought we wouldstrike was good. But making work for usdoesn’t help us. Students and workers can’tbe together until they respect Buildingsand Grounds.Names withheld by requestSorkin-HiltonI loved staying at the Sorkin-Hilton. Adelight.Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr.Professor of Law that would tend to infringe upon the per¬sonal liberty of any student or professorwho wanted to question why and with whatrationale a certain action was taken.It makes sense because education is apatently undemocratic practice, where themore knowledgeable and more brilliantrank higher than those not as wellequipped. Since education is hierarchicalin principle, it makes sense for educationaldecisions to be made by those who are os¬tensibly best prepared to make them. Thisapplies to universities as well as to highschools.It applies to universities only as educa¬tional institutions, however. In that univer¬sities today have assumed many non-edu-cational characteristics, students have anequal right with everyone else to help de¬termine the shape of the university’s fu¬ture. This is true to a limited extent inregard to university investments andwhere the university deposits its funds. Itis true to a far greater extent in the totallynon-educational endeavors that the univer¬sity participates in—helping Woodlawnplan a model cities project, aiding with theexperimental school district there, main¬taining membership in the Institute for De¬fense Analyses, (IDA) or helping subsidizethe Bandersnatch and other student coffee-shops. All of these raise claims on Univer¬sity personnel and funds, and none aredirectly related to educational activities.There can be no real claim that the ad¬ministration or the faculty—en masse—have any more right to deal with educa¬tional matters than do students. A casecould even be made that students, being assmart as the administrators but not as tied to professional solutions, could sometimesarrive at better answers to non-educationalproblems than could the professionaleducators and professors. A very strongcase indeed could be made against univer¬sity participation in any such cases, sinceso many of them involve serious threats tothe academic freedom of the students andprofessors of the university.The Chicago administration argues thatthe University does not act as a unit—butthey are wrong. The University is a mem¬ber of the experimental school district, andthe seven representatives of the Universitycast but one vote—in the name of the Uni¬versity. Yet the seven representatives ofthe University represent neither the facul¬ty nor the students here, and are respon¬sible to no one. What more right do theyhave to speak for the University than anyother group of seven faculty or students?By all definitions they are not entitled tospeak for the University of Chicago—butthey do.Similarly the University is engaged inother projects, such as the child care cen¬ter in WcixUawn, which should not be partof any university’s function. What happenswhen a faculty member or student attacksthe policy of such a university sponsoredproject? Do his colleagues attempt to si¬lence him, so that there won’t be a conflictabout how the university ought to proceed?That is a kind of repression that is mostnatural and most dangerous, because it isso insidious. The easiest way to avoid it,and to avoid the threat it represents toacademic freedom, is to avoid univer¬sity commitments. As a general rule uni¬versities ought not to get involved in a cor¬porate sense. Specifically the Universityof Chicago ought to end its corporatemembership in all groups, not merely themost obviously odious, such as the IDA.(Moscow is student ombudsman, as well asa contributing editor of the Maroon.)On Friday, December 6, the Maroon will be completely given over to a special report on 'The Crime in Our Streets . The quote unquote security problem is onethat has driven away some faculty and alarmed most students; without a doubt it is a problem that very seriously affects the quality of life in Hyde Park.The report will deal with the nature of crime in our community, the city and campus police forces and their relation to each other and to students, and withthe ways the community can work to solve the problem. We need student and public opinion and would appreciate if you would answer some questionsand send your answers to las by faculty exchange.1. Do you feel safe in Hyde Park?2. Does crime in Hyde Park influence your activities at all? If so, how?3. What is your attitude toward the police? What do you feel is police attitude toward youand toward students in general?4. Do you see any difference in attitude or behavior between the city police and the campuspolice? Is the shoulder patch sufficient identification?5. Do you think that there is enough police protection in Hyde Park? Or do you feel oppres¬sed by the presence of the police here?The Crime in Our Streets Fold into eighths and drop into Fac. Ex. BoxThe MaroonIda Noyes HallFaculty ExchangeNovember 28, 1968 The Chicago Maroon• t *» m * * • » ' » "» • 4 t 7V4 V4SOCIAL • WoS??eSheaffer’s big deal gets you through29 term papers, 3 book reports, 17 exams,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-writing49C refill free. All for just a dollar.How much do you think you canwrite?The world’s longest writing dollar ballpoint pen. 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It’s a specialfemale weight gain...caused by temporarywater-weight build-up.Oh, you know... thatuncomfortable fullfeeling that sneaks upon you the week beforeyour menstrual period.This fluid retention notonly plays havoc withyour looks but howyou feel as well. |jj(It puts pressure on Idelicate nerves andtissues, which can leadto pre-menstrualcramps and headaches,leaves emotions on edge.)That’s why somany women take PAMPRIN".It gently relieves water-weight gainto help prevent pre-menstrual puffiness,tension, and pressure-caused cramps.PAMPRIN makes sure a perfectsize 7 never looks less than perfect.Nor feels less than perfect, either.HOBBY CENTERIfrrtrth-wp“H O” “N” TRAINROCKETS &ROCKET SUPPLIESINTERNATIONAL HOUSEGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDT obacc o s-C andie s-StationeryNewspapers-MagazinesC osmetic sOpen M F Noon - 6:45 KEEP INFORMEDRead the ISRAEL and<MIDDLE EAST NEWS'.LETTER. For info andsample copy send $l toP.O. Box 233 I , Sunnyvale,Calif. 94087 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856iCARPET CITY I6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998H s what you need from a $10 kused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom tcarpet. , Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at a1fraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discount iwith this Ad. * ,FREE DELIVERYSLOT RACING HDQ.CHEMICAL APPARATUSARTS & CRAFTSTOYS, MODELS,GAMES, ETC.2116 E. 71st OPEN SUNDAYS493*6633 wherethe U ofCprefersto eat v **x*•* v*\*\ VOvxr: vtt'Alp °*rHYDEAT-••■•Mi*.HY3-1933Make your reservations now%for Christmas Parties.We can accomodate you andfrom 10 to 60 of your guestsTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933Maroons Strengthen Lead in Chess LeagueBy Mitch KahnHis neck muscles bunching tightly intocords, his forehead glistening with sweat,Dave Sillars searched peircingly into theeyes of his opponent. The decision made,his hand reached out. “Checkmate!”The University varsity chess team, fol¬lowing Sillars* opening victory, went on toout-maneuver Wilson City College,last weekend. This victory strengthenstheir hold on first place in the Chicago In¬tercollegiate League.The “B” team rooked IIT, shutting themout 5-0. They are now tied with Circlecampus for fourth.The Maroon knights take to their boardsagain Dec 26, for the US IntercollegiateChampionship. Chicago is one of the onlythree colleges that have ever won thistournament more than once, in *56 and *58. IntramuralsAs the fall season comes to a close, TuftsNorth has an overwhelming lead in the in¬tramural standings, leading second placeFlint I by 36 points, not including the ten¬nis competition.The tennis semi-finals will be played thisweek, pitting top seeded Kovacs of TuftsNorth against Beckman of Hitchcock West,and Paley of Hitchcock East vs Grimm ofVincent.As the pre-Christmas basketball tourna¬ment semi-final round is getting underway, Maroon analysts are picking THEover Linn, Tufts South over Chamberlin,Phi Gam over Psi U, and Human Devel¬opment over Rapping Brown. The PhiGam-Psi U game should be close and theHuman Development-Rapping Brown gameis a virtual tossup.Thursday, November 28CROSS COUNTRY: Central AAU 5,000 Meter Ron.Rlis Park, 6100 W. Fullerton, 10 am.COMMUNITY THANKSGIVING SERVICE: ReverendEdgar H. S. Chandler, Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 11 am.Friday, November 29INFORMAL ONEG SHABBAT: Hlllel Foundation, 5715Woodlawn, 1:30 pm.FOLK DANCE PARTY: Ida Noyes Theater, 7:30 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Solo Ensemble, Howard M.Brown Director, Bond Chapel, 1:30 pm.Saturday, November 30DANCE: Pan American Board of Education, Interna¬tional House, 7:30 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Solo Ensemble, Toward M.Brown, Director, Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm. RECRUITING VISIT: United States Army. Team willdiscuss opportunities with men and women studentsdesiring information about Army programs. Callextension 3284 for appointments.RECRUITING VISIT: Mr. Arthur Lewis, MinorityRecruitment Officer, Office of Personnel and Train¬ing, United States Information Agency, Washing¬ton, DC will talk with candidates for the ForeignAffairs Intern Program. Call extension 3282 orcome to Room 202, Reynolds Club for appointments.Tuesday, December 3Sunday, December 1CAFE MA PITOM: Israeli food and entertainment.Ida Noyes Hall, third floor. 8-12 pm.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Professor Lang-don B. Gilkey, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11am.FOLK DANCING: International Dancing, Ida NoyesCloister Club, 7:30 pm.Monday, December 2RECRUITING VISIT: Ohio State University Collegeof Commerce and Administration. Call extension3282 for appointments.RECRUITING VISIT: United States Information Agen¬cy, Washington, D.C. Representative will Interviewcandidates interested in the Foreign Affairs In¬tern Program and other programs. Call extension3282 for appointments.RECRUITING VISIT: Treasury Department, Office ofInternational Affairs, Washington, DC. Economistsat the MA and PhD levels with training in Inter¬national economics, financial e»K* monetary fields.Exceptional BA candidates in Economics will alsobe considered. Call extension 3284 for appointment!. RECITAL: Judith Nelson, soprano, assisted by GeraldRizzer, piano. Lutheran School of Theology Audi¬torium, 1100 East 55th Street, 8:30 pm. Donationswill be accepted at the door.FILM: "The Gospel According to St. Matthew," Man-del Hall, 8:15 p.m. Tickets can be picked up atReynolds Club desk after November 29. No chargeto students.FOLK DANCING: International folk dancing, Interna¬tional House, 8-10:30 pm.RECRUITING VISIT: Radio Corporation of America,David Sarnoff, Research Center, Princeton, NJ.PhD candidates in Inorganic and Physical Chem¬istry (if interested in solid state work), and PhDsolid state physicists. Call extension 3284 for ap¬pointments.Wednesday, December 4RECRUITING VISIT: Teaching positions at WisconsinState University at Oshkosh. Interested In PhD'sand PhD candidates in many areas. Call extension3282 for appointments.RECRUITING VISIT: Rand Corporation, Santa Monica,California. Advanced degree candidates in Law,Information Sciences, Urban Studies, Statistics,Math (PhD), Economics (PhD), and PoliticalScience (PhD). Will interview students who willhave completed at least one year of graduatework by June, 1969 for summer employment. Callextension 3284 for appointments.RECRUITING VISIT: Research Analysis Corporation,McLean, Virginia. PhD candidates in Economics,Information Sciences, Mathematics, Physics, andStatistics.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 DAILYAPPLY NOW FOR WORKDURING CHRISTMAS VACATIONShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.authorized BMC sales & servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615^foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpbn to Midnight Seven Days 9 Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST. Entries for the regular basketball seasonare due Dec 5.BasketballThe Maroon cagers swish into actionhere next Tuesday against Roosevelt. Com¬ing off the bench to defend their winning14-5 season, the varsity dribblers will haveto do without the services of Marty Cam¬bell, their top scorer, Wink Pearson, lastyear’s captain and floor leader, and GaryDay, defensive ace. All three were lostthru graduation.Coach Joe Stampf, in his twelfth seasonas Maroon mentor, is undaunted by thetough schedule. He feels that returning let- termen Fred Dietz, Randy Talan, and Den¬nis Walden will be able to shoulder theburden.WrestlingThe Maroon grapplers open their seasonafter the quarter break with a quadrangu¬lar meet against Georgia Tech, Hofstra,and North Carolina. Coach John Schael, inhis premier season, is hoping to improveon last year’s 4-6 record.Cross CountryThe University varsity long distance run¬ners placed seventh in the AAU NationalJunior Cross Country Championships. HieUniversity Track Club finished third.Living Theater To Perform at UCLiving Theater, the original Avant-Gardegroup, will perform at Mandel Hall fromJanuary 7 to 12. The Theater, sponsored byRevitalization and University Theater, willperform all four of its plays in a series ofeight performances.Living Theater has been called the mostadventurous and daring radical ensemblein the United States and Europe, since itsformation in 1948. For the past four years,the 34-member troupe has been in Europe,resulting largely from the seizure of theLiving Theater’s last home in New Yorkby the Internal Revenue Service.The company is currently on a tour ofHypnosis Danger CitedThe danger of stage hypnosis was thesubject of a radio tape prepared for use inconjunction with the 20th Annual ScientificMeeting of the Society for Clinical and Ex¬perimental Hypnosis held at the Universityon November 2(1-24.The tape was made by Dr Fredrick PZuspan, chairman of the department of ob¬stetrics and gynecology of the PritzkerSchool of Medicine and Dr Erika Fromm,professional lecturer in psychology.The tape dealt with the problems ofstage hypnotists, who will hypnotize sub¬jects who are psychotic or pre-psychoticand the danger this could cause thesepeople. " colleges and theaters in the United Statesarranged and sponsored by the RadicalTheatre Repertory, performing its fourplays, “Frankenstein”, “Antigone”, “Mys¬teries and Small Pieces”, and “ParadiseNow”.Ticket sales to University of Chicago stu¬dents only will begin next week to givestudents a chance to buy tickets beforeperformances start, on the second day ofwinter quarter. Ticket prices are $5.50, $4,and $3, with a 50 cent discount for Univer¬sity students only. All seats are reserved.After the first week, block orders will beavailable for other groups or schools, andindividuals will be able to buy tickets.Members of the cast have expressed aninterest in staying in homes in the HydePark area, rather than in hotels while theyare here. People interested in providinghousing for any of the members shouldcontact Jim O’Reilly.'Mft-OfiOO, ext 3581.SecurityThere wili be only one Maroonnext week, a special issue on se¬curity, on Friday. The classifiedad deadline is Tuesday at 4 pm;the display ad deadline is Wed¬nesday at 4 pm.e ute/ccme dwpf.... moneySAVE STEPSJH,L TIMECarry Out & Delivery! 2 CHICKEN Dinner M.25I RIB TIP Dinners S1.55RIBSN1BIBS5300 DORCHESTER•BUCKETS OF CHICKEN8 PC 2.2S 16 PC 3.8524 PC 4 95 with FriesRib pinners - Slab 3.40Small Encf2. 10 - LargeEnd I 75Sandwiches from 55CRIBSN'BIBSDel iveries Start 4 p.m.Sat. & Sun. 3 pun.•OPEN 7 DAYSHY3-0400 u, Aaer coffina ant/i 1552 €. 3iftrDliird pj! 2-9255^ appointmentsSI.50 plus this couponkgets you I Jockey BrandfjTurtleneck$15.00 plus this coupon!gets you a pair of fleece-lined WellingtonsGood until Dec. 5JOHN’SMENS WEAR1459 E. 53 rd.COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago ,7100 So. Yates 363-9842Animal never apologizes.Sun. night was like Dadariots in Paris. Pissed?Eat turnips.P.S. The punk was not aplant. A vegetable yes. Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8^ i*f*r I’frr bft ^r i*f it’s a LOOK BOOK ^“the damnedest prayerbookyou ever saw."—Ed Fischer• Domestic and ForeignAir Reservations• Half-fare Youth Cardse Flight InformationPhilip K. GornyTWARepresentativeCall MI 3-9100 Eve¬ningsGoing Some¬where ? 1,029 PrivatePrayersfor WorldlyChristiansGerard A. Pottebaumand Joyce WinkelThis unique book pre¬sents snatches of biblicalprayer, striking photo¬graphs and advertisingslogans on pages splitthree ways. You chooseyour own from 1,029combinations — each adramatic visual experi¬ence and meditationstarter. An outstandinggift book, too. Slipcasedand spiralbound, $5.95AT YOUR BOOKSTOREQ a.Tszss-rssNovember 28, 1968 The Chicago Maroon** MUSICRAFT SPECIALml\v** EMPIRE CARTRIDGE& NEEDLE CLINIC mwFri. Nov. 29, 1968Sat. Nov. 30, 1968 10 to 9 P.M.10 to 6 P.M. *«**At Oak Street Store OnlyMUSICRAFT in cooperation with Empire Scientific Corp. will conduct a FREEcartridge and needle clinic. Bring in any make or model MAGNETIC phonocartridge and have it tested FREE on the most modern factory test equipment byEmpire field engineer, Mr. Ben Van de Kreke.You will receive plotted graph of:o Frequency Responseo Stereo Separation o Intermodulation Distortiono Stylus ConditionSPECIAL SAVINGS ON CARTRIDGES DURING CLINIC ONLYON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.-DE 7-4150 Mu&iOiaft 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500 TAhSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outCAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREET PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800WE DELIVER. . . Lorsqu’un nouveau membre vient's’ajouter h la famille, il est grand temps!de penser d augmenter votre portefeuille d'assurance Sun Life.En tant que repr6sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment dejvotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLV798-0470 FR 2-2390One North La Salle St.Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADAHOW MUCH YOU MAYSAVE ON YOUR CARINSURANCE WITHSTATE FARMFrank Spinelli1369 E. 53rd. ST.955-3133A STATE FARMMutual Automobile I nsurance CompanyHome 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. (volvo)Volvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.I lif lic-l if.i-mi Im Inn in." .i \i♦ I\*i i- luv.iu-f il l.t-l- -ii Imiu.Kvirtk lnm Imi" ilmi’l uii.ii.inlff. I tut we ilu know tli.il met'I.Y ■ nf .ill tin- \nl\ii- ri ui-li'ifil in llif I iiilf'l N.ilf- in tin- l.i-lI I \ .•ill'.it IV -till.HI III.- I n.III.Till' Im'-I I •-.■ -I »• till Inn III” .1 \lll\ll l|ii«. i- I if I .III -f Ilf ll.Hf,i If-« iii -tm k. \ml li.inkU. wf ili.n'i f\|iffi i" luxe ilifiii.llllllllil lull lltll".\\ Ii If Ii III III”- 111 • .III Iiilf i f-t ill” |I.II.I|||1\ .ilimil \iiI\ii-. 1 fit If ll-ll lllll'l - llkf III I III \ lllftll I M'l'.l II—I* tlll'X l.i-l. Wf likf III -fllllifin Ii.'i .iii-i llnx ilmiT.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts,11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 REYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOP5706South University AveOnly shop on campus6 BarbersHours 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.Appts. if desiredExt.3573STUDENTS ❖FACULTYSTAFFHELP KEEP OURSTREETS BEAUTIFULYou won’t have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12455 S. Doty Ave.541-4411 MAKE YOURimports, inc. NEXT CAR2235 S. MICHIGAN326-2550 mmopWitzie’i Jlower Sfi"FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS1308 EAST 53rd STREET YOI ARK l\\ ITEI) TO OPKN ACHARGE ACCOUNTat theUNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREThere are never any service charges"Students under 21 need parent s approvalOpen a charge account now, buy your Winter Quarter Text¬books in December, and pay for them in January.Our book, gift, supplies, typewriter, and photography departmentsoffer a large selection of gifts for Christmas. And,' it is alwaysconvenient lo have a charge account at the U. C. Bookstore.The Chicago Maroon November 28, 1968THE NATIONALLY FAMOUS MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: For University students, Ifaculty, and staff: 50 cents per iline, 40 cents per repeat line, jFor non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28 characters |and spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with or jmail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room334 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. I59th 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 DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266DEADLINESDisplay advertising deadline willbe as usual on Wednesday at 5P.M.RIDES AND RIDERSBUSSES to NY and Philadelphia.Thurs. evening, 11/12 and Fri. eve¬ning 11/13 Return Sat., 1/4. $35.Call or visit SGCF office, rm. 306!da Noyes Hall 1-5 weekdays, Ext.3558.Riders wanted to Toronto or enroute. Leaving around Dec. 13, re¬turning before Jan. 1. Call Ext.3266.Drive my VW to L.A. Dec. 22-Jan.j 643-4770 after 9 P.MI need a ride to Seattle or there¬abouts. After exams. Will shareexp dr. Bob, 643-9514.MEXICO over Xmas? Grad stuseeks others to travel with. Bar¬bara 363-5267.Need ride ,'o Mexico or Texas fora tew people. Christmas. Call Joe,324-1426Grad couple, over 25, good drivers,ooking tor car to drive to N.Y.C.or point between Syracuse 8. N.Y.C.any time before Xmas Call 643-4413Ride wanted to Cleveland Dec. 23or 24. 752-4733.Driver w. car needed to take smtrailer and me to N.Y.C. Urgent.Will pay! Drive-away OK. Call Ron221-7104.Ride wanted from N.Y.C. area toChicago between Dec. 30 and Jan3. Call Ext. 3266FOR SALETV for sale. $25 . 643-3403.Good used TVs, reconditioned. $24.95and up. American Radio, 1300 E.53rd. 53 Kimbark Plaza.Exakta 500, 50mm F/2, 145mm F/2.5, Vivitar Meter $90. Call 684-4882 or x6441 days.STEREO CARTRIDGES On specialFri. & Sat. only. FREE TESTS onall cartridges. MUSICRAFT cam¬pus rep. Bob Tabor 324-3005.Col. Masterwork tape-recorder.Orig. $75. Now $35 or offer. 684-7927.Super-Takumar 200/f 4 auto lensbrand new cond. $130 FIRM. 684-1394 eves.Olympia typewriter, 12 bar auto¬harp, GE light meter, old Leica,Schick shave, electric clock, tran¬sistor radio, 13', 14", 18 cymbals,hi-hat stand. Cheep. Call Sandy 375-6731.Portable Typewriter, Smith Corona.12" carriage pica type like nu. Cast$125.00 bargain $65.00. 528-7388.SCM 120 portable electric typewriter$120, Sony port, tape recorder $30,also furniture. Call 643-4082, eve.1964 VW 1300, 28,300 miles, exc.cond. 643-4082 eve.'63 Chev. 4 dr. hdtp. fair cond. butruns well: $300 or best offer. Call3A 1-1068 after 4.Brand new recently issued JAZZLP's for $2.85. Cop at the StudentCo-op.Buy my drums—LUDWIG, 4 pieces,cases, extras, ex. cond. $400 oroffer. Call Rick, BU 8-6610, 3214xFlint.SITAR best quality. $300. Phone922-5978 before 8:30 or after 6:30.Modern furniture, cheap. x6441.The rew BEATLES ALBUM or anyother record at Hyde Park's lowestprices. Sanford Rockowitz 288-4204.Batik banners, wall hangings, $2-15.5340 Woodlawn, 493-0856.Bring an LP to friends or relativesover Thanksgiving. New Jazz LP'snow at Student Co-op for $2.85. Typewriter, IBM Elec. Perfect. BestOffer. 363-0447. (PM)WANTED TO BUYDress form adjustable or size 10.Call Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3266.METAL MOUTHPIECE for sopranosax. 238-5630.FOR RENTRmmate drfted wntd another rm-mate. Own huge rm. in Hyde Pk.955-1242.DEADLINES FOR CLASSIFIEDADS FOR THE LAST PAPER OFTHE QUARTER, DEC. 6: 10 A.M.Wednesday, Dec. 4. Send a lascivi¬ous message to your sister. 1 or 2 males to share Ig. 5 rm.apt. at 69 and So. Sh. during win.qfr. 363-6221.Rec. by L. Handelman, Stu. Govt.Short-term lease, 2 weeks free,near-by, economical, newly dec.unfurn. apts. 2 8. 3’/j rms. $75,$89.50. Free gas, elec. Clean, Quiet,Williams, 6043 Woodlawn.SUBLET one man apt. 2612 E. 75;Vj block from I.C., 1 block fromU.C. bus; $68. 288-6222.One male grad student to sharew/3 otlers 8 rm. house. Own room$50/mo. Nr. Univer. 955-7436.2 male grads need 3rd, own bed¬room, 2 baths, 53 8, Woodlawn,$45. 752-4733, immediate.Blackstone Hall apt. 2 undgrad girlssingle bdrms. 667-0947.2 fern. stud, want 3rd. Own room.$52/mo. 285-3272Large furnished HOUSE, very closeto campus, winter, spring quarters.Piano, etc. Call 667-2063.HOUSE, 5 rms plus basement andgarage, for the winter quarter forfamily. Excellent location: 57 andMaryland. $300 monthly. Call DO 3-3710.HOUSE FOR SALEBY OWNER $14,500 4 bdrm, brick,modern cabinet kitchen dishwasher,disposal blt-.n oven, range, carpet,drapes, many extras, low taxes,2633 E. 74th Place, 221-7257.WANTED TO RENTWould like to rent a room in yourhouse. Leave message at GR 6-3527Marion Shore.PEOPLE WANTEDStudent to assist in house-paintingover holiday weekend. Hours andsalary negotiable. 667-8693.Part-time work on campus for theElectric Theatre Co. Call WallyMeyowitz at 784-1724.Part-time waiter for lunch and/orafternoons. Court House Rest.The Chicago Literary Review needsan entreprenurial type to serve asBusiness Manager. Remuneration inform of a healthy percentage ofgross advertising revenue. Set yourown hours. Come afternoons to INH305, or call x3276. EOE.PEOPLE FOR SALEWill do rough draft typing—35c/page. Call Jim—624-2749.Minnefte's Custom Salon. Altera¬tions, Dressmaking. 1711 Vi E. 55th.493-9713.Themes and/or these typed withspeed and accuracy 65c/per pageand 2 carbons free. 776-2053.Term Papers, theses typed. IBMelec. 40c/page. Mrs. Cohen 338-5242evngs.May I do your typing? 363-1104.Typing. Low rates. 363-5609 (eve).CHARTER FLIGHTNY/London/N.Y. 17 Dec.-ll Jan.Jet, $189. 493-3961.FOR ADOPTIONKittens—free. Lovely black kittensready to leave mother soon. BU 8-7743.One small, loving and lovable mutt,12 mos old male, house-trained,part dach. part beagle. Answers tothe name of "Fang." 363-0718 eves.& wkends.Absolutely free! 20 lbs kitty litter& kitty pan with two absolutelyfree fern, cats, one spayed. Ages14 mos and 8 mos. Will sep. ifnec. Eves, wkends 667-6507.THINGS TO DOSubscribe now to the NATIONALGUARDIAN, Independent RadicalNewsweekly, before rates go upDecember 1 from $3.50 annual stu¬dent subscription to $5. Ten weektrial sub remains $1. Call JimBennett 493-5289.Look forward to Tha Balcony—3rdSi 4th wkend win qr. RETURN YOUR SHAPIROS—theyare due Dec. 1st to 6th. StudentActivities Office.CHINESE COOKINGLESSONSGarage Space needed—Dec. 14 toJan. 5. Call after 5 P.M.—midnight;will pay. 684-7597. Authentic Chinese cooking taught inlovely Chinese home. Learn to pre¬pare and serve over 12 dishes insix weeks. Tuition $20. Materials$5. begin Jan. Limited enrollment,7 per class. 334-8070.THE SAGE STRIKESIf you truly love a woman, all youwant is for her to be happy. Itfollows from this that if she meetssomeone who makes her happierthan you can, you should let hergo gracefully and gratefully. Itfollows from this that you wouldwant her to meet such a person.In short, if you truly love a woman,you should hope from the verybeginning that she will leave you.PERSONALSI have measured out my life withGothic runes.Dance on fire as it intends. Themusic of MAURICE MclNTYRE,Ida Noyes, 12/7.Happy birthday Gary.There will be an ISRAELI DANCEWORKSHOP with Rivka SturmanDecember 7th.Join in the post-thanksgiving ritesoffered at the Bandersnatch—freefood 8. movies friday, Nov. 29.CAFE MA PITOM—Israeli food,entertainment—Dec. 1, 8-12 P.M.Ida Noyes, $1.THINGS TO FEAR: 1. missing TheBalcony 2. The Balcony itselfJudith Nelson sings Monteverdi,Purcell, Mozart, Tues. Dec 3, 8:30P.M. Lutheran School of Theology,1100 E. 55th St.Dan: your credentials have expiredSee me about getting a whole newset. Orv.Happy birthday Gary.Panasonic radios and tape record¬ers; Craig trap recorders. PlusKLH and all the usual goodies.The Fret Shop, Harper Court.The trouble with helping people isthat they always expect somethingin return.FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400Center'sCOLD?BARGAIN on new sheep-skinCOAT from Poland — whitefur inside with honey-coloredsuede outside.$100Size: medium for a man,large for a girl.Double-breasted, very nicelytailored. Call 363-0533, orsee it on Judd Commons coatrack Tuesday 8s Thursday.It cost $135.Drown your troubles in a bowl ofyogurt at the Bandersnatch.Warmth 8. Communion is what weaim for in the Small Groups Club(FREE) BU 8-1100.RIVKA STURMAN, Israeli choreo¬grapher, will teach a dance work¬shop on December 7th at Ida Noyes.Why is it that for every cheap itemat SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS,there are 10 overpriced ones? Afriend of FORM.Happy birthday Gary baby.Felafel, chumus, pita—CAFE MAPITOM, Dec. 1.If you dig JARMAN 8. MITCHELL,you have to hear MAURICE Mc¬lNTYRE.Minnestrone soup with black breador French roll for a half a buckat Ahmad's.LIFE IS TOO SHORT FOR GAMES.Wld like to meet or corr w warmwhlsm ygn worn w strng snse humvals. Am grad stud, 28. John Er-skine, 123 Winspear Ave. Buff. N.Y.14214.THE BALCONY IS COMING.Letter to HomerWell, I made It back to Ithaca, butPenelope didn't partlckly care togroove on me, and Telemachuscouldn't even walk yet/so I hoppedover to the island of Anthropos^(near Pollute-Ro-Pon) to look for the action with the nymphs andsatyrs/1 mean they're reel reetpeeple/but like nothing was happen¬ing/ So I thought I'd drop you thisline, Homer/Just to say that you'rethe greatest, P.R.-wise: you're sofine,/sometimes I wonder if YOUain't a fig-tree of MY imagination!Your roamin' reporter,Ulyses S. AnimalWRITERS' WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.Jablooski, this is your frisbee: Godis dead."The OAS is dominated by theUnited States, and so dominatedhas taken courses Canada has ac¬tively opposed. It would be pre¬sumptuous to assume that our ad¬ditional weight could have drama¬tically altered those courses, orcould alter any the United Statesdecided upon in the future. Wewould simply be putting ourselvesin the position of becoming anotherU.S. patsy or an opposition partylikely to draw U.S. thunderbolts.No. Canada's best course is itspresent one, to pursue the devel¬opment of more natural communi¬cations with the Latin Americas,through trade and aid and culture;to get to know them. We can dothat a whole lot better without OA$membership round our ankles likea ball and chain.'—Exerpt fromeditorial in Toronto Globe and Mailarguing against Canada's joiningthe OAS. Trip out with MARCO POLO overthe holidays. 288-5944.CAFE MA PITOM—Israeli food, en¬tertainment, Dec. 1, 8-12 P.M. IdaNoyes, $1.SKI ASPEN. 8 days, 9 meals, alltows, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec. 14,Dec. 21, Jan. 11, Feb. 8, March 15.$199. 764-6264. MAURICE MCINTYRE in concert,Ida Noyes, 12/7.Why do Hyde Parkers flock to theCourt House? For the late eveningmenu.God again, Jablonski: Since whendo frisbees talk?Record hit at the Bandersnatch—luckily none of 'em broke.The Business office disclaims allresponsibility for bad jokes likethe one above.YOGA—trancend depression, anx¬iety, ennui. Sri Nerode DO 3-0155.Apres theatre? Court House!!Happy birthday Gary.Gary who?Gary Kaplan, of course! Mimi.Informal Oneg Shabbat this weekand next at Hillel House.Endless orgy issues from the Ban¬dersnatch—with license? Pitchers of beer for $1.25 for UCstudents only.SYMPATHETIC EAR: 643-7178.Groovy room available in Black-stone after Xmas. Call 288-3670 forscintillating details.Will Marian who advertised herecall 752-2619."HAVE ONE!''???John, i wish you could be here—even more, i wish you wanted tobe. mlou.The PIPE spits.Who's G. G. Gump? Jablonski?Shapiro rental pictures due Decem¬ber lst-6th. Student Activities Of¬fice 209 Ida Noyes Hall.25c/day fine for late Shapiros. ~If you found a horse head tie pinon Monday please call Joel Beck,FA 4-9226. Reward.Toni thought he was balling Sally,but she was screwing him.Jesus loves rnmtftm?LittleRosma knowsthat Jesus loves her,but she longs for thelove that you can givealso ... the tender love ofa sponsoring “parent.”Your love can bringa smile to her face anddrive fear from her eyes.Little Rosma is only eight, but she's knownmore suffering and heartache than mostpeople experience in a lifetime.Oh yes, she's heard about the Lord Jesus,and she truly trusts Him. But, deep in herheart she longs for a human care and lovethat she has never known ... a love thatperhaps only you can give her. And, Rosmais but one of more than 22,000 children inCOMPASSION Homes—children yearningfor human expressions of Christian love.Their plight is heartbreaking. These needychildren have suffered the terrors of war,poverty, famine and disease. They pray forthe love of an American “mommy ordaddy" or “big brother or sister." Theyneed food, clothing, medical care and aChristian Home. And, this is what you offerwhen you sponsor one of these lovely boysor girls for only $12 a month (just penniesa day).THESE NEED HELP RIGHT NOW. And what a blessing! You'll know blessing,and reward beyond compare when youchoose your own little boy or girl in Korea,Indonesia, India or Haiti. Letters and smallgifts are exchanged. Your child knows youby name. Prayers span the miles. Your lifeis enriched through sharing your love.Follow your heart! Know the joy ofsponsoring a love-starved child today.■T TT^ I I want to sponsor a lonely childV U ^ I today. I understand I may dis-X 1 JL 1) continue at any time.0 Sedi Sitorus Q ft. Sianturl Q] Soon A* Q Un OkCUT OUT AND MAIL TODAY Osommssm TCM 118 bRev. Henry Harvey, President7774 Irving Park RoadChicago, Illinois 60634(Canadian residents writeBox 880, Blenheim, Ontario)If this child hasMy choice isbeen chosen, please select similar child. I prefera □ boy or □ girl, approximately yearsold, ffrom the land of Pleaserush FULL particulars. Enclosed is □ $12 forfirst month □ $144 for first year.□ Select a child for me from the most needycountry.□ I am unable to sponsor, but wish to contrib¬ute $ for general child care.□ Please rush further information today.NameAddressCityAn interdenominational, Gov. approved, non-profit corporation.Contributions are tan deductible.State. -Zip-krFREE! You will receive a lovely,colorful hand-embroideredtapestry direct from theOrient if you will sponsora needy child.November 28, 1968 The Chicago MaroonSAVINGSCERTIFICATESUniversity National Bank offers you—* Savings Certificates paying the highest rateof interest permitted by law5% per year on certificates of $5,000 or more• Savings Certificates backed by bank safetymember: Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationChicago Clearing House AssociationFederal Reserve System• Savings Certificates tailored to fit your needsavailable for 6,7, 8, 9,10,11 or 12 month periodsFor maximum income with maximum safety and maximumadaptability to your personal needs invest in fluctuation free UniversityNational Bank Savings Certificates.Just ask any of our officers. They’ll be happy to handle thedetails for you.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 41200strength and servicemember: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation'/ Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve System12 The Chicago Maroon November 28, 1968THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND‘Coogans’s Bluff: SiegeVs Grade B MasterpieceBy Ken ShermanTWO WEEKS AGO, grade B movies became respect¬able. The deserving catalyst in this cultural revolution isDonald Siegel. Time magazine informs us that Frenchaudiences go to see “a Siegel” as we do “a Godard.”Presumable this trend will take hold here as well. Theavant-garde (doc films fanatic-flick-freaks) have beenhip to this action for years of course—witness the twoseries on Hawks they’ve done in the last three years.Always with an open aesthetic eye (especially havingfound Madigan very enjoyable) I hied myself down toUniversal’s screening room to Siegel’s latest, Coogan’sBluff.Siegel is still hung up on New York as a vehicle for, ifnot a subject of, his films. Madigan concentrated on thecity as seen by indigenous detectives; Coogan’s Bluffshows us New York through the eyes of a “cowboy”cop from Arizona. If anything, the latter method is moreioforative and more entertaining than the former.Getting Clint Eastwood, as Coogan, to New York waseasy enough— Coogan’s boss, the sherrif, couldn’t standthe sight of him any longer, so Coogan got the assign¬ment of extraditing Jim Ringerman from New York.Ringerman, incidently, is played by Don Stroud, the ac¬tor who played Huey in Madigan. The promise heshowed then has been fulfilled more that I would havepredicted.Siegel’s first, shot of the big city is through the windowof a Pan Am helicopter. The focal point of attention inthis shot is not the spectacular view, however, but Coo¬gan’s string tie. Juxtaposition like , this is an extremelyeffective technique. It occurs often throughout the movie, emphasizing the different styles of life of the strong,taciturn Arizonan, and the brash, deteriorating city.New York is a city of sterotypes. If you haven’t livedin New York for long, you will probably find Siegel’scharacters just a bit much. But anyone with morethan a passing acquaintance with New York willhave to admire the choice of supporting actors. Theyare all very believable. The cabbie asseses Coogan’s at¬tache case as luggage at fifty cents extra; the hotelclerk charges two dollars extra for a room because Coo¬gan isn’t carrying any luggage; two queers loudly com¬ment on his two-inch heels; a social worker Cooganmakes it with tries to rationalize her desire by attempt¬ing to find the worm human being she knows lurks underhis tough exterior.Of course, there is no such being there to be found:even if the role called for “inner warmth,” Eastwoodwould probably not have been able to evoke it. I don’tthink he is mature enough an actor to transcend thetough guy image as Lee Marvin is able to do (in PointBlank for example). In any case, he doesn’t have to try.Coogan is a primitive bastard, a hunter whose primarypleasure in life is the chase and kill (usually symbolic,like slamming his captive in the gut with a rifle butt).This role is transitional for Eastwood: will he be able toretain his toughness while portraying increasingly morecomplex characters? In this movie he has successfullyshown himself capable of superficial social niceties. Inhis next, hopefully he will be able to do more and remainappealing.Coogan’s Bluff has a familiar plot—cop loses prisoner,cop hunts down leads, finds villain, chases and captures him. The element of suspense is introduced by two fac¬tors: Coogan’s complete inexperience in an urban envi¬ronment and the active non-cooperation of the policeWhat keeps Coogan going, oven after receiving ordersto lay off the case from the sheriff is that he must proveonce again that he is a man. His pride is hurt because helost his prisoner in a classic set-up which he nevershould have fallen for. The final impetus comes when hefalls into an even more obvious trap. Linny Raven, sur¬prisingly well played by a hitherto mediocre actress,Trisha Sterling, leads him into a pool room to find Ring¬erman, and Coogan doesn’t get out until he’s wiped up onsix or seven hoods, and gotten beaten to a pulp himself.That particular fight scene is one of the best ever filmed.Perhaps I was impressed by its true-to-life accuracy be¬cause I was the unwilling witness to a very similar onein a Philadelphia pool room. Coogan’s use of pool cuesand balls as weapons are realistic, and their effects notexaggerated at all.The chase and capture make up the climax of the film.The daredevil motorcycle race through Central Park isplayed strictly for thrills, very successfully. The onlycomplaint I have was with the Lone Ranger method Coo¬gan used to knock Ringerman off his bike. But whenCoogan dumps his subdued captive at the feet of Lee J.Cobb (the inevitable tough sergeant of detectives), theemotional climax of the movie takes place in the beau¬tifully sardonic and triumphant lines Coogan spits out:“I’m making a citizens arrest.”If established definitions must be adhered to, I supposewe have to label Coogan’s Bluff a grade B movie. Butdon’t think of the label as a derogatory one: this film isbrilliant.G. B. SHAW’SDON JUAN in HELLwithJames O’ReillyDurward McDonaldJoel CopePauline BrailsfordONE PERFORMANCE ONLYSaturdayNovember 308:30 pmMANDEL HALL57th at UniversityAdmission $2Students & Faculty $1.50KLH 11 PortableKLH 11 WalnutKLH 18 Tiny TunerKLH 20 The Lillie GiantKLH 24 Par Excellenceat THE fret shop5210 So. Harperin Harper CourtIsraeli Dance WorkshopwithRIVKASTURMANIsrael's famous choreographerDecember 7, 8 p.m.Ida Noyes Kaliadmission: $2.00 Students $1.00sponsored by: Hillel Foundation and U. of C. Folkdancers misieR eLLy’sINTERNATIONALLY FAMOUS SUPPER CLUBAcclaimed By CollegesNationwide As The BestNew Act In Show Businessthe PAIREXTRAORDINAIRE&The Incredibly Funny Antics OfMARTY BRILLTwo Shows NightlyExtra Late Show Fri & Sat Special Prices InCocktail SectionUnder 21 - Soft Drinks ServedCALL MR. MONROE-WH 3-22331028 NORTH RUSH STREETJclark tJ Ihfalra Lenjoy ourspecial studentrate“7RC ?,a"f Y timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double feature mdaily• open 7:30 a.m.—lateshow 3 a.m. m• Sunday film guild me every wed. and fri. is mladies day all gals 50clittle gal lery for galsonly mm• dark parking-1 door msouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your free mMmonthly program :dark & madrson fr 2-2843 I I AYEDY'S 41 I -NM7HI SHIM3 PERFORMANCES NIGHTLY THRU DAWN FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATURfNovember 21Joanne WoodwardA BIG HAND FORTHE LITTLE LADY THURSDAYNovember 28Best Pin '66 Village VoiceJohn Ford $SEVEN WOMENFRIDAY - December SCornel WildeNAKED PREYNovember 22Howard Hawks John WaynRIO BRAVO November 29fellim t•|V,SATURDAY December 6Jonathon WintersTHE LOVED ONENovember 23Roquel WelchFANTASTIC VOYAGE November 30 December 7Fellini s Peter O Toole R»chord BurtfJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITS BECKETPLUS Tbs Playboy S.ri«T —Every Night A New ChapterHYDE PARKSTARTS FRI. NOV. 29e&VK&CnewithPeter O’TooleZero Moste!Jeanne MoreauJack HawkinsalsoSSdifey Po*tter>For iare "larc-A<%2r IN COLOR j # THE BEATLES HAVEGROWN UP...THEY’RE ADULTSNOW!APPLE FILMS presents a KING FEATURES productionCOLOR Dv DeLuieUnited Artists WOODSliiAHESi I AH DO LAH at CIAUOIHLimited EngagementA Wild Western ComedyIBS DEATH ID UR OPSNEAKY FITCHstarring Jerry Harperwith Win StrackeGoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus Dr. CE *-2337 CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Tiines****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"«a g- ^.THEmjjnwoof411^8 1/^MonthStudent rate every 1day but Sat. $]50 Last 3 NightsSLEEPYJOHN ESTES3 Shows NightlySpecial! 8 pm ShowsOpen To All AgesThe Quiet Knight131 I N. WellsOld Town 944-8755The Odd Shopat THOMAS IMPORTSJewelry - African ClothingRobes - Black PaintingComing: Books from Africa10% Student Discount1352 East 53rd 684-63702 Entertainment Supplement November 28, 1968“Toklas ’ Film:Perfect RoleFor SellersFloicer in the crannied wall/ pluck you out of the crannies,1 hold you here, root and all, in my hand.Little flower—but if I could under^pmdWhat you are, root and all, all in all,l should know what God and man is.OH, THAT’s BEAUTIFUL,” breathes the young girl toher guru; “is it Ginsberg?”“No, Tennyson.”(I love you, I Love You, Alice B. Toklas, becauseyou are funny, but also because you hide beneath yourglossy exterior a heavy heart, a heart that carries theburden of nascent awareness.)Peter Sellers, as Harold Fine, a successful lawyer,has a jewish mother, and that’s just the beginning of histroubles. He also has his secretary Joyce, who wantshim to name a date. Harry's brother, Herbie, is doingthe hippie thing in Venice. California (when Herbieshows up at the funeral of a family friend in the mourn¬ing dress of the Hopi Indian. Harry says: “What are youtrying to do to me, kill your mother?”).Despite his problems Harry does have all the trapp¬ings of the American Dream—a Lincoln Continental, $200suits, a luxurious apartment, and a permanent place onthe rat track. But circumstances turn out making hisbrother’s life look more meaningful than his. It is onlynatural, or let us say possible, given his brother’s girl ofthe week sleeping at his apartment and Harry’s gettinghis first taste of grass (in brownies made with the recipeof the lady of the title), that Harry should graduallyfreak out. The moment of truth is his wedding. Hethrows his white yarmulke to the floor and walks out ontwo hundred guests (one hundred for you, Joyce, and cnehundred for me,” says Harry’s mother), not to mentiontwin cantors with mouths agape, and joins the hippiething.Sellers superbly portrays the American business manas potential existentialist. His transformation into a flow¬er-child (at the age of thirty-five) is almost credible asthese things go. Equally credible, is that he beccrr.esdisillusioned with his life as a hippie. His apartmentturns into a chaotic crash pad and his girl shows herselfto believe in freedom more than he does. At this point,the movie is nine-tenths over, and I was convinced thatit was going to be a gigantic cop-out. No doubt Harrywill go straight again, marry Joyce, and live Dagwood- Bumsteadishly happily ever after. In two minutes we seeHarry indeed go straight again, court Joyce; we hear thetwin cantors incanting, and. . . no. . . Harry throws downhis white yarmulke and strides out of the hall. He runsdown the street. “Where are you going, man?” asks oneof his hippie ex-friends. “I don’t know,” Harry says,“I don’t know . . . and I don’t care. All I know is thatthere has got to be something beautiful out there.”Like a competent novel which falls into place in thelast chapter, all of a sudden everything seems right.Because it ends the way it does, and because, un¬beknownst to the viewer, the action was heading exactlythat way all along, I Love You, Alice B. Toklas is superi¬or by far to almost any recent American comedy. Itintroduces the element of the unfulfilled life seen beforeonly in British humor.Sellers is the perfect actor for the role of Harry. Heis trapped and his face shows it throughout the movie.When his mother brings a jar of instant coffee to hisapartment because there was a sale at Safeway, Sellersputs it in his cupboard beside the six other identical jarswithout comment. But his eyebrows are carried a mil¬limeter off normal, and there is an almost unnoticeablechange in his intonation. Sellers portrays well the Ameri¬can counterpart of Mersault. He is louder and less profound, but just as tragic, and especially meaningful toan American audience.The movie is astonishingly well put together. Thereare parallel scenes and images that bind the action tight¬ly while allowing constant flow. An example is Harry’sasthma inhaler, to which he resorts in times of stress inhis straight life. When he becomes a hippie, he inhales ahash pipe. The brownies appear twice—once when Harryturns on for the first time and starts down the weirdroad, and again when he gets disgusted with his new life.I suspect that Warner-Brothers-Seven Arts would notrecognize their movie from reading my interpretation sofar, so let me assure you that this flick can be thorough¬ly enjoyed on a much different level.It is a very funny excursion into deepest urban Califor¬nia. There is ^ variety of successful sight, sound andword gags, Elmer Bernskin’s music is suitable (a la TheGraduate) and surprisingly well done, and the flowerchildren are more believable than in any other majorAmerican production to date. Especially delightful isLeigh Taylor-Young, who makes her debut as Nancy, theflower-goddess who turns Harry on to brownies and goodsex. I met a number of girls like her cn the West Coastthis summer, and I must say that Leigh was more belie¬vable than most cf them. And sexier than all of them.Ken ShermanThe Legend of the Left Is ForgottenEVERY YEAR THERE ARE 15 million tourists inSpain. Is it likely that the revolution will succeed in ahurry? The lengend of the left is forgotten. And yet, AlainResnais had made a relevant, sensitive, thoughtful movieabout a Spaish revolutionary who has been working for25 years, mostly in exile, to bring about change in hishomeland.Diego is not your ordinary revolutionary, blind to any¬thing but dogma. He is different, aware. His fellowworkers act as though every minute counts (“For twen¬ty-five yeurs every minute has counted”). Diego knowsthat success will be slow in coming. He is not awareenough to admit to himself that he is actually workingfor no purpose other than to create for himself, in theexistential sense, a raison d’etre. If he knew that, LaGuerre est Finie would be the story of a suicide.The “message” is that one works lives, loves, not be¬cause of any approaching goal, but because “doing one’sthing” is sufficient reason, sufficient goal. Of course, alife like this is not complete, but haven’t we given up thegenuine search for such a life? Diego, played ex¬ceptionally well by Yves Montand, does not grasp foranything beyond what he is. He accepts circumstancesas an almost immutable donne.But Diego doesn’t just accept. He examines first, thenaccepts. The significance for us of seeing this characterso painstakingly delineated is that he goes a bit furtherthan most in his examination. He realizes just what he isdoing, and even if he talks about quitting his job as acourier for the Spanish underground (headquarters —Paris) he knows that he will not quit. He toys with theidea of going back to Spain under Franco and living a“normal” life with the woman who loves him, but heforgets as soon as an urgent assignment is given him.“Patience and irony are the chief virtues of a Bolshe¬vik,” Diego says, smiling at himself in a mirror. He hasunknowingly described his virtues perfectly. His patience(25 years in this business) is unquestionable. His irony isevident in &very expression, in every action.Because of these virtues, he is an excellent worker. Healters passports, operates under aliases as though they were his own semantic skin, undergoes questioning atthe border without revealing fear. But he is more of arealist, compared with the others. Not too much of arealist, or, as he admits, he wouldn’t be in this businessmuch longer. We see him falter only once in a majorway. He gets involved with a young cell of Leninist ter-rorits. He gets into a long discussion with the leader ofthe group, who expresses his disapproval of the olderorganization’s tactics for dealing with the upcominggeneral strike in Madrid. As it happens, Diego doesn’tgo along with the idea himself, but he doesn’t sayanything. Suddenly he becomes very upset, yells “goREACTION IS ONLY ONE RATHER LIMITED STRAINof the awareness or sensitivity that is essential to thecreation of art. Merely reacting to a painting is also afactor in the appreciation of art but is really only anecessary step towards greater visual appreciation. Ingeneral, once the shock of a disturbing experience hasbeen absorbed, the shock produces awareness of thatexperience, what caused it, and one’s feelings towards it.The Feigen Gallery’s Anti-Daley Exhibit was an effort onthe part of artists and sensitive people to create art outof a shocking, disgusting experience, but the exhibit andthe “art” failed because of the shallow, reaction-typeawareness that produced it.The Contemporary Museum has also compiled an ex¬hibit out of the near art-boycott of the city, guided by theconviction that participation is more meaningful thanwithdrawal. Going deeper than Daley and the DemocraticConvention to the basic violent nature of Americansociety as the source of relevant reaction, the resultantpotpourri of contemporary, socially-conscious art bearsmore creative awareness than mere guilt-ridden reac¬tion.Violence in American society is ubiquitous and mani¬fests itself variously; we kill South Vietnamese patri¬otically; our national figures are assasinated; we worshipsuch fold heroes as Jesse James, and Bonnie & Clyde; blow things up, do it your way,” and runs out. His pasthas caught up with him. He is angry because he realizesthat if he were their age, he would probably be doing thesame thing. Diego calms down and forgets the incident.He has already chosen his way, there is no turning back.Superficially, this is a spy film, but it transcends thegenre. La Guerre est Finie shows that the cause goes onwith revolutionaries for the same reason that we go on— because we are in our lives. Those who are mostaware realize that they are not likely to accomplishmuch, but they continue. After all, what else is there?Ken ShermanGood American Artand racial tension finds periodic, destructive release.To be sensitive to the American environment, not evenlimiting himself to social and political aspects, the artistmust be aware of a see ing, inbred violence. Intenseexpression of this aware less becomes almost visuallyviolent itself.To be sure, the violence exhibit, like the Daley ex¬hibit is contemporary and thematic and therefore notunlike an assortment of mixed nuts—the bad nuts in theend always seem to spoil the cashews. But the Contem¬porary Museum has concocted an exceeding good brandthis time, and the advantage of thematic shows is over¬riding, which is to have something for everyone, allowingyou to dig what you want.Well known pop kings like Warhol, Lichtenstein, andJim Dine contribute their by now cliche-like social com¬mentaries. Rauschenberg does his thing on Bonnie &Clyde. But other works really vibrate violence: “SorryAbout That” by Roslyn Drexler and Richard Merkin’s“Notes Toward the Eventual Definition of the GreatLust-Mad Lesbian Nympho Prison Break” are two espe¬cially fine painterly-type examples. Also the exhibit of¬fers incredible sculpture by Bernard Aptekar. See theContemporary Museum show, and violently appreciatesome good American Art.Margo JonesViolently AppreciateiNovember 28, 1968 Entertainment Supplement 3THE GREAT MOTHER SHIP IS COMINGThe Pope... the Premier of Russia...a last desperate effort to prevent World War III.Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents a George Englund productionTHE SHOES OFTHE FISHERMANAnthony Quinn • Oskar WernerDavid Janssen Vittorio De SicaLeo McKern • Sir John GielgudBarbara Jefford • Rosemarie Dexter, oSir Laurence OlivierKweu* »* John Patrick ..a James Kennaway tm.o <n i»» b, la d« Michael Anderson o-ocucm by George EnglundPanavi.ton'.'-a Metrocolor MOMTICKETS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL!SCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES AND PRICES: Mon. thru Fhurs.Eves, at 8:30; Orch. & Mezz., $2.90; Balcony, $2.50. Sun. Eves, at8:00; Orch. & Mezz., $2.90; Balcony. $2.50 Fri., Sat., Hols. & Hoi.Eves, at 8:30; Orch. & Mezz., $3.80; Balcony, $2.90. Mats. Wed.,Sat. 8. Sun. at 2:00; Wed. & Sat. Orch & Mezz., $2.50; Balcony,$1.80.- Mats. Sun. & Hols. Orch. & Mezz., $2.90; Balcony, $2.50.Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope with check or moneyorder payable to McVickers Theatre, 25 W. Madison Street,Chicago, Illinois 60601.NOWPLAYING cVICKERSA TRANS-BEACON THEATRECOAST TO COAST25 W. MADISON ST. • CHICAGO, ILL 60601PHONE 782-8230 U GUERREESTFIHIE2424 N. Lincoln “So far abovethe otherthriller filmscomparisonwould befoolish.Beautifullymade andacted.”—Bosley Crowther,N. Y. Times“A master¬piece. One ofthe all-timegreats.”—Archer Winsten,N Y Post“A triumphand a thriller.Erotic scenesof outrightbeauty”-Judith Crist, WJTA film byALAIN RESNAISstarringYVES MONTAND andat Fullerton-Halsted INGRID THULINone block east of introducingFullerton “El” stop GENEVIEVE BUJOLDA Brandon Films ReleaseTel.: 528-9126FREE PARKING2438-40 N. HalstedStudent rate Mon. thru Thurs. $1.50For special group rates, call 247-6646 or 528-9126ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELLANGDON B. GILKEYProfessor of TheologyThe Divinity SchoolRELIGION IN THE SECULAR UNIVERSITYSunday December I, 1968 I 1:00 A.M.• cameras • projectors• electronic flash • enlargers• tape recorders • telescopes• binocularsMost complete photo shopon the South Side1342 E 55th HY3-9259 Still Up AgainstThe Wall?Live at the Hyde Park YIHICA• inexpensive • clean• maid service • cafeteria• on Campus Bus route$14 Weekly 3ate AvailaoleImmediately to Studentsregister any day I 0 AM - I 0 PM1400 E. 53rd Street 324-5300Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oU change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and Relatives FacultySingle rooms from $8:00 dailyTwin rooms $11:00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveJimmy's.and the University Room- RESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FORUNIVERSITY CLIENTELEfifth-fifth & woodlawn LUCHINOSTUDIO OF THE DANCE -FLAMENCO — PRIMITIVEMODERNMU 4-1113 I" H*rp«r Csurt ^ eyes 1for thenow soundLusdm 97.9 fmsmack dab in the middle of your fm dialGOLD CITY INN* * * * Maroon"A Gold Mino of Good Food’’IO%Student DiscountHYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT OrdersATTENTION:RESIDENTS OF ILLINOISApplication for first time Illinois Stale Grant applicant" "illfn* available at the Of I ice ol financial \id-5737 Southl ni\crsitv during the week ol November 2b. Deadline lorfirst time applicants is February I.Applications to those already receding a grant will lie mailedto vour homes. Deadline for renewals i" December 15.The Committee on College Aid requires that all Illinoisstudents utilize the Illinois State Scholarship opportunitiesto the fullest extent before they will consider vour need.FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYHINT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLY;VWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY Il|AS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYINCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-17154 Entertainment Supplement November 28, I960