HE MAROONVolume 78, Number 15 The University of Chicago Friday, October 24, 1969Fire Damages University BookstoreTHE FIRE: Billowing clouds of smoke fill the air as fireman cross roof to fight bookstore fire.Raby Speaks on Tenant UnionsAsserting that “even intellectuals don’tmake decisions based on knowledge; theymake decisions based on power,” A1 Raby,political action chairman for OperationBreadbasket and Con-Con candidate,stressed the importance of creating studenttenant union power in a speech to the stu¬dent government (SG) assembly Tuesdaynight.Following Raby’s speech SG membersagreed unanimously to have the studentgovernment promote formation of studenttenant unions in Hyde Park.In other business, SG put off voting on theCORSO budget until its next meeting; ex¬pressed disapproval of last spring’s dis¬ciplinary procedures; requested participat¬ing student observers on major Universitygoverning bodies, and made minor changesin the student cpde governing student activ-Panel DebatesSchool SystemThe American public school system wasvariously defended, attacked and optimisti¬cally reformed Wednesday evening byspeakers at a University Phi Delta Kappapanel on “The Demise of American Educa¬tion?”Ernest Jaski, president of the Universitychapter of the professional honorarysociety for men in education, opened thediscussion in Judd Hall by explaining itspurpose as “a review and exploration of theproblems and progress of the publicschools.”Lead-off panelist Angeline Caruso, dis¬trict superintendent of Chicago publicschools, staunchly defended the presentschool system even though, she said, “a de¬fense of the past educational systems onlyserves as a red flag to the discontents, mili¬tants and other critics.” She quoted Morti¬mer J. Adler, who is published in the Uni¬versity of Chicago Britannica Journals,describing the American school system as“on the balance, as good as, if not better,than any other country’s, and better thanany of the past.”Continued on Page Eight ities.In speaking of his own involvement inboth the local freedom movement andthe tenant movement, Raby said that at thebeginning of his participation he had been“pretty naive,” but that he had come torecognize the fact that power was essentialin order to achieve any changes.Raby cited examples of previous atrtempts at organizing tenant unions. Hestated that in Washington, DC, two mem¬bers of Congress had organized tenants in avery affluent area of that city. Also, 1300students at the University of Michigan havejoined together and withheld their rents ina similar movement.Much work has already been done and isbeing done to organize Hyde-Park tenants,Raby said, presently a research committeeis preparing a guide to rent gouging, whichis intended to assist local tenants in eval¬uating whether or not they are beingtreated fairly by their landlords. Thispamphlet should be ready within a month.In urging the SG assembly to act posi¬tively in the formation of tenant unions,Raby said of this movement, “It is radical... but not paternalistic, we will be helpingourselves, as well as the poor.”After Raby’s brief address SG voted tou/nrk far tenant unions in cooperation with the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference (HPKOC). The motion called for di¬viding Hyde Park into eight different sec¬tions, eadi to have its own staff. SG willactively recruit students to participate inthe project.Also brought up at Tuesday’s meetingwas SG’s position regarding last year’s dis¬ciplinary proceedings. Following the pre¬sentation of a committee report on the dis¬cipline committee by chairman David Bens-man, the assembly voted to reaffirm amotion passed last spring on discipline.That motion essentially stated that SG re¬jects the process and content of those dis¬ciplinary procedures.The assembly unanimously passed a setof resolutions which request the council ofthe faculty senate, the committee of thecouncil and the board of trustees to permitstudents to attend their meetings as “par¬ticipating student observers.” These stu¬dents, who would participate, but not vote,would be elected by SG.Changes in the student code were alsovoted upon and passed. Among the newprovisions is one which eliminates the needfor a faculty sponsor for any student orga¬nization and also a provision which specif¬ically permits non-students to participate inUniversity student activities.AL RABY: The Con-Con delegate speaks at SG meeting. Fire ripped through the University book¬store Thursday afternoon, leaving the sec¬ond floor of the building completely guttedand leaving the first floor, which containsmost of the books, partially flooded.The fire was discovered by Mrs. JuleWhiting, chief cashier when she first heard“crackling” in her second floor office at1:45 pm and looked into a nearby room con¬taining books and supplies to find theflames licking up to the ceiling. The build¬ing, filled with customers and employees,was evacuated.Damage was placed at $7500, accordingto J.F. Smith, chief of the 8th fire batallion.He also said that the origin was “undeter¬mined” and that arson was possible. De¬tails of the investigation by the arson squadwere not available at press time.A report that the bookstore would moveto the basement and first two floors of theadministration building across the streetabout January 1st was denied by Eddie Wil¬liams, vice-president for public affairs whotermed the report “in the area of rumors.”He acknowledged that there had been dis¬cussion by administrators regarding mov¬ing the bookstore, but nothing had been de¬cided. Naphtali Knox, director of planningand construction, said about the proposedmove to the administration, “It’s the firstthing I’ve heard about it.” No plans havebeen made at present about reopening thebookstore.Reaction of several hundred onlookerswas mixed, with reactions such as “when’sthe fire sale?” “I hope the credit recordsburned, so I won’t have to pay my bill,”and “anyone for a little looting?”The fire was out by 2:55 pm, but onlybookstore officials were allowed to go in¬side.The location where the fire was first dis¬covered is in the middle of the building onthe second floor. The place where the firestarted was not determined after a prelimi¬nary investigation.A fire broke out Tuesday in the samearea, apparently from an overloaded cir¬cuit in the wall. It was put out by an em-Continued on Page TwoDonovan SingsAt RockefellerDonovan, Welsh folk-rock singer, willpresent a concert in Rockefeller MemorialChapel Monday at 4 p.m.As of Thursday morning, about 350 of1800 tickets at $5, $4.25, and $3.50 are stillavailable to University faculty, students,and staff, according to Marty Marcus,chairman of Revitalization, sponsor of theevent.University ID’s must be presented attime of ticket purchase and at the door.The concert is restricted to University per¬sonnel upon the insistence of a downtownpromoter who did not want his receiptshurt, Marcus said. The Donovan concertdowntown is tonight.Revitalization chose Rockefeller Chapelfor the concert because “It’s the most ap¬propriate place for Donovan to perform,and it’s the largest place on campus,” Mar¬cus said.“This is really proper for the sanctity ofthe chapel,” he said. “It’s obvious that wewouldn’t bring Janis Joplin to Rockefeller.”The concert is Revitalization’s most ex¬pensive venture to date. The group wasable to get Donovan for $10,000, a price low¬er than usual, because the concert is in theafternoon.Holders of the 650 complimentary tickets,given to all freshmen and orientation aides,should use the east entrance to Rockefeller.d«vw RoMnmmt others should use the south entrance.Anti-Pollution Battle Begun in Hyde ParkMayor Richard Daley’s “cleaner airweek’’ was marked in Hyde Park by a com¬munity meeting held in the Lutheran Semi¬nary Wednesday night. Sponsored by theHyde Park clean air committee, the Chi¬cago department of air pollution control,the Mayor’s committee for a cleaner Chi¬cago, and the Hyde Park-Kenwood Commu¬nity Conference, the gathering was the siteof intense anti-pollution heat.Joseph Cornelia, assistant director for en¬forcement of the city department of air pol¬lution control told the audience that “HydePark has a good reputation for clean air,”and observed that while he has “staff,Biology OffersSex ElectiveA new course is being offered in the, win¬ter quarter of this year. The course, whichwas not previously listed in the time sched¬ule, will be offered by several faculty mem¬bers in the department of obstetrics andgynecology and will be entitled Biology 1£0,“Human Reproduction.”This course is intended to be an electivecourse for undergraduates who have al¬ready taken the general education course inBiology. It is intended to offer studentsfrom any division of the College an oppor¬tunity to obtain current knowledge aboutthe genetic, physiological, anatomical anddevelopmental aspects of human reproduc¬tion.Among the topics that will be discussedin lectures are fertilization, infertility, sexdetermination and sexual maturation, hu¬man sexual responses, and both normaland abnormal features of pregnancy.The course will be offered on Mondays,Wednesdays and Fridays at 1:30 p.m. inCLIH 168 (Dora De Lee Hall). Studentsmay register for this course during the pe¬riod set aside for winter quarter registra¬tion. squad cars, inspectors — you just can’tplan effectively without the community.”He discussed pollution violations, recogniz¬ing three types of pollution: smoke, dust,and nuisances. “If you want to report aviolation, call our office,” and he gave twotelephone numbers. (744-4070 during theday, 744-4516 after 4:30 p.m.).He said the department has 27 inspectorsand 20 patrol cars, three of which are as¬signed to Hyde Park. He told the group thatfrom January to May of this year his officehad issued 183 citations in Hyde Park, andhad filed 21 lawsuits. Finally he discussednew regulations, effective July 5, 1970,which prohibit leaf burning and unapprovedincinerators, and which limit the content ofcoal and oil burned in the city to 2.5 per¬cent sulfur by weight.Joseph Karaganis, University graduateand lawyer for the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference (HPKCC) in its pol¬lution battles asked Cornelia why “the de¬partment approved and recommended anexemption for Commonwealth Edison fromthe sulfur-oxide law.” Cornelia replied, “Idon’t know anything about it. This all hap¬pened before I was with the department.It’s up to the appeals board” (referring toan administrative agency of the depart¬ment that hears appeals on departmentalrulings).Reid interjected, “Commonwealth Edisonwill comply with the pollution control rulingby the 1970 deadline.”Said Karaganis, “Mr. Reid, Com¬monwealth Edison means that it will be incompliance with the exemption provision ofthe ruling by the 1970 deadline. I’ve talkedwith their lawyers.” Karaganis, who is cur¬rently prosecuting a suit against both Com¬monwealth Edision and US Steel on behalfof HPKCC, was cheered as he returned tohis seat.Stuart Sikevitz, assistant corporationcounsel, who said that he was not the mainlawyer in pollution cases, discussed the le¬gal steps the city can take, ranging from citations carrying with them a ten dollarfine, to full suits in court that can reach amaximum of $500 fine. “This is, of course,in addition to contempt of court citationswe get whenever anybody violates a prohi¬bitory injunction,” said Sikevitz.Karaganis then inquired about the city’sprosecution procedures. Sikevitz repliedthat there is a lawyer “who represents thecity at the pollution call every week, inbranch 20 of the circuit court.” “Mr. Sikev¬itz,” said Karaganis, “that pollution call isvery short.” It was revealed by Sikevitzthat the city’s lawyer in branch 20 handlesweigh'ts-and-measures and obscenity casesin addition to pollution cases.Mrs. Elsie Krieger of the clean air com¬mittee appealed to the audience to bewatchful, and to “call in any violations yousee with the correct address and time.” Shealso informed the group that the Universityof Chicago “has agreed to convert to gas,”a step, she said, that would “be a big im¬provement.”Kai Nebel, chairman of HPKCC, was in¬troduced. Claiming that he was “angry,”he pointed at the representatives of the cityand said, ‘ We can’t blame these poorpeople, but there are people who deserve tohave us angry at them. The city of Chicagois utterly ineffective in trying to enforce itsair pollution ordinance.”Nebel called for tougher prosection, andsaid that what was needed was simply more people on the streets looking for vio¬lations. Conflicting with Cornelia, who hadremarked on the expertise of city in¬spectors, Nebel said, “What do you have todo to get to be an inspector?” One guess.”Nebel called for a show of hands of thosepresent in the room who could read a Rin-gleman air pollution chart and who thoughtthat they could be satisfactory volunteerpollution patrollers. Nearly everyone in theroom raised his hand. “You have to be ableto look at the smoke and tell it’s black. Youhave to be able to smell hydrogen sulfideand carbon monoxide. We’ve got to takeaction, and take action very fast,” he said,calling for “heavy fines, no conflicts of in¬terest on the appeals board, citizen protestto proper officials, and many volunteers“to patrol the polluted skies of Hyde Park.Sikevitz called the use of volunteers “apossibility.”Another local anti-pollution group is thenewly formed Citizens Revolt Against Pol¬lution (CRAP), formed by twenty or thirtyarea college students. CRAP has alreadydemonstrated at hearings against Com¬monwealth Edison held several weeks ago.Saturday at noon CRAP will distributeleaflets and picket at Commonwealth Edi¬son, 72 W. Adams it Clark). CRAP is pro¬testing the hypotiisy of CommonwealthEdison in sponsoring cleaner air weekwhile it continues to pollute, according toone member.Admissions Office TransferedTo College Dean's JurisdictionThe College office of admissions and aidis now under the jurisdiction of the dean ofthe College, Roger Hildebrand, newly-ap¬pointed dean of the College, announced thisweek. The change takes effect October 26.The office was formerly under the juris-Total Fire Damage Estimate Exceeds $7500Continued from Page Oneployee who grabbed a nearby fire ex¬tinguisher and put out the flames. The firedid not get a chance to grow, and damagewas minimal.Thursday’s fire was confined to the storeand did not spread to neighboring Billingshospital. Dark smoke billowing out of thecut-away roof could be seen several blocksaway.Late Thursday afternoon, the books onthe first floor were; intact for the most part,although water on the floor was as deep asone inch in the center of the store. Canvascovered the counters in the food, tobacco,and candy section of the store, and part ofthe ceiling had given way above the to¬bacco counter, exposing the beams.A dejected Harlan Davidson, manager ofthe bookstore, commented that the storewas an old building, built in 1901, and thatthe interior was mostly wood. It is coveredby a brick exterior and was allegedly astable at one time. David RosenbusbCRISS-CROSS WALKS: sidewalks outside the bookstore with a firetruck added.GREAT PANTSEXPLOSION%BELL BOTTOM SLACKSJEANS FROM $6.50BODY SHIRTST-SHIRTS LEATHERSOVER 3,000 PAIRS OF PANTS IN STOCKHOURS: 11 am-10pm llam-6pm Sunday10*/. Discount with Student I. D.1532 N. Wells (upstairs) Chicago, Old Town 787-59092/lh» Chicago Marpop/October 24,. )969 Catch it from the Dalcony.Opens October 22at the Shuber T heaterGood seats available 1 or all performances,including Wednesday matineesWEEKDAYS: 8:30 pm, Mezz 8 Bale., $8, $6. 55-WED. MAT. 2:00 p.m., Orch, $7.50, $6.50 . SO Mezz.,$6.50. $4 50-Balc $4 50, $3 50. For Ticket Infoi nation call 641-2250.Previews Oct. 11-Oct. 21st $1.00 oft all regular pricesMake check or money order payable io Shubert Theater.22 W. Monroe St., Chicago. Illinois b0603 Please enclosea stamped selt-addressed envelope.diction of the dean of students. The changeis being made in order to involve facultyfurther in the det ion process on admis¬sions and to provid more “direct and per¬sonal attention for prospective students byfaculty” said Charles O'Connell, dean ofstudents.Hildebrand said that when the responsi¬bility for admission of College students wasunder the dean of students, there was “nomechanism to make,faculty feel respon¬sible for helping with admission proceduressuch as sitting on committees. Despitededicated individuals, this has been true forthe most part,” Hildebrand remarked,“and this has been criticized.”At present the professional schools andthe graduate divisions handle their admis¬sions under the academic dean of the ap¬propriate area. O’Connell said that thistransfer to the academic unit, the College,had been studied for over two years beforeimplementation and decided upon lastspring.Hildebrand, in speaking of admissionspolicies said that the college had a need fornew “guidelines” in determining admissionof students, especially “high risk” students,that is, students whose academic prepara¬tion may be less than that of most students.O’Connell emphasized that this is mostlyan administrative change and that Hilde¬brand will now be responsible for appoint¬ing faculty committees to study applicants,overseeing admission policy, etc.IIj»;':- Saul Bellow, contemporary author andprofessor of English and social thought atthe University, spoke at Billings HospitalWednesday on “The Writer and His Au¬dience in the USA.The lecture, part of a lecture series spon¬sored by the Pritzker school of medicine,was attended by an audience of approxi¬mately 350. Because the room has a seatingcapacity of 220, many students stood or satin the aisles. Others were unable to get in.Bellow said that today’s writer “is a pub¬lic performer, gratifying the tastes of thepublic.” He called him a “member of thejet set,” an “entertainer” appearingfrequently in the mass media. He con¬cluded that “the public is more interestedin writers than in literature. The artifactsof culture are beginning to slip, to lose theirgrip,”Bellow attributed this trend to two cir¬cumstances: a public that demands “con¬stantly higher levels of stimulation,” andthe fact that man is becoming more inter¬ested in himself. Bellow explained that “themember of society has become the prota¬gonist” in contemporary events; “man is a watcher of man,” he said.Bellow stated, however, that this publicattention had not always marked the condi¬tion of the writer’s life. In the past, saidBellow, “isolation was a permanent condi¬tion of the writer in the United States.” Hementioned his own condition of isolation asa young writer in Chicago during the de¬pression.Bellow characterized most of the writingof the 19th century as “didactic,” contain¬ing “a strong vein of moral teaching.” Hementioned that Walt Whitman felt it wasthe poet’s role “to present archetypes.Whitman offered himself as the image ofwhat the American ought to be,” he said.Bellow stated that Hemingway exhibitedthis tendency in the 20th century, by seek¬ing to provide “a model of courage, of viril¬ity.”Bellow later said that many contempo¬rary writers “exhibit the didactic tendencyin a different way,” by assumnig the role of“moral emancipator” and of “general advi¬sor to the public.”He gave as an example Gore Vidal,SDS Demands Free MealFor Cafeteria WorkersAs of Thursday evening, some 800 stu¬dents and employees of the University havesigned an SDS petition demanding one freemeal per shift for cafeteria workers. SDShas been distributing the petition at tablesin Mandel Hall and the dormitories sincelast Friday.In the petition, SDS charges the adminis¬tration with throwing away extra food,forcing the workers to pay for meals.Fred Bjorling, director of University per¬sonnel, issued a notice Wednesday to foodservice employees in response to the SDSpetition. Bjorling charged the petition withmaking untrue statements in order ‘'tomake employees feel exploited and to getthem to take unwise action.” Bjorlingstated in the notice that University employ¬ee shave never received free meals, thatUniversity wages are higher than com¬mercial restaurant wages, and that thecafeteria food services are subsidized bythe University and lose money.SDS member Tim Rowton commentedThursday that SDS was not organizing cafe¬teria workers over the demand, but ratherconcentrating on building student supportfor the demand. “However, workers fromWoodward court, Pierce, and the C-shophave circulated the petition among employ¬ees have never received free meals, thatRowton further stated that employees incommercial restaurants make a substantialportion of their income from tips.The circulation of the petition is the firstaction taken by campus SDS this year. Ac¬cording to SDS sources, it is the first stepin a campaign to improve working condi¬tions at the University.“Workers are getting screwed all overthe country,” said one SDS’er Wednesday,Spock To TalkFor Chicago '8'Dr. Benjamin Spock, a leading critic ofthe Viet Nam war, will speak 11:30 a.m.Wednesday in front of the Federal Building,at a rally called by the Chicago MedicalCommunity for Human Rights (CMC) toprotest the “Conspiracy 8” trial.Dr. Howard Levy, who has just com¬pleted a two-year prison sentence for refus¬ing to train special forces medics in theViet Nam war, will also speak at the rally.Transportation from the University to theFederal Building will be provided. For in¬formation, see Tuesday’s Maroon, or phoneHY3-8212.In addition to the morning rally, anotherrally will be held for Dr. Spock Wednesdayat 7:30 p.m. in the Palacio Theatre, 4040 N.Sheridan. Peter, Paul, and Mary will per¬form. “but we have an issue right here. Besides,the University is a particularly bad em¬ployer.”Rowton said SDS has not asked the unionfor support (Local 1657 represents cafeteriaworkers here) with its demand because“we feel it would be a waste of time. “Theunion leadership opposed this demand whenit was raised last year during the bus boys’wildcat strike,” added Rowton.Utley Calls“All talk about a negotiated settlement toend the Vietnam war is an illusion,” saidGarrick Utley, NBC news bureau chief inParis, in a speech here at InternationalHouse Wednesday.Utley, who has been covering the Parispeace talks for nearly a year, said they area “facade,” because “in the future, either acommunist or a non-communist govern¬ment will govern South Vietnam; there canbe no middle ground.”Utley said “It is being increasingly felt inParis that a tacit cease fire is the only fea¬sible path to peace,” providing the US con¬tinues to withdraw its troops. Such a ceasefire may be coming into existence now, inview of the present battle lull, he added.While he thought that neither belligerentforce would agree to a formally declaredcease fire not to any sort of election, Utleysuggested a tacit cease fire would enableboth sides to save face domestically, andwould give the communists a chance to getthe US out of South Vietnam, so they couldhave the arena free by 1971.David RosentoustiGARRICK UTLEYSpeaks on Paris Talks whom he referred to as “an advocate ofsexual combinations unknown to me, and ofwhich I hope I can be spared.” He calledNorman Mailer “an instructor of a free,swinging life-style.”Bellow stated that even today “the rawspirit in America does not know what con¬tent to put into his life.” He called this a“permanent, aching problem.”Bellow also traced the development of thewriter’s audience. He said that by themiddle of the 19th century there were twosorts of writers. One was the “large-publicwriter” who appealed to a “literate,middle-class public which looked foramusement and enlightenment.” The othergroup was the “small-public writer” who“cultivated art for art’s sake,” and wrotefor an elite.The period following World War II, saidBellow, saw “the continual importation andexploitation of small-public values by thelarger public.” He said that the innovationsof writers were discovered by “the media,the theater, and the fashion and advertisingbusinesses.”Bellow concluded that “One of the prob- David RosentoushSAUL BELLOWAddresses audiencelems in a democracy is the assimilation ofan elite culture by a large mass of people.”He said that this “vulgarization” was aninevitable process. “The elite genius is im¬mediately tapped for use,” he explained.David RosentxisnPACKED HALL: students jam auditorium to hear Saul Bellow.Paris Peace Talk FacadeUtley said that Nixon is more concernedwith saving face in domestic politics thanon the international scene. He warned thatthere may be a “vicious right wing reac¬tion” in a few years, if it appears that theUS has been defeated in Vietnam. Thescapegoats in such a witch-hunt would bethe former advisors of Lyndon Johnson; hesaid, who constitute “intellectual estab¬lishment and now work for the Ford Foun¬dation.”Once Vietnam is over, Utley said, Eu¬ropean politics will become increasinglyimportant in the US, because there will be increasing activity between the east andwest in Europe.He cited the recent election of WillyBrandt to the West German chancellorship.Brandt, the first social democrat to holdthat post since pre-Hitler days, is seeking arapproachment between east and west inEurope, and wants to improve relationswith communist East Germany and Po¬land.Utley said that hopes for European unityare dwindling, because of the CommonMarket’s problems.C-Shop Acquires Larger Area;Moves to Hutch in Afternoon“It’s stuffy.”“It’s overcrowded.”“The food is bad!”Sound like the C-Shop? Relief may be insight. Since Monday, the Reynold’s Clubcoffee shop has shut down its services from3:30 pm on, and is being replaced by itsneighbor, Hutchinson Commons, which hasopened its doors from 3:30 to 10:30 pm.The main reason for the switch is “to getmore atmosphere into our dining facil¬ities,” according to Jim Brimberry, man¬ager of Hutchinson Commons.In addition a greater variety of mealswill be served.More entrees, four varieties of soft drinksinstead of three, fish and chips and threevarieties of yogurt have been added to themenu.Brimberry’s explanation for the changewas mild compared to students’ remarks.For the most part, students have been dis¬satisfied with the C-Shop, and welcome theswitch enthusiastically.David Smith, undergraduate, said themuch larger commons will be “more at¬tractive to professors and guests whohaven’t been eating dinner in the C-Shopbecause of its dinginess.”Another student said that the small tables at the C-Shop “make it impossible for alarger goup to eat together.”Apart from the difference in size, there isa striking difference in atmosphere be¬tween the C-Shop and “Hutch.” Many stu¬dents consider the Commons to be one ofthe “most elegant” parts of the University,though a few think it unduly “gloomy.”There is almost unanimous agreementamong students, however, that the C-Shopis bad. Charlotte Brown, an undergraduatesummed up the prevailing attitude whenshe called it a “cheap, stuffy, dingy place.”The food served there has not won any ap¬plause either. John Friedman, graduatestudent, stated, “The food’s cheaper at theC-Shop but it’s worse.”While this is the attitude of many stu¬dents, Brimberry insists that both the qual¬ity of food and the prices are the same atboth places.The cafeteria workers, for the most part,said that working conditions in “Hutch”are better than in the C-Shop.One SDS member interpreted the dinner¬time switch as a “cynical attempt by theimperialist University to divert student at¬tention away from its exploitation of thecafeteria workers.”aatbet • 24; - 1969/Th* Chicago Marodn/3By Christine FroulaIt is unlikely that anyone who has beenon campus for more than a day has notseen the massive bulk of Rockefeller Chap¬el reaching heavenward over the Midway,or heard the peal of the carillon bells ap¬proximating the time of day. Less in¬eluctable, however, is the extraordinarilyfine music program which the chapel has tooffer.Directed by Richard Vikstrom, the chap¬el music program includes concerts by Ed¬ward Mondello, University organist since1961, and by Robert Lodine, visiting caril-lonoeur, as well as performances by theRockefeller Chapel Choir and guest caril-lonneurs and organists.Vikstrom, now in his 20th year as direc¬tor of chapel music, says that “the primefunction of the chapel music program is felton Sunday mornings when, in the course ofan academic year, a goodly cross-section ofthe best music of the Western tradition isperformed, both on the organ and by thechoir.”Vikstrom points out that the chapel musicprogram is “American owned and oper¬ated” as a sign of America’s musical com¬ing of age. “Until fairly recently, therewere many more Europeans in the musicfield than Americans.” Vikstrom is directorof the chapel’s professional choir and an-associate professor in the music depart¬ment. .A native of Illinois, Vikstrom received hisMA from the University of Chicago in 1955.His previous positions include director ofmusic and organist at Messiah LutheranChurch and First Unitarian Church, and or¬ganist and choirmaster of Bond Chapel. Hisfield of specialty is baroque music.Vikstrom considers that musicians havea “museum responsibility to composerslike Beethoven, Mozart, and Brahms. Tospeak of giving Beethoven’s Fifth a rest islike suggesting giving the alphabet a rest.You do so at your peril, because the cultur¬al hang of music is not too strong.“Besides music as art profits by repeti¬tion. If you find something deeper eachtime you hear a piece, then it is a master-work. A work that can’t stand repetitionobviously does not have as much to offer.” PROFILEVikstrom, who considers his profession“a clever way of getting society to pay youfor something you’d want to do anyway,”instituted the Oratorio Festival, which con¬sists of six concerts a year performed bythe choir and members of the Chicago Sym¬phony.Between Vikstrom’s promotional effortsand Mondello’s performing excellence, theaudience for Mondello’s five yearly organconcerts has increased from about threehundred to a peak of two thousand — thelargest attendance of any organ concert inthe country.“We try to give audiences what theywant to hear,” says Mondello. “I’m inter¬ested in making the organ a recital in-trument like the piano. Many composersare afraid of the organ, but we’re trying toget some of the foremost composers to doorgan pieces.”Easley Blackwood, professor of musichere, with whom Mondello studied, com¬posed his “Symphonic Movement for Or¬gan” especially for Mondello, who per¬formed it at its world premiere here lastsummer.Mondello grew up in New York City andstarted singing at Trinity Church on WallStreet at the age of nine. He attended theHigh School of Music and Art and receivedhis bachelor of music degree from KansasState Teachers College in 1950. DuringWorld War II, he was organist, pianist, andactor in the Army Special Services section,and was organist at St. James Cathedraland Sinai Temple before coming here.Mondello was an unknown when he heardthat the chapel position was available.Competing with some famous American or¬ganists, he auditioned and was hired. “Ilove my job,” he says. “What is most won¬derful is that the University pays me topractice and to bring some of the world’s XJesse KrakavertEDWARD MONDELLO: A phantom fingers the keyboard in Rockefeller.great music to Chicago audiences.” As forthe University itself, Mondello considers itunique. “It inspires students to work hard¬er than they possible can, and therebyturns out some of the finest students in thecountry.”“A musician can learn all he needs toknow about music here,” he adds. “Themusic department is outstanding, especial¬ly in research.” Mondello enjoys teaching— the Maroon found him enthusiasticallydemonstrating his quarter-million dollar,7,000 pipe instrument to the Chicago Voca¬tional High School Chorus — and hopes thatthe music department will someday devekop a practicum program So tnSt Tie canteach organ. At present, Mondello teachespiano to degree students and teaches or¬ ganists in the Chicago area.Reigning in the bell tower, 235 windingsteps above ground level, is no shrivelledGothic gnome, but tall, easy-going RobertLodine, who was recently appointed visitingcarillonneur. Lodine is organist, choirmas¬ter, and carillonneur at St. Chrysoston’sChurch, and teaches at the American Con¬servatory. He says he greatly enjoys hisnew job, “although I have to fight off aKing of the Hill complex when I’m sittingup there playing.” The Rockefeller Chapelcarillon is the second largest in America. Ithas seventy-two bells, the largest of which' ddm^greTuplTrlorth^Datefa, antf re¬ceived his doctor of music degree fromContinued on Page TenSURE CUREFOR TIRED BLOODPotent Plasma in a Mohair-typeherringbone slack suit. Rich grey. gold,olive, green, royal, brown, burgundy, orblack.PLUSFASHIONSFor Men and Women5225 S. Harper324-6800 $***********$| Cornell florist ** 1645 E. 55th STREET *£ CHICAGO, ILL 60615 *£ Phone: FA 4-1651 £DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644SUNDAY NEW YORK TIMESON SATURDAYMORNING?!! Secure yours early atBOB’S NEWSSTAND51st & Lake ParkMany Magazines & Pa¬perbacks Carried Many ofthem clean DesignContestStudents, faculty, and staff are -invited to submitdesigns for the 1970 Festival of the Arts symbol It mayuse the old phoenix It may use the words Festival ofthe Arts or FOTA It may not If you can, m<jke roughsketches of how the design can be used in promotion,ads, posters, tickets, or balloons Send entries to FOTADesign contest, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th StreetChicago, Illinois 60615 For information call RogerBlack, 955 4706FOTA '70University of Chicago Festival of the ArtsM. BERG CLEANERSFree Pickup & DeliveryCovered by InsuranceUnclaimed used furs, $25 to $100. Settle forcharges, values up to $1000. Also fabulous minkcoats and stoles. Tremendous values. We alsoclean suede coats and knitted goods.1619 East 55th Street4/The Chicago Maroon/October 24, 1969 493-9413 A bicycle puts you closeto nature - Thus spakeZarathustraTurin in, Turin on,drop joggingV for velocipedeCheapest prices for CarltonRaleigh. Robin Hood, FalconPeugeot. Citane, Mercier,Radius and Daws. Factorvtrained mechanics. I sed bi¬cycles spasmodically.Fly-by-night rentals.Turin Bicycle Coop2112 N. Clark LI 9-8263Free DeliveryM-F 12:00 - 8:30; S&S 10 - 8Th* tirptlbi||tn (ram OM Tows UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.CLOSED MONDAY684-3661FRANK PARIS/proprietorWe havenew Headsfor everybody.This year Head hasall new skis for ev¬erybody. And we'vegot all the newHeads. From the hotnew fiberglass rac¬ing skis withJean-CloudeKilly's nameon them right’down to thenew JR60 forthe kids.SKI RENTALMS,SKI SHOP104 North Marion StreetEU 6-5100 Oak Park, Illinois vYvrvARAGON TRIANGLE PRESENTSTHE 3Ebh5Fr adv, O-'cc-i' 24tieohie MannBRUTE FORCE-r 30y, ’ -C • "’'0 ~ r 7RRLO 6U5BRIEpr aoy, ■■~ser 21ISLEY BROTHERSBEACH BOYSrr acy.WAYNE COCJfWJNA Till-: I . 4 . IIIDKIIN )Fr oov. D-c*r.=«THE FOUR TOPSDOORS OPEN 7:30 P.M.2 SHOWS EACH NIGHTADMISSION $5.00Tickets available at Aragon Box Office,li()6 W. Lawrence, and all TICKETRONoutlets, including Montgomery Ward,Marshall field, Met and Flipside MusicStores.Maroon Soccer Team Bombs Shirn^rSOCCER: Paul Ausick, in striped jersey, battles for ball in recent game.Seven Vie for Omudsman's PositionBy Mitch KahnThe Maroon soccer team has scored avictory, breaking a long slump. Startingearly last season, the ill-fated booters en¬dured 16 matches without a win.The pent up frustration broke looseWednesday as the team pounded ShimerCollege , 7-0.Led by forward Paul Ausick, who scoredthree goals, and wing Joe Rosa, who scoredtwo, the Maroons were like furies un¬leashed. Ausick, last year’s MVP defen¬sively at fullback, was switched to forwardfor the first time after it was noted lastweek that he had a penchant for kicking theball in the net.FootballThe Maroon varsity football team, seek¬ing to continue its one game winningstreak, faces North Central Jr College to¬day at 3 on Stagg Field.Fresh off a 14-0 demolition of Marquettein Milwaukee, the Maroons are lusting fortheir first home victory which would eventhem up for the season at 2-2.The fireworks on the field will bematched by the fans as they continue theirexperiment in participatory football. Akazoo marching band, organized by the Stu¬dents for Violent Non-Action, will providesparkling halftime entertainment.Elsewhere in the World of SportsThe 5658 Mother Puckers, a trans-sexualcross country club, has begun rigoroustraining. The club, organized to bring thejoys of jogging to the universal man (andwoman), is named after Puck, the fairy(pixie, that is) in a Midsummer Night’sDream who ran around the world in justunder one second flat. Anyone interested injogging: the group meets 7 am in StaggField.ceiving $3500 this year from the committeeon recognized student activities (CORSO),and $2000 from the College. According toFOTA chairman Doug Kissel, FOTA’sbudget calls for expenditures of $25,000 thisyear.The administrative staff and committeechairmen were also announced at theFOTA meeting Wednesday. They are LarryLannen, assistant to the chairman; SusanLerner, secretary; Mary Lou Bohn, pro¬gram director; Kathleen Ellis, publicity di¬rector; Debbie Solomon, artistic projectsStudent Government (SG) will hold elec¬tions Monday and Tuesday for first-yearrepresentatives to the assembly, and forvacant seats in undergraduate houses. Offi¬cial results of the elections will be an¬nounced October 30.Ten representatives will be chosen fromthe first-year class at large. Running on theslate of Students fora Restructured Univer¬sity (SRU) are Mike Augenstem, DariusBaer, Rita Goldwasser, Joan Johnson, Jer¬ry Kaplan, Ronald Low, Vivien Ravdin, andJonathan Rosenblum.SRU’s platform states “SG should be abody through which students have power indetermining the course of their lives at thisinstitution.” It adds “SG should be an effec¬tive channel of communication between stu¬dents and administrators,” and that itshould “provide leadership in areas of vitalconcern to Unversity of Chicago students.”Running as independents are Paul R. Col¬lier, Sophie Ilene Cooper, Joshua Fein,Thomas M. Jahnke, Alphine W. Jefferson,Sue Ellen Walter, and Sue Zuhoff. David B. Seven students have applied for the posi¬tion of student ombudsman, dean of stu¬dents Charles O’Connell said this week.The seven — five fourth year College stu¬dents, one third year College student andone graduate student — have all submittedapplications and recommendations for thejob to the dean of students’ office.President Edward Levi will appoint, inthe next few days, a faculty screeing com¬mittee to review the letters and recommen-consultant; Claire Pensyl, financial con¬sultant; David Meyers, lighting coordina¬tor; Paul Kettler, photography; MarshallAlexander, poetry; Lisa Lipman, ballet;Susan Laskowski and Fred Kravitz, famousspeakers; Michael Krauss, classical music;Karen Wishner, happenings; Jeff Jahnsand Ken Lindholm, film festival; DeborahDavison, drama; Janet Landay, modemdance; and Linda Goluch, Beaux Arts ball.In the famous speakers series a tentativelist was proposed which included NormanMailer, Jimmy Breslin, Philip Roth, Mal-com Boyd, Tom O’Horgan, Mike Nichols,Elaine May, and Aaron Copeland.Goldston is also running as an independent,but his candidacy has been endorsed bySRU.Also running for first-year seats are BobEngelman, AI Lewin, and Rick Springwa-ter, on a slate called the Garden Party.The candidates in the vacancy elections,in which first-year students are ineligible torun, are: Tim Wicker, (Ind.) and MikeMarshall (Ind.) in Boucher (2 seats); Eu¬gene H.Goldiberg (SRU) in 5400 Greenwood(1 seat); Carol Heller (Ind) in EleanorClub (1 seat); Holly Hartstone (Ind.) andTrudy Karlson (SRU) in 1400. 57st (1 seat);Arnold Lund Ind.) in Thompson (1 seat);and Martha Armstrong (Ind.) in LowerRickert (1 seat). No candidates have beenannounced for Upper Wallace (2 seats) andUpper Flint (1 seat). Marcia Edison waselected to a vacant seat in Blackstone Octo¬ber 20.Ballot boxes will be placed in Pierce,Burton-Judson, and Woodward on electionevenings. Normal secret ballot procedureswill govern the election. dations of the candidates and to choose thefinal candidates.These final candidates will all be inter¬viewed by the faculty committee and a rec¬ommendation will be given to the president.Karl Bemesderfer, assistant to the presi¬dent, could not say if the President wouldpersonally meet or interview the candi¬dates.Bemesderfer said that the administrationis hoping to make the appointment beforeAn Alain Resnais Rim festival will beheld; an advanced showing of the moviePutney Swope is scheduled. ContemporaryEuropean Films may schedule a secondfilm festival during FOTA.Students interested in FOTA should con¬tact one of the committee members or at¬tend the next meeting, November 5, 8 pm,in Reynolds Club lounge.“Transcendental meditation allows manto make contact with his own essential na¬ture, to expand his potentiality,” said JerryJarvis, national head of Students Inter¬national Meditation Society at the group’sWednesday night meeting in Kent 107.Our environment constantly assails uswith demands we have difficulty meeting,resulting in tension and frustration, Jarvisexplained. Transcendental meditation at¬tacks problems not by trying to removethem on their own level, but by introducinga second element, some further capabilityinto the individual, which makes the “prob¬lem” no longer a problem.Feeling “the quality of human life hasnot improved” in thousands of years, Jar¬vis holds that violence and frustration inthe world can only be eliminated by remov¬ing it from each individual man. Followersof the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the Societyhas enrolled 25,000 students on over 100campuses in the USA during its four yearsof operation.With a blend of philosophies that broughtperplexed frowns to many of his 200 listen¬ers, Jarvis explained meditation’s ability to“expand conscious mental capacity, the po¬tentiality,” of anyone. “Life is bliss,” or atleast it should be, according to Jarvis, andmeditation’s goal is simply to bring thisgood life within the realm of all its prac¬titioners, to bring joy and fulfillment to ev¬eryone, not just “weirdos in the Hima¬layas.”Most listeners agreed on Jarvis’ sincer- November 1, but it is possible that the ap¬pointment will not be made on time.Student government this summer inter¬viewed all seven of the candidates after re¬questing candidates to submit their namesto SG, and submitted a recommendation toO’Connell. They have asked however, thattheir recommendation not be made publicto avoid embarrassment to the candidates.O’Connell said that he was surprised atthe low turnout of applications for the posi¬tion. He said he had expected at least twiceas many people to apply.Several groups on campus, including thesocial science collegiate division studentcouncil, had expressed interest in seeing alist of the candidates so they could thenmake a recommendation to the President.O’Connell would not allow the candidates’names to be published, nor 'will any groupbe given a list of the candidates for fear of“politicizing” the appointment, and “put¬ting pressure” on President Levi to make aspecific decision.The ombudsman is a salaried official ofthe University who irons out red tape forindividuals requesting aid.ity, while his inner tranquility and happi¬ness were manifest to all. As one put it, “Ifhe’s an example of the results, it must bepretty good stuff.” The audience was notwithout skeptics whom Jarvis also wel¬comed, challenging them to try it and see.Many present practitioners were originallyattracted by their desire to confirm thisskepticism, he said.CSO Picks TwoIn UniversityThe junior governing board of the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra named twomembers from the University communityto its membership last week. Elected to thejunior board were David Crabb, assistantto the vice-president of development andpublic affairs, and Peter Ratner, a fifthyear student in the college, former chair¬man of the festival of the arts (FOTA), andmusic columnist for the Maroon. The juniorboard of the Orchestra is responsible forundertaking special programs involving theChicago Symphony Orchestra and youthand student groups. Some of its plans thisyear include a series of special concerts forhigh school students, and the expansion ofthe student discount ticket program thatwas initiated at the University earlier thisquarter.FOTA Receives Funds; Names StaffThe Festival of the Arts (FOTA) is re¬Parties and Independents RunFor Ten Freshman SG Spots Meditation Expands PotentialOcfobar 24, 1949/Th# Chicago Maroon/SI « * is# JuL w\f;‘-'st' - ••EDITORIAL i *££*» fJt3t*TV“~.r** H ViT-f *•? ITi'"**..r*£?!?T:5BookstoreSince yesterday’s fire in the bookstore injured no one, anddid not cause very much damage, we think that it might havebeen a good thing. The bookstore is now closed for repairs, andbefore it reopens, some serious thought ought to go into just whyit is reopening in a building that is hopelessly inadequate, plaguedby deficiencies that have dogged it for years.The University bookstore has been a prime target for com¬plaints for as long as we can remember. The chaos of buyingbooks, the absence of student discounts, the attitude of harriedclerks are all favorite targets for grumbling students. A few yearsago the bookstore changed management, and some of the moreintolerable problems of chaotic shelving and inadequate servicehave been alleviated.No new manager could help the bookstore with its worstproblems however, unless he brought with him a prefabricatedbuilding about four times as big as the present structure. Thebookstore’s staff can do only so much; most of the complaintsabout the bookstore are unfairly directed at them, when thoseproblems are really due to a problem beyond their control.The building the bookstore is presently housed in is woefullyinadequate. It is much too small to accommodate the kind of book¬store service a major university the size of this one needs. Therehave been rumors of an imminent move by the bookstore for years.The confirmation one year ago that the present structure willeventually be torn down to allow for expansion of Billings Hospitalmade the bookstore’s move a certainty. Since that time, however,very little has been done about that move.The most recent and persistent rumor is that the bookstorewill move into the administration building, using two or threefloors that now hold offices that would be scattered throughoutcampus in a decentralization process. The idea sounds like a goodpossibility, requiring no new construction and giving the book¬store the spacious headquarters it so desperately needs. The ru¬mor has been floating about for months, however; it is constantly“under consideration,” with no apparent results forthcoming. Book¬store personnel have felt sure that the move would be announced“any day now” for several months, and yet when one prominentofficial in the University’s office of planning was asked about thismove, he said he’d never heard anything about it.Clearly, someone’s not communicating. Or rather, someone’snot listening. The administration and planning offices of the Uni¬versity have known for years that the bookstore has inadequatequarters. Of course, there are many pressing relocation problemsin the University, and the administration couldn’t be expected todrop everything for the bookstore. But in light of the confirma¬tion one year ago that the bookstore absolutely must find newquarters, the lack of action to date is inexcusable. We don’t sug¬gest that the move of the bookstore be a hasty decision, but whenlast spring’s rumors of a move to the administration building areanswered with the same vague responses and circumlutory “may-be’s” this fall we feel that judicious consideration has turned intoan attitude of “it can wait.”It can wait, and it will. It can wait in the sense that nobody’sgoing to sit in because the bookstore isn’t big enough; it isn’t thesort of problem that outrages anyone’s sensibilities (except per¬haps the people who run the bookstore and take the blame forconditions that are not their fault) or drives one to passionateaction. It is the sort of problem that makes for the small butpersistent annoyances to students that give them the impressionthat the University couldn’t care less about inconveniencing them.That impression is not wholly incorrect, for if an institution takesthe attitude that things that bother its community but don’t dras¬tically harm the institution’s operations can be relegated to obscur¬ity, then that institution insults its community. The bookstore has tomove; why not have it move soon? Postponing a full scale effortto find new quarters for the bookstore only delays the inevitable,and the delay is marked by growing inconvenience and insult tothe persons whom the bookstore is supposed to serve. SDS WorkerPetttionProvesCampus Radicals Not DeadBy Steve CookWith the circulation of a petition callingfor the University to grant a free meal forevery shift of cafeteria workers, SDS haskicked off its fall offensive against the pow¬ers that be in the University.It is significant that SDS is circulatingthese petitions among students, not employ¬ees. Though SDS does not feel it has theright to approach the workers as theirspokesman, the radicals are more inter¬ested in building a student movement bysoliciting student support than in building aworkers’ movement at this point.So signers of the petition are being askedto fill in their addresses and phone num¬bers as well as their signatures on the peti¬tionAfter the expulsions and suspensions oflast spring, it is probably a surprise tomany that there is an active SDS on thiscampus still. Yet those expulsions plus thefervor of the Dixon controversy seemed to faculty hiring and firing is primarily due tothe basic questions raised by “student pow¬er” advocated during last year’s sit-in, ademonstration led by members of SDS whowere upset over the firing of a radical pro¬fessor.Ironically, in all these disputes, SDS hasrarely achieved its end — a massive con¬frontation with the University over what itconsiders the basic issues at stake. Theradicals see the country run by a few pow¬erful rich who profit from the war, racism,and exploitation of workers. The Universityserves the ends of the rich when it co-oper¬ates in research projects for the Federalgovernment, expands into Woodlawn, andsupposedly exploits its own employees. Byself-reform,the University has historicallytaken the wind out of the SDS-ers sails, pre¬venting the development of a massive, ac¬tive, SDS here. Thus SDS remains a forcefor reform, not revolution.But apparently that changed last year."While most liberals condemn SDSthese days, historically, it has acted tobring to light many issues about theUniversity that would otherwise havegone unnoticed "have radicalized many students. Now SDSdraws thirtv to fcrtv students to its meet¬ings, and 800 students have signed the peti¬tions, thus demonstrating support for theradicals and accepting the SDS versions ofthe statistics in the dispute as trueWhile most liberals condemn SDS thesedays, historically, it has acted to bring tolight many issues about the University thatwould otherwise have gone unnoticed. Andby forcing the issue, the radicals have ef¬fected change. SDS raised the issue of theInstitute for Defense Analysis (IDA) twoyears ago. Draft ranking was abolishedhere after SDS demands brought a sit-in.And the increased student participation in The University fait that it could no longerafford an SDS that could shut down the adbuilding for two weeks. Although the sit-indid bring reform of a kind, it also broughtthe effective discipline of its participants.Now that SDS appears to be back in busi¬ness here, the question is how will the Uni¬versity respond. If the issue of University“bossism” becomes big enough, the Uni¬versity will probably in some way betterthe lot of the campus workers. But if coer¬cive action results, there is no reason tobelieve that the University will respond anydifferently than last yearSteve Cook is the Marodn’s associatenews editor.Friday, October 24FOOTBALL: North Central Jr. Varsity, Stagg Field, 3pm.DOC FILMS: Potemkin, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.TALK: "How Speciation Occurs in Marine Protoza: AnAttempt to State the Problem, Dr. Thomas Schopf,Hinds 184, 3:30 pm.INTERNATIONAL DISCUSSION GROUP: "The ChicagoWar Resistance Movement", led by member of CADRE, Crossroads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone, 8pm.RADIO SERIES: FROM THE MIDWAY, WEBH, 93.9FM, "Woodlawn Mental Health Center: An Experiencein Preventative Psychiatry," Dr. Sheldon Schiff, Asso¬ciate Professor of Psychiatry at the University," Dr.Sheldon Schiff, Associate Professor of Psychiatry atthe University of Chicago and co-founder and co-direc¬tor of the Woodlawn Mental Health Center, 5 am.INTER UNIVERSITY FORUM FOR EDUCATORS INCOMMUNITY PSYCHIATRY: University of ChicagoDepartment of Psychiatry — an on-going semi-annualdiscussion of various facets of community psychiairy,through Oct. 30.RECRUITING VISIT: Boston University School of Law,Boston, Mass., ext. 3282 for appointments.Saturday, October 25Editor: 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 Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, SarahGlazer, Pete Good sell, Stan Goumas, SusanLeft, Gerard Leval, Joseph Morris, FriedaMurray, Ellen Sazman, Audrey Shalinsky,David Steel, Lestle Strauss, Carl SunshinePhotography Staff: Steve Aoki, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Phil Lathrop,Jerry Levy, David Rosenbush, Paul StelterDark Lady: Joanne 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 and 304 in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3263. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions toy mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. CROSS COUNTRY: University of Chicago Invitational,Washington Park, 11 am.RADIO SERIES: From the Midway, WNIB, 97.1 FM, 4pm.Sunday, October 26UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: The ReverendE. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the Chapel, RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 11 am.FILM: (HILUEiL FOUNDATION), THE WITNESSESand SIGHET SIGHET, Hillel House, 7:30 and 9:30 pm.CONTEMPORARY FILMS: The Magician, Cobb Hall, 7and 9:30 pm.INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCES: Ida Noyes Hall,Cloister Club, 7:30 pm.RADIO SERIES: From the Midway, WFMF, 100.3, 7am, WAIT, 10 am, "Assisting Developing Nations toCombat Their Population Crisis, Philip Claxton, Spe¬cial Assistant for the Population Matters to the U.S.Secretary of State.DISCUSSION: (Lutheran Church at the University ofChicago) with Stu Boll, member of the CONSPIRACYstaff, defending the Chicago 8, Dietrich House, 5544 S.Woodlawn.CHEC: Women's Liberation Course, informal brunch anddiscussion, Eleanor Club Lounge, 1442 E. 59 St., 11 am.CHEC: Calligraphy Study Group, open meeting, EleanorClub Lounge, 8 pm.ST. THOMAS THE APOSTLE PEACE COMMITTEE:Celebration of 100th anniversary of Gandhi's Birth.Monday, October 27CROSS COUNTRY: Frosh-Soph vs. Wright Jr. College,Washington Park, 11 am.CONCERT: DONOVAN, Rockefeller Mennorial Chapel, 4pm.SQUARE DANCING: Ida Noyes Lounge, discuss freefood demand and Nov. 15 March on Washington, 7:30pm.DISTRICT WIDE WORKER'S RALLY: For Raby, re¬freshments, CCE, Rm. 2-EF.CHESS CLUB MEETING: 3rd floor Ida Noyes, organizeteams for Chicago League and Regional Tournaments,7 pm.LECTURE: Professor Milton Hildeband, Quantrell Audi¬torium, "Effective University Teaching and Its Eval¬uation," 4 pm.The Chicago Maroon/October 24, 1969■* ^ iletters to the editors of the maroonIdeas and MethodsIn the report of the committee to eval¬uate the department of philosophy at theUniversity of Chicago dated November 29,1967 and published in the University of Chi¬cago Record of October 3, 1969, the visitingcommittee took it upon themselves, after atwo-day study of the department of philoso¬phy, to make certain recommendationswith respect to the committee on ideas andmethods and other University departmentsand committees.Before discussing the nature of these rec¬ommendations, and the evaluations of thephilosophy department, it should be notedthat at no time did the visiting committeediscuss with any student, undergraduate orgraduate, or any faculty member of thecommittee on ideas and methods any of thereasons for the existence of the committeeon ideas and methods, its history, its pur¬poses, or its effectiveness within the endswhich it has established for itself. Indeed,the visiting committee explicitly states.. no knowing what the reasons are forthe existence of such related programs, andnot having been asked to examine theseprograms •. . These disclaimers ofknowledge and authorization did not pre-.vent the creme of professional professors ofphilosophy from passing judgment aboutthe hiring practices, course content and ex¬istence of a committee about which theyknow exactly as much as can be gleanedfrom the catalog of the University. Evenundergraduates are not so naive.Such hubris cannot and must not go unre¬marked. These distinguished visiting pro¬fessors, after a total of sixteen hours at theUniversity, believe they are in a position tojudge of the value, worth, and efforts ofhundreds of professors, thousands of stu¬dents, and millions of University dollarswithout ever once having bothered so muchas to pick up a telephone and arrange afive minute interview with anyone directly involved in such efforts. Even at the trial ofSocrates, the defense had its right to cross-examine witnesses, to appear and answercharges, to conduct an open inquiry to getat the truth. Perhaps that is old-fashionedin view of the developments that have beenmade in symbolic logic. Perhaps the needto say “unlike you, whereof I don’t know, Iremain silent” is outmoded by Goedel’sproof.These visiting professors, able men all,begin their report by discussing what thedepartment needs most. Secretaries, a stu¬dent lounge, offices for the faculty, and in¬deed a “library nearby, though this is per¬haps less important than a common room”grace their list of recommendations. Such alist of priorities is indeed Platonic in char¬acter and certainly would go far to redeem¬ing the prestige of the department.I leave to the department of philosophythe job of evaluating the visiting com-mitee’s recommendations on how to im¬prove itself by getting new people fromelsewhere. That, I believe, speaks for itself.However, with respect to the recommen¬dations about faculty appointments to pro¬grams like ideas and methods, the visitingcommittee has recommended that no newappointments be made “unless the recom¬mendation comes from the department ofphilosophy itself.” It further recommendsthat (by and large) departments and com¬mittees in the other divisions of the Univer¬sity keep their hands off philosophical ma¬terial since “by and large those who aretrained in a subject are best fitted to teachit.” That no doubt is true. The question iswhat is a philosopher trained in such thathe is better trained than someone else?What is the subject matter of philosophywhich the department is expert in? To myknowledge, the department offers coursesin the philosophy of mathematics, philoso¬phy of science, and in the history of philoso¬phy, courses in ethics, logic, and forms oflinguistic analysis. None of the above are taught by PhD’s in physics, mathematics,history, political science, linguistics, philo¬logy, descriptive sociology, statistics etc. orany scientific discipline which would quali¬fy its “professor” to teach such courses. Iwould like to know whether those who teachcourses in ethics need to be virtuous men.If so, is the department now claiming thatit is staffed with experts in virtue? If so,our department is indeed a wonder amongcontemporary departments.Let us assume that the department thinksthat being virtuous or teaching about virtueis irrelevant to the curriculum of a profes¬sional philosopher and that his concern iswith conceptual analysis. What would thenespecially qualify the department at con¬ceptual analysis? What courses are labelled“methodology of conceptual analysis 101?”My point in all these questions is that thesubject matter of philosophy is necessarilyoutside of what the department now consid¬ers as is specialty. There has never been aviable philosophy which did not concern it¬self with the problems of the special scien¬ces of the problems of life. And these kindsof problems are not by their nature ame¬nable to the experts of a university; depart¬ment whose genesis lays in the murky his¬tory of educational institutions since the13th century.Indeed, it is my personal opinion that ifthe department endorses the views of theVisiting Committee, it should close itsdoors and send its amateurs back to schoolto get the requisite credentials in some dis¬cipline. It is this idea of a philosophic ex¬pert, an elitist coterie which is most otiose.Where is the department of philosophy’scourse listing supportable by more than thekind of liberal study and inquiry which hasbeen the hallmark of a free university sincethe Academy?Even the claim that philosophy in someor many senses, deals with the problems ormistakes we make as a result of confusionsor category mistakes in our language does not merit belief. For it it is so, who is thephilosophic expert who is willing to say thathe no longer makes ethical or political mis¬takes as a result of knowing the differentuses of “Intention.” It is a prima facie ab¬surd. I propose, in all sincerity, until thattime that the Dept, of Phil, repudiates therecommendaions of the visiting com¬mittee, that its recruitment of students, itsbudget, and facilities be turned over to therecommendations of the visiting com¬mittees who indeed are specialists, even ifonly in the Iliad, Lear and God-Charles GorodessFlawsA forceful conflict between students andadministration-faculty represents, on itsface, a failure of communication. This fail¬ure, I believe, is associated with two flaws.One flaw is the student’s supposition thatthe university has significant immediatepower to correct social problems. It doesnot. Actually, most private (and state) uni¬versities have difficulty meeting theirbudgets and they are seriously dependentupon governmental (federal, state, local)grants and private benefactors to stayafloat financially. If a person can hardlyswim enough to stay afloat, it is not reason¬able to expect and demand that he rescueseveral others who are in danger of drown¬ing.The universities have only small abilityto solve today’s social problems. Their ma¬jor power is to educate the generation thattomorrow will be leaders (governmental, fi¬nancial, military, industrial) in positions totake direct, concrete action.A second major flaw is the faculty’s usu¬al supposition that knowledge (and in¬telligence) are inherently valuable. Knowl¬edge per se is neither good, nor bad, norin between. Its value can be determinedonly in relation to something else.Knowledge is worth learning only if it isContinued on Page TenrProsperity in the Year of AusterityTo date, the Maroon has had 32 more pages of news andads than last year. Why? Six display advertising salesmeninstead of only one, each doing quite well.NO LONGER ONLY MBA sOriginally, I asked for only MBA students to sell ads. Someare doing very well, but a Med student is selling circlesaround some MBA's. Not only that, an SSA student spent anafternoon and sold several ads - outdoing half the MBA's.I NEED MORE SALESMEN!I had thought I could carry a full load of studies and keep theMaroon full of ads, but I did not anticipate this 20%increase in ads and editorial copy. A lot of the increaseI've sold myself. The commissions are very nice, but I MUSTcut back.Rather than ' II an advertiser I haven't got time to take hisads, I'd much rc'1 nr send him someone who can take care ofhis advertising, i am turning over all local advertisers toothers today.MONEYTen cents per mile driven on Maroon business (or train orbus fare - you need not have a car) plus 10% commission oneverything you sell. Old established accounts assigned aswell as new.Continued on page 11 Cohn A Stematawtt Sc (EatmniHShopCHANGINGSHAPESThe shape of traditionally styled suits is changingsomewhat. Our favorite new version is supressed atthe waist, with a longer lapel.You’re welcome to come in and try on a few of thesebeautifully tailored suits. They’re made to our ownspecifications by St. Ives, H. Freeman and others.Prices range from $75 to $135.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings “The performance that shouldhave won the Oscar forVanessa Redgr;softfor Best Actress avethe Year!”-Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times“A WONDERFUL MOVIE!”—life Magazine,"VANESSA REDGRAVETOUCHES GREATNESS!"—Look MogotintAHOSfRIand RAYMOND HMU WranVANESSA REDGRAVE.THE I/IVES (IF ISADORA’AtoMNflKGJAMES FOXIVANTCHENKOJASON RORARDSPBOOUCfO ISSOCMUd* WIIH JNivIRSi! KHMSlNUIOrrrt technicolor*HI-WAY« • • THEATRE e * •63rd & WESTERN 476 0802October 24, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7£ducatorsPresentViewsoriUSEckicationContinued from Page OneThe major point Miss Caruso focused onwas that schools need philosophical andmoral synthesis. “The image of the meltingpot served in the past; we cannot use thisimage today. Ethnic lines do not entirelymelt away, but sail away on a stormy seaof social change. We must explore the usesof diversity, rather than the quality of ad¬versity. We can hold together with a com¬mon goal. . .this is a far more interestingsocial fabric, and it should be reflected andwoven into our institutions today.”Caruso concluded by attacking the criticsof the present system as “sitters on thestatus quo with 20-20 hindsight and needing20-20 foresight.” She feels that the dynam¬ics of dissent will bring about the demise ofthe generation rather than of education.“Turbulence exists for teachers and teach¬ing, but the vast majority will say Ameri¬can public education is alive and well andliving in the twentieth century.”John Desmond, president of the ChicagoTeachers’ Union, expounded on what hethought to be the three major problems ofpublic education in large cities throughoutthe country; not enough money, populationof the schools increasing at a tremendousrate, and an apathetic public. Besides anincrease in aid to pay teachers, “profes¬sional people, decent money,” he would likea maximum class size of thirty students toprovide discipline and flexibility. Desmond defended collective argumentas necessary in effecting these changes inthe state legislature. He believes theremust be more long range planning in thepresent educational system and hopes thiswill involve the community in promotingchange in both the system and attitudes. Hefeels that the taxpayers cannot shoulder theburden of the increased aid, but the stateshould contribute 50% of the expenses.“The public schools may be dying, butthey’re not dead yet. The schools are at acrossroads and are going to continue to dieunless the public supports bills for changeand aid.”Dr. Charles Hurst Jr., president of Mal¬colm X College, claimed that money wouldhelp the present system which “does an ex¬cellent job of what it is designed to do —teach the supremacy of the whites andsupression of the blacks.” He continued“the present system judges its success bythe extent to which a black can becomewhite inisde.” He said that a prerequisitefor black educational leaders is that theybelieve that racism is a reality in oursociety.A basic fault in the education of blacks isthat they are taught by “white rushin”teachers — who work in a black communityduring the day and “rush in” to the sub¬urbs at night. According to Hurst, “no aliencan instruct these children. To hell withcredentials — they don’t contribute to theVIE NEEDMORE BOOKS,!!!!!!If you think you can soil; even ifyou don't think you can soli andjust want to make a little money inthis year of austerity, come seeme. The income is irregular, un¬dependable, and unpredictable,but it's a lot of fun. Also, when theshooting is all over, you find thatthe monetary rewards work outquite handsomely.WHO TO SEE: Emmet Gonder,Business Manager, in the top ofIda Noyes Hall, (take a vitaminpill and eat Wheaties beforeclimbing all the way up). Or call3263 and leave your name andnumber, if I'm not there.E. Gender TIM HARDINOctober 26Auditorium TheatreTickets available inMaroon Business OfficeIda Noyes 304$6.50-$3.50rOCTOBERMUMl INVITATIONALANTIQUE-CLASSICSPORTS CARSHOWING!INTERNATIONAL AMPHITHEATER42nd and Hoisted St., Chicago, IllinoisFEATURING:• 150 SELECTED ANTIQUE,CLASS AND SPORTS CARS• ANTIQUE MOTORCYCLES• ANTIQUE DEALERS IN:CHINA, FURNITURE.GLASS JEWELRY. ART10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.Friday, Saturday, SaadayOctober 24, 25, 21Admission $2.50 Adults50c ChildrenVISIT THE MEISTER BRAU BEER BARDENSEE THE AUTOMOBILESFOMMEMir OWNED BY• AL CAPONE • BIG I. THOMPSON • JACK OKMPSIY•/The Chicago Maroon/October 24. 1H9 SEND SUBSt CARPET CITY i4 6740 STONY ISLANDt 324-7998 <^Has what you need from a $10Tused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom•carpet. Specializing in Remnants^4* Mill returns at a fraction of the 4^original cost.^Decoration Colors and Qualities.4Additional 10% Discount with thisr*d. «t FREE DELIVERY ♦SMEDLEYSSchht/ on tapExtra large pitcher of beerFree peanutsSandwichesI he m groupheadaua rtersin Harper Court5239 Harper AveBig Wheel Bike ShopSALES - SERVICE - RENTALSAUTMORlZf ONORTHSIOL RaUIGH &Robin Hooo Oi.ai.ehs2935 N 0RO4OWAVPHONE: 346-03 I 3EXPERT REPAIR WORKON ALL. MAKES survival of the black, but to genocide.”Hurst said the central aim of schools in ablack community should be to build con¬fidence, remedy physical and psychologicaldistress, and to be devoted to the liberationand unity of the black people. He finishedhis speech by emphasizing that “educationfor blacks is rehumanization. All black chil¬dren are educatable and human.”Dr. Donald Erikson, professor of educa¬tion at the University, announced that hewas not going to talk to the question, as hefelt that it was lot of relevant pre¬dominance, but rather would suggest re¬forms in the politico-economic structure.The professor suggested that the roots ofthe problem, with public as well as privateschools are in the fiscal policies, that tax¬ing methods are inadequate. He would liketo “use a largely untapped reservoir — the funds which parents now must allocate toinvest in three onerous alternatives for abetter education, which are usually prohibi¬tive: a heavier tax program, move to amore expensive neighborhood with corre¬sponding school system, pay a privateschool tuition.”Erikson feels that certain extracurricularactivities could substitute for courses, suchas working in the community, or that fullsegments of the school day should be spentin the community. Funds could be allocatedto other agencies not under such heavy burdens and that the redistribution of responsi¬bilities would aid the school system. Hewould like to see PTA’s intended for broad¬er range of opinions than present parentalmeetings, at which parents could select theexperiences to which their children are ex¬posed.TOUGH LUCK! The LauraNyro Concert at North¬western is sold out. Like inno tickets.As a member of the SkiSpecialists Guild we are in¬viting you to visit our shop.Allow us to custom fit youwith your requirements.We have all quality-brands of equipment.Complete rentaland serviceOpen all year3422 Fullerton Ave.Chicago, III. 60647A/C 312 278-6606May 1 have aFrench winewith TurkishTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.EfendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkU of C Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines.>>» AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYAppointmentsRobert L. Scranton, professor of classicalart and archeology and in the departmentsof art and classics has been appointedchairman of the art department.Scranton secceeds Rev. Harrie Van-derstappen, S.V.D., who returns to full-timeteaching and to his research. Scranton is anexpert on ancient Greek and Roman artand architecture.R.F. Zwi Werblowsky, dean of the facultyof humanities at the Hebrew University ofJerusalem, has been named White visitingprofessor in the divinity school for the 1969-70 academic year.Werblowsky will teach courses in Jewishmysticism, themes and problems in Rab¬binic theology, problems in comparativemysticism, and the phenomenolgy of reli¬gion. . .Cassandra Pyle has been appointed assis¬tant to the dean of students for foreign stu¬dent admissions and foreign study at theUniversity.Mrs. Pyle has served as foreign studentadmissions officer at the University since1961 and also as Fulbright program advisorsince 1962. . .Patrick L. Mayers has been appointed as¬sistant to the vice-president for planning atthe University.Mayers received a BA degree in 1960 inpsychology and an MA degree in 1969 inSocial Work from the University, where heconcentrated in community organization.He recently has served in Chicago as a con¬sultant to the director of the Institute forJuvenile Research in Illinois and as a pro¬gram associate for the Community Fund ofChicago. Mayers was bom in Chicago andattended Hyde Park High School.Adine L. Simmons has been appointed as¬sistant to the,, director, of admissions and;«id. iMiss Simmon§»mcei\ed a £4 dggfeefrom the Universitytin Junfc~ i069,!arid Is agraduate of Chicago’s Harlem High School.She served as a student admissions officerat the University during her senior yearand has been an assistant resident head ina University dormitory since November,1967.FulbrightsThe Institute of International Educationhas announced that the 1970-71 competitionfor grants for graduate study abroad of¬fered by the U.S. Government under theFulbright-Hays act and for grants offeredby various governments, universities, andprivate donors will close in December. . .A total of ^pprokinaately- $60 grants wiltbe offered dfor 1970-71*. approximately thesame number! offered last year, althoughwell below the total quota of two year’sago.Fulbright-Hays full grants will be avail¬able to the following countries: Argentina,Australia, Austria, Belgium-Luxemburg.Brazil, Ceylon, Chile, Colombia, Denmark,Ecuador, Finland, Federal Republic of Ger¬ many, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea,New Zealand, Peru, Portugal, Sweden,Thailand! and United Kingdom, and Uru-* guay. ’ W' .;Full grants to the following countries, al¬though previously announced in the 1970-71Brochure, have been cancelled: the Repub¬lic of China, France, Greece, Iceland, Iran,Malaysia, the Netherlands, Norway, thePhilippines, Spain and Turkey. There willbe no teaching assistantships or fellowshipsto Italy or the Philipines.Fulbright-Hays travel grants will supple¬ment maintenance awards to: Denmark,the Federal Republic of Germany, Israel,Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden,Turkey, and Yugoslavia. There will be notravel grants to France.Foreign grants (offered by foreign gov¬ernments, universities, and private donors)will be available for: Austria, the FederalRepublic of Germany, Iceland, Israel,Italy, Mexico, Poland, Romania, Spain,Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia and Turkey.In France and Yugoslavia, both studygrants and teaching assistantships will beavailable. Some of these are full awards;others cover maintenance and tuition only.Additional information and applicationHyde Park THEATRE“THE \BESTV, FOKMN FILM g\ OF THE YEA*!" Xv -Hmm tor* FiNw 0*<» .THE TWO PART IHEOOUCTIOH Of LEO TOLSTOY S-*•» Vortt C/H<« .THE TWO PART PWOOUCTWAFUhJpEACE’MMNTCD »V THE WALTER REAOf ONOANI2ATKM AND SATAA • IN COLON ■ RELEASED IV CONTINENTAL WPART n ss STARTS Oct. 24 •THE ENTIRE PRODUCTION OF “WAR AND PEACE" WILL BE SHOWNIN TVyo PARTS EACH PART WILL BE SHOWN FOR ONE WEEK! PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd 643-2800WEDELIVER David Rosenbushforms may be requested from the campusFulbright Program Adviser, Mrs. Cas¬sandra Pyle, Administration 204. The dead¬line for submission of completed appli¬cation forms.to the Fulbright Adviser is De¬cember 1,1969.ASCAP AwardEasley R. Blackwood, professor of music,has been chosen as one of the AmericaSociety of Composers, Authors and Pub¬lishers (ASCAP) award winners for 1969-70.These awards reflect “our continuingcommitment to assist and encouragewriters of serious music,” according to anASCAP release.Among the previous winners of this honorare W. H. Auden, Archibald MacLeish,Gian Carlo Menotti, and Carl Sandburg.The awards, being distributed to 1797members of ASCAP, total over $665,000.Faculty HonorsWilliam H. Kruskal, professor and chair¬man of the statistics department is presi¬dent-elect of the Institute of MathematicalStatistics for 1970. He will be presidentduring 1971.The Institute, which publishes The An¬nals of Mathematical Statistics, is themajor international professional societyconcerned with theoretical statistics.Kruskal, 50, served as editor of TheAnnals of Mathematical Statistics from1958 to 1961. He has also been an associateELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd Si. Bl -8-2900 editor and has served as a member of theInstitute’s council.Kruskal joined the department of sta¬tistics at the University as an instructorin 1950. He was appointed professor ofstatistics in 1962 and chairman of thestatistics department in 1966. He has beena visiting faculty member at HarvardUniversity and the University of Californiaat Berkeley.Round TableAUDITORIUMFri & Sat-Nov 7 & 8TICKETS-$6.50-$5.50-$4.50-$3.00Box Office OpenMon. Oct. 13thMail Orders-Make ChecksPayable AuditoriumTheatre - 70 E. CongressChicago, III. 60605Please Enclose Self-AddressedStamped Envelope. The only major restrictions on pornogra¬phy should be those involving children, saidHugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy maga¬zine, Tuesday night on the University ofChicago Round Table.“The only limitations that I would placeon free speech and the press,” Hefner said,“would be related to children .. . I’ve feltfor a number of years that our supposedconcern for the young has been used as ameans to bring all of society, adult society,down to the level of children. The basicpremises of democracy and of being free asan individual are related to an adultsociety; one doesn’t assume that becausewe no longer have prohibition it is properfor children to drink.”Hefner appeared with Dr. Daniel V.Freedman, the Louis Block professor andchairman of the department of psychiatryin the Pritzker School of Medicine and Dr.Morris Lipton, a member of the President’scommission on obscenity and pornography,to discuss “Why Not Pornography?”Round Table is a weekly television dis¬cussion program broadcast at 7 p.m. Tues¬days over WTTW-TV (Channel 11) in Chi¬cago. The program is produced by the Uni¬versity in cooperation with WTTW.Book SigningAbbie Hoffman will fingerprint copies ofhis new book for eager autograph seekersat an afternoon party at the Book Center inHarper Court November 7, according toshop owner Jack Moseff.Moseff said all members of the “Con¬spiracy” are planning to attend the party,and all profits from the sale of Hoffman’sbook will go to support the Chicago 8.Hum LuncheonsThe humanities collegiate division and itsstudent council is holding its annual lunch¬eon series at the Quadrangle Club, duringthe weeks of October 27 and November 3.Individual invitations have been sent toeach student in the collegiate division;those who have not received them shouldstop into Gates-Blake 101.Goodman TicketsA gift to the College of 100 tickets hasbeen donated by the Goodman Guild foreach play being performed by the GoodmanTheater during the academic year 1969-70.These tickets are available for dis¬tribution free to college scholarship stu¬dents. Since this activity is part of the on¬going orientation program, preference willbe given to first year students until oneweek before each performance when thetickets will be available for general dis¬tribution.The tickets can be picked up at the Ad¬missions and Aid Office (5737 UniversityAve.) through Miss Alice Williams.CINEMA THEATRECHICAGO at MICHIGANPhone: 944-5666TttCdutc&t ‘PwueneBILL MARE STl MMETROBERT KILCULLENJOAN SUNDSTRUMAS MUCH OR MOREA WOMAN S PICTURE1STUDENTS $2.00WITH ID CARD, EVERY DAY BUT SAT.Sam Lesner ^Daily News) “ B111 Hare show s ‘he potential power of afirst rote creative fiIm maker’,’October 24, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/9LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONContinued from Page Sevenuseful to the student, “useful” encom¬passing such diversities as practical andtheoretical application in one’s work, ful¬fillment of the student’s curiosity, achieve¬ment of desired social ends, and aid in or¬ganizing one’s information or in obtainingnecessary information. Otherwise, informa¬tion may have zero or negative value. Toillustrate, imagine the fate of a zebra whichwaited before an onrushing lion to ponderin which direction it should flee — a fewseconds cogitation and the intelligent zebrabecomes the lion’s repast.The faculty should be about as careful toavoid requiring courses whose useful valueis miniscule (compared with the time andeffort needed for learning the material) asthey are in establishing required programsleading to degrees. In this regard, howmany faculties could get a passing mark?How many have the foresight and courageto submit their courses individually to re¬verse grading, i.e. by students a year ormore later who are in a position to gradethe course effectively? How often are ad¬vanced students asked their opinion onwhether a faculty member acquires tenure?Students receive instructions, often su¬perbly, on how to acquire information. Butdoes the faculty guide them in eliminatingirrelevant information whose retentionwould waste time and might do harm bydistracting attention from important mat¬ters? The acquisition of unnecessary in¬formation shows ignorance about asconvincingly as does failure to obtainnecessary information.Occupation with trivia allows the keyproblem of our generation to slide along.Increasing pollution, exhaustion of first-class deposits of natural resources, increas¬ing crime rates, and poverty in thecentral cities are all subsidiary to themajor problem of overpopulation. Wars asin Vietnam are facilitated by over¬population because human life becomescheap. Democracy is threatened becausewhat party in power will take a chancewith a free-election if the losers (who areout of a job) have prospects of death bystarvation.G. Hardin in “The Tragedy of the Com¬mons” (Science, December, 1968) hasshown that coercion likely is the only en¬during, satisfactory way of controlling pop¬ulation. Until population growth is con¬trolled, discussion of details of secondaryproblems mainly wastes time. It resemblesdiscussing whether to take a wart off thefinger of a man who has a cancer growingin his lung.When socially concerned students becomeaware both of the increasing problems ofsociety and of faculty deficiencies, theiranger may tend to boil over — even if theyare receiving some scholarship help. Fur¬ther, many bright students are indifferentwhen trouble breaks out.I do not blame the faculty. Most aredoing their best. After all, they are butsomewhat older students who must teach younger students and, like it or not, mustgrade the younger students. Perhaps, if thecollege student in his freshman or soph¬omore year were to give a lecture or two toa class, his perspective of the problems ofthe other side might be improved.Nor are the students to be blamed. A va¬riety of studehts, from finest to worst, havebeen involved in these confrontations.Many students are beset with money prob¬lems and with anxieties about whether theoutside world will have a place for themwhen they finish college. Many are dis¬turbed, I think properly, about the Vietnamwar and feel they have received no ade¬quate explanation — if indeed there is one(other than policy influence of the military-CIA-industry).Tfie confrontations of last year, as well asthe October Vietnam moratorium, servedthe useful purpose of bringing into openview some illusions and deficiencies of fac¬ulties and students. The answer seems tobe not repression, but honesty in admittinglimitations, and study and hard work.The University of Chicago faculty andstudents have a great tradition. In ourpresent society with such dominating forcesas military, rich, and heavenly-bound igno¬rant, you will, of course, “do your thing” —which is perhaps more than can be said formany outsiders as myself.A ParentTenant UnionsI’m sure all of us working to organizetenant unions in Hyde Park are grateful tothe Maroon for its endorsement of tenantunion activity. However, to make sure thatthe movement starts off on the right foot, itis necessary that the general perspectiveand strategy be understood by all thosewho get involved.First, the foremost necessity of the ten¬ant union movement must be to secure lowrent levels in Hyde Park, to assure thatHyde Park is a community in which notonly students, but also low and lower-middle income people can live. If we striveto improve building conditions and con¬tractual arrangments without insisting onthe maintenance of low rent levels, we willonly succeed in driving out of Hyde Parkthe people who want most desperately tolive there.Secondly, it is true that tenant union ac¬tivity is in the self-interests of students aswell as of the community residents, butself-interest should not be too narrowly de¬fined. The reduction of rent is one benefit oftenant organization, but the creation andmaintenance of an integrated community,on racial and class lines, is in the interestof students both because an integratedcommunity is a more interesting one inwhich to live, and because an open HydePark takes some pressure off the surround¬ing ghetto and reduces the likelihood thatjustified outrage over the conditions of theghetto will erupt in the destruction of thesouth side.David Bensman3g™nenfiQ 25 at all timesROBERTBRESSON£ PETITE GOO&ARDSOLDAT2424 LincolnPark Free528-9126Oct 22-21T M. S. n ;>► r, I, .i Robert BressonSTARTS WEDNESDAY SIX IN PARISO/Tha Chicago Maroon/October 24, 1969 darkenjoy ourspecial studentrateO C C atal1timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredaily• open 7 30 a.m.-lateshow midnight• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day-all gals 75‘little gal lery for galsonly• dark park mg-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly program HPKCCAs a member of the board of directors ofthe Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Con¬ference I was pleased to learn that the stu¬dent government has undertaken a tenantunion support project. The growth of thetenant union program has been importantin shaping the new direction of the Confer¬ence during the past year. I would like topoint out, however, that the role of the Con¬ference in initialing and supporting theprogram was mentioned only once in MissGlockner’s article and not at all in the edi¬torial.The board of the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference established thecommittee on tenant unions in March 1969.There are organizing efforts in about 40buildings, concerning problems of code vio¬lations, maintenance, management prac¬tices and rent increases. The program hasattracted a staff of five full and part-timeorganizers. Currently, the landlords of fivebuildings are being sued by the city forlack of compliance. Sixteen more are in¬volved in building department complianceboard hearings. The tenants of one buildinghave sued their landlord over the con¬stitutionality of the lease. There are a ma¬jority of tenants on rent strike in thr§pbuildings, and minority strikes in three oth¬ers. Tenants in four buildings have pre¬pared contracts to replace the lease. Nego¬tiations one one of these should be com¬pleted by the end of November. Collectiveaction by tenants has resulted in $15,000.00in repairs to date.One week ago, the Conference tenantunion committee, composed of building rep¬resentatives, agreed to establish itself as atenant union organization. It adopted atemporary set of by-laws and elected tem¬porary officers. It will be working out its structure, policies and strategies during thecoming month. The next meeting is Thurs¬day, October 30, 1969 at the HPKCC officeat 8 p.m. All are welcome to attend. I lookforward to the participation of the Univer¬sity community in the Conference’s tenantunion program.Robert Ashenhurst, TreasurerHyde Park-KenwoodCommunity ConferenceSour GrapesAs the Reverend Jesse Jackson told us onOctober 15, wars like the war in Vietnamcannot be ended by university students andtheir parents. If university students want toengage themselves in an effective anti-warmovement, they must begin to involvethemselves in the efforts of poor people totransform the system which oppressesthem into one which serves their needs.One opportunity for students to becomepart of an important struggle by the poor togain a measure of control of their lives isthe nationwide grape boycott against storesselling grapes grown by California growerswho will not recognize the rights of theirfarmworkers to organize. The growers arebeing aided in their resistance to union ac¬tivity by Governor Reagan, President Nix¬on and the Pentagon, which has increasedits purchase of grapes tremendously sincethe strike started four years ago.In Chicago, Jewel Stores is the majorchain which is still selling scab grapes. TheChicago Grape Boycott Committee, staffedby California grape workers, is conductingpicketing at Jewel stores throughout Chi¬cago. Paul Griffith (955-7281) and I( Flint3407) are organizing picketing at a Jewelstore in south shore every Saturday, in thelate morning.Jane JohnsonYoung Socilist's LeagueSilent Three Make Rockefeller MusicContinued from Page FourNorthwestern. He also studied in France.Last summer he gave a concert inLoughborough, England, and visited theNetherlands, where “the sounds of the ca¬rillon is at its best due to the low buildingsand sheets of water.”Lodine explains that the carillon is a dif¬ficult instrument to compose for because ofthe lingering overtones of the bells, which,unlike piano andorgan tones, hang in theair for a long time, making dissonancemore likely to occur. “Because of theseovertones, people sometimes think bells arebadly played or out-of-tune. It just takesknowledge of the instrument and ex¬perience to be able to avoid this problem.” Although he jokes gleefully about his“captive audience” of everyone in theneighborhood of the Chapel, Lodine takesseriously the responsibility of selectingpieces to play. “The carillon is a seriousinstrument, but it’s also well-adapted tofolk music. I want to compromise betweenhigh-brow and light music by providing avariety of both. I also consider that somepeople must hear the carillon, whether theylike it or not. I want to play both for themasses and for the musicians.”Lodine gives a short concert everyWednesday during the noon hour. Mondelloplays at 12:30 on Tuesdays and Thursdays.These short concerts are free and everyoneis invited to come.dark & madison fr 2-28431 PIERCE TOWER CINEMA COBB/tmHOf MSatOct 25$17:15,3=15 a blind white girl of 18, her sluttish, prostitutemother, her drunken grandfather, "a patch ofblue/'she meets Poitier.she also falls in love with him.Cast: Sidney Poitier, Shelley Winters, ElizabethHartman, Wallace Ford.* ' * ' « ‘ ' ' ‘ ' «(.««.. f ■ I , l»i ii(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)YOU WERE ONLY WAITING FOR THIS MOMENT TO ARISERATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perHn* For non-Urviversity clientele:40 cents per line each additionalinsertion.75 cents per line, 60 cants perme each additional insertion.Count 30 typewriter spaces perline.TO PLACE AO: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60037.N» ads will bo taken over ftiophene er billed.The next issue of the M*raaiiwill be Oct. 31. Deadline for alladvertising is 4 PM on thoMonday before publication.march onWASHINGTON.NOV 15thCharter busses Leaving Fridayfrom Main Quads. Students-S25Adults-*X ROUNDTRI'P. WHILEFunds Last—SAVE S5 FIRST 100Student tickets are *20. CALL Mil3-0800 x 3273-74 or Ida N. Rm 218.AMERICA HURRAHSee Jean Claude van Itallie'sAMERICA HURRAH 8:30 Oct 31,Nov 1, 7-8 Rey Club Theater Stu¬dents *1.50 Others *2.00. PEOPLE FOR SALEExpert typing. 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's & weekends."May We Do Your Typing?" 363-1104.PEOPLE WANTEDTYPIST WTD.3-0447. Yr own hrs. DOHOUSE FOR SALE4-BEDROOM GEORGIANLrg. L.R., formal D.R., surwoom,den, l'/i baths, floored attic, fullbasement, good transportation.*1300 down FHA. Near 74th 8, ColesMr. Cohn DOO-6672SILVERWOOO INC.ARTISTIC HOUSE. Oriental accents.Japanese garden. Redwood deck. 4bedrooms. Nat. fireplace. 22' livingroom. By owner. Nr. 77th Paxton.22,500. SO8-0995.ROOMMATES WANTEDMature fern grad wanted to shareFANTASTIC APT 5 rm 22 fl LakeView modern bldg E Hy Pk *90-100after Nov 1. 643-3714. HELP WANTED: PLEASANTPART-TIME WORK IN YOURspare time. 363-0838.TYPE TABLES FOR UNIVERSITYRESEARCH PROJECT. STRAIGHTCOPY NO SET-UP. COULD TYPEAT HOME. PHONE MISS BLOCH,643-8090.ATTENTION DEPARTMENTALSECRETARIES. We are looking fora girl who knows her way aroundthe academic community; someonewho has had experience keepingtrack of course lists, appointmentschedules, etc. but who wants abetter iob. We offer a bright future,a challenging, exciting position, goodpay, and dedicated colleagues whoare eager to improve higher educa¬tion in the US. Please reply in con¬fidence stating education and workexperience as well as salary re¬quirements. Chicago Maroon, BoxALDINE.GRAD STUDENTneeded to assist with national re¬search study on pedestrian acci¬dents. Interviewing and observationon part-time basis in Chicago. Forfurther information, send name, ma¬jor, year in school, address, andphone number to:Pedestrian Safety StudyLeasco Systems 8, Research Corp.5401 Wesbard AvenueWashington, DC 20016Drummer ft Bass Player Wanted forBand in Rock, Folk Rock, HeavySound Groove. Gigs. Must HaveEquipment 8, Experience Call Bob643-0741 Evenings.WAITRESS, Experienced 3 eveningsper week, 5-8:30 PM Gordon's Res¬taurant 321 East 57th St., 752-9251FEM GRAD STUDENT. MOVE INNOV 1ST. 54 8. HARPER, S55/MO363-0715.2 STUDENTS WNTD—SHARE 4BDRM APT. 57 8. KENWOOD M orF 842.-7407.—- *. .» * i r i—■' - ■*; * * “ *FOR RENT-- ^SUBLET * < .3'/j room apartment; newly decor¬ated. 57th 8. Harper. Call 752-4716evenings after 10.STUDIO APT. H. PK. *75. 955-8143LAKEFRONT HOUSE2564 E. 72nd Place. Large 4 bed¬room house, own private yard andbeach on lakefront. Avail now. Rareopportunity. Rent over *300. D.Parry. DE2-2525 or BU8-5540.Good, large, single room for rent atAlpha Delta Phi 5747 University, PL2-9718.Tired of Your Roommate? WantPrivacy? Large sunny room for rentin^Kenwood. Call 548-4748.FOR RENT 3'/j RM FURNISHEDAPT VERY NICE *150-Mo. 731-7X4. Co-op middle (11-13 years old) needsvolunteers with skills in mechanics,sciences, 8. music. Call Mrs. Davis.363-5810.QUIE T-SIM ULA TOR NEEDED BYCOUNSELING CENTEROnce again the teaching staff of theCounseling Center PsychotherapyPracticum would like to provide itsstudents with an opportunity to tryto be helpful to persons with minorpsychological problems. We needvolunteers who have problems, con¬cerns or' anxieties-they would bewilling to discuss with graduatestudent*-tyho are in clinical train¬ing. The volunteer must commit twohours a week for 5 weeks, maximum10 interivews. Call Ml 3-0600, x2360to make an appointment for orien¬tation interview.A young, beautiful bod is needed tobecome Miss Year Box of 1970. Sub¬mit yourself or your roommate.Call 955-7602 or 3263 or mail toMaroon, photo-editor 303 Ida Noyes.ROOM WANTEDMALE BERKELEY GRAD wantsroom in furnished apt prefer near55th call PETER 752-8259.PERSONAL^In a hurry? Too much to carry atone time? Get the Sunday N. Y.Times magazine, book section, etc.THE BANDand all other 5.98 albumsonly 3.99STUDENT CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT on Saturday at the Book Center inHarper Square.A roommate is wanted for one ofthe finest apts. a student couldhope for. You must be responsible,and able to pay *100 per month,entitling you to MANY extras. CallBU 8-0907 for details.LAURA NYRONorthwestern University presentsLAURA NYRO IN CONCERT Frl.Oct 24 8:00 FM Cahn AuditoriumNorthwestern University 600 Emer¬son, Evanston Tickets *3.00 at doorDONOVANTICKETS ARE ON SALE AT THEMANDEL HALL BOX OFFICE:*3.50, *4.25, and $5.00 FOR THE**★★*★★*★*★*** THE MAROON MARCHING **KAZ00 BAND WILL ORGANIZE?? AND MARCH BEFORE THE ** GAME TODAY. DRESS ZREHEARSAL FOR HALF-TIME* MANOEUVRE **************DONOVAN CONCERT IN ROCK¬EFELLER CHAPEL, OCT. 27, AT4:00 PM Admission is restricted toUC Students, faculty, and staff.SCENESOut of the Bandersnatch Wombcomes another free flick! By L.Bunel, The Young ft The DamnedSun., Oct. 26, 8:30 Not to be missed.EMILY SINGS TUESDAY AT GArIGOYLE ANGIE SINGS SOMETIMESTOO.Horror at the Oriental Institute!THE MUMMY'S TOMB ft THEMOLE PEOPLE, at Breasted Hall,7:15 & 10:00 pm, Thors, Oct X.CHICAGO RESISTANCE MOVE¬MENT at Crossroads InternationalDiscussion Group Tonite 8 pm5621 Blackstone. Led by CADREMember. The Jeff Carp Band (re¬member?) plays Saturday at IdaNoyes.BUNEL-LOS OLVIDADOS-BANDER-SNAT SUN OCT 26; 8:X; IDANOYES HUTA blind girl's recollection of the skyis "A PATCH OF BLUE." ShowingSat, Oct 25, 7:15, 9:15. Cobb *1.PIERCE TOWER CINEMA.The big horror double feature inBreasted Hall Thurs evening onlycosts one dollar.APPLIED YOGA ~New approach to Mental Well-being.Kick insomniq, nervousness, anddrugs. Only Serious Students Freeof Organic Diseases, SRI NERODE003-0155 (WILL TALK TO ANYGROUP.)SUNDAYS. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555 E.73rd St. (corner Coles)7:30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist 8.Church School11:00 am Choral EucharistGAY POWER IN 69-70 Anyone in-terested in joining the Hyde ParkHomophile League formed last qtat UC write Box 69, c/o MaroonReplies kept confidential.Hyde Park's Best Story teller.Reuven Gold-TonightHillel 8:45 PMTake your mummy to Breasted Hallfor the double feature, Ttrurs OctX, 7:15 & 10:00 pm.The Jeff Carp thing will be betterthan anything else unless you haveSMEDLEYSSchlitz on tapExtra large pitcher of beerFree peanutsSandwichesThe in-groupheadquarters.in Harper Court5239 Harper Ave.SUBSCRIBE"Prices going up Oct. 1"THE CHICAGO MAROON, 1212 E. 59th St. Ida Noyes Hall,Chicago, IllinoisMaroon issues for the remaining academic year (69-70) can be sent anywhere inthe country for $8.00. For an additional $1.00 we throw in the June 6 YearbookIssue last year.Complete your collection, keep your family informed of campus life, impress yourfriends. a ride to the coast. 9-12 Sat., Clois¬ters Club.DanceJLIVE BAND Hitcboock-TUFTOct 31 9:00-UntH ? Pierce Tower.Women Free Men 75c ID's.BUSINESSOPPORTUNITIESCHRISTMASSTUDENTS!CHRISTMASdesigned torwould like toIn the nextplete details2255 LimeBeach, Calif. INCOME!Could you use EXTRAINCOME? This plan isuniversity students whoearn from *50. to *500.two months. For com-send *2. to Don Baker,Ave., Suite F, Long90806.YEAR BOX 1970David Travis has killed the vinylcovered yearbook by introducing Iheyear box. Inside are posters, photos,articles, recipe books, coloringbooks, sculpture, and a fabulous Uof C. game. AH ideas are consideredwithout restriction. If interested call955-7602 or 3263.* CONSPIRACYAN EVENING WITH S7U BOLL,member of the Conspiracy Staff,Sunday, Oct 26, 6:30 pm at DietrichBonhoeffer House. 5554 Wood-lawnAve. Come at 5:30 tor supper.DEUTSCHE MESSE?RIGHT! LUTHER'S FOLK SONGMASS OF 1526 (ADAPTED TOENGLISH FOR THE FAINTHEART¬ED) THIS SUNDAY AT 10 AM. ASERVICE OF ST GREGORY LUTH¬ERAN PARISH. AT GRAHAM TAY¬LOR CHAPEL.SUNDAY SUPPERHillel Sunday Supper October 26,6:15 All YOU Can Eat $1.25.EDU-CAGEThe Staff of the Grey City Journalextends greetings ro Edu-cage andwishes for a successful and thrillingyear. Hi, Les, Jules, Tom, Woody,and cohorts.SKIING FOR SALESKI CLUB WINTER TRIP-ONEVAIL, COLORADO BY AIR. Leave Dec. 13— Return Dec. 20.Reasonable cost—Marty: 324-8930.FOR SALEREF ANO STOVE GOOD COND.955-5585.1960 MERCEDES 2209 *375/955-5585HELP WE MUST MOVE OUT OFCHICAGO QUICKLY. WE HAVESOME FINE FURN ACCESS. STER¬EO EQUIP. IF YOU ARE INTER¬ESTED IN QUALITY YOU CANBUY AT GREAT SAVINGS 955-5585Darkroom Utensils and EnlargerStand-Good Cond. Cheap; Chest ftVanity; TV Console 21 in Sears;Linoleum 9/13 new; Metal Ward¬robe; Sauna Facial new; Electr.Fans ft Heaters; Phonograph wind¬ing; Aut. Wash Mach (needs 1 newpart); Wringer Wash Mach good.Best Offer Cash ft Carry. SO 8-7338at 8:00 PM.Sell good '59 Ford. Offer? DO 3-0447.HAIR TICKETSBenefit Performance Oct 30 MU RIALZAKE FOUNDATION FOR LITTLECITY, Home for Retarded ChildrenStudent Discounts Ticket Info 251-5115 Mrs. Green63 CHEVY II 55,000 MILESX4259 EVES 924-7110 *250Xerox Copies 9c,7c,5c,&7c,5c,3c *10runs, 10% Dicount on 9c7c5c rate:MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: 829-0248.TRIUMPH. SPITFIRE 64 GOODCOND. NEW BRAKES, TIRES *700OR OFFER.STEREO COMPONENTS AT LOW-EST PRICES AT MUSICRAFT GSRCHANGER WITH BASE ft CART.ONLY $44.00. CAMPUS REP BOBTABOR 363-4555.GIRLS BIKE, 26" ENG 3-SP, PRNEW WIRE BASKTS FR ft REAR,CABLE ft LOCK INC ($60 NEW)$40. 36X715.1968 VW BUG. MODEL 1500 EN-GINE EXCELLENT CONDI¬TION—20,000 Ml. *1450. CALL 324-3819.617 VW Sedan Sky-blue one ownersvc. every 3000 mi. needs new muf¬fler and valve job cell 465-4798 thisweekend.Continued from page 7RESTRICTED TO U of C STUDENTSAs always, I am restricting this goldenbonanza to U of C students only. Mostsalesmen have reached $2-4 per hourand work five - twenty hours per week.NO WORK NEAR FINAL WEEK,BUT, you still get income then. Call theMaroon Business Office, x3263 fordetails, or come over at 2 pm.TODAYloom 304,Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.JE. Gonder, BusinessManager SINGE BED: Mattress, box springft frame; extra firm 955-9)656.CONSPIRACYNeed sleeping accomodations forstudents coming to Conspiracy Con¬ference (Sat Nov 1st only) anyspace call 427-7774.7th INTERNATIONALFOLK FESTIVALFri Nov 7 Performance 8:15; SatNov 8 Dance Workshops 2:00, FolkDance Party 8:00. All events atInf House 591b ft Dorch. Ticketsat Stud. Activities Office, x 3594.JANE DON'TFAIL ME NOWx 3263MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUN.NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE.CHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non-University people: 75* perline, 60* per repeat line. There are 30 letters, spaces, andpunctuation marks in a line. ALL ADS PAID IN ADVANCE!HEADING: There is an extra charge of $1.00 for your own heading. Normalones (For Sales, etc.) are free.NAME.I ADDRESS ZIP.j □ 1 year subscription $8.00□ Yearbook Issue $1.00October 24, 1969/the Chicago Maroon/IfTHEMAROONMUSICRAFT SPECIALSOn New EquipmentREG.*39reMuiiCuift PRICE$2995df.ver units speciallyotters mcompariKI“'Stemng over the frequency range of 40 HHi The enclosua 0 18 000s particularly noted for its excel— jristics. distortionless reproductionwithout any added coloration a perfectly smoothmidiange and brilliant Signed to enhance »ny iSPECIFICATIONSvirtually inaudible even at risp highs Distortioch bass speaker i... 4 layered voice <specially treated cloth, high complyi 1 inch diameter long tThe 3»/, irmounted •response and wide dispersion character^1over frequency is at 4 000 Hiand oiled The grille doth is acoustically t Power handlingDimensionsFrequency rangeBass speaker 40-H/to 18 <high complia1 inch dvoice coil31 j mch diaFlush mounted onbaffle to give smooth,upper frequencyresponseCrossover frequency 4.000 HiEE-338 A Design Product of ELITE/GOODMANS OF ENGLAND,SPEAKER SYSTEMALSO ON SPECIALREG. $2995MuUOvaft PRICE V ■■ m tm mm tm mmMODEL CAMERA •LEICA NIKONPENTAX BOLEX1342 E. 55thHY 3-9259Student DiscountSMEDLEYSSchlitz on topExtra large pitcher of beeFree peanutsSandwichesThe in groupheadquartersin Harper Court52 39 Harper AveYou don't have to beWjiMcKto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip”Non-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931 DavidTravis