The first resolution declares SG’s supportof the moratorium and urges students andfaculty not to take part in classes, but tospend the day participating in the morato¬rium activities.DISPLAY: At which moon rocks will be shown to the UC community today from 12-5 in Oriental Institute.Moon Rocks Shown at Noon Davkf TravisBy Con HitchcockSome of the moon rocks now being stud¬ied by University scientists will go on pub¬lic display today in the Oriental Institutefrom noon to 5 p.m.Upon presentation of University identi¬fication card, faculty, students, and staffwill be admitted.Following the display here the moonrocks will be moved to the Field Museum ofNatural History at Lake Shore Drive andRoosevelt Road, where they will go on dis¬play to the public. The display was madepossible through cooperation of the Univer¬sity with the Field Museum of Natural His¬tory.Prior to the presentation today, Univer¬sity professors investigating the sampleswill hold a press conference which will pre¬view to the press the lunar rocks display.Individual interviews with the scientistswill be arranged following the conference.After that, the scientists will be unavail¬able to the press until their investigationsTwo DepartmentsSupport BoycottThe mathematics and philosophy depart¬ments have passed resolutions supportingthe October 15 moratorium on classes.At a meeting of the philosophy depart¬ment last Thursday night, all of the mem¬bers present agreed to cancel their classeson the 15th, said Robert C. Coburn, profes¬sor. The math department, by a 22 to 0 with7 abstentions vote, “expressed support forthose department members choosing to ob¬serve the October 15 moratorium by can¬celling classes that day.” The departmentalso requested the council of the facultysenate to support the moratorium.In a statement issued Friday, newly-ap¬pointed dean of the College Roger Hilde¬brand showed his support for the morato-Continued on Page Two are completed. Furthermore, the NationalAreonautics and Space Administration(NASA) forbids their disclosing any find¬ings prior to its own announcement after allinvestigation reports are in.Six of the University scientists who willstudy the samples are Anthony Turkevich,Franck professor of chemistry and in theEndico Fermi institute; Edward Anders,professor of chemistry; Robert Clayton,professor of geophysical sicenes and chem¬istry; Stephen Hafner, associate professorof geophysical sciences, George Reed, re¬search associate at the Fermi institute andat Argonne; and Joseph Smith, professor ofgeophysical sciences.The scientists are working as part of 140scientists across the country and hope toanswer some questions such as:• How old is the moon?• Was it formed from the same materialas the earth?• How much of the condition of the moonrocks are the result of melting?• Is or was there liquid water on themoon?• How much of the rocks have beenmodified by shock impact of meteorities?• Can micrometeorites be reliably identi¬fied in impact pits or minerals at themoon’s surface?• Do they have the same composition asthe larger meteorites which survive burn¬ing up in the earth’s atmosphere?The field museum and the Universityhave a cooperative arrangement in whichappropriate staff members can utilize labo¬ratory facilities and specimens of bothinstitutions for research and study. The mu¬seum has one of the world’s largest mete¬orite collections from which many sampleshave been used by some of the University’slunar researchers to study processes in thesolar systemSince the question of whether moon rocksare similar to meteorites is of great inter¬est to lunar researchers, samples of mete¬ orites and tektites, the glassy bodies strewnover some parts of the earth, will be includ¬ed in the museum’s display.Lunar material for the exhibit will be onloan from the six principal investigators af¬filiated with the University.In addition to these six researchers, otheruniversity scientists working on the exam¬ination are Paul B. Moore, associate pro¬fessor of geophysical sciences; Peter J.Wyllie, professor of geophysical sciences,Alfred T. Anderson, Jr, assistant professorof geophysical sciences; Julian R. Gold- The second resolution is a petition thatwas sent to the Council of the UniversitySenate requesting that the Council “act tosuspend class” in observation of the Viet¬nam moratorium.SG president Mike Barnett announcedthat at the last count, taken on Friday,more than 1200 students had signed the pe¬tition supporting the moratorium. (Thenumber is now over 1350, not including hun¬dreds of faculty signatures, Barnett toldThe Maroon Monday.)David Bensman, a member of the Uni¬versity’s moratorium committee, told theSG assembly that tentative plans for Oc¬tober 15 activities include leafletting in sup¬port of a rally to be held by BusinessmenAgainst the War at noon at the Civic Cen¬ter. In addition, the moratorium committeehopes to organize supporters in an after¬noon action on the south side, such ascanvassing, and a march or rally, in con¬junction with a community organization.A teach-in is planned for the evening.Bensman said that many people have vol¬unteered to speak. These include facultymembers, students and political figures,among them Congressman Abner Mikva.Barnett also said that he had requestedthe administration not to hold its panel dis¬cussion on Vietnam planned for October15th because it “competes with the morato¬rium.” It was learned Monday morningthat the Administration had decided to can¬cel the program.The meeting opened with a report fromthe president about SG’s activities over thesummer. Barnett said that SG has re¬quested applications for student ombuds¬man, so that students could interview themin an open committee. SG members feelvery strongly, said Barnett, that this inter-mm D«mA Ea%« APRESIDENT BARNETT: Presides over an SG meeting. DavM TravisTHE MAROONVolume 78, Number 10 The University of Chicago Tuesday, October 7, 1969SG Resolves to Support MoratoriumBy Sarah GlazerStudent government (SG) passed two res¬olutions in support of the October 15th mor¬atorium against the Vietnam war at itsfirst meeting of the quarter Sunday night inIda Noyes Hall.Rally At Civic Center To Mark MoratoriumContinued from Page Onerium by moving his classes up to the nightbefore, saying that “It represents extra ef¬fort for all of us and may therefore give ourprotest a little more force.”Hildebrand said that he would not, in hisposition as dean, cancel classes for the col¬lege. He said that it “would threaten me ifI, as a faculty member, had a dissentingopinion. It would force me by decree to par¬ticipate in a political demonstration which Imight wish to oppost in its goal or in itsmethod of expression.”Earlier in the week President Edward H.Levi announced that he would not cancelclasses for the day, although he was in fa¬vor of the moratorium, saying that this wasa University in which students and facultydecided for themselves whether to go toclass or not and that he favored individualprotest.At a meeting Sunday night, Student Gov¬ernment (SG) passed two resolutions ur¬ging students and faculty to stay from classes that day, and for the council of thefaculty senate to call off all classes.Paul Sally, assistant professor of math¬ematics, said that faculty support for themoratorium was great, and that a numberof faculty members were planning to sign apetition to appear ni Friday’s Maroon. City-w;de plans include a noon rally atthe civic center which will be addressed byCongressman from this district Abner Mik-A torchlight parade through the loopva.will be held in the evening, followed by arock festival at Northwestern’s DeeringMeadow. At the university, a “convocation” will be' held on the 15th, although details are not atpresent complete. Area colleges planningactivities on the 15th are Barat College,Mundelein College, and Loyola University.Other colleges observing the moratoriumare Queens College, Memphis State, andUniversity of Miami.Greenstone to be Head of Public AffairsJ. David Greenstone, associate professorof political science has been appointedchairman of college Public Affairs pro¬gram. The appointment was announcedMonday by Arcadius Kahan, master of so¬cial science collegiate division.Kahan also announced the appointment ofCharles Grey, associate professor of historyas the college history program adviser. pointed with the consultation of public af¬fairs students. As chairman, Greenstonewill corrdinate the work of the students inthe program and its faculty committee,consisting of Professors Morris Janowitz,Harry Kalven, Morton Kaplan, MiltonRosenberg, Joseph Schwab, Theodore W.Schultz, George Tolley, Jeremy Azrael,Donald Levine and Theodore Lowi. ceeds Eric Cochrane, professor of history,who is on leave for the year and working inItaly. As chairman of the history program,Gray will “coordinate the work of provid¬ing teaching faculty for the undergraduateprogram and of advising students in theirconcentration work,” Kahan said.Greenstone replaces Gilbert White aschairman of the Public Affairs program.White left the University last spring toteach at the University of Colorado.According to Kahan, Greenstone was ap- Greenstone teaches and conducts re¬search on apsects of political sociology andthe problems of political parties and ur-bannpolitics.Gray, who teaches English history, su- In the statement Kahan said that “bothappointments provide a continuity of theprograms and a commitment to developingnew forms of educational experience in theSocial Sciences. Both new chairmen repre¬sent a younger generation of faculty assum¬ing administrative responsibilities in under¬graduate programs.”RENOUNCETHEWORLDDid you know that iff USICRAFT sellsSTEREO COMPONENTS at discounts?48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. Q5thiOn Campus Call Bob Tabor324-3005 | SHORELAND HOTEL ]Office space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveSmikhcHoldit Plastick Adhesive by Eberhard Faberis great for sticking up posters, bulletins,sketches, photographs. Any paper or card¬board message. Also handy for steadying orholding in position heavier pictures, mirrors.Holdit isn't a glue or paste. It's a clean, non¬toxic, easy-to-use adhesive. Just knead a tinypiece, then press on any dry surface.Convenient package costs just 49d at yourcollege bookstore. At that low price, it's aholdup!TM B.J U S P.l CXI »Ad Otlt. Count. 1*1EBERHARD FABER*# WILKES 8ARRC. PA. • NEW YORK • CANADA • GERMANY • VENEZUELA • COLOMBIA BOWERS DODGE7300 S. WESTERNPHONE 476-4400THE ALL NEW FOR 1970 CHALLENGERChallenger 2-Door Hardtop'69 CHARGER RT440 W/V8 EngineRed w/black vinyl topAuto Power SteerA Brakes AM/FM Radio$3295 '68 MALIBU2 Or Hardtop V84 Speed, PowerDark Blue w/m interior$2295'68 CHARGER '66 TORONADO CUSTOM383 cu in, Dark Green4 Barrel Carb w/ Matching4 Speed, Red Interior, Full Powerw/blk vinyl top Factory Air$2395 $1995LET US KNOW THAT YOU ARE A STUDENTAND YOU WILL RECEIVE THE BEST DEAL IN TOWNON A NEW DODGE OR USED CAR Let’s BeFrancDevaluation sale days!!If it’s true that in any language money talksthen the franc, while still very sound, justdoesn’t sound the same. The truth is it isn’tworth what it used to be worth. Bad? Not ifyou’re in the market for a fine car. That justhappens to be as French as the Franc. TheRenault 10 and the Renault 16 Sedan-Wagon,are still worth what they used to be worth. Butbecause of the recent devaluation you can buythem for less.To be perfectly frank R-10 $1725R-16 $2395 p~poeBEM1jCLcslxf imports, rwc*2235 SO. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL.60616TEL. 326-25502/The Chicago Maroon/October 7, 1969r 9 • * « « FA atajw.w « azaa-jaw mmra r a**: r t r » « a* a** r * Fr: ■ r .r*r„ V, T,111 Conference DefinesThe Role Of WomenBy Sue LothFormer University instructor NaomiWeisstein’s speech “I Am Furious — Fe¬male” climaxed a day of panel discussions,workshops, and demonstrations sponsoredby the Women’s University Association(WUA) on ‘‘What It Means to be a Womenin the University.”Miss Weisstein, assistant professor ofpsychology at Loyola University, told amostly female audience of about 200 Satur¬day, “It’s a stigma being a women. You’reinvisible ... and men are reacting to yourface and your body and how desirable youare to men.”“It takes a long time for women to real¬ize they’re oppressed,” she continued, be¬cause ideologies tend to grow around op¬pressed groups justifying their oppression.The traditional explanations for women’sroles — that they are weaker, more emo¬tional, passive, and lack “a strong super¬ego” — sound like racist excuses for thissubservience of blacks, she said.“Listen to what psychiatrists are tellingme,” Miss Weisstein said. She quoted ErikErickson’s statement that mature womanlyfulfillment rests on the fact that a woman’s“somatic design harbors an ‘inner space’destined to bear the offspring of chosenmen, and with it, a biological, psy¬chological, and ethical commitment to takecare of human infancy.”“Well, passuh, boss,” she said.To support her theory that “no psy¬chological test has been run on the differ¬ences between men and women has anyvalidity,” Miss Weisstein said that psy¬chiatrists and psychologists as prestigiousas Sigmund Freud tend to accept theorywithout adequate evidence.In a graduate psychology class she at¬tended at Harvard, she said “We spent oneand a half months on the psychological dif¬ferences between men and women. Butwhen the class was asked to identify whichof two piles of a psychological test had beenwritten by men and which by women, shesaid, “Only four out of 20 picked correctly— a percentage way below chance.“We were picking correctly on thebasis of what we were taught. . .but thecues were wrong.”Miss Weisstein also cited the 1952 Eycenck study of neurotics which showed that whilethe improvement rates of patients whoreceived psychoanalysis and psychotherapywere 44 percent and 64 percent, respec¬tively, the improvement rate for patientsreceiving no treatment was 72 percent.Miss Weisstein also stressed the impor¬tance of social context when examining theactions of individuals. Experiments haveshown a teacher’s or examiners’ high orlow expectations for an individual, evenwhen unspoken, can influence the perform¬ance of that individual. Woman’s true po¬tentiate annot be realized until the ex¬pectations for her have changed, she said“and it’s as hard to change expectationsabout how the world is as it is to changebehavior.”She concluded, “All you have to do ischallenge your caste status in any way andyou get garbage dumped on your head,”but that “you just have to get yourselvestogether and, wow ,there’s no telling whatyou’re going to be able to do.”Soia Mentschikoff, professor of law andone of five members of a faculty femalepanel, advised girls not to be intimidatedby traditionally male fields, but to “findwhat is intersting for you.”“Don’t let anyone make you feel guiltyabout anything,” she said. “Find what lifestyle is right for you.”A student panel, departmental and divi¬sional discussions, workshops examiningsuch topics as abortion, day care centers,and jobs, and demonstrations of judo andkarate as self-defense and sport completedthe “orientation day” scheduled. PEACE MARCH: Between 250-500 people turned out Saturday tomediate U.S. withdrawl from Vietnam. David Travisdemand im-Militants Demand Peace in Loop RallyA peace march protesting the contin¬uation of the Vietnam war, the first activityin a week of demonstration sponsored bythe factions of students for a democraticsociety (SDS), drew a crowd Saturdaywhich was only slightly greater than thepolice lining the streets in twenty-foot inter¬vals.The march, called by the Progressive La¬bor (PL)-segment of SDS, was peacefulthough the theme of the demonstration was“US Get Out of Vietnam Now; No Deals”.The demonstration, which was dominated by the “anti-imperialism” theme, beganwith a noon rally in front of BuckinghamFountain.After a mock football game, in which the“American people” were pitted against the“U.S. Imperialists” (including, among oth¬ers, Eugene McCarthy, S.I. Hayakawa and“Mr. Racism” the demonstrators marcheddown Congress St., Michigan Ave., andJackson Blvd. to the Federal Building,which they circled twice. After a brief ral¬ly, they marched back to Grant Park toplan future actions.Itinerary of SDS Anti-Chicago ActivitiesFinal plans of the October 8-11 demon¬strations planned by the two RevolutionaryYouth Movements (RYM) factions of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society (SDS) havenot been fully publicized; however, orga¬nizers in both factions expect demonstra¬tors from all over the country to partici¬pate.Demonstrations during the four days willbe aimed at the war, the city of Chicago,racial discrimination, and male suprem¬acy.Because of the major tractical differ¬ences between the two factions independentdemonstrations are being organized. Al¬though RYM I refused to comment on thespecific tactics which they plan to use dur¬ing the confrontations (one spokesman toldthe Maroon “I really can’t discuss them;you’ll have to come and see for yourself”),they claim that they want to “destroy thecity.” RYM I views II’s tactics as “totallyineffective — dull.” On the other hand.RYM II spokesmen consider the actions of RYM I too militant to be effective and di¬rected too much at “getting the pigs.”An account of the demonstrationsplanned by both factions this week follows.Organizers would not give the Maroonmany of the specific areas where the dem¬onstrations would take place.Wednesday: A night rally planned byRYM I will take place in Lincoln Park, tomark the second anniversary of the deathof Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara. RYMII has planned small demonstrations atdraft boards and tax offices.Thursday: RYM I plans “jailbreaks” inorder to disrupt public high schools; oneRYM I spokesman said “this is a positiveaction against the city. We want to get stu¬dents out of the schools, where they arejust wasting their time, out onto the streetsand into action.” RYM II has scheduledboycotts of several high schools and juniorcolleges, and plans a march on the Boardof Education.RYM II also plans a demonstration at In¬ ternational Harvester tractor works to pro¬test the company’s plans to shut down.RYM II believes that the company is shut¬ting down and moving the plant in order todiscourage blacks from working there.RYM II is also protesting that InternationalHarvester owns land in Viet Nam. Thus,the faction’s protests will hopefully com¬pare the plight of the blacks with that ofthe Vietnamese. “We all have the sameenemy,” said one RYM II spokesman.Friday: RYM I will march on the Feder¬al Building to protest the conspiracy trial.RYM II will focus their actions on the hos¬pitals, which the faction believes dis¬criminates against women and the thirdworld.Saturday: RYM I plans a march which isto begin at Haymarket Square and gothrough the loop to Grant Park. RYM IIplans a march somewhere on the NorthSide, probably in a working class area.RYM II is supported in all its demonstra¬tions by the Black Panthers Party and theYoung Lords. Th^ marchers, composed largely of col¬lege-age students, carried signs and chan¬ted “U.S. get out now; no deals in Viet¬nam,” “Workers and students unite andfight,” “U.S. out of Vietnam; cops out ofthe ghetto,” and “There’s nothing to nego¬tiate.” In addition, leaflets were handed outto onlookers.At the Federal Building, Bob Siegel, anSDS-member from the University of IllinoisCircle Campus, gave a speech in which heurged students to build campus worker-stu¬dent alliances for the purpose of fightingimperialism on the campus. Siegel stressedthe need to build a “continuous movement,and not just something which plans semi¬annual marches.”Siegel said that the universities, which hebranded “servants of the corporations,” ex¬ploit campus workers and help promote im¬perialism abroad. He added that the Viet¬nam war is not a “mistake,” but rather the“logical extent of imperialism.”After Siegel’s speech, the demonstratorsmarched back to Grant Park on the side¬walk (for lack of a parade permit) andthere disbanded into “workshops” to planfuture anti-imperialism activities.Saturday’s peace march was the firstcalled by the PL faction of SDS. Two otherSDS factions, Revolutionary Youth Move¬ment (RYM) I, and RYM II, will hold sim¬ilar demonstrations in Chicago betweenWednesday and Saturday of this week, toprotest “the oppression of workers, impe¬rialism, and the Chicago police.”Did you know that MFJSiCRAFT not only hasthe LOWEST PRICES on STEREO COMPONENTSbut gives generous trade-in allowances.48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95th St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005 Did you know that niSICRAFT ha> FREEDELIVERY for University people? For STEREOCOMPONENTS at DISCOUNTS call48 E. Oak St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-2QQ5- 2035 W. 95th St. STEREO COMPONENTS at MUSIC RAFTSAVE YOU MONEY. A.R., DYNA, SCOTT. FISH¬ER48 E. Oak St. 2035 YV. 95th St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005October 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3TUES., OCT. 7 thru SUN., OCT. 1?42nd & H ALS^DSTs'^ADJACENTPARKINSAVE *1.00 ON KIDS UNDER 12Moo thru Thun 14 15 ft 8 It PM IFn Ah (4 IS PM) >Sgt Morn (10 30 AMITICKETS ON SALE AT:4S Ticketron outlet, includingTicket Central (Marine City) • All Montgomery Ward itorei line charge account) • MonhallFold a Crawford Opt ttorat a international Amphitheatre boa office a Dial T IC K E TS fornaaraat outletMAIL ORDERS: Sand teff-addreaaad. stamped envelope, math check or money order pay able toRINGLING BROS CIRCUS, International Amphitheatre. P O 8oa 09007. Chicago. Ill 60609CHG0S0WNSWINGERS CLUBSEND $1.00 FOR 64 PAGEIIUST MAGAZME, 100s OFPERSONALS. NKS, BOX3S06.CHC0 60654. ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St. BL-8-2900ARLO GUTHRIEh tmmmm mALICE'S RESTAURANT CHGO'S OWNSWINGERS CLUBSEND $1.00 FOR 64 PAGEUiUST MAGAZME, 100s OFPERSONALS. IKS. BOX3S06. CHGO 60654 say"i love youwith a diamond froShllhmSbHNf ifWflftS »0« S* VfARS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAHl TCHI\SO\ COMMONSCome one - Come AllBring your roommate or date toThe Hutchinson Coffee ShopCome for dinner or late snackWe're open until 11 pm!See you soon!Weekdays 10:00 - 11:00 PMSaturdays 10:00 - 4:00 MENTIONTHEMAROON MUSIC THEATREHYDE PARRHe Need Men - To Sin,JOIN THECHORUSOFCAROUSELOpens December 5th■I theHarper TheatreTHE ALHAMBRABOUTIQUE INTERNATIONAL10% STUDENT DISCOUNT1453 E. HYDE PARKPHONE: 363-9215The Burgundy StreetSingers were just10 unknowns from Kansas.Then they enteredthe IntercollegiateMusic Festival.The Burgundy Street Singers performed as regulars thissummer on CBS TV’s Jimmie Rodgers Show and are now undetcontract to Budweiser. From Kansas State Universitystudents...to professional entertainers in one year!REGIONAL COMPETITION!Villanova, Pennsylvania;Tampa, Florida; Edwardsville,Illinois; Austin, Texas;Reno, Nevada; Northridge,California.For entry forms and completeinformation on how to submittapes and photos, write: I.M.F.Box 1275, Leesburg, Florida 327Budweiser.KING OF BEERS.ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON • COLUMBUS • JACKSONVILLESign up now for the 1970Intercollegiate MusicFestival... it could bethe start of a new careerin show business for you!Competition is open tovocalists, vocal groupsand instrumental groups... in two musicalcategories: Folk and Pop. enter now!Sponsored by4/TW Chicago Maroon/October 7, 1969One Of 'Chicago 8' Explains DefenseH o S , \ ~w>faO **«*»’ *Construction Alters Appearance of CampusThe department of physical planning andconstruction expects a new appearance forthe University campus in the next fewyears with the completion of several build¬ings.The most recent addition to the campus,the Hinds Laboratory for the GeophysicalSciences on E. 58th and Ellis Ave., openedfor classes last week. TTie “romanticised”architecture was designed by Ike Colburn,consulting architect for the University.Essentially a box with towers, the build¬ing is of standard laboratory design withthe middle portion as a central utility slotallowing flexibility in the delivery of labmaterials. Around the slot are laboratoriessurrounded by a perimeter corridor. The“servant” towers are considered a “tour deforce” in their function: housing air han¬dling, fire stairs, and toilet facilities, leav¬ ing room for a greater number of labs inthe floor plan.The Joseph Regenstein Library, cur¬rently being constructed on E. 57th andEllis Ave., is scheduled for completion inthe fall of 1970. It will have as much flowspace as the Museum of Science and In¬dustry and house three million volumes ofbooks. Harper Library will be relegated therole of undergraduate library and containoffices fw the College.The Pahlavi Building, to be located atE. 58th and Woodlawn Ave., in the fall of1971, will house the Adlai Stevenson In¬stitute currently situated in the RobieHouse, a Frank Lloyd Wright original. Thenew building will also contain the Centerfor Middle Eastern Studies and additionaloffice space for the social science division.The International Studies Building, de¬signed by Ralph Rapson of Minnesota, willbe finished in the spring or summer of 1971.This construction will contain the depart¬ments of political science and geography,the Center for International studies, andthe committees of African studies, Slavicarea studies, and the comparative study ofnew nations.Froines spoke of a growing movementaround the country to stop the trial. He saidthat lawyers were meeting in Los Angelesand New York to organize a committee fwthat purpose. He also mentioned petitionsin support of the Chicago 8 being dis¬tributed on every college campus.According to Froines, the indictment ofthe eight alleged conspirators is part of abroad based attempt by the Nixon adminis¬tration to repress the anti-war movement.He said, “We intend to show that the onlyway to fight that repression is with an of¬fensive, not with a defensive posture.”Froines went on to say, “What happenedin the streets of Chicago is happening inJudge Julius Hoffman’s courtroom. Amer¬ica’s judicial system is just as bankrupt asits political system.”In that connection Froines mentioned thealleged unconstitutionality of the anti-riotlaw. He also spoke of Judge Hoffman’s re¬fusal to grant a continuance of the trial un¬til defense lawyer Charles Gary recoversfrom a gall bladder operation. He criticizedHoffman’s ruling on the legality of govern¬ment wiretapping and the “frame-up” ofone of the few jurors who the defendents thought might be sympathetic to their case.“It only takes one juror to make a hungjury,” said Froines. “So it was a very im¬portant law.”Froines stated that the importance of theactual proceedings inside the courtroomshould not be ignored. He said the defend¬ents served a function, that of “turning thecourtroom into a schoolhouse, by trans¬forming the jurors into members of theanti-draft, anti-war movement.”Froines said that the defense would baseits case on four main points: that the de¬fendents had applied for permits at everyjunction that, they were not a conspiracy(some had never met each other), thatwhat happened in Chicago had been a po¬lice riot, and that the violence of demon¬strators had been used in self-defense.Froines felt, however, that it was mostimportant to include a discussion of the is¬sues that had brought the defendents toChicago, “These issues relate to the entirepolitical spectrum,” he said. We do notwant to isolate ourselves on the left. And sowe are supporting all actions against thewar, including the October 15 moratoriumand the October 11 SDS march.”Picnic Helps Woodlawn KidsContinued from Page One.viewing should be “non-political” andshould concentrate on the candidate’s “con¬cern about student problems.”Another summer event was correspond¬ence with Senator Thomas Eagleton, (D-Mo) who requested SG’s opinion on bills inCongress concerning student discipline. SGsent copies of their reply to about 20 othersenators in addition to Eagleton. The re¬sponses, Barnett reported, ranged fromSenator Eagleton’s, who “called us a bunchof crazies” to Senator McGovern’s, who“agreed with us point by point.”The biggest event of the summer was apicnic held by SG, launching a program tofeed breakfast and lunch to Woodlawnschool children. The picnic raised $500, andanother $522 was collected when SG gaveaway free lemonade on the quads one weekduring the summer. $10,000 will be neededfor the program. SG has joined with theWoodlawn Methodist Church’s School ofHuman Dignity in the project and is in¬vestigating sources that might contributemoney. Further campus fund drives arecurrently being planned for the school year.Barnett said that SG members had beendiscussing the possibility of forming tenant unions. He feels that this would be an effec¬tive way for students to join with membersof the community to combat poor housingconditions. A1 Raby, a Con-Con candidate,civil rights activist and one of the foundersof Operation Breadbasket, will speak atSG’s next meeting about tenant unions.During the committee reports, CheakYee, chairman of the election and rulescommittee announced that five studentplaces are open for Student Faculty Admin¬istration (SFA) Court, and all nominationsmust be submitted by November 1.The treasurer stated that SG was askingthe committee on recognized student orga¬nizations (CORSO) for three times as muchmoney as it did last year.The committee on internal affairs pro¬posed that SG not continue to fight againstthe disciplinary sentences which followedlast year’s sit-in. Discussion on this matter,however, was postponed until the nextmeeting.The committee on the constitution of theUniversity reported that it had been in com¬mittee at Cornell University recently estab¬lished to recommend a redistribution ofpower within the University.A biological sciences research building isscheduled fw construction in the spring of1971. There are no imminent plans for thedestruction of extant buildings.March Set For WashingtonAlthough the October Vietnam Morato¬rium has not yet taken place, plans are al¬ready underway on this campus to plan fora national student strike on November 14and a massive memorial death march mithe White House in Washington, D.C., No¬vember 15.The death march and national studentstrike are being called by the New Mobili¬zation Committee to End the War in Viet¬nam (NMC), a national organization whichis coordinating other massive anti-war ac¬tivities in 60 cities throughout the countrythis fall.Moon Rocks WillSolve ProblemsContinued from Page Onesmith, professor and chairman of the de¬partment of geophysical sciences; RobertC. Newton, associate professor of geophy¬sical sciences.Also, Edward J, Olsen, curator of miner¬als and meteorites at the field museum andlecturer of geophysical sciences at the Uni¬versity ; Albert V. Crewe, professor of phys¬ics and in the Fermi institute; David Virgo,research associate of geophysical sciences;Dr. Humberto Femacez-Noran, Pritzkerprofessor of biophysics.Because only portions of the total lunarsamples can be studied at any one time bythe scientists, the museum display will notinterfere with scientific work. The Univer¬sity scientists are among some 140 princi¬pal investigators around the world who willconduct chemical and mineralogical studiesof lunar samples. Their findings, to bemade public by NASA this winter at a ma¬jor scientific conference, are expected tohelp clarify several theories regarding theorigin, age, and nature of the moon. The UC Committee to End the Vietnamwar (CEV), a recently formed chapter ofthe NMC, will coordinate activities on thiscampus for the death march and studentstrike.Tentative plans include canvassing oncampus and in the Hyde Park area to re¬cruit participants and funds for the deathmarch, transportation to Washington D.C.,a rally on campus with guest speakers andanti-war GI’s November 7, and a studentstrike November 14 in conjunction with thenational student strike set for that day.Those interested in the death marchshould come to the meeting of CEV in IdaNoyes Lounge Wednesday, October 8, at7:30 p.m.The memorial death march itself willconsist of two parts. The first part will be¬gin at midnight, November 14, when asingle-file procession of about 46,000 al¬ready-chosen Americans (equivalent to tilenumber of GI’s killed in Vietnam so far)carrying candles will march from ArlingtonNational Cemetery past the White House tothe Capitol. Each marcher will carry a pla¬card with the name of an American killedin Vietnam, and will shout the name as hefiles past the White House. The placardswill then be placed in coffins in front of theCapitol, thereby ending the first part of thedeath march.The second part of the march will beginat 9 a.m. (EST) on Saturday, November 15,when people from all over the country willassemble in the mall area for a massmarch to the White House. Coffins carryingthe name-placards of the 46,000 dead GI’sand of Vietnamese towns that have beenbombed out of existence by the U.S. will bedeposited in front of President Nixon’s resi¬dence, and a rally will take place there, at2 p.m. (EST), demanding the immediatewithdrawal of all U.S. troops from Viet¬nam. HARPER TOWERS: Shown in Monday's sunlight.David TravtaREGENSTEIN LIBRARY: To bo competedin a yoar. John Froines, staff member of the Na¬tional Mobilization Committee to End theWar in Vietnam, and one of the defendantsin the “Chicago 8” conspiracy trial, spokeat the Augustana Lutheran Church Mondaynight on the national implications of thetrial.In his speech, Froines said “What hap¬pens to eight men in the court room is oflittle importance; the crucial thing is totalk about the issues before the people ofthis country.”EDITORIALNarcsEverybody knows that there are narcotics agents on campus,but nobody seems to be able to do anything about it before it’s toolate. So far, there have been no arrests here this fall. But North¬western has not been so lucky.Last week, some five Northwestern students were arrestedby a narc. A copy written article in the Daily Northwestern re¬vealed how an informer working for the agent purchased marijuanafrom a student and turned him in. It was Northwestern’s first bustresulting from the infiltration of state narcotics agents this fall.Thursday night the student government at Northwesternpassed a resolution protesting the presence of the narcs on campusand set up a committee of three students (as yet unnamed) towork with the dean of students and admissions office to discoverthe identity of the agents. There is a provision in the studentcode of Northwestern calling for the expulsion of narcotics agentsregistered in the University.We have no such provision here, and if an agent is registeredat the University of Chicago, he could not be expelled. He couldonly be “advised to leave,” to use the words of Charles O’Connell,dean of students.Our University rates high on the state narcotics divisions’list, and it is surprising that there have not been any arrests yet.Estimates as to the number of agents here have run as high astwelve. Users and dealers in Hyde Park are keeping cool, especiallywith new students.Meanwhile, in the dormitories, it is reported that the wordhas gone out to resident heads to crack down oh drug use. Pre¬sumably it is an effort by the University to beat the narcs at theirown game, thus avoiding bad publicity and institutional embarrass¬ment.So what can be done? It is clear that the presence of theagents is detrimental to the University and disruptive to studentlife. Paranoia, an evil here no matter what you’re into, certainlyisn’t being helped by a constant fear of your fellow students. Andwhen that first bust comes, maybe people will get a bit upset,but it will be too late for somebody.Things are started in the right direction, however. Ananonymous “non-head” is offering a $100 reward for informationconcerning the agents, and someone was kind enough to post copiesof the Northwestern story around campus. And people are gen¬erally keeping cool.That isn’t enough. The University could consider making aprotest to the state narcotics division over the intrusion of agentswithin the student body. We know the University’s famous standon neutrality, and yet such a protest could be made — a politically— against the disruption of normal University activities. Perhapsthe University’s legal staff could consult with the American CivilLiberties Union to determine if students’ rights are beingthreatened, a “safe” ground for institutional protest.We wonder what it must be like to be a narc, paid to informon the business of fellow students. Looking for long-haired typesto make friends with, knowing all the time that you are being dis¬honest for a dollar. Or maybe its like Mod Squad or Dragnet. Dothey really give you a pretty girl and a .38 for saving society fromthe scourge of the freaks?Somehow we doubt it. Have you ever talked with someonewho has just been busted? It’s a bit depressing, to say the least.To any narcs who might read this, all we can say is, it must be adrag when your only friends are cops. New Bill Provides ImprovedAid To The Poor In IllinoisBy Joseph MallovA big factor behind the ill health of thepoor in our society has been their economicdeprivation. It is this to a considerable ex¬tent which has led so many to live incrowded and disease-fostering environ¬ments, and it is this which has played alarge role in preventing them from gettingadequate medical care. To a degree it hasbeen this that has caused doctors to movetheir offices to the suburbs of Chicago.(There are 2000 fewer physicians practicingin Chicago today than in 1930, while thepopulation of Chicago has increased.) It istheir economic deprivation that causesmany of the poor to put off seeking medicalhelp until illness is well advanced. It is thisthat accounts for the heavy reliance on theinferior Cook County Hospital, distant andinconvenient though it is for many. (CookCounty, a charity hospital, accounts forhalf of all Chicago’s Black hospitalpatients. The average distance from Negrohomes to Cook County is eight miles, whilethe average distance from Negro homes towhite hospitals is under one mile.)MANG (Medical Assistance-No Grant) isthe name Illinois gives to a program whichsupposedly removes the economic obstacleto medical treatment of many of the poorand near-poor. In actuality it does no suchthing, in Cook County at least. MANG wasimplemented in late 1965 in response to theTitle XIX (“Medicaid”) Amendment to theSocial Security Act, the same act to whichMedicare was the Title XVIII Amendment.Under Title XIX the federal governmentpays 50-83% of each state’s medical pay¬ments to public aid recipients and to peopletermed “medically indigent.” Public aidrecipients fall into four categories:• Dependent children (under 21) and therelatives with whom they are living • The aged (65 and older)• The blind• The “permanently and totally dabled” who are 18 or olderThe “medically indigent” are definedthose who cannot meet medical expensand who would fit into the above categoriif they were poorer. It is left up to tlstates to decide exactly who comes undthis heading. However, according to recefederal legislation the federal governmewill not pay for medical payments on bhalf of individuals with incomes over 133of the income allowed similar individu:in the basic maintenance assistance catgories. According to present Illinois stadards a family of four qualifies for medicassistance if its income is less than $36and its assets value at less than $800. Anone familiar with the high cost of mediccare can have no doubt that such quafications leave out many who could reasoably be considered medically indigent, aiin fact, these qualifications are more rstrictive than the qualifications set by Wiconsin, California, Oregon, PennsylvaniNew Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachsetts, Rhode Island, and New York.But the problems with MANG lie not sirply in the fact that many people have beileft out. Rather, the program is not woring in Cook County, so that only an eslmated one-eighth of the medical needsthe county’s Medicaid eligibles are actualbeing met under this program. (The fration is one-half for the medical needs of tlcounty’s public aid eligibles.)Why do they not take a chance on tlplace, application for assistance cannot 1made in advance of illness in IllinoiHence, someone who is ill but is unsurebeing able to pay his medical expenses wiContinued on Page NinBULLETIN OF EVENTS*Tuesday, October 7TWELVE-THIRTY ORGAN SERIES: Edward Mondello,University Organist, in twenty-minute recital, Rock¬efeller Memorial Chapel.CONFERENCE: (Graduate School of Business and In¬dustrial Relations Association), Midwest Conference onIndustrial Relations (Panel Session), Center for Contin¬uing Education, 1:30 pmCOLLOQUIUM: (James Franck Institute), John E. Har-riman. Professor, Theoretical Chemistry Institute, Uni¬versity of Wisconsin, Madison. "A Density Matrix Ap¬proach to Spin Density Calculations." Research In¬stitutes 480, 4:15 pmINTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Auditorium, Inter¬national House, 8 pmDOC FILMS: SHADOW OF A DOUBT, Cobb Hall, 8 pmCOUNTRY DANCERS: English, Scottish, Scandinavian,Wednesdays, 8-10 pm. Dance Room, basement INH,Free.PRE-MED CLUB MEETING: 7 pm., Billings M-137.Speaker: Joseph Ceithaml, Dean of Students in theTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David TravisFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froute (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports)Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Raul Bernstein, PeteGoodsell, Sarah Glazer, Stan Goumas, SusanLeft, Joseph Morris, Frieda Murray, AudreyShalinsky, David Steele, Leslie Strauss, CarlSunshinePhotography Staff: Ben Gilbert, Marie IsraelEssentially Unelassifiable: Rob CooleyDark Lady: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and Intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices In Rooms303, 304, and 305 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 80637. Phone Midway3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus and inthe Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mall $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. Division of Biological Sciences and the Pritzker Schof Medicine.RECRUITING VISITS: Cornell University-School ofdustrial and Labor RelationsWednesday, October 8SOCIAL SCIENCE 121 LECTURE: Cobb 209, 11:30 <Rosalind Cartwright, Dept, of Psychology, Universof Illinois, "Fantasy, Dreams, and Drugs: The Eperimental Psychology of Mental Processes."AUTUMN CARILLON SERIES: Robert Lodine, VisitiCarillonneur 1969-1970, in twenty minute recital, Roiefeller Memorial Chapel, 12:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: RehearsWinds sectional, 6:30 pm Mandel Hall, full orchestiMandel Hall, 7:30 pmDOC FILMS: Broken BLOSSOMS - D.W. Griffith, Qu<trell Auditorium, 7:15 and 9:30 pmARCHAEOLOGY CLUB MEETING: Breasted Hall, fito be shown, 8 pmFOLKSINGING: Hillel House, 8:00 pmFOLK DANCING: Country Dancers, Dances from Btish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida Noyes Hall (DanHall), 8 pmVISA MEETING: Ida Noyes Hall, to organize to hithe mentally ill. 8 pmUC NEW UNIVERSITY CONFERENCES OPENItMEETING: Radical grad students, staff, faculty ainvited to discuss racism, women's liberation, imirialism, Ida Noyes Hall, Cloister Club, 8 pmThursday, October 9STUDENTS FOR CAPITALISM AND FREEDOM-MEEING: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pmORGANIZATIONAL MEETING OF MUSICAL SOCITY: Ida Noyes Hall, East Lounge, 7:30 pmISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel House, 7:30 pmTWELVE-THIRTY ORGAN SERIES: University Orga1st, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics Dept), D. J. Bjorken, SL/Stanford University. "Deep Inelastic ScatteringHigh Energy Electrons, Muons, and Neutrinos." E<hart 133, 4:30 pmClarificationFriday’s Maroon quoted PaulBrown, member of the Student HealthOrganization (SHO), as saying thatthe organization had expected MarkRudd until an hour before the speech.According to Brown, the Weathermenknew of Rudd’s cancellation an hourin advance but that SHO did notlearn of it until “a minute before hewas scheduled to speak.”‘.♦.V. * * •4/The Chicago Meroen/October 7, 1949 11 .*(<•< f •* •Wheaton Mows Down Midway MonstersBy Mitch KahnThe monsters of the midway turned outto be nothing more than paper dragons,slain by those knights in shining armourwho call themselves the Wheaton Crusa¬ders, by the scandalous score of 6-0.The varsity grid jocks extended a losingstreak begun by their predecessors over 30years ago. Rockefeller’s Rowdies wouldhave turned over in their grave seeing themighty Maroons roll up an awesome totalof 99 yds. total offense against a porousWheaton line-up. Seventy of those yardsaccounted for by halfback-quarterback JimStankiewicz who ran 14 times for 43 ydsand completed five passes, three to thegood guys and two to the bad.One of the major problems facing Ma-oron quarterbacks was the inexperienceof the offensive line in the area of passblocking. Mike “Broadway Joe” Burgerwas dumped three times attempting to passand rarely did a play end without findinghim sprawled out on the ground with about250 lbs. of “Christ and iKngdom” sittingon his head.The Wheaton team took the opening kick¬off and marched downfield; the game’s only score coming on a one inch sneakyplunge by quarterback Jim Stevenson.However, the strains of “Onward ChristianSoldiers” was rapidly stifled by the defen¬sive unit led by Larry Woodell, Gary Le-land, and Mike Lockhart, holding them tounder 70 yds. for the rest of the day.Two other bright spots for the Maroonjocks was the punting of Steve Barrett, whowas called upon eight times and averagedalmost 30 yds. a kick, including one thatwas blocked; and the pass catching ofrookie Steve Reiss who caught two passesfor 15 yds.The score however, did not reflect the ef¬fort by the participants. Head coach WallyHass explained, “The only part of the gameI was disappointed with was the finalscore.”Elsewhere in the world of sports:The varsity soccer team followed the leadof their grid counterparts, losing twogames this weekend at the Purdue In¬vitational Tournament, 2-1 to Purdue at Ft.Wayne on Friday, and 4-3 to Trinity Chris¬tian.Intramural entries are due today for foot¬ball, tennis, golf, and squash. David TravisTHE MAROOS: Are about out of time and luck as they lose a heartbreaker toWheaton Friday, 64).TWOMONTHSFREE.30 ««tn absorbentself-adjustingtamponsWe’ll send you the $1.69 size of Playtex’first-day™ tampons for only SO<.You get more than two months’ supply free.There's no other tampon likePlaytex. Outside, soft and silky,not cardboardy. Inside, so extraabsorbent, it even protects onyour first day. That's why wecall it the first-day tampon.In every lab test against theold cardboardy kind, the*8as«d on the Average .oetjn's uie of ten tampons per monthPlaytex tampon was alwaysmore absorbent. Actually 45%more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regulartampon because of the uniqueway it’s made. Actually adjuststo you. Flowers out, fluffs out,protects every inside inch of you.Once you try it, we thinkyou’ll love it. That’s why we’remaking you this special "twomonths free” offer.So go ahead. Use the couponand get more than two months’supply free.Here’s 50$ for my more than two months' supply of Playtex tampons.Send in a plain brown wrapper, please.□ Regular □ SuperName.(plaise prml)Address.City. .State. -Zip.Mail coupon to: International Playtex Corporation, Dept. WV, 350Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. Offer expires December31, 1969. Please allow four weeks for delivery.I 1tPlarfaa it lh« trademark of International Playfti Carp., Ooeer. Oel. • 1969 International Planter Corp. The Man-On-Campus CollectionfromOF NEW HAVEN / SHIRTMAKERSIffilit iivM *,l....... The Bristol pin-or not' in eitherfrench or barrel cuffs.S' Shaped for the Man.Available in our newMargate spread, shown The celebrated Purist® button-downabove, and the Purist^ button-down, with regular tapered body.Sero presents a distinctive collection of falland winter dress shirts designed for today’sMan-on-Campus. Meticulously tailored inno-iron, wrinkle-free Sero-Press of 65%DACRON® Polyester, 35% Cotton for afresh all-day appearance.'DuPont registered trademark Copy'-** by tofO o« (f • f ' t • ♦ * * October 7,1W/T)w>ttli<**>M«f©©n/7Thursday Oct. 9,THE BEDFORD INCIDENT is the suspense-filledstory of a U.S. destroyer on submarine patrolduty and its fanatical captain, who is re-lentlessy pursuing a Russian sub. OTIS SPANN •ad hisBLUES BANDANDBIG JOE WILLIAMSTime 7:30 & 9:00 $1.00 CobbBlack Colony Productions Saturday, Oct. 11Ida Noyes Gymnasium8:00 p.m. Until ...Tickets *2 at Student Activities Offic& Reynolds Club DeskSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSC/9g w JOi n >ICS^ 3 ?cr'jn C/>[ T. «- I §* §8 iy ms -S 3i SAoz><IA<Aoz><l/)*Aoz><«/)lAoz This coupon worth $1toward anypurchase of$10 or more. $Offer expires Oct. 15, 1969limit of 1 per customer><«/> John’s Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd. ><zo<A\A><zo<AtA><zo<A(/>><z©*A<A>SAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSSFACULTY A STAFF:Recently, some of you have re¬quested that we send you copies ofThe Maroon to your offices. Wo can¬not afford to have our regular de¬liveryman deliver copies to specificoffices. At the same time, we realizethe inconvenience of trying to get aMaroon when you aren't on campuson Tuesdays or Fridays. Therefore, we are initiating a newservice; if you will send us a bunchof self-addressed faculty exchangeenvelopes, we will send you a copyof each Maroon in the envelopesyou provide. There if no cost for thisservice, and anybody who can re¬ceive mail through Faculty Ex¬change may apply.FOTA '70FOTA '70FOTA '70All interested students and faculty invited to the first meeting of theFestival of the Arts '70.Wed., Oct. 8Reynold's Club S. Lounge8:00 P.M.wLp/ .v... ORDON'SPtsr AUP ANTDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometrist•ye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644 FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY50* SAVINGREADER’S DIGESTLESS THAN 17< A COPYOrder Cards located in college bookstoreSend no money. Mail your card today.SEXSELLS!Find Out Why.Available At Your Local Campus Bookstore or NewsstandTHE UNIVERSITY OlCHICAGOCONCERT BANDpresentsA Concert of MarchesandAssorted Outdoor Musicfor yourPrandial and Postprandial EnjoymentFriday, October 10Hutchinson Court12:30 p.m.I * 9 • • • M » 4 « • * •r» err * rProposed Medicaid Plan Broadens BenefitsContinued from Page Sixput off seeking medical help until the ill¬ness is further advanced. By the same to¬ken, the doctor or hospital, seeing such apatient, will hesitate to treat him, and willmost likely either refer him to Cook CountyHospital or have him wait 30 days until no¬tice of his acceptance by the MANG pro¬gram is received, possibly a tragic delay.Why do they not taek a chance on thepatient's acceptance by MANG? They knowthat a majority of Medicaid claims put inby hospitals are rejected or ignored, partlya result of faulty administration, partly dueto failure of patients to meet financialeligibility standards, and partly due topatients’ (understandable) unwillingness tocooperate with public aid investigators.There is another reason why hospitals patients, if accepted, would receive a cardwhich would guarantee payment to any me¬dical vendor when illness struck. Recogniz¬ing that many people would wait until ill¬ness arrived before applying, Mann and hisassistant have also provided for that con¬tingency. According to the bill, The IllinoisDepartment of Public Aid must station au¬thorized personnel in every hospital re¬questing such personnel. To apply for theprogram an applicant has only to fill outand sign an affidavit specifying his incomeand assets. He must be notified of his ac¬ceptance or rejection within 72 hours, or, inan emergency, he will be certified by a li¬censed physician or dentist within 24 hoursafter submission of the application. Approv¬al or rejection depends only on the informa¬tion on his affidavit. Every applicant would"Thus HB-1479 would create an effective work¬able and broadened program of medical insur¬ance for the 'medically indigent' to becomeself-supporting to a greater extent, and may en¬courage doctors to practice in what are now'medical wastelands.'"and doctors would hesitate to treat such apatient. Due to poor administration by theCook County Department of Public Aidand/or the Illinois Department of PublicAid, there is a delay of six months to twoyears from the time a patient is acceptedby MANG until the time payment is re¬ceived by the medical institution. Manyhospitals, faced with current operating.ex¬penses they must meet, cannot afford solong a wait. Indeed, only the richest can. A1967 survey showed that one Chicago hospi¬tal had unpaid accounts receivable of a mil¬lion and a half dollars, and five Chicagohospitals had unpaid claims ranging from$250,000 to $750,000.Doctors and hospitals also complain oftoo much paper work and too complexregulations. As a result of the above factors— uncertainty of being paid, long delays inpayment, and red tape — “most hospitalsand virtually all physicians” in Cook Coun¬ty refuse to participate in the program.The MANG program has other faults.First, not much of an effort has been madeby Illinois to inform its citizens of the pro¬gram, thus contributing to the hesitation ofmany people to seek medical services whenthey are required, and to the overuse ofCook County Hospital. Second, preventivemedicine and dental care (physical anddental exams) are not covered by the pro¬gram. Such a flaw is another example oftragic short-sightedness on the part of Il¬linois’ legislators.Representative Robert E. Mann has in¬troduced a bill, HB-1479, to combat theabove enumerated difficulties. This mea¬sure has been passed by the Illinois Houseaad is awaiting action by the Illinois Senateat the next legislative session. It is now inthe hands of a subcommittee of the SenateCommittee on Public Welfare. The bill aspresently amended would accomplish thefollowing:1)It would end medical vendors’ uncer¬tainty of being paid, one of the biggest ob¬stacles to an effective program. It would dothis, first, by permitting people to apply forthe program in advance of illness. Such not be subject to a humiliating, time-con¬suming investigation. Spot checks of ap¬proved candidates would be made, as aredone now for the purpose of detecting in¬come tax violators. These must be done, ifat all, within 30 days after initial approvalof the application. According to the bill, ap¬proved applicants may be required to con¬sent to a payment reimbursement scheduleif. upon such spot checks, they are foundnot eligible for aid.2)The bill would eliminate the six monthto two year wait after applications are ap¬proved before payment is made. It would• do this by putting the job of payment tomedical vendors in the hands of an insur¬ance company cr a non-profit hospital ser¬vice corporation or a medical service cor¬poration (perhaps Blue Cross). The agencyselected would be chosen by the Governor,Lieutenant Governor, Treasurer, Directorof the Illinois Dept, of Public Aid, and theDirector of the Illinois Dept, of PublicHealth on the basis of these criteria:David TravisFem Grad StudentNeeds Apartmentfor under $100Call Ml 3-0800x3263 Did you know that MlUSiCRAFT haslull-time servicemen to give you the best service onyour STEREO COMPONENTS?48 E. Oak St. 2035 W. 95thOn Campus call Bob Tabor 324-3005 • Low bid• Ability and past experience in reim¬bursing medical providers• Effectiveness of control mechanisms toassure quality of care, appropriate utili¬zation of services, and claims cost control.The state would pay the agency’s pre¬miums using its own and federal funds. A“rate stabilization reserve” would be madeavailable to the insurance company to pro¬vide for periods in which total liabilitiesand operating expenses of the company ex¬ceed premiums paid. Every six months thepremium rate would be subject to adjust¬ment, using past experience, future costtrends, and a desire for maintenance of therate stabilization reserve at a fixed level asguides. The company would render accountquarterly of its expenditures, and the statewould furthermore have the right to auditthe company’s financial records as well asthose of medical providers, insofar as theydealt with Medicaid patients.3)The bill would broaden both the num¬ber of patients eligible for Medicaid and thebenefits provided. It provides that the Il¬linois Dept, of Public Aid shall not establishincome eligibility restrictions of less than133% of the maximum basic maintenancegrant allowed the most needy welfarerecipient of a similar classification. Thismeans, for example, that a family of fourwould be eligible if it had a yearly incomeof $4000 or less. (The present figure is$3600.) HB-1479 also raises allowable assetsto a level of 50% of the maximum incomeallowed; i.e., $2000 instead of the present$800 for a family of four. It also permits thestate, though it does not mandate it, to paya sliding-scale percentage of the medicalcosts of those with income higher than the “maximum allowable without restrictions.”The bill has another important provision.It bro? tens coverage to include preventiveserv'ces; i.e., preventive physical exams,de.ital exams, and psychological coun¬seling. Prevention of disease is thus re¬stored to its rightful place as medicine’strue goal.4)Finally, the bill mandates the IllinoisDept, of Public Aid to publicize fully itsMedicaid program. The Department mustplace signs in all its offices, all offices ofcounty Departments of Public Aid, and allhospitals in which authorized personnel arelocated. It must provide leaflets in theabove areas and other areas where Illinoispublic information leaflets are normallydisplayed. It must, further, make use of allavailable modes of public service adver¬tisement.Thus HB-1479 would create an effective,workable, and broadened program of me¬dical insurance for the “medically in¬digent.” It will also, if passed, help OEOclinics and other climes operating in pover¬ty areas, to become self-supporting to agreater extent, and may encourage doctorsto practice in what are now “medicalwastelands.” Finally, it will help to trans¬form the concept of medical care as a hu¬man right into a reality.Joseph Mallov is a second year medicalstudent.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit¬ting columns should contact the editor.Ourpill.Does it really work?If you’ve ever resorted to NoDoz’’ at 4 a.m.the night before an exam, you’ve probablybeen disappointed.NoDoz, after all, is no substitute forsleep. Neither is anything else we canthink of.What NoDoz is is a very strong stim¬ulant. In fact, NoDoz has the strongeststimulant you can buy without a prescrip¬tion.Caffeine.What’s so strong about that?If we may cite The PharmacologicalBasis of Therapeutics: Caffeine is apowerful central nervous stimulant. Caf¬feine excites all portions of the centralnervous system. Caffeine stimulates allportions of the cortex, but its main actionis on the psychic and sensory functions.It produces a more rapid and clearer flowof thought and allays drowsiness andfatigue. After taking caffeine, one is ca¬pable of more sustained intellectual ef¬fort and a more perfect association ofideas. There is also a keener apprecia¬tion of sensory stimuli.Very interesting. But why take NoDoz when you can get caffeine in acup of coffee?Very simple. You take NoDoz all atonce i nstead of si ppi ng coffee for 10 mi n-utes. And if you take two NoDoz tablets,the recommended dosage, you get twicethe caffeine in a cup of coffee.Two tablets—isn’t that likely to behabit forming? Definitely not. NoDoz iscompletely non-habit forming.Which means it’s safe to takewhether you’re cramming at night. Orabout to walk into an 8 o’clock class. Ordriving somewhere (even though you’rerested) and the monotony of the roadmakes you drowsy.One last thing you should knowabout NoDoz. It now comes in two forms.Those familiar white pills you take withwater. And a chewable tablet calledNoDoz Action Aids'. It tastes like a choc¬olate mint, but it does everything regularNoDoz does.And if you’ve managed / vvto stay awake thislong, you knowthat’s quite a lot.Don't Cancel!On Wednesday, October 1, one of my un¬dergraduate classes was interrupted by anannouncement by my instructor that wehad a political issue with which we had tocome to terms. He stated that with refer¬ence to the proposed October 15th Morato¬rium, the university was desirous of know¬ing student sentiment toward possibleofficial stands of the university. He wrotefive possible types of action on the boardand then gave the floor to a young ladywho was a member of the steering com¬mittee of this planned moratorium.At this juncture I list the five choiceswhich, although slightly paraphrased forlack of direct quotation, are in contentquite accurate:• Close the university; employees notallowed to work• The university remain open (i.e. em¬ployees must work), but classes can¬celled• Leave the choice open to individualteachers and individual students• Cancel formal classes, but if some stu¬dents were desirous of it, informal dis¬cussions would be held, and those stu¬dents who would not attend thesediscussions would “not miss anything.”• The university operate as normal.Of course, the students voted practically enmasse for Number 1. There were two of myinstructors in the classroom who announcedthat the university position notwithstand¬ing, they were cancelling their classes.The first question which arises in mymind, of course, is the bare issue, aqj I foror against the war in Vietnam. However,after circumspection beyond my initial cur¬sory evaluation, I noted that the moregrave implications of this proposal hadbeen rather obfuscated by the emotion sur¬ rounding this issue, to wit, the entire philo¬sophical meaning of such consideration.I am against the University of Chicagotaking an official stand on this issue byclosing down the school. I believe the uni¬versity should operate as usual and thosestudents who desire to express themselveson this issue should do so, but also shouldtake the responsibility for such action.It is true that we, as students, seek avariegated education, but involvement ofthis nature in such an issue is quite outsidethe university as a formal institution. Fur¬ther, the university as a whole cannot beconsidered a homogeneous group, for thereare two parts: one, the administration, fac¬ulty, and employees, and two, the studentbody. Should the former group want to takean official stand, then let it so state itsstand, but not interfere with the learning ofits students, which is not related to the is¬sue. For, it would appear to me that if theuniversity fails to provide instructors, thenit is, in effect, reneging on its contract. Ifthe students want to take a stand on thisissue, then they are expressing their viewsas citizens on a national political issue, andthey may do so, but not at the expense ofother citizens. It might be interesting tonote that the majority of undergraduateshave not yet attained the right of franchise.The moratorium committee states overand over again that this is not a strikeagainst the university, then I ask, why doesit feel free to want to utilize universitytime, funds, and property? What is this useof the English language? If this is truly adesire to show fervent citizen interest, thenwhy is a time advantageous to all. dis¬advantageous to none not utilized? Sincethe committee insists it only wants the sus¬pension of classes so everyone may partici¬pate freely, it evolves that Sunday would bethe only such day that could fit this descrip¬ tion. However, having this on Sunday“would be insane.” Why? If that is so, whatare the real desires of the forces behind theentire movement?Further, if the students are again trulydesirous of reflecting their sentiments, hop¬ing that they be taken into consideration inthe future determination of Vietnam policy,I alert you to the definitions of two words.“Intellectual” as an adjective means “giv¬en to study, reflection, and speculation; en¬gaged in activity requiring the creative useof the intellect.” “Creative” means “pro¬ductive.”Ah yes, study. I ask, how many studentshave read books on Vietnamese history,have read Bernard Fall, Joseph Buttinger.Col. Corwin, Daniel Lyons, Ho Chi Minh, VoNguyen Giap? How many students havespoken with even one Vietnamese person?How many students have been to Vietnam?How many have studied its geography?After truthful answers, I ask upon what,then, does the student body base its opin¬ion. one of such conviction that allegedly itwarrants the attention of the man who hasthe grave responsibility of determining theforeign policy of the United States? Is thisbasis of judgment one at which you canpoint with individual intellectual pride andsay that this is the culmination of the in¬tellectual approach as taught by the Uni¬versity of Chicago? Is this the respect youhave for your intellect?Charles V. ChaseCancel!You're under 25but you drivelike an expert.Why should youhave to payextra for yourcar insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY nINSURANCETINA’SBEAUTYSALON1329 E. 57th St.Complete Beauty ServicesExpert Hair CutCallDO 3-7330 BLOWYOURSELF UPBlack and WhiteDiat*iv onu wmie2 ft. x 3 ft. Poster only $0($4.95 value)with plastic frame $4 ($7.95 value)Send any black & white or color photoup to 8" x 10“ (no negatives) and thename ''Swingline" cut from anySwinglmt stapler or staple refill packageto: Poster Mart. P. O. Box 165.Woodside. N. Y. 11377. Enclose cash,check or money order (no C.O.O.'s) inthe amount of $2.00 for each blow up;$4.00 for blow-up and frame es shown.Add sales tax where applicable. Originalmaterial returned undamaged. Satisfac¬tion guarantied. Allow 30 days for delivery.STAPLERThe world's largest sellingstapler yet no larger than apack of gum. ONLY Mt with 1000 FUI stapieslTHE GREAT NEWSWINGLINEriiR* han°*VUB DESK STAPLERS. ONLY $1 .St each.5) With 1000 staplesonly $1.98 each.me.xemwiWM. 7uaeisuaecin.e> m.i On October 2 the Department of Philoso¬phy voted to support the Vietnam Morato¬rium, and all those present at the meetingwho have classes scheduled for October15th agreed to cancel them.Robert C. CobumProfessor of Philosophy They're After Me!The lead in Friday’s Grey City Journalby Robin Hawkes was a much more mean¬ingful piece than even Miss Hawkesseemed to think. By treating the problem ofparanoia as wittily as she did, (unless Robin is a he, in which case, I apologize) thetopic itself seemed to lose much of its valid¬ity. However, those of us who have attend¬ed the University know that the feeling ofpamois is a real, but terrifying one.This feeling seems to manifest itself inthe conspiracy theory that is so prevalentall over campus, especially during the trou¬bles of last year. Students, being relativelypowerless, are apt to blame their problemson an amorphous group known as “the ad¬ministration” or “them” without realizingthat there really isn’t any one specificgroup that makes all of the decisions thatstudents dislike. However, from their par¬ticular viewpoint, most students don’t knowthis and therefore tend to build these in¬credible stories on how there is a Univer¬sity-wide conspiracy against them, peoplelike them, or opposing viewpoints.Some might call this far-fetched to saythat merely from paranoia, all this canmanifest itself, but sociologist havelearned that when people are scared orpowerless, it is easier to blame their prob¬lems on a conspiracy than on the morecomplex, but truer realities of the situation(Gantson’s study of Jeweltown). To help orease the situation here seminars or col¬umns in the Maroon should explain to stu¬dents exactly how this place works and howdecisions are made so that the conspiracytheory will die and follow those other fa¬mous theories on the flat earth and the geo¬centric solar system.Michael Fred EllisOpium d&fMurderThat's what's at Doc this week. Tonight: SHADOW OF A DOUBT, about a man who murders little old ladiesas much out of contempt as for their money and his adoring niece who wants to be just like him. Perceptivewit and nerve-shattering suspense from Alfred Hitchcock. Tomorrow night: D. W.Griffith's BROKENBLOSSOMS for all those hip to drugs and love and such.' Richard Barthelmess as an opium-smokingChinaman in desparate love with beautiful Lillian Gish, defying the backlash violence of her working-classpapa. See it and never forget it. Both at 8 in Cobb. Friday: Fellini's 8-1/2. And the weekend after:Jean-Luc Godard (director of BREATHLESS) and WEEKEND.doc filmsSENIORSIT'S YOUR CHOICE100 INTERVIEWSor100 JOB OFFERSA on* interviewtor you your friondt. your family,A all job bunfort. . . .Call or come in NOW!DUNN PERSONNELCONSULTANTS17 N. State St. - Suite 1300ST2-5422•A Stato liconsod Agoncy. / • • t / f S’you can Hear yoursdl think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxe.lass ale and Schlitx beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon5311 BLACKSTONE dinner . , . (ate snacks .BANQUET ROOM HY 3-193310/The Chicago Maroon/October 7, 1969IE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)IOEL! WHAT HAPPENED TO THE HEAD?!fbates: For University students,I faculty, and staff: 50 cents perI line. For non-University clientele:'40 cents per line each additionalinsertion.75 cents per tine, 60 cents perme each additional Insertion.Count 30 typewriter speeds perJ line.I TO FLACK AO: Come with or| mail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1213 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60037.I Ne ads will be taken ever theI phene or billed.The next issue of the MaroonI will he Oct. Id. Deadline ter alladvertising is 4 PM on theWednesday before publication. TRY-OUTSFOR University Theater's First Pro¬duction AMERICA HURRAH Rey¬nolds Club South Lounge Oct 7A9;7:30-9:00 PM.CHEERLEADERSUC CHEERLEADERS WANT YOU.PRACTICES: OCT 9, 13, 16, 20 at6:30 IN IDA NOYES DANCEROOM.HAIR TICKETSkOOK WANTEDIRAIN AND INTELLIGENCE ByYard C. Halstead U. of Chi, Press1947) Phone Ml 3-0800 Ext 4774. SPECIAL NDC PREVIEW PER¬FORMANCE TUES. OCT 20. TICK¬ETS $4 & $5. Students Only. Call Ml3-0000 EXT. 3273-74 tor Info orTicket.PEOPLE FOR SALEINTERIOR DESIGN CONSULTANTFor townhouses, opts., houses. Stu¬dent dlscts. Barbara Hammere, as-sociate member NSIO, 200-4596 BABYSITTER-EVENINGS-RESPON-SIBLE-SOPH-x3755eNo. 200.MICROBUS & FORDECONOLINE OWNERS!If you are a student, you can make$20 & up per Friday AM deliveringthe Maroon. See the Business Man¬ager on Wed.FOR RENTStudios 2*A$ 4 Rm Apts Cali Mr.Stoll DO 3-6700.STEVE FA 4-0342MIA STUDENTS!!!!!Do you realize you could have made $50 plus$5 mileage yesterday? And with only 4 hourswork? Do you realize that the ad salesmenlast year cleared $12,000 in commissionsduring the school year? And they only calledon advertisers who called repeatedly until thead salesmen had a chance to get time to callon them. In other words, we have a sellers'market that is very UN-saturated.Getting back to the $50 & $5, this is whatJim Woods made yesterday, his first dayselling ads. He is an MBA student with noselling experience, no advertising experience.First year students, second year students,beards, blacks, females, drunkards, stockmarket speculators - their are clients to suityou all, and it has been proven that you allcan sell Maroon advertising.Why am I not keeping this gold mine all tomyself? Because I must carry a full load ofstudies, or I'll be on social security before Igraduate.Please call the Maroon office, ex. 3263 orleave a note in my mail folder. E. Gonder Nearby uhfum. 3-rm. Also apt. toshare with woman. 955-9209NEAR UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO3-5 room apartments, all w-tile baths& showers. Ideal for students in¬terns, nurses, young couples NOCHILDREN, RENTAL, CALL RE4-4141 $9b*110.PRIVATE ROOMS FOR UC STU¬DENTS BOARD CONTRACT IN¬CLUDED 5555 S WOOOLAWN CALLPL 2-9704,ROOMMATES WANTED2 Gay Students Wanted to Share 5Rm Apt (53rd & Harper) $52 &Utils. 955-7433.ROOMMATE PREF MALE GRADSTUDENT $40 Plus Painting Req363-3175.GIRL TO SHARE APT WITH 2OTH. 54th & UN IV. 540-mo. 684-7927.FEMALE GRAD WANTED TOSHARE 2-BDRM APT WITH SAME.GREENWOOD NEAR 54th. $80. 643-6549.FEM GRAD TO SHARE APT W-2OTHR 54 & HARPER. BEG. WINQTR OR SOONER. S55-MO. 363-0715.Fem Roommate For Large, Bright,Convenient Apt MUST LIKE CATS.CALL MARGOT 324-4626.[Did you know that MFSiCRAFT not only hasthe LOWEST PRICES on STEREO COMPONENTS>ut gives generous trade-in allowances,ME. Oak St. 2035 W.95th St.On Campus call Bob Tabor324-3005 GRAD WANTED TO SHARE BESTAPT IN HP MUST TAKE GOODCARE OF FLAT CALL BU 8-8907FOR DETAILS.QUIET YOUNG FEMALE PROFNEEDS QUIET, FEMALE GRADSTUDENT TO SHARE 4-ROOMAPARTMENT IN SO. SHORENEAR 1C. CALL 721-4845.PEOPLE WANTEDWANTED-BABYSITTER-1 DAY AWEEK AND 1 AFTERNOON. 667-6251.Want to commit yourself? HelpVISA help the mentally ill at com¬munity centers, Chicago St. Mentalhospital and a halfway house. Call493-3284.BRIGHT, ambitious student neededas campus representative for com¬puter dating service. May work forcommission or franchise. Write Cu¬pid Computer, 403 South Coler, Ur¬bane, Illinois 61801.Orgy of the ArtsandNorthwestern UniversitypresentHowlin' WolfandPhillip UpchurchFriday, Oct. 10 8 PMTickets For Sale At The MaroonIda Noyes Room 304 ‘ -I * :Cohn Auditorium^ 600 Emerson Street(Off Sheridan Road)/ Evanstonsi SUBSCRIBETHE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, IllinoisMaroon issues for the full academic year (69-70) can be sent anywherein the country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6Yearbook Issue last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, im¬press your friends.NAME.address ZIP.□ 1 year subscription $8.00D Yearbook Issue $1.00 Total inclosed Be the Claude Killy of the Univer¬sity. Ski Europe. Charter FlightsChristmas Charter 1199 Ml 30088Ext. 3598. 1:00-5:30 PM.TYPE TABLES FOR UNIVERSITYRESEARCH PROJECT. STRAIGHTNeeded Someone to Work PART-TIME With The Woodlawn Busi¬ness Community Office 8> Gen.Work. Call The Woodlawn Business¬men's Assoc at DO 3-5362, LeaveMessage If No One in Office.RESEARCH SUBJECTS FOR CIGA-R E T T E SMOKING EXERCISESTUDIES NEEDED HAVE TO BESMOKERS CONTACT MR. GOLD-BARG, MU 4-6100, X 5565.FOR SALE67 VW eng exc few dents. Betterdealers offer 1100 this week FA4-8200 x577 leave message.So where are you? Doesn't anyonewant my poor old couch? It makesinto a bed 8, has storage in the bot¬tom. Not bad except for a repair¬able tear. Make an offer. Wheeling,dealing Maroon Business Manager.X3263.Portable Manual Typewriter $80 NewWill sell for $35 Original Packing-With Case Used a few times. 643-0300, 3981.68 HONDA 30£ SCRM CUST SEATLUGG RACK AAANY XTRAS $500643-4050.1966 RAMBLER AMERICAN EXCCOND DOOR STICK SHIFT OVER-DRIVE RADIO HEATER PH.BRIAN NO75063.WRANGLER JEANS, BELL-BOT-TOMS, WORKSHIRTS. Shipmentjust arrived at John's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd Street.READER DIGEST $2 CALL 667-6241Xerox Copies 9c 7c, 5c 8, 7c 5c 3c$10 runs, 10% Discount on 9c 7c 5crate.'66 VW SEDAN. RUNS WELL.GOOD TIRES. MUST SELL $750.493-3119.Furniture For Sale. Beds, Lamps,Tables, Chairs Etc. Cheap 5466 SCornell Apt 2 After 5PM. "Two WSA paranoids have accusedme of being a police spy. I am flat¬tered to be included with Ho ChiMinn ('a traitor') and Marcuse('cop-out or cop*). At the last SDSNC i opposed purging WSA-PL as aStalinist tactic. Now l say, "UncleJoe where are you now that wereally need you?" Ronald YangVOLUNTEER TO KELP THE MEN-TALLY ILL. VISA INFORMATIONMEETING WED OR CALL 493-3284.Help remove a major threat to lib¬erty and prosperity. Write FederalUnion 1736 Columbia Rd NW, Wash¬ington, DC 20009.HAPPY BIRTHDAY ESTHERKEEP ON CHOOGLING!ANN, WINDY, WE LOVE YOU.ARE YOU OK? MOM & LOR¬RAINE.PRE MED CLUB MEETINGTues, Oct. 7, 7PM in BiHings M-137.Joseph Ceithami, Dean of Studentsin Med School, speaking. Everyoneis wercome.OUTING-MORTON ARBORETUMLISLE ILL. Sat Oct 11. Bus LvsIni') H'se 1414 E 59 St 930 AM Fare1.75 Bus Tour on Ground: 50 centsSHAPIRO COLLECTION-ART TOLIVE WITH. Distribution of Paint¬ings October 10th at 4PM in IdaNoyes Hall. Numbers for sequenceof distribution may be obtained be¬ginning at 8:30AM. Bring a vali¬dated ID an $1.25. First come Firstserve.Radical grad students staff facultycome to opening meeting of UC NewUniversity Conference. Discuss rac¬ism women's liberation imperialismIda Noyes Cloister Club Wed Oct 8.8PM.En{oy the last decadent days of oldEurope before the Revolution.Christmas Charter, Ml 3-0800, Ext3598 1:00-5:30. JR - THE FOREST FLOWER HASDIEDPorsche, Mercedes, Volvo, VW, etcThey all cost much Jess in Europe.Charter Flights Christines Charter.Ml 3-0000 Ext 3598WHY NOT SLEEP COMFORTABLYTHROUGH THE CLASSES THATPUT YOU TO SLEEP. Portabletape recorders from $34.95 »t MUSI-CRAFT. Stereo components et dis¬counts. Campus rep Bob Tabor 363-4555THE ANGEL: Ot Gideon would youhave your God a wandering magi¬cian slapping a timbrel and kickinghis heels?GIDEON: Do not rise in wrathagainst me sir.THE ANGEL: I am not In wrath. Iam plainly confused. And sore atheart. I HAVE LOVED YOU. Andyou have turned your back.IOEON: I do find you personablesir.THE ANGEL: Personab’e! Gideon,one does not merely fancy God. tdemand a splendid love from you,abandoned adoration, a torrent, astorm of love.GIDEON (with almost unbearablekindness): I'm afraid I'm not thesplendid sort, my Lord. You want aless moderate man than I. t'm sureyou shall find one soon enough, foryou are an attractive God, and thereare many men who will love youvigorously. I'm sure of that. (He of¬fers his hand and smiles dis¬armingly). Come. If I have givenyou some hurt, then clasp my handand say it is over with.The Angel cannot help but beamused by this ingenious fellow. Heclasps Gideon's arm.THE ANGEL: I SHALL MAKEYOU LOVE MENew 8< Used Sterio Components atdiscounts. Used Specials with 90 dayguarantee.Sony 350 $115Oyna Pat No. 4 $79.95AR 4X Walnut $34.958. much more at Musicraft.Campus Rep. Bob Tabor363-4555PERSONALWELCOME — TWEEDLEDUM(OR IS IT TWEEDLEDEE)WILL THE OWNER OF THE DOGTHAT BIT ME ON OCT. 1 1969NEAR RYERSON AT 830 PMPLEASE CONTACT ME. R. J MIT¬CHELL EX 3770.STUDENTS FOR CAPITALISM &FREEDOM — IDA NOYES 730 PM9 OCT '69. MANYTHANKSBRUCEOpen Your Day atHutchinsonCommonsBreakfast 7:00 - 10:00Lunch 11:00 - 2:00Did you know that MlFStCRAFT sell KLHcampacts with 2 year parts & labor guarantees, &does any necessary service on their premises!!48 E.OakS.L_ 2035 W. 95thOn Campus call Bob Tabor 324-3005 MENTIONTHEMAROONSunday Seu> York Timet8:30 AMBOB’S NEWSSTAND51st and Lake Park(daily too)Huge storks of Current Magazines,Paperbacks, Assorted Pornography,Candy, & Gum. Come & meet mydog" Michael.'’MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIER TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUN.NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE:HEADING: 50' par line, 40* par oach Una if tha ad is repeated in asubsequent, consacutiva issue. Non-Univarsity people: 75' parline, 60* par repeat Una. Thera are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation manes in a Une. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.October 7, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11• -t’.-i (#’• ■ ■ *’ .•invitesthe Publicto our 8thAnnual Wine SaleFriday, Oct. 10th9Saturday, Oct. 11 th,and Sunday, Oct. 12thAs wine is consumed, the supply swindles, andbecause wines must be purchased two to fiveyears in advance of the time they can be sold,established, vintages are becoming rarer andmore costly. A sale of such fine vintage wines, would,of course, be most unusual. But now is our purchasing timeagain, and new vintages must be purchased. To makeroom physically, 952 wines from the Party Mart WineRoom will be offered at 20 to 50% reductions thisFriday, Oct. 10th, Saturday, October 11th,and Sunday, October 12. Reductions offeredwill be at least 20%with manyWE SUGGEST EARLY ATTENDANCEIN ORDER TO ACQUIRE THEBEST VALUES as 50%CHICAGO'S FINEST LIQUOR STORES2427 EAST 72nd ST. • BAyport 1-9210351 EAST 103rd ST. •568-1811Non • Profit Org.U. S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, lUinoisPermit No. 793112/The Chicago Maroon/October 7, 1969