Donovan PerformsIn Chapel Concertsreve aokiCONCERT: Donovan performs for capacity crowd in Rockefeller Chapel Mondayafternoon. By Audrey ShalinskyDonovan, the Scotch folk-rock singer, re¬ceived daisies and a standing ovation froma capacity crowd in Rockefeller Chapelyesterday. The concert lasted from about4:15 to 6:15 p.m.The concert started about 15 minuteslate, but the audience in the chancel whofirst glimpsed Donovan applauded, as didthe rest of the audience as they got theirfirst look when he stood amid the daisiesand red velvet on the platform. Donovanwore white and he removed his sandals be¬fore he squatted to play his guitar.Many of the tunes in the first half had achildlike quality, like his rendition of “Win-THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 16 The University of Chicago Tuesday, October 28, 1969Football Stomps North Central 12-0By Mitch KahnFor the first time since 1934, the Univer¬sity of Chicago varsity football team haswon two consecutive shutouts.Playing to a cheering crowd of about 800,the Maroons posted their first home victoryof this season by beating North Central Col¬lege, 12-0.The antics of the fans off the fieldmatched the fireworks of the players on it.Sponsored by the Students for Violent NonAction, the halftime activities included a 12foot long kazoo, a kazoo marching band andthe crowning of a refrigerator as home¬coming appliance. The crowd caught the in¬fectious enthusiasm of the cheerleaders andin their frenzy, they tore down the goalposts and carried them across campus toPresident Edward Levi’s house, on whosefront lawn they were left.As the week before, in their victoryagainst Marquette, the Maroon defense wasvoracious, hc'ding the North Centralground game to less than four yards. Theleft side of the defensive line, consisting ofDave Goins at end, Mike Lockhart attackle, and Walt Kroemer at linebacker,was particularly punishing to the enemy at¬tack. The pass defense equalled the effortof the line, holding the North Central quar¬terback to eight completions in 35 attempts.Safety Mike Burger and defensive endChris Kilday each picked off one NorthCentral pass.This victory coupled with last week’s 14-0demolition of Marquette gave the Maroonstheir first two game winning streak sincethe team beat Carroll College 31-0 andWestern State, 31-6 in 1935. In fact, the lasttime the team won consecutive shutoutswas in 1934, when they downed Michigan,27-0 and Indiana, 21-0. In those days theMaroons were lead by the brilliant runningof the great Jay Berwanger, All-Americanhalfback in 1934-35.The current edition of Berwanger is full¬back Tim McGree who scored both Maroontouchdowns. Walt Kroemer blocked a punton the North Central 15 yard line to set upContinued on Page Five CATCH 33: Maroons downed North Central 12-0 Saturday before acrowd at Stagg field. Mike Brantcheering cken, Blinken, and Nod,” which he saidwas about three astronauts. Donoval lookedaround at his setting several times andsaid, “It’s nice in here.”Donovan also played “Hurdy GurdyMan”. In a medley beginning with “Riki-tikitavi Mongoose,” in which he said thechurch and government “can’t kill oursnakes for us anymore,” Donovan told ofhis disenchantment with drugs. “The natu¬ral high is the best high in the world,” hesang.After a break, Donovan returned withflutist Paul Horn who accompanied him onseveral numbers.Donovan explained more of his religiousmysticism before he sang about Jesus,who, he said, “is a Messiah but not theMessiah. Everyone can be like he was.”Between the ages of 14 and 30, Jesus wentto India, studied, and realized completecontrol over his body, Donovan said.“Atlantis,” one of his most recent bighits, was explained in terms of a spiritualrising.” Our generation is the people of At¬lantis, and we are on the verge of makinggreat progress, he said.Talking of California’s predicted sinkinginto the ocean, Donovan said that peoplecollected soil samples to sell after the sink¬ing. “They have a capacity for com¬mercializing catastrophe,” he noted speak¬ing of Hollywood. Although Atlantis did risesome 20 to 30, an unreported event, “itis the spiritual rise that will be Atlantis.”The audience joined Donovan in singingthe chorus to this song, which he termed“fantastic” afterwards. A three part roundwith the men harmonizing, the women sing¬ing “happiness runs,” and Donovan singingthe stanzas, was formed in one of the mostenthusiastically received numbers. The fi¬nal sing-a-long was “Colors.”As Donovan left, he gave the peace signand was answered with the same sign,daisies, and a standing ovation. As the au¬dience followed out catching and tossingdaisies, a student was heard to remark,“Everyone looks like they’ve got stars intheir eyes.”The concert was sponsored by Revitaliza¬tion in conjunction with Contemporary Eu¬ropean films.Bookstore To Move; No Plans GivenBe ThereAll Maroon staff members are ex¬pected to attend a staff meeting to¬night at 6:30 pm in the office, IdaNoyes Hall, room 303. The tenth weekissue and staff policy will be dis¬cussed. Anyone now working for theMaroon, or who would like to workfor the Maroon should come. If ab¬sence is absolutely unavoidable, con¬tact one of the editors. By Paul BernsteinThere are as of yet no plans for the re¬opening of the University bookstore, ac¬cording to its manager Harlan Davidson.The building’s second floor was destroyedby fire Thursday afternoon.Commenting on the possibility of a re¬opening, Davidson said, “I just don’t knowwhen or where.” He stated that there was“little space available” for a move, andsaid that a committee would meet Wednes¬day to discuss the problem.Speaking of a move, Davidson said that“the best place might be Ida Noyes,” butadded that there was no indication ofwhether or not organizations there wouldsupport such a plan.According to Robert K. Heidrich, directorof purchasing and auxiliary services, thebookstore will be relocated within the nextmonth, even if the move is not permanent.“We have to be back in business to sellbooks for winter quarter,” he explained.Heidrich also said “it looks as though wewill not reopen in that building,” referringto the bookstore’s present location.There is no exact estimate of the damagecaused by the fire, because inventory hasnot yet been completed. Davidson stated,however, that it would be “a lot more than$7500,” the figure printed in last Friday’sMaroon. He speculated that the damagemight come close to $500,000, but said thatthere was “a considerable amount of ac¬counting” left to do.Part of the problem, according to Heid¬rich, is that “we don’t know what we can resell.” Items like typewriter parts havebeen found missing, and the moisture onthe first floor has caused mildew in some ofthe books, he said. He added that dis¬cussions were underway with the insurancecompany, and that “we should have a fig¬ ure by the middle of the week.”The cause of the fire remains unknown.Davidson said that the arson squad hadcome up with no results in its investigation.He explained, however, that “the timber inthe building is about seventy years old.”Oavid RosenbvstiBURNED OUT: Greeting cards are a charred mess in the bookstore which waspartially gutted Thursday.MODEL CAMERALEICA NIKONPENTAX BOLEX1342 E. 55th* HY 3-9259Student Discount CHGO'S OWNSWINGERS CLUBSEND $1.00 FOR 64 PAGEILLUST MAGAZINE, 100s OFPERSONALS. NKS, BOX3806. CHGO 60654.* MUSICRAFT SPECIALKLH Model 24 PRICE REDUCTIONCOMPLETE STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM$90095(JfJO mss;Was $319.95 KLH’s "Twenty-Four” sounds like twice its sizeplays stereo FM broadcasts and stereo records asfew consoles or component systems can. Ultramodern solid-state design provides 35 watts musicpower. Fine Garrard record changer with Pickeringcartridge made to KLH’s specifications. Inputs forheadphone, tape recorder. Speaker systems have allrequirements for excellent performance. With dustcover. In oiled walnut.Save $20. Model 24 plus AM. Was $349.95 *$329.95AtmiOui/tON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 363-455548 E. Oak St.—DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95th St.—779-6500SEND MOM A SUBCAN BOTH BLACK AND WHITE BEBEAUTIFUL? TOGETHER? . . . - - * ■■ —r." g**'A good crycleanses the soulis a compatible, "isotonic” solu¬tion. very much like your eye's nat¬ural fluidsCleaning your contacts withLensine retards the build-up offoreign deposits on the lenses.And soaking your contacts m len-sme between wearing periods as¬sures you of proper lens hygieneYou get a free soakmg-storagecase with individual lens compart¬ments on the bottom of every bot¬tle of LensineIt has been demonstrated theimproper storage between wear-After all is shed anddone, your soul may besaved but your contactsneed help They need Len¬sine. Lensme is the one con¬tact lens solution for com¬plete contact care preparingcleansing, and soakingThere was a time when youneeded two or more different lenssolutions to properly prepare andmaintain your contacts No moreLensme. from The Murine Com¬pany. makes caring for contactlenses as convenient as wearingthemJust a drop or two of Lensmecoats and lubricates your lensThis allows the lens to float morefreely in the eye. reducing tearfulirritation. Why? Because Lensine ings permits thegrowth of bacteria onthe lenses This is asure cause of eye ir¬ritation and in somecases can endangeryour vision Bacteria can¬not grow in Lensine be¬cause it's sterile, self-samtiz-ing, and antiseptic.Lensine . . the sou/ution forcomplete contact lens care Madeby the Murine Company. Incnot yourcontacts! PIZZATHE ALHAMBRA •PLATTERBOUTIQUE INTERHATIONAL1 Pizza, Fried Chicken1 Italian Foods10% STUDENT DISCOUNT1453 E. HYDE PARKPHONE: 363-9215 1J Compare the Price!| 1460 E. 53rd 643-2800j WE DELIVERHOW DO YOU BUILD AN INTERRACIALMOVEMENT IN TODAY'S POLARIZED SOCIETY?IS THERE ANY OTHER WAY WE CAN REALLYCONFRONT AND DEAL WITH THE RACISMWITHIN US?THE BAHA'I'S HAVE SOME EXPERIENCE ANDSOME IDEAS AND ARE INTERESTED IN YOURSPLEASE JOIN US FOR DISCUSSION -FRIDAY, OCT. 31 - 3 PMIDA NOYES 1st FL LIBRARY TOMORROWD.W. GriffithABRAHAM LINCOLN (1930) Cobb 7:00 75C for bothGriffith's first sound film demonstrated his mastery of the medium, from the sublimeopening image of the lonely cabin in the snow. Walter Huston stars as Lincoln, in aperformance far more interesting and accomplished than the later, duller Raymond Massey.The simplicity of ABRAHAM LINCOLN adds to its beauty and power.THE STRUGGLE (1931) Cobb 9:00His last film, THE STRUGGLE dealt with one of Griffith's favorite themes: the effectsof alcoholism on the family. Anita Loos wrote the screenplay: Griffith's direction vividlydepicts hard labor in a steel mill, a Bronx street, a pre-Prohibition Beer Garden, and a1920's jazz speakeasy. Hal Skelly (as the alcoholic) and Zita Johann (as his wife) giveconvincing, realistic performances. Photographed by Joseph Ruttenberg (who won anAcademy Award nearly 30 years later for GIGI).2/The Chicago Maroon/October 28,1969; \ i j» i M > $ i t G 3 • (\ * >* T i u f j : t■ ' «s*Elections to fill six vacancies on the stu¬dent-faculty-administration (SFA) Courtand consideration of the committee on rec¬ognized student organizations (CORSO) willdominate Thursday evening’s Student Gov¬ernment (SG) assembly meeting. Thismeeting, the third to be held this month,will take place in the Ida Noyes Theatre at8 pm.The first order of business on SG’sagenda will be the election of six studentsto serve on the SFA Court. According to theSG constitution this election must takeplace prior to November 1, and must bepreceded by two meetings at which nomi¬nations are accepted.Nominations for the six vacancies havealready been closed. Cheak Yee, electionand rules committee chairman explained,“Those that have been nominated are nowin the process of being contacted and thesestudents should go to the SG office and fillout a declaration of candidacy form.” Yeeadded, “Only those students whose names have already been placed in nominationshould present themselves.”There will also be elections to fill at leasttwo SG committee chairmanship positions.The two committees presently lacking per¬manent chairmen are the community rela¬tions committee and the constitution of theUniversity committee.Also of major significance a this week’sSG meeting will be consideration of theCORSO budget. That budget was presentedto the assembly at last week’s meeting,however action on the budget was deferredwhen disagreement arose with regard toseveral of the appropriations. There havebeen private meetings in the last few daysin attempts to iron out these differences Meetingand it is expected that the CORSO budgetwill come to a vote on Thursday.SG will have to vote on its own budget.The original budget submitted by SG toCORSO has been altered due to cuts madeby that group. The trimmed budget mustonce again be considered by the assemblyand will be voted on.Cheak Yee’ and Bill Griffith, secretary ofthe graduate house, will present a report tothe assembly regarding the controversysurrounding former CORSO chairman JeffSchnitzer last spring. A brief summary ofthat report was read to the assembly lastweek, but the full text will be released anddiscussed at Thursday’s meeting.Last week a series of resolutions request¬ ing the University senate and the council ofthe senate to permit participating studentobservers to sit with those bodies werepassed by the assembly. SG President Mi¬chael Barnett has indicated that he intendsto ask the assembly actively to seek imple¬mentation of those resolutions.Prior to Thursday’s Assembly meeting,there will be a meeting of the under¬graduate house of SG. The purpose of thismeeting scheduled for 7 pm in the IdaNoyes Theatre, is to elect five students toserve on dean of undergraduate studentsGeorge Playe’s undergraduate disciplinarycommittee. These students will not be vot¬ing members of that committee, but theywill be able to participate in the decisionsmade by the disciplinary committee.Milton Hildebrand Talks on EvaluationDavid Rosentoush Milton Hildebrand, professor of zoologyat the University of California at Davis,and brother of College dean Roger Hilde¬brand, spoke to a group of 60 people Mon¬day night in Cobb Hall on the defining andevaluating of “effective university teach¬ing.”Hildebrand observed that, “across thecountry . .. research is a much more im¬portant criterion for advancement thanteaching,” but he noted that ” the best re¬searching professors are not always thebest teaching professors.”“As far as good intentions go, good teach¬ing ... is just as important as research ...but the problem is ... we just don’t agreeon what good teaching is,” he said. He toldthe group, mainly faculty members, admin¬istrators, and graduate students, that in1966 he suggested, and was made head of, astudy of effective teaching at Davis.Hildebrand said that an early problem inMcCartney Is Alive and Well!By Sue Lotht *Is Paul McCartney really dead?Rumors of his death were denied lastwoek by the Beatles, but the mysteries ofthe Beatles’ whereabouts still live on. Thesame questions which now puzzle a studentgroup at the University perplex Beatle fansthroughout the nation.The students have been studying Beatlesong lyrics and album covers, in order touncover clues which might solve the mys¬teries. The “mysteries” under scruntiny in¬clude the death of Beatle manager BrianEpstein; the drowning of Rolling StoneBrian Jones and the discovery of the pos¬sible existence of Pepperland, a country made famous in the movie Yellow Subma¬rine.Beatles song lyrics and album coversprove to be so ominous, that they receivedfront page coverage in Chicago’s SunTimes last week. Examples the studentstudy group cites to support the theory ofPaul’s death are the facts that on the insidecover of the Sgt. Pepper album, Paul iswearing a badge with the letters OPD —Officially Pronounced Dead — and on theMagical Mystery Tour album cover, theBeatles are dressed as walruses, Nordicsymbol of death. All the Beatles aredressed in white except Paul, who is ablack walrus. An inside picture shows theBeatles in white suits with red carnationsContinued on Page FiveDavid RoseobustiDEAD OR ALIVE: Rumors that Paul, dressed in black here, is dead were shownt(> be a hoax this week. the study was the selection of the propergroup to evaluate teaching. He enumeratedthe possibilities as “grad students, honorstudents, general students, faculty, andalumni.” The study eventually settled upontwo bodies, students generally and faculty.Both groups were statistically broken downin later analyses.In satisfying the first task, “to describeeffective university teaching,” Hildebrandsaid that he and his colleagues began withthe definition, “teaching is excellent in pro¬portion to the contribution it makes to thelife of the student.” “Interestingly,” hesaid, “the definition went unchallenged onthe campus.”He also said that in the first stages of thestudy the investigators adopted the premisethat “only the recipient of the teaching —students, observers — is going to be quali¬fied to know how great the contribution hasbeen.”The study was accomplished by askingquestions of various samples of studentsand professors, asking them to name andevaluate their choices in “best and worstprofessors.” Teachers were asked whatthey did with their academic time.Hildebrand reported that between stu¬dents and faculty there was very little dif¬ference of opinion as to who were “best”and “worst.” However, when the studysought to determine “what sort of behaviorcorrelates with effective teaching” by com¬paring evaluations with function, Hilde¬brand said, “We found nothing. We foundno correlations. Professors are doing thesame things but the quality varies.” MILTON HILDEBRANDSpeaks on teacher evaluationFinally, the study devised several sets ofcriteria for teaching, excluding research.Factors such as “analytic-synthetic ap¬proach, organizational clarity, group-in¬structor interaction, student-instructor in¬teraction, and the instructor’s dynanismand enthusiasm.” Hildebrand concludedthat the study has isolated the character¬istics of effective teaching, but in adoptinga scalar system of evaluating it, “We neednorms.”Robert Mann Has Bread PartyFriends of Bob Mann, Democratic assem¬blyman from the 24th district, which in-eludes Hyde Park, met at Sauer’sBrauhaus Sunday afternoon for a “breadparty” designed to raise funds for his elec¬tion campaign next year.Featured speaker was columnist anderstwhile candidate for New York citycouncil presidency Jimmy Breslin who, af¬ter praising Mann’s achievements in the as¬sembly, said “Anyone who cares about thethings Mann cares about, I’ll fly — I won’twalk — to that son of a bitch and lick enve¬lopes for him.”Daily News columnist Mike Royko in¬troduced Breslin, praising his writings.Speaking on Breslin’s New York City race,Royko remarked, “They change leadershipthere from time to time. Things are differ¬ent here in Spain.”Adlai Stevenson III, state treasurer andfrontrunner for the Democratic nominationfor Senator next year, also praised Mann’slegislative accomplishments. He had justreturned from Greece and cracked “It’sgood to be back among you effete snobs.”Also speaking were Congressman AbnerMikva (D-Ill), Alderman Leon Despres (5thward) and Ginger Mack, chairman of thewelfare mothers’ rights organization.Some of the bills Mann sponsored include free lunch for 200,000 school children, me¬dical insurance bill for low-income fami¬lies, and low-rent housing bills.SDS Will HoldRally on FridaySDS has scheduled a rally in support ofcafeteria workers October 31 and is consid¬ering another rally here against a GeneralElectric (GE) recruiter either October 28or 29.The rally on the 31st will support SDS’sdemands of a free meal for those employedin University cafeterias and dining halls. Itwill take place at the ad building and thenmove across the street to the personnel of¬fice where Fred Bjorling, director of per¬sonnel will be asked to address the demon¬strators concerning their demands.The anti-GE rally will take place only ifthe official is interviewing, a representativeof SDS said. Such a rally would be designedto show support for the nationwide strike of140,000 GE employees asking for a wagehike.October 28, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3Psych Students CriticizeBy Frieda MurrayThe diagnosis of undergraduate psy¬chology majors is that their department issick.For students to feel this way about theirdepartment is nothing new. Departmentshave always left unsatisfied students whofelt they should be getting more (or less)than they do, but there is generally consid¬erable health in them for all that. Butpsych majors feel that undergraduate psy¬chology needs more than a shot in the arm,it needs a complete rehabilitation.Classes are large, with over one hundredstudents in many. The average student-fac¬ulty ratio is 67-1, there are few under¬graduate courses, no undergraduate labcourses, little opportunity for independentresearch, and what students feel is a de¬pressing lack of student-faculty* commu¬nication.Four concerned undergraduate psychmajors, Larry Greenberg and Norm Katz(fourth year) and Lonn Wolf and DaveClark (third year) indicated in an interviewthat undergraduate psych students are gen¬erally angry, apathetic or disgusted withthe state of their department. They attrib¬ute much of the problem to the way theundergraduate department is organized.The collegiate division is the responsibilityof the graduate division, but no one in thatdivision wants to take the responsibility forit.The department is mired in an unwieldybureaucracy. It is impossible, for instance,to get an accurate mailing list of college psych majors. There are two advisors forthe largest division in the College. The oneadvisor to the graduate students has herhands full with them and has no time forundergraduates.There have been no recreation or com¬munication facilities in the psych buildingsfor undergraduates until recently. Nowthey have a bulletin board and one half ofa lounge.What irks undergraduates particularly isthat they feel the attitude of the facultytoward the division has been basically apa¬thetic or even slightly hostile. It is general¬ly agreed that the curriculum is a mess,that it leaves wide gaps in psychologicalknowledge, but no one is interested in or¬ganizing a good cohesive undergraduateprogram; no one will take the responsi¬ bility of taking steps to organize one.A sample of the organization difficultiesthat infuriate students is the case of theundergraduate psychology professor wholast spring agreed to be the faculty orga¬nizer for psychology tutorials this year.Over the summer he went to Harvard andis presently still there.There are still no tutorials. There arealso no courses for undergraduates in coun¬seling or group experience, nor are therecourses which involve lab situation obser¬vation, or which deal with test experienceor learning theory. When students getready to apply to graduate school they feelthe burden of this lack of preparation.Another major complaint about the facul¬ty is that it is so difficult to get to knowthem. Large classes and busy schedules'What irks undergraduates particularly is thatthey feel the attitude of the faculty toward thedivision has been basically apathetic or evenslightly hostile.'AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYDream ParkThe development of an imaginative smallpark has been proposed by the Open LandProject (OPL) for 5481 South Cornell Ave¬nue.The park, designed by 20 freshmen archi¬tectural students at the University of Il¬linois Circle Campus, may have a repro¬duction of the moon’s surface, an adventurewall that children can climb or a waterbridge made by jets of water, among oth¬ers, and is on a 150 by 62 foot vacant lot.The OPL has a foundation grant to by theland from the Department of Urban Renew¬al (DUR). If DUR sanctions the sale, localfunds will be used to develop the park, us¬ing some of the students’ plans.Children and adults interviewed on theblock said that the park should be multi¬level with mounds where areas would beplanned for adults and children.Organ PowerWorld-renowned organist E. Power Biggswill perform at a recital in RockefellerChapel tonight at 8:30.On the program are Sweelinck’s Ballettode Granduca, Purcell’s Westminster Suite and Chaconne in F, Pachelbel’s Partita onthe chorale “What God hath done is rightlydone.”Also to be performed are Buxtehude’sprelude and fugue in F, Bach’s toccota andfugue in D minor, Soler’s the Emperor’sfanfare and minor third concerto, and twomovements from the Little Notebook ofAnna Magdalena Bach.Other pieces to be played are CharlesIves’ variations on “America,” Daniel Pink-ham’s A prophecy, and Ernest Pepping’sseven chorale preludes.This concert is part of the University’soratorio festival series which will presentthe Messiah, Mendelssohn’s Elijah andBach’s Passion according to St. Matthew.Volunteers NeededVolunteers to tutor children in grammarschools and to teach sewing, domestic andother skills to children from ages six totwelve are being sought by the Hyde ParkNeighborhood Club as part of two pro¬grams.The study center needs adults to helpchildren from first through eighth gradewith homework, in tutoring and for librarywork.The after school program needs adults toBULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, October 28DISCUSSION: “What it means to be an alien" on theacceptable possibilities for alien life. Science FictionSociety, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.FILM: "The Chase", Cobb, 8 pm, 75 cents.MEETING: CHEC: The Devil in Music. Robert Holst,sponsor. Lexington Lounge, 8 pm.INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: InternationalHouse, auditorium, 8 pm.E. POWER BIGGS, organist. Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 8:30 pm.Wednesday, October 29LECTURE: Social Science 121, "Behavioral Analysis asApplied to Problems of Social Relevance", Israel Gold-iamond, Dept, of Psychiatry and Psychology, Kent 107,11:30 am./EETING: UC BAHA'I Fellowship, Ida Noyes EastLounge, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: "Population Cytogenetics", Janet Rowley,Dora DeLee Hall, Chicago Lying-in Hospital, 4:30 pm.FILM: "Abraham Lincoln" and "The Struggle", Cobb, 7and 9 pm.BRASS SECTIONAL: Rehearsal, Mandel, 6:30 pm.REHEARSAL: Full orchestra at 7:30 pm, Mandel.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from the British Islesand Scandinavia. Ida Noyes Dance room, 8 pm.POETRY READING: Ugandan poet Okot p'BItekf Afri¬can Studies Association, Social Sciences 122, 8 pm. Thursday, October 30DISCUSSION: Poetry discussoin groups meet. Library, 8pm.BULLSESSION: Students for Capitalism and Freedom,Ida Noyes 7:30 pm.FILMS: "Angola: Journey to a War," and "Revolutionin the Colonial World," Social Sciences 122, 8 pm.MEETING: UC Committee to End the War will be or¬ganizing work to build Nov. 14 International StudentStrike and the March on Washington. East Lounge,2nd floor, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.LECTURE: "The Naked Truth about the AmericanBanking Industry Today." A senior business writer ofthe American Savings & Loan Institute speaks for theInternational Language Society in Cobb 101, 7 prn.CONFERENCE: The University Extension presents thesecond day of a Conference on Preventive DententionLegislation at the Center for Continuing Education,8:30 am.EXHIBITS: Forty photographs by Irving I. Herzberg,"The ilasidic Jews of Williamsburg." The habits, cus¬toms and dress of a unique Jewish community. HillelHouse.EXHIBITS: Paintings, drawings and prints by Max Ack-ermann. Renaissance Soceity Gallery, Gcodspeed Hall,room 1C8. 10 am-5 pm.FOLK DANCING: Israeli Folk Dancing, Hillel House,7:30 pm.Continued on Page Five4/The (Chicago Maroon/October 28, 19$9 i)v teach sewing, cooking, knitting, dramaticsand arts and crafts to children from six totwelve. Mary Kay Kreider, a member ofthe club called this program “a gratifyingexperience for the volunteer, because chil¬dren register for these programs becausethey really are interested in learning.”Interested volunteers should contact Mrs.Kreider at the club, MI 3-4062, located at5480 Kenwood, or at 643-5666 during eve¬nings.Conspiracy RallyBuses will leave from the front of BillingsHospital 11:15 am Wednesday for a rally infront of the Federal Building to protest theConspiracy trial and the war in Vietnam.The rally is from 11:30 to 1:00, at whichtime the buses will return. Dr. BenjaminSpock, a leading critic of the war, is sched¬uled to speak at 11:30.Editor: 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 Leva I, Joseph Morris, FriodaMurray, Ellen Sazman, Audrey Shalinsky,David Stool, Leslie 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: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms303 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 by mail $8 per year in the U.S. Non¬profit postage paid at C- :ago. 111. Subscribersto College Press Service. are partly responsible for this; students donot blame this entirely on the faculty. How¬ever they do complain that faculty mem¬bers will not aid students in getting psych-related jobs or willingly sponsor them forresearch.What do members of the faculty and ad¬ministration say? M. Brewster Smith, headof the psychology department, agreed thatit certainly needed improvement, and heagreed with the criticisms the studentsmade about the size of classes, difficulty ofdoing research and communicating withfaculty members. “I think it is character¬istic,” he said, “that I came here as chair¬man and for about half a year didn’t knowanything about the undergraduate depart¬ment.”How did the department* get into this fix?Smith says that much of it is due to theambiguity of the relations between the Col¬lege and the division, not only in psych butin all the departments. Some graduate de¬partments have taken the responsibility fortheir College counterparts and somehaven’t.If the program for majors is so poor, whyare there more undergraduate majors inpsychology than in any College depart¬ment? “For one thing,” said Smith, “thecollegiate social science gives an impres¬sion of a kind of humanistic psychologythat is not a good approximation to actual¬ity and people get attracted to psychologyfor reasons that do not approximate reality.Some see psych as an easy discipline; thesehave low morale and don’t do anythingabout the discipline.”John Butler, professor of psychology, isall for seeing changes made. He agreeswith the critical assessment and feels thatit is a shame that an empirical science likepsychology has no labs. “It would be un¬thinkable if physics had no labs,” he said.Butler feels, as do many students, thatthe department’s difficulties stem from theorganization of the College, which makesundergraduate departments the responsi¬bility of graduate divisions of the Univer-s i t y which sometimes ignore under¬graduates. “The students are right,” hesaid, and agreed with prevailing under¬graduate feeling that the graduate divisionmay feel responsibility in the abstract butdoesn’t feel enough responsibility to do any¬thing about it.Butler would like to abolish introductorypsych and have courses in introduction toparticular subject matter, but th;s is along-term solution and is years away, heacknowledged, “There must be both long¬term and short-term solutions.”What are students doing about the de¬partment’s problems? Earlier in the montha group of concerned psych students held ameeting to try to form an organization tostir up some action on these issues. Out ofthe more than one hundred students in thedivision about forty-five showed up. Smithand Marvin, assistant professor of psy¬chology, were also there.The immediate problems that the stu¬dents are trying to solve are the lack ofinformation on graduate studies in psy¬chology, the state of the psych honors pro¬gram, the state of the tutorial program, thecurriculum, and the lack of special pro¬grams for psych students. Included in theseare the issues of evaluating faculty andcounseling for the undergraduates.The opinion was offered that the councilof the Collegiate division of the social scien-cess spends too much time on irrelevantmatters, matters of university policy, noton the problems of the social sciences. Al¬though the psychology students send mem¬bers to it (Norm Katz and Peggy Green¬field, fourth year, and Margaret Eagle,third year, they feel they must have theirown organization in order to be effective.Smith supports this new expression ofstudent interest. The staff is committed tothe tutorial and honors programs, he said.He feels that they have or will get off to agood start. There are probably also manypeople in the department, he said “who‘welcome’ reminders that they are respon¬sible for the undergraduate and that if it isa failure it is their failure.”mSong Lyrics Examined to Unravel MysteriesContinued from Page Threeexcept for Paul who sports a black bouton¬niere. ,The increased popularity of the mystery,which has gotten widespread press cov¬erage. “takes some of the impetus out of,the search),” said Scott Schulten, firstvear student in the College who began hisstudy last December in Kentucky. “NowApple (the Beatles’ company isn’t talkingto people or accepting collect phone callslike they used to.”Andy Segal, fourth year student first in¬ vestigated Magical Mystery Tour afterhearing that a homosexual, offended byBritish slang about queers in one of the al¬bum’s songs, had interpreted that theBeatles were responsible for the death ofEpstein, an alleged homosexual.“I believed it, told some of my friends,and we let our imaginations go,” he said.Mystery Tour’s “Blue Jay Way,” with itsplea “Please don’t bt long/Or I may beasleep” represented Epstein asking theBeatles to return from meditation in Indiato do another tour, the investigators felt.Fans Go Wild, Grab GoalpostContinued from Page Fourthe first, and the second came at the end ofa 70 yd. drive.Elsewhere in the world of sports:The Maroon soccer team bounced backfrom their 7-0 destruction of Shimer Collegelast Wednesday to lose to George WilliamsCollege 3-0, Saturday.In intramural action, wrestling, swim¬ming and pre-Christmas basketball entriesare due Oct. 30.Yet elsewhere in the world of sports:On Saturday October 25 the University of Chicago chess team crushed NortheasternIllinois State College 5-0 in their first matchof the 1969-70 Chicago Intercollegiateleague season. Chicago winners were Har¬old Winston, Robert Kirk, Dave Sillars,Steve Pollack, and Robert Whiting.Chicago is now tied for first place in theeleven team league with Northwestern Uni¬versity “A” which also swept its firstmatch. The Maroon Knights’ next match isat home against Loop College as Chicagotries to win the League title for the thirdstraight year.. 9s V*v rMike BrantKAZOO: Members of the Maroon Marching Kazoo Band entertain the fans duringthe football game Saturday.Where's the 3 largestwedding ring selection?119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOODEVERGREEN PLAZABblJhstihUNf 'fWflftS »Ot 59 YfAtS Big Wheel Bike ShopSALES - SERVICE • RENTALSAUTHORIZt oNORTHSIOl RALtlGM ARobin Hood Di.ai.&ks2935 N BROAOrtAVPHONE: 340-0313EXPERT REPAIR WORKON ALL MAKES “Epstein died of an overdose of sleepingpills,” Schulten noted.Some felt that Paul was murdered or atleast “marked” after Epstein’s death be¬cause he hadn’t gone along with the plot.Those who opt for the murder theory con¬tend that Paul has been impersonated by alookalike since his death. Later, BrianJones, who drowned in his swimming poollast summer, might have been quieted af¬ter discovering the plot investigators rea¬soned.“It’s really interesting the way people re¬act to the theories,” Schulten said. “Some,who have a pure image of the Beatles, arehorrified. Others, jealous of their girl¬friends still harboring crushes (on the Beat¬les) really enjoy it.”The possible existence of Pepperland wasanother theory studied. On the cover of theRolling Stones’ album Satanic Majesty, amap and a maze lead to a spot labeled “It’sHere.” All the faces of the Beatles are hid¬den on that cover.“At first Pepperland (in Yellow Subma¬rine) seemed like a nice fairy tale,” Segalsaid. “Here are these people having a beau¬tiful time; the Blue Meanies come; but theBeatles come and get rid of the Blue Mean¬ies.“But we have the blue meanies — police¬men who beat kids.”Are the Beatles then offering an escape?“I don’t know why it should exist, butwhy shouldn’t it? If Aristotle Onassis canhave his own word, why not the Beatles?”To piece together the puzzle, Segal,Schulten, and Charles Sommercom, secondyear student, made several trans-Atlanticphone calls to Apple, Inc., and to a “BillyShears” listed in London until recently.Some calls were made “Wednesday morn¬ing at 5 a.m.” London time (George Harri¬son is pointing to that hour on the back cover of Sgt. Pepper), others at 5 a.m. NewYork time because “Mr. Shears wouldn’tbe in until then.”Rumors that the right message at theright time to Apple or Billy Shears wouldbe rewarded with a trip to Pepperland hadfurther prompted the search. During thesummer, a coinvestigator at the universityof Michigan called and said “I’m lookingthrough a hole in the ocean.”“They told him ‘Sorry, that’s not quiteright,” Schulten said. “That was the highpoint of our summer.”Mushrooming national interest in the ru¬mors of McCartney’s death, however, havequieted Apple for the time being. When thegroup tried calling Billy Shears two weeksago, operators who had previously con¬nected them said, “There is no Billy Shearsin London. You’re tying up the trans-Atlan¬tic cable Please don’t call back.”So many people now know of the Beatletheories, Segal complained, “If Pepperlanddoes exist, it’ll bo overpopulated.”Segal admitted they were driving blindon the phone calls to Apple. “We’re not as¬sured anything if they do crack the mystery— not even a year’s supply of dog food, asubscription to Time magazine or even aticket to Pepperland.”“Even if (Pepperland) did exist,” Schul¬ten added, “even if Apple did say ‘Be onthis flight to London,’ would you go? If theykilled Epstein, Paul, or Brian Jones, wouldyou want to be next?”The theorists themselves are not devoutbelievers in their Beatle theories, “It wasnever so much a question of believing it asenjoying pursuing it,” Schulten said.“Something like Santa Claus.”“But if it isn’t true I’d like to know why itall happened, why it became a nationalthing,” he said. “Now that it all seems tobe coming to a climax it should come out,”Continued from Page FourFriday, October 31BALLET: The Arts Forum of Chicago presents a pro¬gram of Modern dance including a lecture-demonstrationand a modern ballet Blue Gargoyle, 5655 South Univer¬sity, 6 pm, Admission Free.LECTURE: Dr. Nils Retter Sundgren, Swedish film crit¬ic. Quantrell Auditorium, 4:30 pm.DISCUSSION: "Is an interracial movement possible intoday's polarized society?" sponsored by the UC Baha'i Fellowship. Ida Noyes Library, 3 pm.MEETING: The College History Group Council com¬mittee meets to review and make recommendationsconcerning the renewal of the appointment of Mr.Charles Hamilton. Gates-Blake 212. 2:30-4:30 pm.MEETING: Microbiology club Dr. Charles C. Remsen,"Some Observations on the structure of Membranes."Ricketts 1, 4:30 pm.FILMS: "The Scarlet Empress", Cobb Hall 7:15 and9:30 pm.THEATER: "America Hurrah" University Theater, Rey¬nolds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.SHORELAND HOTELOffice space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive SEND HOME A SUBi BLUE GARGOYLE |lOpen Monday - Friday!1 12 to 1222ND CENTURY PRESENTSNOVEMBER 21 • 8:30 P.M. • AUDITORIUMTHE BANDTicket Prices: $6.50. $5.50, $4.50, $3.50Special attention fiven to mail orders at 22nd Century, 70 W.Hubbard, Chicago, Illinois GOttO. Enclose a self-addressedstamped envelope.Tickets now available at Ticket Central. Montgomery Wards,Marshall Fields and other Ticketron Outlets.LISTEN TO WCFL FOR LATEST 22ND CENTURY CONCERT INFOR¬MATIONOctober 29, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5\\ \ \ I I DCAMPUSHPPHESENTA7IVES4 (,IHLS MtEDFUS4 ,’S 7 SO hourBecome .1 ilemull>tr.iioi • <>!pc i vo ii ,t I jiut ho me. uiopiuiluc!' I vcivonc needs them.v> nil', n. >l sell I hem 1l le\ iHe horn s ! o III ui ouiid\oiii sl.iss schedule Mink hi\ ..III inn .lie., \ll lijiiimeluimsiied,H \s 1 INt.S \SS()( IMISI S SI \ I I SI* IIH \i .1) II I INOISI , >i iiicmen ejil U ' 2 1Design ContestStudents, 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, make roughsketches of how the design can be used in promotionads, posters, tickets, or baloons. Send entries to FOTADesign Contest, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street,Chicago, Illinois 60637. For information call RogerBlack, 955-4706. Deadline: Tuesday, November 4University of Chicago Festival of the ArtsDo you have to give up your identityto make it in a big corporation?You’ve heard the stories:One big corporation forbids you towear anything but white shirts.Another says it wants you to be "crea¬tive”—and gives you a 4-pound rulebook telling you exactly how to do it.Yet another doesn’t want you to buya more expensive car than your bossbecause "it wouldn’t look right"Is this really happening in Americanbusiness?Have companies become so rigid and fossilized that they’re scared of peoplewho don’t fit the “norm”?Not this company.Wearenothungupontrivialikethat.The advances General Telephone &Electronics has made didn't come frompeople hiding behind organizationchartsand smilingattherighttime.They came from people who usedtheir brains:People who revolutionized picture¬taking with the Sylvania flashcube, who developed the high-energy liquidlaser, who came up with the sharpestcolor TV picture in the world, who pio¬neered instant electronic stock marketquotations, and so on.We are looking for more people likethis—people who aren’t afraid to standup and try themselves out.We are an equal opportunity em¬ployer:All you need to make it with us is agood head on your shoulders.Genera] Telephone & ElectronicsSylvani* Electric Products * Lenkurt Electric ‘ Automatic Electric • Telephone Companies in 34 States ■ General Telephone Directory Company ‘ General Telephone & Electronics LaboratoriesGeneral Telephone & Electronics International * GT&E Data Services * GT4E CommunicationsFAMOUS LITTLE REDBOOKS FROM PIKING:MAO rSE-TUNG: Quotations 60,Selected Military Writings $1.25,Five Articles 60, On People's War40*, Talks at the Yenan Forum 50*.LIN PIAQ Report to the NinthNational Congress 35‘, long Uvethe Victory of People's War 35‘.Also, Constitution of the CPC 35‘.As priced, or all 8 for $4.00.Payment with order to CHINABOOKS, Dept. C, 2929 - 24thSt., San Francisco 94110. FREECATALOG of books, magazinesand records.DR. AARON ZIMBLER.Optometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644MONEYTen cents per mile driven on Maroon business (orI train or bus fare - you need not have a car) plus10% commission on everything you sell. Oldi established accounts assigned as well as new.RESTRICTED TO U of C STUDENTSAs always, I am restricting this golden bonanza[to U of C students only. Most salesmen havereached $2-4 per hour and work five - twentyhours per week.NO WORK NEAR FINAL WEEK,BUT, you still get income then. Call the MaroonBusiness Office, x3263 for details, or come overat 2 pm.TODAYRoom 304, Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.E. Gonder, Business Manager8Vi"xll" • Paper • *$4.95, all others $3.95 eachSee them at your local bookstoreCowles Book Company^ Inc. a subsidiary of cowlss communications, inc!PASS THAT TEST!with the help ofCOWLESSCORE-HtGHEXAM BOOKSCHECK THIS LISTPreparation forGRADUATE RECORDEXAMINATION APTITUDE TESTLAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST*MILLER ANALOGIES TESTGRADUATE BUSINESS SCHOOLADMISSION TESTNATIONAL TEACHER —COMMON EXAMINATIONSMEDICAL COLLEGEADMISSION TESTFEDERAL SERVICEENTRANCE EXAMSDENTAL APTITUDE TEST INSIST ON COWLES -THE QUALITY STUDY GUIDESFOR TOP TEST SCORES• Up-to-date test material• Best organized study guides• Do’s and don’tsof test taking• Step-by-step programming• Accurate practice tests• Explained answers• Self-evaluation profileplusCOWLES GUIDE TOGRADUATE SCHOOLS.Covers more than 1,400 schools:costs, faculty, study programs,housing, financial aid.facilities, etc.6/The Chicago Maroon/October 28, 1969(THE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS)JAM yesterday, jam tomorrow but never jam todaySCENESPIG FANS-ANIMAL FARM is com¬ing this sun in a great doublefeature with TWELVE ANGRYMEN only $1 for both 7:00 SUNCOBB HALL-CEP.THE FANTASTICKS IS COMINGNOV 6, 7, 8, 9. AT CLOISTERCLUB TICKETS AT REYNOLDSCLUB AND AT THE DOOR. *2.00,$1.50 STUDENTS.Take your mummy to Breasted Hallfor the double feature, Thurs Oct30, 7:15 & 10:00 pm.GAY POWER IN 49-70 Anyone in¬terested in joining the Hyde ParkHomophile League formed last qtat UC write Box 89, C/o MaroonReplies kept confidentialDance-LIVE BAND HITCHCOCK-Tuft Oct 31 9:00-Until ? Pierce Tow¬er women Free Men 75c ID's.IndiarTsiTariSt DEBU CHAUDHURI.Mendel Hall, 57th & University Sat.Nov l, 1969, 8:00 PM. Tickets: $1.50students, $2.50 others at box officeor call FA 4-8200, Ext. 271 or 451.Sponsored by India Assoc, of U. ofC.LEARN RUSSIANRUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EXP NA¬TIVE TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON NO CHG. CALL236-1423 9-5.RETREAT TO FANTASYDisguise Yourself As WhatYou've Always Wanted To Be!Trick or Treat For UNICEF-Costumes and All 7 PM WoodwardCommons Holloween FridayOver In Time For Pierce Party.7th INTERNATIONALFOLK FESTIVALFri Nov 7 Performance 8:15; SatNov 8 Dance Workshops 2:00, FolkDance Party 8:00. All events atInt House 59th & Doroh. Ticketsat Stud. Activities Office. * 3594.ROOMMATES WANTED3-rm apart, at 5400 Greenwood-"notour students”$4.95n Sex Oft Campus twelve unmarriedcollege couples (from Rnode IslandCollege. University of Wisconsin. Univorsity of Chicago. Stanford Univerty. Cornell University. University ofCalifornia, University of Rochester,Reed College. Antioch College. Uni¬versity of Texas. Oberhn College, andBoston University) tell their ownstories - how they feel about theirparents, their new sexual freedomand the broad sociological impact oftheir actions. Read about the immi¬nently explosive issue of off-campuscohabitation inMXOFF-CAMPJJISByjRoyAld^GROSSET & DUNLAP. INC.. O.plhOBoVlsr”' SOC~26Kensington Sta B klyn, N Y. 11218oiivise send me copy(ies) ofSEX OFF-CAMPUS at $4.95 ea. Mymeek or money order for $is enclosed.NameAddress| City __ state Zip immed occupancy 955-8851 (male). call 493-9265 after 6 PM.Mature fern grad wanted to shareFANTASTIC APT 5 rm 22 fl LakeView modern bldg E Hy Pk $90-100after Nov 1. 643-3714. LOST & FOUNDFEM GRAD STUDENT. MOVE »NNOV 1ST. 54 Si HARPER, $55/MO363-0715.2 STUDENTS WNTD—SHARE 4BDRM APT. 57 & KENWOOD M orF 842-7407.Male grads need third to share 3todrm apt Kimbark near 54th $57.50.Furniture available Call 363-15%. SONY 255 Tape Deck (List $180)6 Mo Old No Bugs $100 Or BestOffer Call 684-0816 After 6 PM.CHEVELLE - '65-4 dr-AT-PB-Extragood condition but needs body work$250 NO 7-3106.______HARMON-KARDON 120 WATT AMPAND PRE-AMP EXC COND. $150363-6190. BL and Wh Fern cat. Lost vicinity58th and Woodlawn. 221-7764.LOST: Girl's Reading Glasses WithBlack Frame in Black Case LastSeen Between Dorchester 8c Uni¬versity, 57 & 59. Call 363-5609.PERSONALFOR RENTSUBLET3Vj room apartment; newly decor¬ated. 57th 8. Harper. Call 752-4716evenings after 10. SINGE BED: Mattress, box spring8> frame; extra firm 955-9656.Xerox Copies 9c,7c,5c,&7c,5c,3c $10runs, 10% Dicount on 9c7c5c rate:MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UlCCPhone: 829-0248.63 CHEVY II 55,000 MILESX4259 EVES 924-7110 $250FOOTBALL FREAKS....Students for Violent Non-Action, fresh from their headyhalf-time of last Friday's football game are in the insaneprocess of organizing buses or cars to the Lake Forestgame on Sat. Nov. 1. We're a bit unsure of our numbers(all Kazooists are urged to show) so please call FrankMalbranche at 324-3005 or 493-3410. On Friday's AllHallow's Eve, watch for SVNA's "Pike for Peace."F.M.FOR RENT 316 RM FURNISHEDAPT VERY NICE $150-Mo. 731-7304.Tired of Your Roommate? WantPrivacy? Large sunny room for rentin Kenwood. Call 548-4748.Nearby gnfurn. 3-rm. Also apt. toshare with woman. 955-9209.PEOPLE WANTEDLIBRETTISTS FOR MUSICAL PRO¬DUCTION OF UBU ROI-J1M R. 3HTCHCKLOOKING FOR GiRL FOR SERI¬OUS SEX RELT. SD 1-9636 AFTER6:30._Male or female wanted to teachgym, 1-3:15 PM, M-F, at school foremotionally disturbed children, ages6-15. Experience with groups ofchildren necessary. $150/mo. Phone643-7300 for application.WANTED: A PERSON NOT NOWIN THE HOUSING SYSTEM TOTAKE OVER MY SINGLE ROOMIN BJ AFTER XMAS. CALLBRUCE, RM 430, MIJ-6000. ___WANTED: 2 rides to Ann Arborthis Weekend. Diana x3776.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 job. 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.HELP WANTED: PLEASANTPART-TIME WORK IN YOURspare time. 363-0838.Co-op middle School (11-13 yrs old)needs volunteers with skills in me¬chanics, sciences, & music. CassMrs. Davis. 363-5810.PEOPLE FOR SALE"May We Do Your Typing?" 3631104. HELP 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 955-55851960 MERCEDES 2209 S375/955-5585REE ANO STOVE GOOD COND.955-5985.Sell good ‘59 Ford. Offer? DO 3-0447.VW 61 2 snow fires new brakesRuns Great, Negotiable, 324-4355. AMERICA HURRAHSee Jean Claude van Itallie'sAMERICA HURRAH 8:30 Oct. ?!,Nov 1, 7-8, Rey Club Theater Stu¬dents $1.50 Others $2.00Need sleeping accomodations forstudents coming to Conspiracy Con¬ference (Sat Nov l only) any spacecal! 427-7774.LOOKING FOR GIRL FOR MEAN¬INGFUL SEX RELN. SD 1-9636.BLACK-CAT BONE BLUES BANDWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377)FREE: Student Organization Regis¬tration Forms for all organizationsnot yet registered this fall SAO.Beware the BANDERSNATCH!!From salami to STEAK, EAT, drink,procrastinate, coagulate, torn.Prof. Flacks Please come back.Free Female-beige dog. 363-0551.NOWStudent Organization RegistrationFormsDUEIf you don't know what PRIMARYPROCESS THINKING is, the mora¬torium was. All id and no betz.FREE SWIMMING INSTRUCTIONFOR ADULTS IN THE COMMUNI¬TY ON MONDAY NIGHTS, IDANOYES HALL, 7-8 PM. BRINGSUIT, TOWEL.Dear Natty Bumpo, PleaseRegister. SAO.FREE POPCORN-WATCH FORFURTHER DETAILS.nine five five-five one five oneAFTER SDS—WHAT?There IS a radical, original, indi¬genous, creative alternative to theadventurist elitism of WEATHER-Expert typing. 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's & weekends.MARCH ONWASHINGTON.NOV 15thCharter busses Leaving Fridayfrom Main Quads. Students-$25Adults-$30 ROUNDTRIP. WHILEFunds Last—SAVE $5. FIRST 100Student tickets are $20. CALL Ml3-0800 x 3273-74 or Ida N. Rm 218.FOR SALEBaby gerbils, delightful and free. TO BE LISTED IN THE STUDENT DIRECTORYA STUDENT ORGANIZATION MUST BE REG¬ISTERED WITH THE STUDENT ACTIVITIESOFFICE. ARE YOU? MAN AND the stale, sterile, Ir¬relevant sectarian dogma of RYMII. It is called the NEW PATRIOT¬ISM, a new political tendency basedon the concept of a PERMANENT,ONGOING AMERICAN REVOLU¬TION! For free tracts and/or freespeaker, call JUDY 2-6:30 pm at247-6646, or write Johnny Apple-seed Box 50393, Cicero III. 60650.AMERICA HURRAHLife before the Revolutionnine five five-five one five oneVIETNAM MORITORIUM COMMIT¬TEE has registered. Have you?Please do! student Activities Office.AMERICA HURRAH Is coming!SVNA WARNED THE BOOKSTORE.MAYBE NEXT TIME THEY'LLLISTEN.ABSENTMINDED? TEN PROFES¬SORS RETURNED TRAVEL PLANSTO THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONUNSIGNED TO LET US KNOWWHO CALL MRS KIFBR x 4291.FREE KITTENS 7 VKS BL & WOR GRAY M & F 324-8173.IF YOU'D LIKE TO HELP RAISEMONEY TO FEED HUNGRYCHILDREN COME TO SG OFFICEIN INH 7 PlM.FANTASTIC!! THE FANTASTICKSCLOISTER CLUB NOV 6, 7, 8 and9th. Lasivious Patriots: AMERICA HUR¬RAH Posters are supposed to stayup til Nov 9. Restrain yourselves.All Woodward Residents, You caneat free at the Bandersnatch withmeal-plan vouchers!nine five five-five one five oneHorror at the Oriental Institute!THE MUMMY'S TOMB & THEMOLE PEOPLE, at Breasted Hall,7:15 8< 10:00 pm, Thurs, Oct 30.The big horror double feature inBreasted Hall Thurs evening onlycosts one dollar.SPEED Kills . . . War kills . . .The moratorium kills . . . Thoughtsaves lives . . . THINK!ATTENTION: HARtPER GROCER-LAND (THE ONE AT 57 & HARP¬ER) SELLS CALIFORNIA GRAPES.STUDENT CODERecognized Student Organizations:Copies of changes in the StudentCode proposed by Student Govern¬ment are available in the StudentActivities Office, Ida Noyes 209.FOOTBALL MANIAThere may be a bus going for thefootball game in Lake Forest Fri¬day. Support your local kazoo band.For information call extension 3501.SUBSCRIBETHE 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.name.address ZIP.O 1 year subscription $8.00Q Yearbook Issue $1.00 MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637 ,DATES TO RUNNAME, 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.October 28, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/7TONIGHT!Marlon BrandoJane FondaTHE CHASE TuesdayOctober 288:00Cobb75£Doc Filmsa film of arthur penn,director of bonnie & Clydeand a lice’s restaurant for your gift needs1541 EAST HYDE PARK BLVD.955-0177'Appropriately Unique'SKI VAL, COLORADO$180 • EVERYONE WELCOMEThe SKI CLUB WINTER TRIP leaves at 2 PM on December13th for a week at Vail. Travel arrangements have beenmade with TWA and accommodations have been reservedat the Vail Village Inn (located at the base of the mountain)which offers a sauna and swimming pool. According to theSki Yearbook 1969, "This is the 1960's version of how gooda ski resort can be." For information call Marty Karel324-8930 or Sue loskowski Ml 3-0800x 3756REAM TEAM RIDES AGAINPLArCCr’S ALL-NIGHT SHOVRIRFORFYIANCIS FRIDAY A SATURDAY FOLLOWING IASI REGULAR FEATUREOct. 31Oscar War mt JJIHIS AND JIM KING KONGNev. 7Otsm WallasCITIZEN KANE Nev.BGogol'sTHE OVERCOATNev. 14MU«'tOLIVER TWIST Nov. ISEaMiai'sLASTRADANov. 21BebDylaaDON'T LOOK BACK Nov. 27Antonioni'sI'ECIIPSINov. 21WACKY WORLD OfMOTHS GOOSE SANTA CLAUSCONQUERS THEMARTIANSTICKETS $1.50PLAYBOYTM EATE R1204 H DtARBOFfN • PMQNl 944 3434COLLEGE OF OCCULT STUDIESTHE TEMPLE OF KRIYA YOGA"TO GIVE CLEAR KNOWLEDGE OF THE OCCULT. ITS VALIDITY.DANGERS ANO LIMITATIONS. AND TO ADVANCE INTO DEEPERMYSTICAL THOUGHT "Semester Begins November 7, Offering Instruction In:ASTROLOGY S15 AUTO HYPNOSIS S25 I CHING S15AST RIAL PROJECTION $30SPIRITUAL PHILOSOPHY OF TIBET S15REINCARNATION & PAST LIFE RECALL S20FIVE WEEK COURSESI or further Information Write or Phone:COLLEGE OF OCCULT STUDIES410 S. Michigan Ave., AN 3-7567 Are you agood student?Are you acareful driver?If you are tired ofpaying a high premiumfor your car insurance itwill pay you toinvestigate Sentry'sgood student discount.This is in addition toSentry's discount fordriver education. Callyour Sentry man for fastfacts.Jim Crane2.38-0971SENTRY ifINSURANCEI ii Wrist DEBU CHAUDMIRIMmnM Hal, 57lk A UniversitySat., Nnv. 1,1M9, IM PMTkkvts: $1.50 stwkats, S2J0 ethersat hex eHRa ar cal FA 4-1200Ext. 271 er 451Sponsored by: InaBa Assac nf U. •( Csilicic?Ddre-d-JIllieliminates trial & error dating!Now let the Date-A-MatchComputer enable you to meetand date people that arereally in tune with you!Call or write today for detailsand free questionnairePhone: FR 2-0555 (24 hrs.)OATEA-MATCH SYSTEMS24 N. Wabuh—Suit* 822-PChicago. III. 60602Please send me information aboutOatt A-Match and a free questionnaire The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn Ave.SUNDAY AFTERNOON,NOVEMBER 9, JeJORICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOKwith members ofTHE CMCACO SYMPHONY ORCH.Mendelssohn'sORGAN RECITALTICKETS: Reserved $4.50Mendelssohn’sElijaljON SALE AT Ticket Central, Ma¬rina City at 300 N. State Streetand all Marshall Field and Mont¬gomery Ward Stores; Wood¬worth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57thStreet. Itl 645 E. 55th STREET *CHICAGO, III. 60615 *2 Phone: FA 4-1651 ^ELIZABETH GORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd St. BtJ-8-2900AMERICAMAROONNTI0N Non-Profit Org.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDTHE Chicago, IllinoisPermit No. 79318/The Chicago Maroon/October 28, 1969 B/ The Uutiifge A*ffs~>-.r k (t rr I i