The ombudsman should be appointed byPresident Edward Levi in the early part erfthis month, dean of students, CharlesO’Connell, said yesterday. Seven studentshave submitted applications for the posi¬tion.David TravisCONSPIRACY RALLY: Dave Dillinger, one of the conspiracy 8 currently on trial, spoke at a rally at the Federal BuildingSaturday protesting the trial. Rennie Davis and John Froines of the 8 also spoke.SVNA Holds Annual Pike For PeaceBy Sarah GlazerFrank Malbranche, closely resemblingSteve Landsman and national chairman erfstudents for violent non-action (SVNA),was briefly apprehended by campus policeFriday night during the annual Pike forPeace, led by SVNA.At midnight a procession of about 30 stu¬dents marched behind a burning torch tothe Hull Court archway and carried out theHalloween tradition of piking jack-o-lanterns over the arch. Frank Mal¬branche had succeeded in piking threepumpkins on the top spikes when a campuspoliceman told him to come down, tookaway his ID card and arrested him for car¬rying a weapon. According to Malbranchethe onlv purpose of the weapon in question, a knife, was to carve the pumpkins. In astatement to the press he said, “I considerthis unnecessary harassment of my rightsto express an opinion as one of the silentAmericans.”Police led Malbranche to Hitchcock-Snel1, and the torchlight procession followedchanting “Free Frank!” and holding upthree or four fingers. As the group stood infront of Hitchcock, spiritedly protesting thearrest, about five SDS members suddenlyappeared on the scene, joined in the chantand added one of their own, “Free Mealsfor the Workers.” Meanwhile the noise at¬tracted Hitchcock residents to the windowsand some descended to join in the demon¬stration.The police led the alleged weapon-carrier to the police car and were about to driveoff, but students surrounded the car stillsinging and chanting. An unidentified nunoffered to administer last rites to Mal¬branche as he sat in the police car. Finallythree campus and two Chicago police carsarrived. An off-duty policeman told Mal¬branche he would not be arrested at thattime and that he should leave.A group of supporters lifted Frank aloftand the procession marched to PresidentEdward Levi’s house. By now,there were atleast 60 supporters chanting such slogansas “Treats for the people!” and “What dowe want? Trick or treats!” When the pro¬cession reached Levi’s house the policemenhad already arrived. Protesters sang “Si¬lent Night” and other songs. The police toldMalbranche they would return his ID cardif he told the crowd to leave. Malbranchedenied that he had any power over thedemonstrators. After several more ex¬changes in which Malbranche explainedthat SVNA was “trying to get back into themainstream of American life” by observingAmerican traditions, the policeman re¬turned Malbranche’s ID and told him hewas free. Originally it was hoped that the selectioncould be made by Nov. 1. O’Connell said,“There is no delay. We said ‘hopefully’ byNov. 1.” Two applicants did not submittheir complete credentials until four daysafter the Oct. 15 deadline, he added.O’Connell also said that the serious prob¬lem with the bookstore fire and relocationhas taken up time.According to O’Connell, applications havebeen forwarded to the jurisdiction of KarlBemesderfer, assistant to the President ofthe University, and the decision should besoon. According to one applicant, each wassupposed to be individually interviewed,but this had not yet taken place.The administration decided to select theombudsman through an application andrecommendation procedure this year. Stu¬dent organizations could submit names.The ombudsman is a part time salaried of¬fice of the University appointed by thePresident. He or she should be a currentlyregistered degree candidate in good stand¬ing and should be willing to take a partialload in order to have sufficient time toserve as ombudsman.The ombudsman’s job is to investigateand make recommendations to appropriateoffices of the University in cases wherethere are allegations by students of specificunfairness or inefficiency.The basic qualifications for the job aslisted by O’Connell are “independence, dis¬interestedness, and fairness.”The ombudsman occupies an office inReynolds Club and attempts to solve prob¬lems brought to him by members of theUniversity community. Although both fac¬ulty and students may come to the ombuds¬man with their problems, the ombudsmanin the past has dealt with many studentmatters.Last year’s ombudsman’ John Moscow,was the first on any major college or uni¬versity campus in the country. Moscow wasa fourth year student in the college lastyear and is currently attending HarvardLaw School.This year’s ombudsman will serve untilthe end of summer quarter. Hopefully, theselection procedure for next year’s ombuds¬man will be worked out far enough in ad¬vance so that he may take office at thebeginning of fall quarter.Identity restored, the hero raised his IDcard and a clenched fist to show supportersthat he was freed. And so, flushed with thespirit of victory, singing “Happy Trails,”students for violent non-action dispersed forfurther celebration of All Hallow’s Eve.SVNA is also presently participating inUniversity football by organizing themarching kazoo band which entertainedat half time in the recent “homecoming”game against North Central. They crownedthe campus appliance, a refrigerator, atthat game and built the 12-foot kazoo thatwas displayed. They also organized the busthat traveled to Saturday’s game againstLake Forest._ L/avia i ravisPIKED PUMPKINS: Jack-O-Lanterns sit atop Hull Court gate yesterday. Last year SVNA sponsored the “Flush forFreedom” in which all members of the Uni¬versity were asked to flush their toilets ex¬actly as Nixon was inaugurated. Theyhoped that if this happened on campus hereand all ever the nation at the same time,the sewer system would not be able tohandle it and the sewerage would spill intothe streets. OMBUDSMAN'S OFFICEWaiting for an occupantTHF, MAROONVolume 78, Number 18 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 4, 1969Levi To Announce Selection Of OmbudsmanAROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAYWeathermenAmong 23 persons indicted last Friday oncharges arising out of the Weathermanriots of September near the Federal'build¬ing were six former University of Chicagostudents.Bonds ranging from $5,000 to $100,000were set for those identified as Weath¬erman members at the recommendation ofthe grand jury.The downtown riot erupted last month aslocal SDS chapters were holding a march insupport of the Conspiracy ‘8’ defendants.Near the end of the march, a number ofdemonstrators broke line and began hurlingrocks at store windows and battling withpolice. Richard Elrod, prosecuting attorneyfor the city of Chicago, was seriously in¬jured during the melee when attacked byone of the marchers.Those indicted who were also former Uni¬versity students are: Howard N. Machting-er, Daniel Cohen, David Klafter, JudithClark, Leonard Handlesman, and CourtneyEsposito. All these were expelled from theUniversity following the January sit-in oflast year.All the demonstrators were charged withaggravated battery, while individuals werealso charged with felonious mob action,battery, obstruction of police, resisting ar¬rest, and aiding an escape.Associate DeanLeonard K. Olsen has been appointed as¬sociate dean of the College.Olsen has served as assistant to the pro¬vost at the University and as a teacher inthe College since 1962. He now is teaching acourse in the interpretation of literarytexts. In his new assignment, he will assistthe dean of the College in whatever capac¬ities the Dean deems necessary.Commenting on the appointment, Collegedean Roger Hildebrand said, “The appoint¬ment of Leonard Olsen brings to the Col¬lege a man who is dedicated to the in¬stitution and has a deep understanding ofits goals. In the tradition of all Masters andDeans of the College he will continue toteach. We are indeed fortunate to have himwith us.”Olsen, who received a BA in 1936 fromthe University, served as a lecturer and as¬sistant professor in both the Extension Di¬vision and the College of the Universityfrom 1948 to 1955. In the last year of thatperiod, he was director of special programsat the extension.LecturesEdoardo Cacciatore, an Italian poet, crit¬ic and author, will give a Vaughn Moodlecture on “Experience and Experiments inPoetry,” Thursday at 8 pm in BreastedHall of the Oriental Institute. Admissionwill be without charge or ticket...Sidney Davidson, the Arthur Young pro¬fessor of accounting and acting dean of thegraduate school of business, will describehow “An Accountant Looks at Con¬glomerates” following a 12 noon luncheontoday sponsored by the school and itsExecutive Program Club. The meeting willbe in the International Ballroom of the Con¬rad Hilton Hotel. IncompletesStudents planning to be graduated duringany of the next four academic quarters arereminded that the College faculty and theRegistrar have ruled that Incompletesmust be made up at least one quarter priorto the date of commencement. A studentwho receives an Incomplete in a quarterimmediately preceding the quarter of grad¬uation must remove the Incomplete by theend of the fourth week of the followingquarter, i.e., the quarter of graduation. Stu¬dents making up Incomplete work will needto check with the Registrar to see that theinstructor has submitted a quality grade.AppointmentsMarvin W. Mikesell, professor of geogra¬phy, has been appointed chairman of thegeography department. He succeedsChauncy Harris, professor of geography,who resigned his post to devote full-time toteaching and research. Mikesell has been afaculty member since 1958 ...Dr. Frantisek Musil has been appointedvisiting professor of pathology in the Pritz-ker School of Medicine for the 1969-70 aca¬demic year. He is on leave from Spoda Hos¬pital in Pilzen, Czechoslovakia, where he ischairman of the department of clinicalbiochemistry ...Alphonso Pinkney of the Hunter Collegesociology department has been named vis¬iting associate professor of sociology at theUniversity for the 1969-70 academic year.Pinkney is known for his work among theIroquois Indians in New York State andblacks in New York City ...Philip Nowlen has been appointed direc¬tor of the Center for Continuing Education.He has been associated with the Centersince June, 1968 .. .Vietnam SlidesAs interest over the Vietnam war growswith the approach of the second morato- ium and November march on Washingtonthe student body can find out more aboutthe Vietnam situation by viewing an ex-GI’s slides of South Vietnam and CambodiaThursday, at 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes library.The showing is being sponsored by Studentsfor Capitalism and Freedom (SCAF), andis open to the entire student body.Charles Chase, a third year under¬graduate who served in Vietnam from Mayof 1968 to May of 1969, told the Maroon thatthe purpose of showing the slides is “edu¬cational.”After showing the slides, Chase will dis¬cuss such topics as GI morale in Vietnam,the effect of dissent at home, the dominotheory, Vietnamese history, natural re¬sources of South Vietnam, and other mat¬ters related to Vietnam.Chase said he would not use the speech toexpress his personal views on the war, butwould be available for discussion after¬wards in both English and Vietnamese. Heis speaking on the invitation of SCAF.Lit ReviewThe Chicago Literary Review, a news¬paper insert printed six times a year bystudents of the University will accept andpublish original literary and art efforts forthe first time in its seven year history. Thiswill give student authors and artists thechance to have their work appear in a pub¬lication which is distributed to 54 collegesand universities across the nation and has acirculation of approximately 300,000.The reason for this change in policy, ac¬cording editor in chief Leslie Maitland,third year undergraduate is that “the stafffelt there was a need for a place wherestudents could be published, and the largecirculation of the Review makes it an idealplace.” This year, in addition to the re¬views of books and records, the issues willinclude original student poetry, short fic¬tion, essays, art work, and photographs.Miss Maitland also stated that besidesthe original contributions, the Reviewneeds people who want to write record andbook reviews, or who are just interested inbeing members of the staff. She mentionedthat reviewers may keep any records orbooks they review.The Chicago Literary Review office is lo¬ cated on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall.The next issue of CLR is tentatively sched¬uled for December 5, and the deadline forcontributions is Thanksgiving.Moon Flight PlanAlbert Pick, Jr., has given the Universitya copy of the flight plan of the Apollo 11voyage to the moon.The flight plan, together with a photo¬graph of the crew, was autographed by as¬tronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin.and Michael Collins. Pick purchased thecopy of the Apollo flight plan for $10,000early in October during the annual grandauction benefit for the University CancerResearch Foundation.Pick presented the space mementoesrecently to Edward H. Levi, President ofthe University. In presenting the flightplan, Pick said he hopes it will be housed ina location which would afford students andfaculty the opportunity to study details ofthe journey.Pick is president of Pick Hotels Corpo¬ration and a Life Trustee of the University.Disease CourseMore than 200 physicians from through¬out North America will attend a course on“Mechanism on Disease and ModernTheraphy” all this week at the Center forContinuing Education.Dr. Hans Hecht, the Blum-Riese profes¬sor of medicine and chairman of the de¬partment of medicine in the PritzkerSchool, is director of the conference whichis being sponsored by the American Collegeof Physicians.The course will emphasize current trendsin internal medicine and rational therapybased on fundamental concepts of diseaseprocesses.UC TV“Perspectives,” the University televisionshow presented on WLS-TV (Channel 7) ev¬ery weekday morning at 6:30 am, will high¬light discussions on diseases and music thisweek.“Controlling Atherosclerosis” will be dis¬cussed Tuesday by Dr. Robert Wissler, pro¬fessor and chairman of the department ofpathology at the University, Dr. JeremiahStamier, associate professor of medicine atNorthwestern University, and Dr. RichardJ. Jones, associate professor of medicine atthe University.Wednesday, Dr. Audrey Evans of theChildren’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Dr.Werner Kirsten, associate professor of pa¬thology and pediatrics at the Universityand Dr. Giulio Dnagio, professor of radio¬logy at Cornell University Medical Collegewill discuss “The Treatment of Childrenwith Cancer.”“The Black Classical Musician in Amer¬ica” will be discussed by Natalie Hinderas,concert pianist, and James Bruce, associ¬ate professor of Germanic languages andliteratures at the University Thursdaymorning.Auditorium DedicationRoom P-117 of the University Hospitalsand Clinics will be formally dedicated asthe Frank Billings Auditorium at 4 pm to¬day.Dr. Richard Richter, professor emeritusin the department of medicine will speak atthe dedication ceremonies.The late Dr. Billings was dean of RushMedical College and the principle architectof the affiliation of that college with theUniversity.Study Abroad...in Scenic Monterey, California130 Miles South of San FranciscoMonterey Institute of Foreign StudiesSmall Classes — Individual AttentionIntensive Tutorial-Type InstructionUpper Division Graduate StudyEnrollment open *o limited number ot qualified sophomores.languages and Area Studies—Arabic, Chinese, Frenth, German, Italian, Japanese,Portuguese. Russian, Spanish—History, International Economics, Political Science—Department of Education, Department of Translation Cr Interpretation.^fi/GN STV$^A private liberal arts college Accreditedby the Western Association of Schoolsand Colleges. V A. Approved. SPRING SEMESTERFebruary 9, 1970May 30, 1970For Information Write toDEAN OF ADMISSIONSP.O. BOX 1978MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA CHGO'S OWNSWINGERS CLUBSEND Sl.OOFOR 64 PAGEULUST MAGAZINE, 100s OfPERSONALS. MKS, BOX3806. CHCO 60654.for your gift needs1541 EAST HYDE PARK BLVD.955-0177'Appropriately Unique’Page 2/The Chicago Maroon/November 4, 1969 THE ALHAMBRABOUTIQUE INTERNATIONAL10% STUDENT DISCOUNT1453 E. HYDE PARKPHONE: 363-9215UC's Monsters 54-0Skit,Tragedy struck in the muddy quagmireof Dyke stadium as the Maroons wereraped by powerful Ohio State, 54-0.If this were indeed the case the painmight not be as intense. Unfortunatelyupon replacement of Ohio State with LakeForest College, and Dyke stadium, withLake Forest stadium the full magnitude ofthe agony is realized.The vaunted Maroon defense, which hadgiven up only 22 points in four games, wasleft sprawled all over the field, face downin the mud; their end zone violated repea¬tedly and often.The Lake Forest team, the only varsityteam on the Maroon schedule, was bigger,faster and more experienced than theirUniversity of Chicago counterparts; andmore important, they had the hometeamadvantage: it only rained on our side of thefield.The less said about the game the better.Seemingly unbothered by the lopsidedscore, the faithful Maroon fans, 200 strong,cheered minor Maroon heroics, booed thereferees, and generally introduced LakeForest to the University of Chicago brandof participatory football.At halftime, the Friends of Jerry KirkMarching Kazoo Band formed in the eastendzone and marched in their inimitablefashion.At least the fans had a good time.They didn’t ride the team bus home.RugbyNovember 1. No fanfare. No cheerlead¬ers. No crowds. No sun. Just clouds. Justcold. Just Rugby.The University Rugby team ripped Mil¬waukee’s proud club 17-5 Saturday on bleakStagg Field. The visitors sent a chillthrough their surprised hosts when theybroke through in the first minute to score atry (touchdown). And with a consequent conversion Chicago found themselves down5-0.The maroon and blue-jerseyed hometeam shot back with a confident “We tryharder.” The quick reply came in the formof two field goals for a 6-5 lead.After that Chicago brushed aside sub¬sequent attempts by that “big and fast”Milwaukee club to violate the touchline.Chicago, not content simply to hold theiropponents forever after scoreless, contin¬ued to rack up ponits: two more field goals,a try and a conversion.The monopoly of the ball lasted throughthe first half and into the second as Chicagocontinued to hit away at Milwaukee. Nei¬ther side scored during part two of thegame as the cold began to affect both play¬ers and fans. What was running during thefirst half had turned to walking by the endof the period and what was walking even¬tually turned to trodding.SDS PlansSDS is planning a rally and skit today at12:30 in Mandel Hall to build support forthe free meals demanded for cafeteriaworkers.Fred Bjorling, director of personnel, wasasked by SDS to speak at the rally. How¬ever, Bjorling, when contacted by a Ma¬roon reporter Monday indicated he wouldnot take part.“Several students have come to me ask¬ing me to speak at a rally,” Bjorling said.“I said to them that nothing worthwhilecould come about in those conditions. Ifthey really wanted to investigate the issue,they should sit down and look at tjie facts. Iwould sit down with a representative com¬mittee, but in a rally situation, I think thereArticle Foresees Mitch KahnAs New College Football Hero Rally for Workersare too many people looking for a quickanswer.”Bjorling also commented on the demanditself.“The cafeteria workers don’t have freemeals because in the process of bargainingwith the lihion in years past the decisionwas made to grant other benefits. The workers here have never had free meals asfar as I know.” NBjorling’s reaction to SDS involvement inthe affairs of cafeteria workers was:“I think that these employees are quitecapable of repersenting themselves withtheir own representatives and with us. Wehave bargained in good faith in the past.”I can play football.“Football is something I’ve always want¬ed to try because it was a challenge, some¬thing I'd never done before. And where elsein the country could someone like me comeout and play college football.“I felt I wanted to do it. ‘Nah! You playfootball? Ha, ha, joke,’ and so I said to my¬self it will be like taking a graduate courseI’ve never taken before. I approached itwith sort of an intellectual, rather thanphysical approach.”Joseph Haas, the author of the oaring ex¬pose, picked Mitch as the archtype of thecontemporary gridiron hero because herecognizes Kahn’s ability to maintain hisimage as a jock without prostituting his in¬tellectual soul.His mother, Mrs. Caryl Kahn, had this tosay about her famous son, “He’s a doll,brilliant at whatever he does. But I’mproud of all three of my boys. You shouldhave seen Mitch and his brother Doug allsummer, running and running and runningand running to get in shape for football.This is new to Mitch and he was readingfootball books to learn all about it. He’s oneof the few people I know who can learnfrom books.”And what exactly did Mitch learn?“Yeah, well, when I’m in the line I just hitthe nearest guy in a uniform of the othercolor because I have absolutely no idea ofwhat’s going on. At first, I just hit anythingthat was moving, but that’s not alwayswise.Contacted Monday, Kahn smirked,“While I’m glad that members of the na¬tional press have finally realized my valueto the team, I think that perhaps they’veoverlooked the valuable contributions ofmany other players on the team. Of course,the publicity has been a considerable bar¬gaining factor in my contract negotiationsfor next year.” SATURDAY'S GAME: Maroon tries to stop Lake Forester with the ball. David TravisMitch KahnOur Hero?Discard your image of a 6’1” 250 lb. bruteas the average football player. A new pro¬totype has emerged: a 19 year old juniorattending Chicago on a four year NationalMerit Scholarship to study chemistry, whois also a pianist, trombonist, and journalist.Mitch Kahn, a 5’10” 208 pounder under hispads, has attained notoriety by appearingon the cover of last Saturday’s Panorama,a Daily News feature section. Kahn starredin a story entitled “The Monsters of theMidway: Meet Mitch Kahn and his fellowfootball warriors at the University of Chi¬cago.”Said Kahn, the intrepid sportswriter forthe Maroon, “I was too small in high schoolto go out for football and, you know, I wassort of introverted. I studied hard because Iwanted to be able to go to a good college.But I’m settled down now. I’m not worriedschool, so Students Debate Drug IssuesStudents from the University of Chicagoand the Illinois Institute of Technology,fired questions on narcotics and drug addic¬tion at three guest panel members of theTV program ‘University of Chicago Round¬table” during and after the October 21 tap¬ing of the show, which will be aired tonightat 7 pm on WTTW (Channel 11).Dr Helen Knowles of the University ofRochester and author of the book “Drugson Campus,” Dr Jerome Jaffe, assistantprofessor of psychiatry at Billings hospital;and Mitchell Ware, head of the state nar¬cotics division discussed issues of the drugproblem during the first half hour.The remaining 30 minutes were notenough to cover the comments and ques¬tions raised by the students.' Most of thequestions were directed to Ware, who re¬sponded without varying from the officialpolicy of his department.Dr. Knowles stated that “the type ofperson who uses marijuana varies tremen¬dously.” In stressing the danger of over¬simplifying the narcotics issue, she empha¬ sized that an understanding of what causesthe problem is vital. “Drug abuse comesfrom abusing the controls on drugs, not thedrugs themselves.”Kenneth Northcott, professor of germaniclanguages and moderator of the program,asked Dr Jaffe about the medical effects ofdrugs. Jaffe replied that drugs are reason¬ably potent and can produce toxic effectswhen taken in overdose. But “most usersnever reach this point.” Psychologically itis more difficult to analyze their effects, hestated.The student audience expressed amaze¬ment at a statement of Ware’s, who pointedout that it is not illegal to use drugs inIllinois; but it is to possess them.In answer to a student’s question, Wareannounced, “No student who isn’t pushingdrugs need worry about law enforcementagents on campus.” He said the depart¬ment was not mainly interested in bustingsomeone who used drugs in the privacy ofhis own room, not involving anyone else inhis habit.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, November 4MEETING: Council of the University Senate, MandelHall, 4 pm.INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: InternationalHouse, Auditorium, 8 pm.LECTURE: Department of Anatomy, Dr. Robert E.Smith, Veterans Administration Hospital, Palo Alto,California, "E.M. Cytochemistry in the 70's: New En¬zyme Substrates to Evaluate Cellular States and DrugActions on Organelles.", Anatomy 105, 4:30 pm.DOC FILMS: Wagonmaster, Cobb Hall, 8 pm.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ROUND TABLE: WTTW,Channel 11, 7:30 pm.MEETING: Chicago Science Fiction Society, Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.MADRIGAL SINGING: Sponsored by Allegro Conspirito.Come and participate, 5540 S. Woodlawn, 8 pm.RECRUITING VISIT: Harvard University-GraduateSchool of Education, Cambridge, Massachusetts, ext.3282 for appointments.Wednesday, November 5SOCCER: Lake Forest College, Staff Field, 2:30 pm.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from the British Islesand Scandinavia, Ida Noyes Hall, Dance Room, 8 pm.LECTURE: Graduate School of Business (Invitation Lec¬ture Series), Jacques Maisonrouge, President and Di¬rector, IBM World Trade Corporation and Vice Presi¬dent, IBM Corporation, Business East, 1 pm.DOC FILMS: Knock on Any Door, Cobb Hall 8 pm.MEETING: U.C. Baha'i Fellowship, 2nd floor lounge IdaNoyes, 3:30 pm.DISCUSSION: The Status Quo Functions of the FreudianView of Human Behavior, Naomi Weisstein, ReynoldsClub, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: Social Science 121, "The Division of Labor:An Evolutionary View," Robert Me C. Adams, OrientalInstitute and Dept, of Anthropology, Kent 107, 11:30am. REHEARSAL: String sectional, 6:30 pm., full orchestra,7:30 pm.; Mandel Hall.RECRUITING VISIT: University of Wisconsin — Teach¬er Intern Program, Madison, Wisconsin, ext. 3282 forappointments.RALLY: Bring all the Gl's home now, Rm. 107, KentLecture Hall, 1020 E. 58th St., Speakers to include:John Froines, Conspiracy 8 Defendant; Sidney Lens,National Co — Chairman New Mobilization Committee,Andrew Pulley, Former Antiwar Gl and one of the Ft.Jackson 8, Bob Lucas, Black Liberation Alliance,Third World Committee for Solidarity and Vietnam,Cindy Burke, Chicago Student Mobilization Committee,8 pm.Thursday, November 6BOARD MEETING: Division of the Biological Sciencesand Pritzker School of Medicine, Billings Hospital,P-117, 4 pm.LECTURE: Department of Economics (Student FacultySeminar), Jacob Marschak. Professor, Dept, of Eco¬nomics, University of California, Los Angeles. "Eco¬nomics of Information Systems.", Business East 106, 8pm.GREGORIAN CHANT: Sponsored by Allegro ConspiritoCome and Sing, at 5540 S. Woodlawn, 7 pm.MEETING: Pre-Med Club, Election of officers, Speaker:Prof. Jack Cowan, Chairman of The Committee onMathematical Biology, Billings M-137.TALK: Al Shanker, President of the United Federationof Teachers will discuss "Education and Social Pol¬icy," sponsored by YPSL, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: Vietnam Representation," Students For Cap¬italism and Freedom, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY LECTURE: "Experienceand Experiments in Poetry" by Edoardo Cacciatore,poet and critic, author of La Restituzione, LoSpeecchio e la Trottola, Dal Dire al Fare, BreastedHall, 8 pm.November 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 3EDITORIALResponsibility?“Student Power” it seems, is a term that has been relegatedto obscurity, joining such relics of the past as the crew cut andthe divine right of kings. In this day and age, to be outdated isthe worst sin you can commit, and so the cry for student participa¬tion, more student responsibility is now made sheepishly, if atall, only after more fashionable issues have been raised.One of the results of the demands in the past for studentpower is that most academic departments of the University arenow willing at least to entertain the opinions of students as tohow those departments should be run. Somewhat belatedly, manydepartments now make provisions for student evaluation of teach¬ers and courses, and have some sort of student advisory committee.Compared to what students had asked for in the way of controllingpower, these concessions sound ironic, but they are not the great¬est shortcomings of students’ push for more responsibility.Much more ironic is the fact that even the limited responsi¬bilities won by students has been ignored and shirked by thepeople who said they wanted them — the students. Professors passout course evaluations forms to a class of 30, and get back three.Student committees get together with the other students of thedepartment, and half a dozen students out of 80 show up — thesame few who fill out the course evaluations.... if they think the present method ofteacher and course assessment by studentsis poor, now is the time to propose a newplan for this quarter."For some students, the lack of interest is just apathy. Manystudents, however, do not care to participate in the new “re¬sponsibilities” because they feel that these are token, worthlessconcessions made by department faculty more concerned withkeeping students quiet than with really investigating the desir¬ability of relinquishing part of the throne of command to students.In many cases, the students’ distrust may be warranted. One getsthe feeling that in some departments, the teacher evaluation formsand student advisory councils have been set up in the assurancethat when students show no interest in them, the faculty will haveaffirmed its own right to control. In most departments this is notthe overt intention of the faculty, but if the students do not makethe most of the cautious concessions the faculty have granted allfurther progress will stop.We cannot afford to let this happen. Even if students thinkthat the opportunities for participating in their department affairsare small, they must make use of them now if they hope ever tohave greater opportunities. If they think that the existingmechanisms should be changed, if they think the present methodof teacher and course assessment by students is poor, now is thetime to propose a new plan for this quarter.You can’t force a person to be responsible. It has been sug¬gested that departments require students to complete a courseevaluation form before they could be given credit for the course,but somehow this whole idea is paradoxical. Even if you succeededin getting the student point of view, there would be no increaseof student responsibility. And it should be obvious that the de¬partment faculty are not going to go out of their way to pressupon students measures that increase student authority at theexpense of the faculty.When we were all twelve, our mothers told us that if wewanted some privilege, like having a dog, we had to take on theresponsibility of walking it every day. Like all good twelve yearolds, we always laughed at our mothers’ advice, but found our¬selves remembering it in later years. It is advice so fundamentalas to be a cliche, but at this University where only complex thingsare easily understood, it is a lesson that many of use refused tolearn. Bio Students' Anger FocusesOn Fundamentals Of BiochemBy Paul HeltneFor a great many students in the divisionof biological sciences the focus of the great¬est disappointment, frustration and angeris the department of biochemistry. Item:All students of the division have been re-quired to pass fundamentals ofbiochemistry — a course which each yearhas become even less competent than theefforts of the previous year, a course forwhich mediocre and pedantic are descrip¬tions too generous to be applicable. Item:Despite a faculty of 45 to 50 only tencourses are even listed as offered by thedepartment. This compares in the weakestway with other departments around thecampus. Both points will be examined inmore detail.The fundamentals of biochemistry course(not the requirement) has been the objectof strong criticism from many sides foryears. The course has degenerated from apoorly taught two-man course to an incred¬ibly disheveled conglomeration taught by“staff.”If a student has never had biochemistrythe fundamentals course given by “staff”presents no insight which is not available inbiochemistry texts. However, most peoplewho have a background in biochemistrywill agree that they received more and bet¬ter-integrated information in their under¬graduate biochem or physiology courses —be those taught in small colleges or largeuniversities. This despite the fact thatmany lecturers here spend a good deal oftime mumbling and stumbling over whatthey suppose to be the frontiers of science.It might be supposed that a switch fromone lousy lecturer would be welcome relief,but with one or two notable exceptions, thenext is just as lousy. The students usuallywind up with an increment of excrement.In general the criticisms are these:There is an almost total lack of integrationof continuity in the course. No one teachesmore than two weeks, no lecturer can betroubled to hear the material which comesbefore or after his. The significance of in¬formation presented is rarely considered.One learns little about the implications ofthe material for evolutionary, medical orphysiological science. Alternative resultsand points of view are rarely mentioned.Class size is between 100 and 150, and in orout of class student-teacher rapport is min¬imal. Of course, since no man is respon¬sible for the course, no one feels respon¬sible for poor showings in the course. Mr.Carbohydrate probably neither knows norcares how students fared on examinationsconcerned with carbohydrates. With fewTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editor: David TravisFeature Editor: Wendy GlocknerAssociate Editors: Con Hitchcock (Managing),Steve Cook (News), Chris Froula (Features),Mitch Kahn (Sports), Rob Cooley (Copy).Assistant Business Manager: Joel PondelikSenior Editor: Roger BlackStaff: Judy Alsofrom, Paul Bernstein, NancyChisman, Allen Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Susan Leff, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, EllenSazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, David Steele,John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Steve Aoki, Mike Brant,Steve Current, Richard Davis, Monty Futch,Ben Gilbert, Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer,Phil Lathrop, Jerry Levy, David Rosenbush,Paul Stelter.Founded 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 RoomsNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59thSt., Chicago, IH. 60037. Phone Midway 3-0600,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 Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. exceptions there is general incompetence inthe classroom and a departmental irre¬sponsibility to what the title of professor (atany level) in a university implies in termsof teaching. A most concentrated protestwas leveled against the course by lastyear’s med freshmen who pressed for im¬mediate mid-quarter revision of the course.Their criticisms were put off by promisesof far-reaching changes in response to thehighly touted new basic sciences medicalcurriculum. Medical students in a positionto know say not only has the quality of thecourse remained at low ebb but the “staff”lectures are almost word for word un¬changed from previous years. Promised re¬visions have obviously been a facade overthe same refuse. A frank and detailed eval¬uation of teaching in the department by bio¬chem graduate students was consideredrude and uppity and earned only facultyenmity for those students who developedand presented the evaluation.The obvious alternatives are simple:Give the course or what remains of it to arespected teacher like John Law, or bet¬ter break the large course into separatesections with a single competent professorresponsible for each section. Since this is adivisional requirement and a divisionalproblem it seems appropriate that if thedepartment fails to respond a request forsuch revision should flow from a dean orfrom the basic sciences curriculum com¬mittee.Another way to evaluate the formal in¬structional activities of the biochemistrydepartment is to examine their course of¬ferings. This brings us to our second point.As taken from official registrar records,the figures speak for themselves. Since 1962the department has offered a total of 16different courses. Even this scanty pictureis not completely representative of themeager teaching contributions of the de¬partment. Further analysis reveals that forone course no credit is given. Two othersare merely research' 'jtOrkeep the registrar ""happy. The' teachingcourse is a requirement stipulated by theparticular governmental traineeship pro¬gram from which the department supportsits students. Students are seldom more thanlab assistants. In no way should this coursebe construed as some sort of departmentalcommitment to turning out PhD’s who aregood teachers. Also it might be interestingto know how the government views regis¬tration for this course in quarters when noformal teaching ( and thus no assisting) isbeing done.As for the other courses, intermediateand advanced biochemistry are the semi¬nar or staff type involving a minimum ofprofessorial time. General virology, bioche¬mical genetics and microbial and molecu¬lar genetics are merely dual listings moreappropriate under microbiology andbiophysics. Medical aspects ofbiochemistry is really a course offered bythe departments of medicine to med stu¬dents and residents. The same is true of theseminar in connective tissue offered by thedepartment of pediatrics. Selected topics indevelopmental biology is indentical tocourse numbers offered by biophysics andbiology. Thus the specialty courses offeredsolely under the auspices of thebiochemistry department are only five: ki¬netic analysis of enzyme activity, mem¬brane biochemistry, seminar in devel-o p m e n t a 1 biochemistry, physicalbiochemistry and advanced research tech¬niques. Of these the first three are rated asbeing worthy of only one half credit, andthe last four were offered for the first timeonly in 1969.It is not that there are only two part timeand one full time faculty in biochemistry.The current catalogue lists 49 members ofwhom at least 46 are active and at least 18tenured. The catalogue lists 10 courses inthe department. By contrast the depart¬ment of astronomy lists 15 members ( 14active) and offers 31 courses. The depart¬ment of classical languages and literaturelists 15 members ( 12 active) and offers 91courses ( no half credit stuff either). Andthe astronomists and classicists publish pa-Continued on Page FivePage 4/The Chicago Maroon/November 4, 1969The Wegener subcommittee on dis¬ciplinary procedures appointed last Aprilby the council of the faculty senate willsubmit its report this month.The original deadline for the completionof the report was November first, but com¬pletion has been delayed. Charles Wegener,professor of humanities and NCD andchairman of the subcommittee, said, “Bar¬ring the development of a major difficulty- something I do not presently foresee — Iwould think that we might be able to sub¬mit our report to the committee of thecouncil of the University senate within thenext two to three weeks.” Wegener said that the subcommittee was meeting threeto four hours twice a week to finish thereport.The Wegener subcommittee was formedafter last year’s sit-in raised many ques¬tions as to how students participating inmass disruptions should be disciplined. Ac¬cording to Tim Lovain 70, one of the threestudents on the subcommittee, the task ofthe subcommittee was “to review dis¬ciplinary procedures in light of student in-volvment and mass disruptions.”The Wegener subcommittee was set upseveral months after the Kalven committeeon disciplinary procedures submitted a re¬ port to dean of students, Charles O’Connell.Chaired by law professor Harry Kalven,the committee consisted of nine facultymembers appointed early in 1968 byO’Connell.The Kalven committee suggested that theUniversity define two major categories ofdisciplinary infraction which deliberatelyinterfere with University teaching, re¬search, and operation; and “offensesagainst University life” including drug,sex, and liquor violations.The Kalven report recommended thatgroups of tenured faculty, with student ob¬servers, judge students accused of offensesStudents Suggest Organized SeminarContinued from Page Fourpers and serve on committees, do govern¬mental and consultative work, too. Theymust feel overworked or drastically under¬paid when looking at biochemists. In lightof astronomy and classical languages wehave every right to expect from 100 to 300courses to be offered by the department ofbiochemistry. Presently it is obvious thatmost biochemists on this campus haveshirked any formal teaching at all. Since1962 a total of 16 names have dared to ap¬pear beside course titles listed in timeschedules under biochem. Many of thesewere microbiologists, biophysicists andMD’s.Certainly an organized seminar course inone’s special field once a year is not toomuch to ask — that is assuming, of course,that one’s research area is relevant enoughand broad enough to encompass such arelatively narrow specification. Not onlybiochemistry students but also those in oth¬er departments would respond to such elec¬tives. Obviously the biochemistry facultysimply feels no responsibility to bear their fair share of this sort of teaching.Why does the situation exist? Apparentlythe route to advancement in the depart¬ment is blocked by taking time out fromone’s research for teaching. The currentchairman may not have created the situ¬ation. But it must be said that in the 27years of his chairmanship it appears thathe has been unable or unwilling to correctthe present state of affairs. Certainly agreat deal of responsibility must rest withhim.Comes the time for recommendations:• Require that everyone in the depart¬ment be responsible for at least one entirecourse each year.• Put all positions in the department(including the presently tenured ones) upfor grabs. Make reappointment and ad¬vancement dependent to a goodly extent onteaching evaluation and such as that doneat the Davis campus of the University ofCalifornia.• If all else fails, create an institute ofW \ NIK I)CAMPUSREPRESENTATIVES4 GIRLS NEEDEDS4 7 SO [>*'f hourBccomo .i ilcimiiislrjuir ofpersonal and home careproducts I versone needs them,so win not sell them ’Flexible liouis to tit .iiotindyour class schedule Work myour own atea All turningfurnishedHASTINGS \SS<)< IUISn S SIAM si( lll< \<,() || I INOISFor interview . call 2o(i OT24Skiers!!GIGANTICSKI SALESove 25 to 50%and more.Big Selection — Big Brand*Sltis — Boots —* BindingsSweaters — Pants — JacketsSPECIAL COMPLETESKI OUTFITIncludes: skis,boots, polesand bindings *59wc KENT SKIS • TAKE TKADISMORRIE IMAGES609 N. la Salle 337-6151Ski Haadquarfari • Dawnfawa Ckleofo~®"*«k bitvwa Okie St. nit ud OntarioSt- Mtraacf ta Oaa Ryan-Kannaky X-w«y<frtt Ski Ttai Ta SMtnU Witt Tkli Adi Examinations for Teachers’ Certificates:CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLSExaminations Given in ChicagoBUSINESS EDUCATION’High School AccountingHigh School Business Training♦High School Stenography-Gregg♦High School Stenography-PitmanPHYSICAL EDUCATION♦Physical Education-Gr. 1-8LANGUAGEFrench, Gr. 7-12German, Gr. 7-12Latin, Gr. 7-12Spanish, Gr. 7-12SPECIALChild StudyAssistant Family InstructorFamily InstructorLibrary Science-Gr. 7-12Physical TherapyPublic School HealthTeacher in PlaygroundTeacher Social WorkerSpeech Correction♦Practical Exam—December 30. 1969♦♦Practical Exam—Date to be announced SOCIAL STUDIESHigh School GeographySPECIAL EDUCATIONTeacher of BlindTeacher of Partially SeeingTeacher of Educable MentallyHandicappedTeacher of Trainable MentallyHandicappedTeacher of DeafTeacher of PhysicallyHandicappedVOCATIONAL AND PRACTICALARTS♦High School Auto Shop♦High School Drafting♦High School Electric Shop &Electronics♦High School Machine Shop♦High School Print Shop♦High School Wood ShopTRADE♦♦Auto Body♦♦Auto Mechanics♦♦Carpentry♦♦CosmetologyDATE OF EXAMINATIONS: December 29, 1969DEADLINE FOR FILING: November 14, 1969-4:30 P.M.(Applications postmarked November 13, 1969 will be accepted.)SPECIAL NOTICE WITH REFERENCE TO THESE CERTIFICATEEXAMINATIONS'A candidate for a teaching certificate may make application forthe examination if he has courses in progress leading to theaward of a Bachelor’s Degree, and which will make him fullyeligible by July 1, 1970; or if he possesses a degree from anaccredited college or university and will complete all require¬ments, including student teaching, to make him fully eligibleby July 1, 1970. Evidence of registration in courses designatedabove must be presented by April 15, 1970.DOCUMENTS NEEDED AT TIME OF APPLICATION:Application form (Ex-5), official copy of birth certificate, state¬ment from candidate showing classes in progress and date ofgraduation, official transcript sent by registrar showing all workcompleted up to current term.FOR INFORMATION WRITE TO: Board of Examiners, Room 1026CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601or the Office of Teacher Recruitment, Room 1038or details in the Teacher Placement Office biochemistry which finds its own supportseparate from the University — the pointbeing that if a group refuses to take theresponsibility of being a department in auniversity it should no longer masqueradeas a department in a university. For teach¬ing of biochemistry hire individuals fromsome of the small colleges in the midwest— individuals who can and do present alucid synthesis of an entire subject area.And, believe it or not those of you who havesuffered through biochemistry at this Uni¬versity, there are still quite a few com¬petent teachers around.Paul Heltne is a graduate student in thebiological sciences ditnsion.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the university com¬munity. The opinions of the guest column¬ists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit-ting columns should contact the editor. against the “mission.”The Wegener committee has nine votingmembers, six faculty and three students.Faculty members are: Harold Demsetz,business professor; Edward Deutsch,chemistry instructor; Paul Sally, assistantprofessor of mathematics; Ronald Singer,professor of anatomy and anthropology;Janice Spoffard, associate professor ofbiology; and Wegener.Allison Dunham, professor of law, hasserved as counsel of the committee, but isnot a voting member. Student members areLovain, law student, Peggy McQuade, andSteve Orman 70.When the subcommittee was formed fastspring controversy arose over the methodof choosing student members. The com¬mittee of the council first said studentswould be chosen by the faculty membersof the committee from a list of studentsnominated by the student advisory coun¬cils, but under these conditions many advi¬sory councils refused to nominate a stu¬dent. It was later decided that nomineesthemselves would select the members.Eleven of the 16 advisory councils nomi¬nated students from which the three mem¬bers were elected.Wegener said that subcommittee mem¬bers disagreed on various points in theirrecommendations but that on the wholetheir opinions are the same.“I do not know what will be done withrespect to publication of the report once itis submitted to the committee of the coun¬cil, nor do I know whether the subcom¬mittee will express any opinion about thepublication and discussion of the report tothe committee of the council,” Wegenersaid. “The matter has been raised in thesubcommittee but no detailed discussion ofit has taken place.”4., Bring All the Gl's Home NowMarch on Washington November 15RALLYJohn Froines - Conspiracy 8 DefendantSidney Lens - National Co-Chairman New MobilizationCommitteeAndrew Pulley - Former Antiwar Gl and one of the Ft.Jackson 8Bob Lucas - Black Liberation Alliance, Third World Com¬mittee for Solidarity with VietnamCindy Burke - Chicago Student Mobilization CommitteeWed., Nov. 5 8 pm Rm. 107 Kent Lee. Hall 1020 E. 58th St.U. of C. Comm, to End the War in VietnamTEACH A BROTHERin a Black collegeThe Southern Education Program is a non-profit place¬ment clearinghouse for Black teachers. Placement is freeof charge in any of 90 colleges where your education willdo the most good.For information write:S.E.P.859 1/2 Hunter St., N.W.Atlanta, Georgia 30314 STOP NAIL BITINGWITHNow you can stop youi nail biting, cuticlechewing habit, TODAY1, with STOP BITE, let sface it, this ugly habit is bad news Why lookdumb, when you can be IN with long beautifulfinger nails. This amazing new product is aglossy cover that paints on the nail surface,with a bitter taste you'll hate, and WHAM1"STOP BITE" ends the nail biting habit, LIKENOW!We guarantee you results, or return your moneyBuy "STOP BITE ’only $1.50AT All DRUG STORES• DARK-EYES*’ CO.. INC.331X W. CARROLL AVE.-CmcAoojLL^soeze _[Can't find STOP-BITE at your drug store? Then |clip this out and send, with $1.50.I NAME'STATE,1969/The Chicago Maroon/Page 5;H i’ftWMX I *» w*LEMERSIDQiJiliEyEDITlCi^iPR jnHEiAAAROONas r m - »+' f I* * a % >*f "4&p>8* sNiaHS, _'lAlora^®Kj1mIl-■ £.- „ ■ ,va, * r • v -v- i|£|P? ■'"pt|ii nk in g, a 1 on g ; t he- lines f of ^ a if a i rly||fti|^giv^^full-siBryideJpper^iprnalla,the>Ha’rTi I|^M. I :T:- st<)re ,;:AvUhfwhichf^'^arri^^^p 1|fiGi^ly^familiai^L.shouldMhink^the|pntuf^ |pal|rnarket fqr;-suc^a■: faci Iit ypnfIydo|l|i^LWhilej-^|iigi ■ HHnwum mm..' mmmahjk£Sl;^ ■•>■.•:■ v--V X'Prlr.a; M-*. -t A-iV-> ■ ■ ^-•V• < '-;•: :•- .;v■■mf ■•“CjmmiS3im r ..-Eigjjr ’ey jjft> -,>:v.|85L_hia; •. ilispf>r , iMS&SMmSgh. ' ’"; ■’ ilwHHSffiaH„.-c;._ ■ -A'-;- A*:-, iJMr1* H3i iiiisig HPr^fcMvS&V’tmlimmm.BRBBR!^Slrls5|:8S¥rsf /Me*... m;■■■•. -v- >;.vi,N.y':I-"My ^ m, alii■Mr r I■Sfe' . i&f ; //iSsK'.-SS■ ' KMil iiiitsim.:.. •' , ; ;.■:91 t~ * k3P§H '.5'. fe-" ' I*. •' . ,fjiif.* v* i“ ’ »'■' - £p,v ..’KVi A'M •'•■ •■•.••'.- 8 -.Ml' :'•' V-• r>- : v *•‘:r •• .• ■ -• ■ '"^mm_ •; -'- - ■'.-••*'■ ! ^;;.8 V ';- \- ;'C-V1-:--m- ■self-adjusting-'tamponsIk■ - * -■;, . >:JM!W'SpIPi;8'v ^Supreme^fMonad^lytxx^askV* unw.;|Simply^^ecause, tiwre^reVho books^V <\y^£6ur^u^|i^prpfess<)ns;'_chboso^^^ :i®! t^byi/su^cfflobscure^cbmpan iosW ^ - ;Imunit:.curm^;^j?Pumpkin^Pie’ and'.fl^ss&$8fiiii-1: iMMl sl< K \ l I M \H\MKh I III I ONX I > I |»HH I aiWBISI8 [ : ' '- ' * ‘ ' j .- fr •■jsmmnrj| * " %I 1*1 l ^ I .) «);i\ r;i«h r+’liiml-1*1 I ^ 40 «J;i\ full ♦■\rh;iuy*1 pr i\ 11 «**i«*~1*1 lsl rr*- ()rli\«Tv lor I ol I1*1 I s ( (tmplt'lf -rr\ic«‘ facililit-' on th«- pmni'»t“»mkmaM 5. ■■- 5--E-:: • & ■ A■! IM wteh^fSiM1(Maroon Classified Ads)SEE ME, FEEL ME, TOUCH ME, HEAL ME i J JAMERICA HURRAHJean Claude Van Itallie'sI AMERICA HURRAH 8:30 Oct. 3),\Z 1 7-8 Rev Club Theater Stu-| dents SI .50 Others *2.00.7th INTERNATIONALfolk FESTIVALv , 7 Performance 8:15; >atNov 3 Dance Workshops 2:00, FolkDance Party 8:00. All events atInt House S9th & Dorch. Ticketsat Stud. Activities Office x 3594.SCENESVIETNAM IN PERSPECTIVE —THE PEOPLE, THE LAND, IdaNoyes Hall 7:30 PM Thursday Nov 6.Where is the Snack Bar? Or —more clearly — What Is it? PTSnack Bar, the grease pit of theNorth Campus, at 55th and Univer¬sity: open dalty, 8:30-12:30 and4:30-12:30 on Sundays.Pierce Cinema presents RichardLester's A Funny Thing HappenedOn the Way to the Forum on 11/22.RENAISSANCE PLAYERS organiza¬tional meeting. Thursday, November6, 8:00 pm, 5615 University Ave. 66 Plym Convertible V8 Automat51000 exc. condition *1200 2-6PM667-7086.TWIN BEOS—ELEGANT CARVED,COMFORTABLE. I PD. *35 EACH.CALL JAYME EVES HY 3-4567 OR955-0725.PERFECT ELEC DRYER. YR.GUAR *80, BEST OFFER. 667-0840.Xerox Copies 9c,7c,5c,8.7c,5c,3c *10runs, 10% Discount on 9c7c5c rate:MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: S29-0248.CHEVELLE - '65-4 dr-AT-PB-Extragood condition but needs body work*250 NO 7-3106.Coming Soon: A Funny Thing Hap¬pened On the Way to the Forum.Save Your Pennies Kiddies for thisbig date this qtr. Live appearanceby MS Bedford.VIETNAM — Slides & Talk By theMan Who Took Them. Ida Noyes6 Nov 7:30 PM. BODY SHIRT SPECIAL - 2 for*11, bell-bottom shipment just ar¬rived. John's Mens Wear, 1459 E.53rd.Wollensak T-524 Tape Recorder 7"Reel Mono 4 Speeds (15/16-7Vj Ips)plus Accessory Cords *70 or OfferCall ES 5-9235 Perfect Condition.PEOPLE WANTEDBoard of Ed. Certified teacher toteach in school for emotionally dis¬turbed children in Hyde Park. Ex¬perience with normal children neces¬sary. Call Miss Johnson at 643-730Cfor application.Tues & Thurs all day person to doclerical work of highly varied na¬ture, like typing, for U of C Press.Call Bonnie Walson x3398. SHORELAND HOTEL 1Office space also Availablefrom 200 sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Special RatesforStudents and RelativesFacultyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 doilySingle rooms from $9.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00dailyLake View Please call N.T. Norbert PL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveMARCH ONWASHINGTONNOV 15th"Revolution — Insights From TheLatin American Experiences" Lec¬ture by Victor M. Nazario, staffmember Cl DOC & Urban TrainingCenter, Chicago. Thurs, Nov 6, 7:30PM Calvert House, 5735 S. University.ZENGAKUREN: TACTICAL MTG.PRI_3_MOWY—BRING EQUIP.PWRZKITAKOJICOMING NOV 11 Dave DellingerAt The Blue Gargoyle 7:30PM"LIBERATION MOVEMENTS INSOUTHERN AFRICA" INTERNA¬TIONAL DISCUSSION GROUP NOV.7 0PM Crossroads Center 5621Blackstone. DOW Chemical will be interviewingin Business East Basement Nov 11A 12 They will be pleased to answerany questions.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.BASS PLAYER & DRUMMERWANTED FDR BAND. ROCK, CAW,RAB, FOLK ROCK BAG. SHOULDHAVE OWN EQUIPMENT A EX¬PERIENCE. WE WOULD PREFERSOMEONE WHO CAN AT LEASTSING BACKUP, HAS PRO EXP. AIS OR CAN BECOME UNION.CALL BOB 643-0741 EVENINGS. Charter Boses Leaving Friday fromMain Quads. Students-*25 Adults-*30. ROUNDTRIP—Buses Will Leave D.C. Both SatAND Sunday Eves. TICKETS ATIDA NOYES RM 218 1-5 PM ForInfo x3273-4.ROOMMATES WANTEDMBA STUDENT AGE 50 WANTS* TO SHARE YOUR APT APPROX$75 MONTH. B18-6011 x208.Grad (Pref Physics) TO SHAREHd Pk Apt w/2 OTHERS. OWN RM*51.50. 752-6151.Mature fern grad wanted to shareFANTASTIC APT 5 rm 22 fl LakeView modem bldg E Hy Pk *90-*100after Nov. 1. 643-3714.FOR RENTFOR SALECHEV 62 IMPALA BODY IN GOODSHAPE EXCEPT FOR MINORREAR END ACCIOENT, NO- MUF¬FLER, RUNS WELL. *75 OR OF¬FER 667-5671.DOUBLE BED-MATTRESS, BOXSPRING, FRAME, HEAD BOARD*75 EXCEL. CONDITION 752-0180EVE5. U.C. MORATORIUM COMMITTEENEEDS YOUR HELP. VOLUN¬TEER-CALL MIKE FOWLER 935-0425 LEAVE NAME or 288-5248. FURN ROOM WITH PR. BATH INAPT CLEAN LINENS SOME COOK¬ING 55th and Hyde Park $40 mo955-4625.RIDESGUITAR: El Martine for $20 752-9508 Eves. Bob Gottesman.6 Place Settings Orange & WhiteMel mac dinner ware, Serving dishes8. extras in some pieces $7. Alumi¬num pan set with lids: 3 saucepans, dutch oven, 6, frying pan.Good buy! S8. 363-0565. FREE« TUTOR WANTED: MEDSTU GOING TO CALIFORNIANEEDS TO LEARN SPANISH Bob324-5355.WANTED: Folksingers Jazz orRock Groups—To do your thing onCampus Hitchcock x260 Dan MassLeave Message.PEOPLE FOR SALE 2 Girls Need Ride to Fla Xmas.Share expenses. 752-2454, 752-5582.PERSONALSJohn Reed, Norman Mailer, andnow Jean-Claude van Itallie. CanHarvard do no wrong?Did I say that?"May We Do Your Typing?" 363-1104. *Expert typing. 15 page minimum.955-4659 pm's & weekends. WANTED: Folksingers Jazz orRock Groups—To Do Your ThingOn Campus Hitchcock x260 DanMass. Leave Message.ARE YOU GOING TO THE FAN-TASTICS THIS WEEKEND?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.i! ADDRESS : ZIP.p 1 year subscription $8.00Yearbook Issue $1.00~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~1MAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60632OATES 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.£ IS VIETNAM AS SIMPLE AS THEMORATORIUM'S SLOGANS? MAY¬BE? MAYBE NOT. Ida NoyesThurs 7:30.CHRISTMAS FLIGHT. Will Pay 10%More For Ticket. PH 752-9609.G. Griss.Gurdjieff people: Where are you?Call Cathy M13-0800 Ext 3371 AM.After 3 Wars . . .After 3 Wars . . . Come hear whatpromises to be the most provocativespeech of the year.ARLENE, I LOVE YOU, RID.Comptrollers Office Moving DoYou Know Where? Ask Ding DongBell 3103.FOR NUDE CULTURE-MINDEDPEOPLE—would you believe authen¬tic African clothes straight fromTOGO to Alhambra Boutique forless bread than anywhere else inthis materialistic country?Richard Nixon will not be affectedby AMERICA HURRAH IYOU CAN'T ENJOY THE LIFEOF THE MIND ON AN EMPTYSTOMACHSO HOW COME THE GARGOYLESELLS SOUP FOR 75« ON THURS?TO PUT BREAKFAST IN STARV¬ING KIDS.AMERICA HURRAH this weekendIf you like Jerry Troyer in "An-drocles" last summer (rememberFerrovius?), you'l love him as ElGallo in "The Fantasticks"Buy a Snack 'Bar Burger or Shake.They make great presents.The Al Sh pun toff Fan Club meetsat the Pierce Tower Snack Bar.LOFTY the righteous pacifist; thedeath toll holds him high. AFTER SOS—WHAT?There IS a radical, original, indi¬genous, creative alternative to theadventurist elitism of WEATHER¬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 at246-6646, or write Johnny Apple-seed Box 50393, Cicero III. 60605.Ron Rico. Isn't he the tall guy whoworks at the Snack Bar on Tues¬days and Thursdays?After 3 Wars . .VIETNAM AN EYEWITNESS AC-COUNT Ida Noyes Thursday Nov 67:30PM."I was exceptionally impressed byAMERICA HURRAH. It's possiblethat "Mitel" is the best one-actplay I've ever seen."—Norman MailerBLACK-CAT BONE BLUES BANDWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL2-8377)Who ever heard of a fat El Gallo?PRETZELS: Anyone knowing wherein Chicago to get soft, hot, bigpretzels (like the ones sold in front of the Metropolitan Museum in NewYork Square before the CambridgeCity Council banned the pushcartpeddlers because they were sellingdrugs) inform the Maroon so theknowledge may be spread amongthe brethren.Wanted: Folksingers Jazz or RockGroups—To do your thing onCampus Hitchcock x260 Dan MassLeave Message.Who ever heard of Jerry Troyer?Well, maybe—bjf he does a niceRAPE.SVNAIMPORTANT MASS MEETING TODISCUSS FUTURE PLANS, THURS.NOV. 6 AT REYNOLDS CLUBSOUTH 7:30.FOTA DESIGN CONTESTDEADLINE IS TONIGHTThe deadline of the contest for asymbol design for the 1970 Festivalof the Arts is TONIGHT! Takeyour stuff to the Ida Noyes desk.If you have an idea but are havingtrouble executing It, or If youhaven't had time to finish it, callRoger Black, 955-4706.AMERICA HURRAH Ithe revolution. Life beforeABSENTMilNDEO? TEN PROFES¬SORS RETURNED TRAVEL PLANSTO THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONUNSIGNED TO LET US KNOWWHO CALL MRS KIFER X4291.SAV "l LOVE YOU*with a diamond fiftNf jfWftftS Hit 59 rfAtS119 N. Wabash at WashingtonINGLEWOOD EVCROtffN PLAZARUN AMERICA FROM THE MAROON BUSINESSOFFICE!$1.00A 15-word telegram sent to your governor, statelegislator, senator or congressman. Even thePresident is within your reach. These men getthousands of telegrams and every one is read.Use your opinions to make theirs - simple de¬mocracy. The $1.00 charge lets you save $1.25from regular rates. Western Union forms and alist of all governors and U.S. senators andrepresentatives are available in the MaroonBusiness Office, Ida Noyes Hall, Room 304. Fill itout, we deliver it. “Well worthreading, considering,discussing.”—The Kirkus ReviewsCAMPUSAPOCALYPSEby Donald L. KoganAn experienced, objectivecollege counselor analyzesthe interacting forces ofcampus rebellion and dis¬cusses the real meaning ofthe goals of st udent activity.$4.95 at your bookstoreTHE SEABURY PRESS815 Second AvenueNew York. N Y. 10017November 4, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/P*B® 7Are 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 Crane238-0971fr HAytCY’S ALL-NIGHT SUCHPERFORMANCES FRIDAY & SATURDAY F0U0WING LAST REGCUAR FEATURENev. 1Oriyiml mmI mevt MPiKING KONG Nev. 7lu Orsee WellesOTIZEN KANENev. 1 Nev. 14Geyel's Hi ^ David Lem'sTNI OVERCOAT OLIVER TWISTNev. 15 Nev. 21FeHiei's dM iu BekDybnLAST* ADA DON'T LOOK DACKNev. 72 Nev. 28Antonioni's MPl Ohe TRUFFAUTSriairsi STOLEN KISSESNev. 29 Dec 5FELLINI'S **■ Ct, IN THE HEATSPIRITS OF THE DEAD OF THE NIGHT# Corneff -3/orti/* 1645 E.55»h STREETSENTRY * *INSURANCE I “SSXXff' tRenaissance pfayersOryanizationaf IfWeetinyOk ursday, Wovemker 6, 8 PW56 15 Xlniuersity DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.363-7644Ml Weicome:University of Chicago Students:LOOK BOTH r.WAVS AND £(OP ™YOU'LL FINDUNITEDToad Hall Campus StoreYour Center for Stereo Excellence!JBL L75 MINUET SPEAKERSYSTEMPerfect in small rooms. In¬credible “big sound." Gen¬uine hardwood veneers andhand-crafted wood grill-work, add a luxurioustouch. Oiled walnut on allfour sides. SANSUI 350AM/FM Multiplex StereoTuner Amplifier. Large re¬ceiver performance in themedium power field. Allsilicon solid state. Thefinest stereo performerunder 50 watts. SONY 255Stereo Tape DeckRecorder. SolidState stereo andmonophonic tape re¬cording and play¬back to your stereomusic system. ELPA PE-2020Automatic Turntable. World'sonly turntable that tracks rec¬ords at the prescribed 15” stylusvertical tracking angle...whetherin single or multiple play. Mini¬mum distortion, maximum fidel¬ity, rugged reliability.Convenient Terms AvailableWe acceptMidwest Bank CardsOTHERSTORES INCHICA60Lincoln Village Shopping Ctr.6181 N. Lincoln Ave.Phone 478-7505 Aweefat.A/w/tetim ivuawesi oamcUNITED Audi* CENTERSToad Hall Campus StoreNILESGolf Mill Shopping CenterGolf & Milwaukee Ave.Phone 827-6104 WILMETTE1515 Sheridan RoadPhone 256-4800 SERVICECENTER4409 W.Oakton St.,Skokie, III.Phone676-2222 when the heads tf all nations meetAlJCE^ RESTAURANT,.,ARL0 GUTHRIE, COLOR bv Deluxe Unttad ArtistsSTARTSIWEDNESDAY OPEN AOOM>.MUOMGMT SHOW22ND CENTURY PRESENTSNOVEMBER 21 • 8:30 P.M. • AUDITORIUMWE BANDTicket Prices: $6.50. $5.50, $4.50. $3.50$#ecial attention given te mail orders at 22nd Century. 70 ...Hubbard, Chicago, Illinois bOC 10. Enclose a so If-addressedstamped envelope.Tickets now available at Ticket Central. Montgomery Wards.Marshall Fields and other Ticketron Outlets.LISTEN TO WCFl FOR LATEST 22NO CENTURY CONCERT INFOR¬MATION Checker TaxiHASIMMEDIATE OPENINGS• EXCELLENT EARNINGS•WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS PER WEEK FROM 2to 6 DAYS• DAYS or NIGHTS■Wu* doss to horns or schoolMALE or FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 W WASHINGTON8:00 AM to 4:30 PM: DAILY8:00 AM to 11:00 AM: SAT.CALL 421-1314TtoIMvereityef ChkafaROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPu59th Street ondWoodlownAve.IT AfTBMOON,If, MlTHE FANTASTICKSCLOISTER CLUB NOVEMBER 6,7 AND 8thAT 8:00 PM and 9th AT 7:30 PM TICKETSAT REYNOLDS CLUB $2.00, $1.50 STUDENTS RICHARD VnSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTKMcxiFiuaaumauuWith 50 members ofTKOKAttSYWNMYOfiQlMcmMsiohn'tfElifatjTICKETS:U.C. foe. - Staff $3.00Gen. Adm. $3.50Students $2.50Reserved $4.50ON SALE AT Ticket Central, Ma¬rina City at 300 N. Stale StreetU|ayJ jJI AAjue^ell Al^^ono an PRonnoR^nHU 009 Nw*emery Ward stores: Cooley sComer 1311 Harper ©.; Rey¬nolds dub Desk.Black Colony PresentsSidney PoitierinSomething of ValueThe Mau-Mau RebellionThursday, November 6, 8 PM Cobb Hall $1BOOK CENTER5211 S. HarperFriday, Nov. 7, 5 to 8 PMTo FINGERPRINT first editions ofREVOLUTION for the hell of it!and (a new book ) WOODSTOCKNATIONfor the benefit ofthe CONSPIRACYABBIE HOFFMANFINGERPRINTING PARTYNon-Profit Org.U.S. POST ACEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931Page 8/The Chicago Maroon/November 4, 1969