THE MAROONVolume 78, Number 25 The University of Chicago Friday, December 5, 1969Special News Supplement Editorial10th Week IssuesWhat do you know about Richard Flacks? Quite a bit, perhaps,but you may not be very well informed about how and why heleft the University. Somehow, you never quite got a chance to seethat news. Although the University had at least a third of a yearto decide on whether or not to grant Flacks reappointment, the de¬cision not to grant him tenure — an unpopular one with students— was not announced until the day after the last Maroon of lastyear was printed.What do you know about Marlene Dixon? Quite a bit theretoo, and of course you know all about the decision not to granther tenure either. But did you also know that the decision wasmade at the end of last autumn quarter — too late to appear inthe last Maroon of the quarter? By the time we could report itin the winter, the decision was finalized by the administration —before students had a chance to learn of it.And now this quarter, what about Len Radinsky and JudithLong Laws? What about the antics going on under the label of“disciplinary hearings?” What about the three students beingdisciplined for a “disruption” no one seems to have heard of —alleged heckling a University professor?We all have heard the warning and should take it seriously:“Paranoia runs deep; into your life it will creep.” Maybe thereisn’t a conspiracy to keep students from learning about controver¬sial news while it’s hot, but we on the Maroon don’t like to thinkthat something is being railroaded past students.So, because of the unusual amount of controversial and im¬portant news that has happened after our last regularly scheduled* news issue of the quarter — last Tuesday’s — we are printingContinued on News Page FourI The Discipline TrialI See Story, News Page One 10th Week Feature IssueHyde Park IsA State of MindSee Story, Feature Page ThreeLiving In Hyde ParkBy Con HitchcockHyde Park gives the student a widechoice of decor, ranging from modern cin¬der block to ancient peeling plaster. Stu¬dents choose among dormitories, frater¬nities. and apartments, often reluctantly,never quite satisfied, but seldom unable tobear what they wind up with. Most havesifted through the alternatives and have de¬cided to make the best of things for theseveral years they will be at the Univer¬sity.Less is less j"Our living conditions are less' thanideal." remarked one apartment dwellerWe’re not overjoyed about our 'life style',but we can't complain too much. We'veconsidered what else we could live in andthink we’ve got the best we could. 'Such is the mood of most students: theyaccept the way they must live here, andwhile they try to improve their surround¬ings as best they can. there is still a feelingthat living here is a necessary evil of at¬tending the University, but not one whichdepresses or alienates them to a greatextent.Many problems and considerations enterinto a decision of what kind of'living one'wants, and'many more crop up once peoplehave made ii'decision and carried it out.Perhaps the biggest problem is loneli¬ness.’and this is true particularly in apart¬ments "There are four of us in one apart¬ment." said one College student, "and mostof the day. there's only one or two of usaround Besides, we’re isolated physicalhand sometimes 1 wish I were back in Wind¬ward Court because there,you at lea/t hadsomeone to talk to I didn't feel this waywhile I was >1111 -there but 1 appreciate,having people around Fraternity residents feel little of this iso¬lation: one member defined his frat as a"place where those few students who wanta more communial. a more group-orientedplace to live in can have it " Fraternitiesstill retain some of their traditional "frat-ishness." as one member put it. and theycarry on with some of the traditional no¬tions about the social purpose of a Univer¬sity: parties. mainly, as opposed to the lifeof the mindMany students are' hesitant to move outof dormitories or fraternities into apart¬ments because of the responsibility and in¬conveniences it entails, but many decidethey can no longer take dorm life and mustflee to something, anything that seems bet¬ter. Most of the. problems center about find¬ing an apartment, ta prime deterrent!,proximity to campus, the food and the se¬curity measures.“Sure we’ll rent to them"Once the decision has been made to getan apartment, the bhttle has just begun.Many realtors are squeamish about rentingto students, particularly undergraduatemen. because they feel students are gener¬ally bad tenants.• A representative of McKey and PoagUesummed it up when he proudly declared."If we get some clean-cut looking fellows,sure we’ll rent to them." He added thatstudent occupants can cause trouble, par¬ticularly in the area of housekeeping An¬other realtor said, that they were "not real¬ly happy about it.** but they would lease tostudents.An agent of I Uevensteih -sympathizedwith students, commenting that there hasalwavs been a constant -irritation betweenlandlord and tenant." He credited studentsContinued on Feature Page FiverThe OutIn contrast with the often stifling atmos¬phere of Hyde Park, the 55th Street pointoffers a beautiful and close escape to mi¬rages of blue waves and sandy beaches.Away from the hub-bub of the hectic greycity, you can find solitude and contentmentin the cold, ragged rocks.The point lures Chicago students fromtheir studies from dawn to dusk. Earlymorning excursions, early enough to makeeven Lakeshore Drive deserted, find LakeMichigan reflections of pink and orangesunrises. Supper picnics on the beach areaccompanied by bongos hnd bachnalianfeasts. Lonely midnight walks discover afew moon-gazers and some optimistic fish¬ermen. And, sometimes, when you arehicky, you can find the whole point to your¬self.Hyde Park’s cherished retreat to na¬ture” acquires a new character for everyseason.Summertime brings out laughing chil- d r e n , harried businessmen and con¬templative students. It means skinny-dip-ping in Lake Michigan and fishing off therocks Summertime is the celebration offreedom and the point is at the center ofthe festivities.Bleak November brings desertion.Chicago’s blustering winters freeze thepoint for several months. Solid ice inhibitsmany, but the few courageous ones find thewindy trek to the lake worth the possiblefrostbitten ear. A lonely and deserted pointon a grey day can inspire strange and fas¬cinating emotions; a surprisingly pleasantchange from Harper stacks.The spring thaw” brings flocks of stu¬dents, children, and Hyde Park residents tobask in the warm sun and wade in the chil¬ly lake. Confronting a wicked storm at 4am provides challenge and beauty. Diggingholes in the sand at 4 pm offers relaxationand rest.Point: Seasons In; SeasonsJESSELSON’S752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186 -1340 E. 53rdSHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle rooms from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T.. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore Drive EASY RIDINGTRAVEL EUROPE IY CYCLEAIR CYCLE fli*» you to London to pick upyour B.S.A., Triumph or other fin* bik* atlowest cost.bnuronc* RegistrationAccessories Spar* portsService Air freight to U.S.All arranged before you leave for London.For information, writ* or call:am oralSuita 1-A30 West 90th StreetNow Yerfc, N.Y. 10034(213) 799-9313i5 Membership fee refunded on departurej PIZZA jPLATTER;| Pizza, Fried Chicken .I Italian Foods ^I Compare the Price! II l11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|1^ WE DELIVER I‘AlhambraFashions to make youfeel as beautiful as you ’lllook. Finely tailoredoriginals of domesticand imported fabrics.Mod, Edwardian,conventional andcasual styles plusdressv things from$12.99 to $100.00 inmost sizes. Stop inand browse awhile- Youare welcome'Hours:Mon.—Wed.10.00 to 7:30Thurs.—Sat.10:00 to 9:301 453 East Hyde Park2/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969 POTTERY • BATIK • WEAVINGmany peices are suitable as holiday giftswith most prices between $5 & $50.HARPER GALLERY. 5210 HARPER COURT. TUES. thru SAT. 11-6ADVERtlSERSiREADEIHEY YOU OUT THERThis is the last issue of the fall quarter. Ournext issue will be on January 6, 1970.There will be somebody in the office for atleast 3 or 4 business days preceding pub¬lication to handle classified ads, displayads, complaints, subscriptions, and generalbitching and moaning.5 Hour ServiceJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSFurs Cleaned and Glazed — Insured StorageShirts — Laundry — Bachelor Bundles1363 EAST 53rd STREET 752-69337:30 AM to 7:00 PM10% Student Discount - CLEANING & LAUNDRYEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372 THE ISRAEL SHOPIMPORTSfor your gift needs1541 EAST HYDE PARK BLVD.955-0177'Appropriately Unique' ’\II5*iIIIi*I.• • • • •Hyde Park Is A State Of MindBy Wendy Glockner“Hyde Park? The physical environmentis stultifying. The social environment isregrettably unstructured. The spiritual en¬vironment isn’t. Maybe there is a machinesomewhere near Kenwood and 57th broad¬casting waves of fear and depression. Ithink I saw someone evoke a smile onceand his face fell off.”Student reaction to Hyde Park is in¬tensely negative, a Maroon survey pollshows.Why?Is the problem inherent in the commu¬nity. or is it in the nature of the students?What prompts a student to declare that“Hyde Park is an immiscible mixture of adeteriorating neighborhood and a pseudo-intellectual ‘community of scholars’ (yuk,yuk). It is full or paranoids and plasticfreaks involved in infantile, surrealistic po¬litical gestures, waiting for the revolution.”Is Hyde Park really “the world’s largestcollection of sanctioned mentally-illpeople?”One optimistic second year studentvehemently states that it is not. “HydePark is not the point, pollution, paranoia atall,” she declared in her Maroon poll re¬sponse. “It is community attitude, partici¬pation, activities at the University, inde¬pendent politics and generally aware andinteresting people!”“Bastion of liberals”Indeed, as the same student went on tosay, “many things are going on in thisneighborhood — from play production topolitical campaigns . .. there is no lack ofopportunity to meet people.”No one can deny that Hyde Park offersmany opportunities for community partici¬pation. While the community might not be“the most organized in the country” as oneprofessor hypothesized, it can’t be far be¬hind, Hyde Park is an outstanding exampleof citizen participation politics. Indeed, itmust be if it wants to live up to its imageas “a bastion of liberals.” (The quote wasoffered by a College graduate, now a gradstudent at Northwestern.)Specifically, what makes Hyde Park “thestrange mixture of artsy-craftsy, in¬tellectual, dropout, and working middleclass types which has evolved into one ofthe only stable integrated neighborhoods inthe nation?” What does the community of¬fer?Probably the best example of “commu¬nity organization” is the Hyde Park — Ken¬wood Community Conference (HPKCC).Presently the Conference concentrates onair pollution workshops, tenant unions,schools, womens’ rights, and physical plan¬ning. Over 400 residents are members oftenant unions, and about 200 participate in school improvement. Air pollution work¬shops now study the technical, legal andmedical problems that have made HydePark the “dirtiest community in the city.”The Conference offers all residents in HydePark the opportunity to try to solve theproblems which the community face. Whenpeople use the opportunities, the HPKCCgoes a long way in preventing the wide¬spread citizen alienation which the usuallack of political efficacy in this city alleged¬ly causes.A CO-Operative communityFurther encouraging community organi¬zation is the Co-op super market, which of¬fers residents the chance to pursue an ac¬tive role in Hyde Park life. A “cooperativebaby sitting pool” enables residents to ex¬change baby-sitting jobs with each other.Semi-annual dances provide still more op¬portunities to meet other people and par¬ticipate in the community. Also, a surveymight prove that more Hyde Parkers wereinvolved in the Con-Con campaigns this fallthan were residents of other communities.For those quiet, more introverted resi¬dents who don’t live up to the widespreadimage (“A Hyde Parker is supposed to beliberal, to take an active part in citizen andsometimes administrative politics”), thecommunity offers two parks, one beach,one lake, one midway, and about seventy-three empty lots where they can con¬template the essence of being. Or, as onehistory student snarled, “Where one cancontemplate what Chinese restaurant willnot be built in what empty lot.”Of course, not all students are that cynic¬al. One student wrote that the salient fea¬tures of Hyde Park are “the great trees,the rewards of green grass, the groovy catsand dogs, and the pure space time contin¬uum which currently exists.” On warmspring days, more students are usuallyfound at the point than in Harper library.Football in the fall, skating in the winter,and baseball in the spring appear to be fa¬vorite Sunday afternoon activities on theMidway.The least frequented areas of Hyde Parkappear to be the two parks which surroundit. “Washington Park is a lonely place”said one student. “Washington was prob¬ably a lonely man. If he was lonely then,with so few people around, shouldn’t we ex¬pect him to be even more lonely now?”Another student commented that “somany people are uptight about going tothe park, that whenever I go, the placeis completely empty.”One very crowded area, on the otherhand, seems to be Harper Court. “Talkingto people in the courtyard and eating icecream cones are favorite activities” de¬scribed one student to her out-of-town HI! When was the last time you smiled?guest.Thus the student who declared that“there is no lack of opportunity for meetingpeople” might be right. Her theory breaksdown however, when she states that “a stu¬dent becomes a common participant alongwith teachers and business people.”The facts show that most students don’tbecome participants in the activities of thecommunity.Why not?Set-up Put Down“I rather think that the loneliness ofHyde Park for many students is due to thenature of student life,” said one student.“From what I have seen, there are manyorganizations and groups and ways ofmeeting people, things that the new resi¬dent of Hyde Park can utilize. Many ofthese are connected with the University,but not all. But the kinds of things thatwould attract the established liberal HydePark resident would not attract the tran¬sient, not exceptionally well-integrated stu¬dent. The student’s life is more or less tiedup to the University, and the Universityset-up not set up to dispel loneliness?”Can the University “dispel loneliness?”One student believes that it can. Loneli¬ ness, to him, is the result of “the almostunbelievably negligent attitude of the Uni¬versity towards anything but the in¬tellectual preparation of its students. I haveyet to encounter another major universitythat devotes so little time and money tocreate student services such as a studentunion, bookstore, etc.” Another studentsuggests “free movies and dances” to dis¬pel loneliness.The widespread complaint is that “Thestudent body has nothing to unify it. It hasno central meeting place. There are nomixers. Upperclassmen in many casesdon’t know where to meet girls on an infor¬mal basis. The social life is relatively back¬ward. No coffeehouses exist which are in¬expensive and close.”Nevertheless, many students frequent theBlue Gargoyle, Bandersnatch, etc.; in fact,one second year student said “the Band¬ersnatch, Gargoyle, clubs, and the coffeeshops are great places to laugh, rather thanwork.” Also, most students appear to go tocoffeehouses to see their friends, ratherthan to meet new people.“Fear reigns”Many students cite the neighborhood asContinued on Page 15David Travis Steve Aoki^ CAPE OR ALIENATE? During this quarter many students escaped from the worries of school, the draft and the war by participating in the kazoo marchingband seen here tearing the goalposts down. One of the possible alternatives for not seeking such an escape is pictured at right.December 5, 1969/Maroon Feature lssue/3THE FAMILY NEWSPAPERNAMEADDRESS ZIP.□ Rest-of-the-school-year subscription $6.00□ Yearbook Issue $1.00 Santa Claus can't get you an Ideal date for the holidays,but Cupid can1.!Cupid Computer ServiceIII No. Wabash AvenueChicago, Illinois 60602NameAddress . •City.. ..•••••••••.•••State.ZipcodeSend for our questionnaire and further informationwith no obligation.JESSELSON’ST^fr752-2870, 752-8190, 363-9186- 1340 E. 53rdVIETNAM1961 - Red, White, & BlueRESCUE This Symbol From You Know Who”BRING THE BOYS HOMEWear this pin for PEACE NOW!A PERFECT GIFT FOR MON V DAOThe Peace Pm is /ewe1 like, in colorful enamelat hall mail.ppa □ clutch beckO Stic, pm with fu.rd□ «- * 5" color «cili I It 50 3 SI 00 10 S3 00 ppd(tor window or bump»f)t PACt CMBLCM CO 1969 0 1%' button. 1/S 35 2 $60 3*$ 80 « SlOOppdW» w.dwt.m%W.pw ^ttlwdili Wllliw. wdm^SX wmw.10% of net proceeds to bona fide peace organisationsEnclosed please find check (money order) tor $NTS rn adds safetiesName NYC res add 6 sales la. LIBRARYHELP WANTEDStacks personnel neededpart time. Telephone955-4545.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage- Grove Avenue! PIZZA IMATTER!Pina, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsI Compare the Price! lThe Chicago Maroon can add a touch of class to every family’s coffee table,rest of year Xmas Special Subscription $6.00IdeasFOR YOUR CHILDREN S EDUCATIONLet’s talk about assuring cashfor a University Education foryour Children—whateverhappens to you! A Sun LifePolicy will guarantee theneeded money for your child’seducation. Why not call metoday?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North laSalie St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470 Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE OF CANADA20 TYPISTS9 SECRETARIES6 RECEPTIONISTS6 ORDER FILLERS4 MESSENGERS(SI.75 TO S3.75 per hr.Work your own hours, holidays and SummerVacations. Call immediately for interview andassignment. Earn that extra money NOW, and beassured of a position this summer.Call Mr. Collins236-0044Lincoln Hall Co.77 So. Wacker DriveAmerica’s Finest Temporary Service AddressCity, State, ZipPace emblem company iw a— cm sum. v. in ■ » imii 11460 E. 53rd 643-2800|^ WE DELIVER iGive a membership in a British clubfor Christmas.(»iw a I 2-rnonlli uift m<*ntl»rr»)ii|> in tli«‘Itrili'h Mapa/inr-of-lln-Month ( lultWhat an exclusive idea!When you enrol your friends inthe British Magazine-of-the-MonthClub, you will he introducing them tofascinating people. To new places.Indeed, to all of Britain.For, this is not just a magazinesubscription you arc giving. It is anexperience—rich in its variety, exciting in itsnovelty. Each month, yoyr friends will receive adifferent British magazine—direct from London—withfascinating glimpses of England’s life and culture, itscountryside and society and history.No single magazine, of course, can capture allof Britain. That’s why the multi-magazine plan ofBritish Magazine-of-the-Month is already sopopular with thousands of Americans—those whowish to re-live the golden moments of their ownvisits to England, and others who still lookforward to viewing its wonders for the first time.The clatter of Soho and the quiet of Scottishmoors. Old Vic and Savile Row. The wit ofParliament aifd the Mod madness of Liverpool.They will all he there—to he seen and savoured—in the pages of Britain’s greatest magazines.And to herald your ingenious thoughtfulness,we shall send an unusual gift card*hearing afull-colour portrait of H.M. Queen Elizabeth II.Also, if you post your order straightaway, we will hepleased to send the Illustrated London News’lavish $1.25 Christmas number as an extra, freebonus to arrive during the Holiday Season. FIELD History today%—UJ0jLncounter.‘*5S " COUNTRY LIFE(KOGMPHIGAL-tvIf. Colourful pi.n.l pro.,ml the mNONASEPTEMBER K«r JU.Y Rural lintand colourful peophare shown in a rielpanorama. Al'Cl’SI Kmtl.mil’-nmst rrapcclcl p"mwm r\mchCHRISTMAS Cll-T BONUSThe handsome 1969 Christmas edition ofthe world-famous Illustrated London Neirswill portray the traditions of Christmas inluxurious colour illustrations andfascinating stories.This superb edition ordinarily retuils for$ 1.25. To Club members, however, if isgiven free with each new Club subscription. trends with candor.u 39.95| (or all lliese gift feature'| I 12 issues of Britain's| outstanding magazines| -one each month| 2. Free bonus copy of| the lllustraled l.undon| A Vies' magnificent $1.25 OCTOUEK I hurt-nof distinct ive horn,decorating ideas, almarked by imperrahie British taste. NO\EMBEKEnglish tradition:brilliant and enter-Christmas issue.| V Handsome gift an| noiincenii'iit card,| signed as you direct.| 4. Special discount rates| for Club memltrrs on■ all new subscriptions to* any of the 12 ClulI ————————————————————————“"“IT.» BRITISH MAGAZINE-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB |P. O. Box 2975 Clinton. Iowa 52732□ Please enter a one-year membership in the British Magazine »>l the-Month |Cliilt. and semi a Creeling Card annmim ing my gift In: 'NAddress l P»"»)Cilv State % !Gift tur<] to read from: IMy Name 1Address 1City State iZip' |FOR ADDITION AL C.IET Sl'RSCIIIPTWINS ATTACH N AMt* AND ADDRESSES ON SEP NR HE S,IH T |CJ Check here if you wish to enter a suhst riptioh for yourself (Includes Gift Bonus> |□ I ENCLOSE MY REMITTANCE OK S —FOR SI BSGRI.ITIONS *□ 1111.1.M,l*tkk n-^ni iiHsinjl!Publisher reserves the right to alter selections.4/Maroon Future' fskue/December 5, 1969Continued from Page Onewith showing improved attitudes now,though. “I think they’re much more understanding. Before kids used to throw beercans out the window.”And every spring, when students descendon realtors and on graduating students intheir quest for apartment, they are con¬tinually faced with a dwindling supply,caused by such things as urban renewal,influx of middle class families into HydePark, and transformation of buildings intoexpensive condominiums.These difficulties, contrasted with theease of getting a dormitory or fraternityroom, deter many people, although manydormitory residents say they plan to orwould have gotten an apartment had theybeen able.Apartment dwellers, despite problems ofliving in an apartment, prefer them to dor¬mitories, for reasons discussed previously;residents claim that they have more priva¬cy, more quiet (‘‘You don’t have peoplecoming and going and still running aroundat 5 am,” one resident sighed), no mealcontract, less expenses, no parietal hoursor other University regulations, such as re¬gards drug use, and a lack of the general‘‘lethargic dullness” of the dorms. Apart¬ment living also provides an opportunityfor co-educational living not possible indorms. Thus people who live in apartmentsare those who despite the simplicity ofdorm life, would rather have responsi¬bilities, the chance to live independentlyand in conditions more to their liking.Salvation army draftApartments flourish in Hyde Park from50th Street to 61st Street, but finding one toGETTING OFF CAMPUS?GET WAY OFF. FLYAMERICAN AIRLINES(COAST TO COAST)FOR ESCAPE PLANS, CONTACTJIM SACK 684-6667A.A. CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE“Christmas is for giving”Select a fine print for thatspecial giftExtensive Collection - Custom framingReasonably PricedW aller Gallery9:30 - 6, Mon. to Sat Sunday by appointment53rd & Blackstone 363-7446suit the needs of a group of people is at besttaxing. Many apartments have rapidly ris¬ing rents and are of mediocre quality. It isdifficult to get furniture since the Catholicsalvage closed. One’s best bets are the sal¬vation army and used furniture and carpetstores. The street vendors on MaxwellStr< it also will offer an occasional goodbargain.Insects abound in Hyde Park apartments,and although students are understandablynot pleased with this, nonetheless they getused to going to bed with a can of Raid attheir side. Mice are no problem, perhapsbecause a good deal of apartment dwellershave cats. (One tenant, upon cleaning hisapartment, discovered five mouse skele¬tons, victims of his cat.Apartment residents have chronic prob¬lems with thefts, and more than one apart¬ment has seen typewriters, cameras, andrecord players disappear. Some considerthis as inevitable so that they rarely reportit to the police.Up against the mattressMany students have armed themselveswith elaborate kinds of locks, burglaralarms and burglar screens. One personkeeps a rifle cocked in his apartment.Occasionally these mechanisms work.Several weeks ago a burglar was appre¬hended while trying to climb in a first floorapartment window when the homemadeburglar alarm went off, to the apparentsurprise of the inhabitants who were in bedtogether at the time.There are a few other alternatives toapartment living for those who cannotstand dorms or frats. One is to live inContinued on Page SevenSteve AokiDORMS VS APARTMENTS: Ancient apartments with few conveniencies are therule in Hyde Park, but a 50 year old stove and a 2 cubic foot freezer are tolerablecompared to the sterile cinder-blocks of Pierce Towers.DOLLAR OFF ON ANY ALBUMDec. 8-9-10 onlyWith This Coupon$3.79 to $2.704.59 to 3.595.34 to 4.34December 5, 1969/Maroon Feature Issue/5You'll never get anywhere without it.Nothing helps a young engineer'scareer like being given a challenge.Which is another way of saying a chanceto fail now and then. To make his ownmistakes.At Western Electric we give our newlyrecruited engineers responsibility almostimmediately. They make their own de¬cisions. Learn from their own errors.Don't get us wrong. We keep our demands reasonable enough so that ourrecruits can make their decisions at theirown pace. But our thinking is, a manfeels awfully good about even a smalldecision when it's his.If you're the type who'd like the chanceto make your own moves, see our recruiteror write College Relations, 222 Broad¬way, New York, N. Y. 10038.A lot of hard work never hurt anyone.Western ElectricManufacturing and Supply Unit of the Bell SystemAn Equal Opportunity EmployerWANT A JOBWINTERQUARTER?There are a few openingsfor choice sales territorieson the ad sales staff ofthis fabulous universitynewspaper. You don'tneed a car or experience.You can work over va¬cation, if you like. Youcan make lots of money,if you like. You can beblack, white, yellow,purple, female, male, or?if you like. In fact, wehave too damn manyWASP males right now.Men feel funny selling adsto dress shops. Chau¬vinists? Hung-up? Whoknows? But the BusinessManager isn't a chau¬vinist (well, not too muchof a one). Anybody canhave any account as longas advertising is sold. Ab¬solutely no discrimination.See Emmet Gonder orJoel Pondelik in the Busi¬ness Office. Astrology and YouYour horoscope reveals the pattern of your life and psy¬chological development. Carl Jung studied thousands of hor¬oscopes. He never treated a patient without consulting thepatient’s horoscope.Proper interpretation of the horoscope requires training anddeveloped judgment — as does the diagnosis of a physician.Mrs. Mitchell is a leading authority in the movement of newastrology. Her approach is keenly analytical, yet philosophical.Lecturer, teacher and magazine columnist, she has been con¬sulted by thousands in all walks of life.Consultations: Call 723-1365Classes: “Mysticism and Meditation”Dec. 11, 1969 - 8:00 p.m. - No Charge“Introduction to Astrology”Dec. 12, 1969 - 8:00 p.m. - 3.00Far Information Call:J. M. Mitchell723-1365 We havenew Headsfor everybody.This year H-ad hasall new skis for ev¬erybody. And we'vegot all the newHeads. From the hotnew fiberglass rac¬ing skis withJean-ClaudeKilly's name1on them right^down to thenew JR60 forthe kids.SKI RENTALMS,man JSKI SHOP104 North Marion StreetEU 6-5100 Oak Park, Illinois COLD CITY INN**** MaroonNew Hours:lunch 11:30 AM - 2:30 PMdinner 2:30 PM - 9:30 PM"A Gold Mine of Good Food"Student Discount:10% for table service5% for take homeHyde Park's Best Cantonese Food5228 Harper 493-2559Eat more for less.(Try our convenient take-out orders.)Attention - Men Under 25Save $$ On Auto Insurance.$23,0001.1. and P.D. SI ,000 Medical Payand Uninsured Motorists ProtectionSingle MaleAg*21-25-MarriedMaleAga 21-25- J256“J142“ Par YaarParYoar Jim Crane238-0971SENTRY. TlINSURANCEWITH GOOD STUDENT &YOUNG DRIVER DISCOUNT9ORDONSRESTAUR ANTscienceengineeringMale and Femalerecent graduatesB. S. M,600-S11,500ChemistryChemical EngineersBiological SciencesMechanical EngineersIndustrial EngineersElectrical EngineersPhysicsCivil EngineersMathM.S. IN ALLABOVE DISCIPLINESS12,000-513,500M. B. A. $12,000-513,500PH. D.'s SCIENCEOR ENGINEERING514,000-516,000Our clients pay all fees, offerdraft exemptions. For a marketsurvey of positions for whichyou qualify, call W. L. Organ,427-0795Technical DivisionC.I.P., Inc.332 S. Michigan businessand artsMali- and l-Vinali-recent graduatesB. A. OR B. S.S9,000-S11,000AccountingFinanceMarketingEngli shHistoryPsychologyChemistryM. A. - M. S. - M. B. A.511,000-514,000MarketingAccountingFinanceStatisticsEconomicsPersonnelOperations researchPsychologyManagementMathPH.D’s ANY OF ABOVE$13,000-516,000All of the above salaryquotations are withoutconsideration of experience.For further information call:Manager-College Recruiting341-1190C.I.P., Inc.332 S. MichiganOur clients paygpll fees-offerdraft exemptions. We also havesome summer positionsavailable.6/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969Or Do They???riiiARealtors Don't Bite.Continued from Page Fiverooms of a house in Kenwood, which can bedone by finding an owner who will let stu¬dents board there, often a matter of luck.Another is to find enough people (like eightor so) and rent a house in Hyde Park, al¬though luck is a big factor here too. Theadvantages are primarily cheaper rent perperson, more room and a backyard. Thedisadvantages are that there are fewaround. But house residents feel these areonly one step above apartment living.Other details which go into the decision ofwhere to live include price, food, and com¬patibility with fellow residents. It is strangethat a good number of students feel thetype of accomodations they have, no matterwhat they are, are the cheapest they couldfind.Meals are a major gripe in dormitories,but less so in apartments and frats. Manyof the dorms have required meal contractswhereby a person pays for two or threemeals (depending on the dorm) regardlessof whether he eats them or not. BarbSpringer, 72, commented, “Dorm life woudn’t be so bad a place if we didn’t havemeal contracts.” Yet many enjoy havingtheir meals prepared for them. Keith Join¬er, 70, remarked, “I like the convenienceof having my meals prepared for me andhaving my bed made once a week by themaid service.” Students can, however, cooktheir own food' in a number of dorms, ifthey like neither meal contracts or apart¬ments. In Frats many only serve dinner,which is the one time in the day duringwhich residents can get together. The mealis generally a bit hurried, but very family¬like.The ability to cook, or have a roommatewho can, is a major prerequisite in decid¬ing to move to an apartment. Those who domove complain that the prices are general¬ly high and the food of mediocre quality.There is no pattern of eating together orseparately, as it depends on time of arrivalhome or the perennial hassles betweenroommates.Getting along with those living near youis a problem, no matter what your livingContinued on Page 19mSteve Aok'DORM VS. APARTMENTS: The thought of venturing into a realtor's office drive many students to make the best of what they already have. Steve AokiChristmas gifts— "Things - Older - Than - You -Are" from turn - a - the - century jewelry to grandold chandeliers - From old brass door knobs at$1.50 to hanging chandeliers of $45.00.$2.00 and under —Christmas gifts— Candles allshapes and sizes - scented and scentless. Earrings -rings - kitchen things - like German radish curlers;pickle forks and Italian spice boxes - plastic pillows- porcelain mugs ...Christmasgiftsfor every budgetcooiey’s corner inc.,5211 s. harper court(312) 363 4477Christmas gifts— $6.00 and under - Haremjewelry for hand and foot - fondue forks - piperacks - candles and candles ...$15.00 —Christmas gifts— and under plasticbubble chairs - topazed dinnerware - peoplebottles and of course - lovely glow candles -over $20.00 —Christmas gifts— Boda Chan¬deliers - empress chair - an old brass bed - astanding mirrorOpen Every Day - and Evenings Sometimes CINEMA THEATRECHICAGO at MICHIGAN Phone. 944-5666OF BEAUTY, SEX, AND LOVE:" 'More' probably contains more footage ofnaked bodies than any other film that has made itpast Plymouth Rock. It's strong stuff. A powerfulmovie about drugs. Mimsy Farmer as Estelle, is oneof the real baddies of all time, a totally amoralperson cavorts in the nude, lies, steals, makes loveto girls, and destroys every man who falls in lovewith her.”—The Sunday New York Times“A very beautiful, veryromantic movie.''—New York Times" *More' is tough, candidstuff, clearly among thegood ones.”—National ObserverX Adults 18 & overStudents $2.00 with I.D. Cardt*»ry day but Soturday STUDENTDIRECTORY50*STUDENT ACTIVITIESIDA NOYESThe Carpet BarnA divmow H Contend Carp*We have on enormous selectionof new and used woH-to-waHcarpetings, staircase runners,remnants and area rugs (a largeselection of genuine and Amer¬ican orientals). Antique furnituretoo.We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 4.122* W. Kin xie (at Racine)W4-IMC MS-2271********************** MAIL EARLY WITH: CHRISTMAS STAMPS:*******I;X-X!XvXyX-X*X-X-X‘X,I"X-!vX\vXvX*X-W'XvX-X\vXNicky's PizzaAnd Restaurant1208 East 53rd St.Fairfax 4-5340Pizzas, Sandwiches, Chicken, Ribs Freedelivery to UC frats, dorms 5 pm tillclosingOpen seven days a week - Hours 11 amto 2 am Sundays - 12 noon to 2 am X-X*XXS! *X * USE ZIP COOES ***** *********************** ** ** USE; CHRISTMAS SEALS ;„ GMCT/NGSttW ;- v WT'* FIGHT EMPHYSEMA. TUBERCULOSIS *J !> AIR POLLUTION ** \ •**********************Deadline for application for financial assistance for theacademic year 1970-71 is February 1.All students who wish to receive financial assistance must apply. Applications areavailable in the Office of Admissions anj Air, 5737 University. ,December 5, 1969/Maroon Feature lssue/7gr'1&F'r&F'^ATTENTION:Candidates for Teaching Positionsin Chicago Public SchoolsNATIONAL TEACHER EXAMINATIONSfor Elementary (K-8)and Selected High School AreasCHICAGO N.T.E. REGISTRATION DEADLINE DATE:Thursday, January 8, 1970, 4:30 p.m.Chicago Public Schools will use the scoresas part of their 1970 certificate examinations for:Kindergarten-Primary Grades 1-2-3(N.T.E.-Early Childhood Education)Intermediate and Upper Grades 3-8(N.T.E.-Education in the Elementary Schools)Art Grades 7-12(N T.E Art Education)High School English(N.T.E.-English Language and Literature) Homemaking Arts -Grades 7-12(N.T.E.-Home Economics Education'Industrial Arts-Grades 7-12(N.T.E.- Industrial Arts Education)High School Physical Education Men(N.T.E Men's Physical Education)High School Physical Education Women(N.T.E. Women's Physical Education)Hich School Mathematics (N.T.E.-Mathematics)All Candidates Must Take the Common Examinationand the Teaching Area Examination Relevant tothe Certificate SoughtApplicants for teaching positions in theChicago Public Schools should:1. Register with the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, NewJersey to take the common examination and the relevant teachingarea examination. Registration for N.T.E. closes January 8, 1970.2. Indicate on the N.T.E. form, line 10, that scores should be sub¬mitted to the Chicago Board of Examiners,Chicago Public Schools.3. File application for certification examination (form Ex-5) withthe Board of Examiners. The following credentials should accom¬pany the application (Ex-5), if not already on file: Official copy ofbirth certificate, official transcript of all college work attempted.The application and credentials must be filed by Thursday, Jan¬uary 8, 1970, 4:30 p.m.The National Teacher Examinations will beadministered Jan. 31,1970 on 400 college campuses.For additional information: Board of Examiners, Room 624CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601or the Office of Teacher Recruitment,Chicago Public Schools or Teacher Placement OfficePlease send me information about theNational Teacher Examinations for:□ Kindergarten-primary grades 1-2-3□ Intermediate and upper grades 3-8□ High school(subject area)AddressCityCollege __ Zip0Gc*. >a9HYDE PARK THEATRESTARTS FRIDAY, NOV. 28thEverything he touched turned to marriage.■Emanuel ( Wolf presentsan ALLIED ARTISTS FILMCfiude Bern’sColor by DE LUXEReleased by Allied ArtistsA SURPRISE FROM CLAUDE BERRI.THE MAKER OF 'THE TWO OF USComing Dec. 26 ALICE'S RESTAURANTADVENTUROUS8-MAN EXPEDITIONSfVumwd Hpgrinlfy for thi time bmt~nwimon. January, February, and MarchIdday enpadMcne to March for 16 tone ofgold and eihor in eh* Lo*e Qty of Toyopa andaehar hidden traoeurae in eoafod com andontitnl *i4Hqgn in mwotp mountains, untx*pioftd conyom, ond gom# rich dmfti ofSonora, Mexico.Coronado Expeditions,1255 S an dhurg jf-2911,Chicago, 3ft. 60610PHONE: 944-3613Cal today. BE PRACTICAL!BUYUTILITY CLOTHESComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, in¬sulated ski wear, hood¬ed" coats, long un¬derwear, corduroys,Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYDEPARTMENT STOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd St. CHRISTMASSHOPPING0Koga Gift Shop£ DISTINCTIVE GIFT ITEMSFROM THE ORIENTOpen Sundays I1462 E. 53rd St.MU4-6856 You don’t have to beWj)/4CKto drink Joe Louis milk.Just “hip”._ -Zr. CEILINGANDVISIBILITYUNLIMITEDAt Pratt & Whitney Aircraft "ceiling and visibility unlimited"is not just an expression. For example, the President of ourparent corporation joined P&WA only two years after receiv¬ing an engineering degree. The preceding President, nowChairman, never worked for any other company. The currentPresident of P&WA started in our engineering departmentas an experimental engineer and moved up to his presentposition. In fact, the majority of our senior officers all haveone thing in common — degrees in an engineering orscientific field.To insure CAVU*, we select our engineers and scientistscarefully. Motivate them well. Give them the equipment andfacilities only a leader can provide. Offer them company-paid,graduate education opportunities. Encourage them to pushinto fields that have not been explored before. Keep themreaching for a little bit more responsibility than they canmanage. Reward them well when they do manage it.Your degree can be a B.S., M S., or Ph D. in: MECHANICAL •AERONAUTICAL • ELECTRICAL • CHEMICAL • CIVIL •MARINE.* INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING • PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY • METALLURGY • MATERIALS SCIENCE • CERAMICS • MATHEMATICS • STATISTICS • COMPUTER SCIENCE* ENGINEERING SCIENCE • ENGINEERING MECHANICSConsult your college placement officer — or write MrWilliam L. Stoner, Engineering Department, Pratt & WhitneyAircraft, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108.CAVU* might also mean full utilization of your technical skillsthrough a wide range of challenging programs which include jetengines for the newest military and commercial aircraft, gasturbines for industrial and marine use, rocket engines for spaceprograms, fuel cells for space vehicles and terrestrial uses, andother advanced systems.Pratt & Whitney AircraftEAST HARTFORD AND MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUTWEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA u► AIRCIPDIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATIONAn Equal Opportunity Employer3/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969Hyde Park may as well be a state ofmind for one-third of the Chicago area, sev¬eral Maroon surveys have shown.In three small surveys conducted thismonth with Loop passersby, North Shorehomeowners, and New Trier West highschool students, almost 36 percent said theyknew nothing of the Hyde Park community.Those familiar with Hyde-Park often ad¬mired the intellectual vitality of the areabut worried about safety in flic neighbor¬hood.A telephone survey of Homeowners in theaffluent North Shore communities ofEvanston, Wilmette, Winnetka, Glencoe,and Lake Forest reflected that safety in thestreets is a major concern. Although morethan a quarter of the respondents said theyor some family member might considermoving to Hyde Park, almost all mentioned“the dangerous element” as the commu¬nity’s main disadvantage.Cocktails in the fortress“I’m terribly interested in the life there,”a Winnetka socialite said, “but I’m not sureI would want to live there until it seemssafer. I’ve been to cocktail parties in facul¬ty penthouses there, and I was terribly im¬pressed with how they lived in a fortifica¬tion.” For the present, her 13-room house ismore appealing, she said.A Winnetkan who attended high school inHyde Park and might consider movingback for its convenience to the University,downtown, and the lakefront, was held backin part by the public schools and high costof housing. Again, though, the “instabilityof the neighborhood” had discouraged him.Only one homeowner mentioned “hip¬pies” as a disadvantage to living in HydePark. “I don’t like them,” the Evanstonjournalist housewife said. “I turn off. I likeclean people.” Though her last visit toHyde Park was made more than threeyears ago, she added that she admired theacademic nature of the University.Old University alumns don’t necessarilykeep in touch with what’s up in the area.“As of now I’m not in a position of know¬ing.” a Glencoe alumnas said. He did notknow that he would not consider movingthere. Those without former ties to Hyde Parkwere less likely to venture opinions. “I’venever lived there, so I don’t know why I’dknow anything about it,” a Lake Forestman said.Talks with high school seniors at a NewTrier West “College Night” showed similarreactions in a younger generation of NorthShoreites. Those connected with the schoolby parents who were alums were at leastacquainted with the area: “very intellect¬ual, very liberal, very liberal arts — and Ilike Jackson Park” one senior boy said.But the student council president had ap¬plied to eastern schools.One girl who wanted to apply to the Uni¬versity had encountered parental resis¬tance. “The school is beautiful and I lovedit,” she said, “but my father is worriedthat I’ll get raped.”A third student who intends to major inurban studies summarized the history andsociology of Hyde Park before saying “Pma neat and orderly person, but Chicago’smessy. I like trees and grass, sun and air”— and he didn’t think Hyde Park could pro¬vide them.“It’s like Northwestern”Among the students who knew nothing ofHyde Park or the University (two-thirds ofthose talked to) was the girl who explained“It’s like Northwestern (in Evanston): it’sso close to home I don’t think about it.”Loop passersby offered yet other opinionson students, the University and the commu¬nity. Again, about half declined to commentbecause they didn’t know enough aboutHyde Park. But few of those asked refusedto talk at all.Some were obviously disturbed by stu¬dent dissent, as was the businessman whosaid “In any government people are goingto be dissatisfied, but students should ad¬here to American traditions.”A 75-year old man said “This isn’t areal revolution. Next year students will for¬get what happened this year and will befighting about something else. Studentshave time and money. They can go on trips ■ ■ ;'-;v <■:' -it - V'•.. ' - -V* ■: : ' m[/'m tsf *** - 2**5”which attracted outsiders. Perhaps it was the destruction of those clubsSecond City) which caused many to lose interest in the Hyde Park area.and have a good time.”One pedestrian was a former Universityof Illinois student who had lived in Inter¬national House. He recalled life there:“Freshmen at UC grow up fast. The atmos¬phere at the International House was adult,cold, inpersonal, and lonely.”“Pretty weird”A library guard thought Hyde Park was asophisticated though not especially uniquelower middle class community. A collegestudent’s only connection with Hyde Parkwas with a physics professor — “and hewas pretty weird.” Others were more sympathetic to HydePark lifestyles. A white-haired man said“Students are people. They’ve got a right tobe themselves. Hyde Park seems to be thekind of community where everyone can bewhat he wants, and that is what is impor¬tant.”A well dressed young businessman said“There is too much materialism in theworld and the lack of it in Hyde Parkbrings out an aestheticism that is badlyneeded. Students are following newthoughts and this is what must happen.”Hi Want a really cool job next quarter?f I *(Like, I mean, REALLY cool.) How would you like to deliver The Maroon in the winter time?I'm raising the wages of the deliverymen, effective winter quarter, since it is rather nastyoutdoor work during a blizzard. You must have no classes on Tuesday morning, andpreferably no classes on Tuesday afternoon as well.For a car, you'll need a full-sized Detroit model, or a VW Microbus, or an old hearse, orsome kind of large-type vehicle.Should work out to be about $20 plus, for 5 hours work.Husband-wife teams would work well, or any 2-person team. If you're a glutton forpunishment, do it all yourself, and pocket all that money.MUST BE DEPENDABLE!See Emmet Gonder or Joel Pondelik in the Business Office.APPLY NOW FORXMAS VACATION WORKIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 6-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. Art for the young collector(Gift certificates available $10 • 500)157 EAST ONTARIO STREET CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60611 PH 312 642 2900"GOING HOME FOR THE'CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYSCALI-374 8555 1■TiatR’iJII 1 1 J 1 if.SBEHsafflBSfiMIROUND TRIP TO: EXCURSIONFARE THRIFT OR ECONOMY IFARE |NEW YORK 8200 10200SAN FRANCISCO 17100 18400LOS ANGELES 17100 18400DENVER oo& 108“MIAMI — 154“SEATTLE 17100 214“NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICEHyde Park 1.3 .*By Audrey Shalinsky“Urban renewal” — the words conjure upvisions of rubble strewn slums, of dustystreets full of potholes and broken bricks.Nowadays, “urban renewal” around heremeans “Woodlawn.” There was a time,however, when urban renewal meant HydePark, meant shiny town houses with back¬yards and big dogs to make it seem not somuch like a city.For many students, urban renewal meansexploitation, racism, immorality, yet theylive in a community, attend a University,which probably wouldn’t be here today if itweren’t for urban renewal.Hyde Park in the ’50’s was at a criticalpoint, and the decision toward a major ur¬ban renewal program has cast its charac¬ter ever since. Much of the community’scharacter, however, goes back much far¬ther than 1950.Farming in old Hyde ParkIn the 1860’s Hyde Park was a villagewell outside the city limits of Chicago.There were some farms in the area, somecountry estates and a few resort hotels.Mary Todd Lincoln stayed at one of themfor a few months following the assassina¬tion of her husband. After the Great Fire in1871, many wealthy families who had losttheir homes in the blaze built huge man¬sions in Kenwood, the area north of HydePark bounded by 47th and 51st streets.Hyde Park proper is the section between51st and 60th. Its big building boom coin¬cided with the World’s Columbian Ex¬position of 1893. The Museum of Scienceand Industry housed the fine arts exhibitsof the fair. The fair’s carnival zone was theMidway Plaisance. Nearly a year beforethe fair the University of Chicago openedits doors.Until the 1920’s there were three pre¬dominant groups in the area: wealthy up-perclass conservatives, University person¬nel and faculty, and an art colony whosepresence caused Hyde Park to be consid¬ered Chicago’s Greenwich Village. Resi¬dents of the art colony included such per¬sonages as Carl Sandburg, Vachel Lindsay,Ben Hecht, James Farrell, Lorado Taft,Edgar Lee Masters, Theodore Dreiser and Sherwood Anderson.This community was the birthplace of“second city” social satire. Elaine May andMike Nichols got their start here and HughHefner allegedly dreamt up his Playboy en¬terprises while drinking coffee at the Stine¬way drugstore on 57th. The reform move¬ment led by Jane Addams and MaryMcDowell found a home in Hyde Park. Afiery cross was once set alight on the Mid¬way in front of the home of Clarence Dar-row.The area can be divided into several sub¬sections with characteristic populations andmodes of life in each. Kenwood is the mostsuburban yet it also had the most blackpeople jammed into decaying apartments.From 51st to 55th is a commercial and resi¬dential section called the village core.From 55th to the Midway is the Universitysection and east of the IC tracks is an areacalled “Indian Village” composed of manywidows and elderly Jews.Turning LeftIn the depression and through the waryears, Hyde Park began to lose some of itswealthier citizens who were replaced withlower-middle class people and white collarworkers. The buildings were beginning toshow their age. The loss of the wealthy con¬servatives gave Hyde Park to the Demo¬cratic party for the first time.Chicago had long held the bulk of itsblack population within a segregated areasouth of the Loop. This was enforced byrestrictive covenants and later when thesebecame unfashionable by realtors refusingto show homes in white areas. By the 1940’sthe black belt, was pushing into Hyde Park-Kenwood from the north and west. Block¬busting and illegal conversion came intouse. Landlords did not take care of theirproperty; the blacks fresh from worse con¬ditions did not and could stop the landlordswho were purposefully allowing deteriora¬tion.The trend toward deterioration wasthought to be irreversible but organized ac¬tion to halt blight was first taken in 1949 byan action group that became the HydePar k-Kenwood Community Conference(HPKCC). HPKCC was a liberal in-Meet ourgas eater.The Renault 16.It gets a measly 30 milesto the gallon compared to35 miles to a gallon theRenault 10 gets.Bu t the sacrifice is worth it.The Renault 16 has thefeel of a big car.With a four-wheel inde¬pendent suspension systemthat glides over bumps.Front wheel drive for bettertraction. Seats that have beencompared to the Rolls Royce.Besides, the Renault 16is a sedan that converts to astation wagon.We call it the Sedan-Wagon. And it costs only$2395 poe.2235 SO.MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL.TEL. 326-2550 ARHOOLIE LP 2001/2COUNTRY BLUES • CITY BLUESGOSPEL • JAZZ • CAJUN • FOLKA 2 LP Anthology—31 SongsHear: Big Mama Thornton, Lightning Hopkins,Clifton Chenier, Mance Lipscomb, BukkaWhite, Fred McDowell, Johnny Young, Big JoeWilliams, Lowell Fulson, Juke Boy Bonner,Jesse Fuller, J. E. Mainer, Nathan Abshire,Del McCoury, Rev. Overstreet, Kid Thomasand many more.Special: Only $5 post paid with a copy ofthis ad or 25C brings you our catalog of over100 Blues, Jazz, & Folk LPs, including newreleases by Earl Hooker, John Littlejohn,Sonny Simmons, etc.Or ask at your superior record shops!Blues LP of the month” (Melody Maker)5 stars ★★★★★ (Down Beat)"Arhoolie has offered us a delicious sliceof real American folk music with deservedemphasis on black blues—an excellent col¬lection.” (Jazz & Pop)BOX 9195BERKELEYRECORDS CA 94719 0 child flower quickin God’s hand yourprayer of peacewill bloom it will bloomSkewerawm'tr,oveThe Generation of Love: poem:by Mary Norbert Korte, photographs by Jess Villalva, introduction by editor Clayton C. Barbeau. $2.95 at all bookstoresThe Bruce Publishing CompanyAn Affiliate of Crowell Collier ancMacmillan, Inc. 850 3rd Avenue NewYork 1002235 MM. SLIDES WANTED!We pay well for color slides of Chicago demonstrations at1968 Convention. Our Prentice-Hall Co. produces educa¬tional filmstrips and will pay at least $20.00 per in¬dividual slide, adjusting payment for quantity. Rejectsreturned promptly. Suggest you send slides insured, returnreceipt requested. LINDA TOONI, WARREN SCHLOATPRODUCTIONS PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y. 1057010/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969 Steve AokiTHE FEDERAL BULLDOZER: The urban renewal which began in Hyde Park in 1955continues today.tegrationist group which had almost no rep¬resentation from the merchants, hotel keep¬ers, bankers or University administrators,the more conservative elements who werebasically anti-integrationist. HPKCC pri¬marily concentrated on the formation ofblock groups to tackle specific problems ofphysical maintenance. Their efforts couldnot combat the overall problem of deterio¬ration.Crime in the Streets The crime rate continued to rise in the1950’s until it reached nearly the highest inthe city. Whites continued to outmigrate,the black population rising from 6 percentin 1950 to 49 percent in 1960.The University of Chicago began to feelconcerned about the community deteriora¬tion. It felt that the substantial decrease ofthe undergraduate population was due toneighborhood deterioration and that facultywere leaving for other institutions.TICKETS $2 AT THE DOOROR AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESKREFRESHMENTS SERVEDAPARTMENTS AND TOWNHOUSES: Empty lots scattered through Hyde Park eventually become restaurants or Chinese laundries. But don't hold your breathwaiting for them.When Lawrence Kimpton replaced Rob¬ert Hutchins as Chancellor in 1951, threeinterrelated priorities gained supremacy:strengthening the College, maintaining thefaculty, and community improvement.There was some thought about moving theUniversity but as one faculty member putit, “There is not much of a market for asecondhand university.” Moreover the Uni¬versity had a $200 million investment inland and facilities.Covenants and the UniversityFrom 1947 to 1952 the administration in¬vested in the Hyde Park Planning Associ¬ation as the organization most likely to solve problems in a fashion favorable to theUniversity. The Planning Association fo¬cused on efforts to enforce zoning, promotebuilding code inspection, promote neighbor¬hood cleanup, control traffic and extend re¬strictive covenants. They gained supportfrom realtors and hotels east of the ICtracks. This use of restrictive covenantshad in part led to the formation of HPKOCin opposition to the covenants.In 1952 after a series of local crimes, 2,-000 people attended a mass meeting inMandel Hall on crime prevention. A Com¬mittee of Five with Kimpton as chairmanwas set up. This committee recommendedanfoA Gallery of Pots and PlantsLargest variety of exotic houseplants and one-of-a kind ce¬ramic planters in the Uni¬versity of Chicago area.Combine a specimen from the largest variety of exotichouse plants in the Chicago area with a one-of-a-kindceramic pot at potter's prices, or select one of our owncombinations for a uniquely beautiful gift.5210 S. Harper Ave. (in Harper Court) The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th St. and Woodlawn Ava.IfeMtaftByGeorge Frederick HandelRICHARD VIKSTRQMDIRECTORTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 2? members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASylvia Stahlman, SopranoPhyllis Unosowo, ContraltoDonald Doig, TenorHenri Noel, BaritoneTWO PERFORMANCESFriday evening, December 5. at 8:00Sunday afternoon, December 7, at 3:30TICKETS: Reserved $4.50General Admission $3.50Students $2.50On Sale At: Ticket Central at MarinaCity, 300 N. State St.,and Marshall Field, Mont¬gomery Ward and Craw¬ford Stores. Woodworth'sBookstore. 1311 E. 57 thSt.; Cooley's Corner, 5211Harper Courtand Reynolds ClubChapel Box-Office opensone hour before performance. the formation of the South East ChicagoCommission (SECC) with a large piece ofits budget to be guaranteed by the Univer¬sity. Julian Levi was appointed executivedirector in the fall of 1952. SECC had fourobjectives: to ensure proper police protec¬tion and code regulation, to provide a prog-gram of action and an urban renewal plan,to provide residential stability among themiddle class and to gain support amongcity leadership for the program.The University’s chief failure was that itcould not maintain effective community re¬lations and thus could not be represented asa citizens’ organization. SECC activity was strongly supported by the Universitythrough extension of its real estate holdingsgiving rise to the charge of “rascist ex¬pansion.” The University commissioned thelargest real estate management firm inChicago, Baird and Warner, to manage thenew property. By 1955 the system had beenperfected to the point where applicants forhousing were being screened by SECC. Thisincluded control of black movement intoHyde Park.In 1954 the Marshall Field Foundationgave $100,000 to the University for planningpurposes. Jack Meltzer was appointed di-Continued on Page 17Make your reservations nowfor Christmas Parties.We can accomodate you andfrom 10 to 60 of your guestsTHE EAGLE- cocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933Deeembor 5, 1969/Maroon Future Issue/11Life Styles: Diverse And UnclassifiabkPOLITICS: Independent, anti-establishment politics predominate in the community. "Being a conservativein Hyde Park is a lonely position," one student says.RELIGION: McCall's Magazine cited this University as the "place where you willmost likely lose your religion." The prize-winning religion at registration time is"other." ENTERTAINMENT AND SHOPPING: Bustling 57th and 53rd Streets win 01the only place in Hyde Park where you can buy Spanish peanuts at 11 p<Harper Iheater coffeeREADING IN YOUR SPARE TIME: Playboy is fighting a close battle with the New York Times. Reader's Di¬gest just dropped out. • -12/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969r •»', - i ' T-T'-!".-.•> •**. V*»#* *«■**In Pictures Which Tell 1000 Wordssearching elsewhere for the things theydope is OK." SEX: The sexual revolution is now mixed up in the fight for women's liberation.knock the Buiko. It'she Buiko Gas Station on Cottage. But don'night.Bi EATING: Hyde Park is noted for its expensive restaurants, inaccessible to stu¬dents. Unless you like greasy pizza, of course ...December 5, 1969/Maroon Feature Issue/13eliminates 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 questionnaire.Phone: FR 2-0555 (24 hrs.)DATE-A-MATCH SYSTEMS b24 N. Wabash—Suite 822-IPChicago, III. 60602Please send me information aboutDate-A-Match and a free questionnaire.11 NAME111 AGE 11111 1! ADDRESS |! 11( CITY. STATE ZIP ■1Jimmy's and theUniversity RoomDRINK SCHUTZFIFTY-FIFTH & WOODLAWNJunior Yearin New YorkThree undergraduate colleges offer studentsfrom all parts of the country an opportunityto broaden their educational experienceby spending theirJunior Year in New YorkNew York University is an integral part ofthe exciting metropolitan, community ofNew York City—the business, cultural,artistic, and financial center of the nation.The city's extraordinary resources greatlyenrich both the academic program and theexperience of living at New York Universitywith the most cosmopolitan student body inthe world.This program is open to studentsrecommended by the deans of the collegesto which they will return for their degrees.Courses may be taken in theSchool of CommerceSchool of EducationWashington Square College of Artsand ScienceNew York University also sponsors:Junior Year in France (Paris)Junior Year in Spain (Madrid)Write for brochure to Director, Junior Yearin New YorkNEW YORK UNIVERSITYNew York, N.Y. 1000314/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969 Skiers!!GIGANTICSKI SALESove 25 to 50%and more.Big Selection — Big BrandsSkis — Boots — BindingsSweaters — Pants — JacketsSPECIAL COMPLETESKI OUTFITIncludes: skis,boots, polesand bindingsWe KENT SKIS • TAKE TRADES609 N. LaSalle 337-6151Ski Headquarters • Downtown Cklcafo—Smatk between Okio St. exit «nd OntarioSt. entrance to Dan Ryan-Kennedy X»wtyvFree Ski Ties To Students With This Ad! m enjoy our Mspecial student urate mQ C C at allQ times »■■ for college students ■■ presenting i.d. cardsat our box officeClarktoeel'e• different double featuredaily• open 7:30 a.m.— lateshow midnight• Sunday film guilde every wed. and fri. isladies day -all gals 75little gal lery for galsonly• Clark parking-1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m• write for your freemonthly program DiAyuer1PIRFORMANUS FRIDAY S ALL-NIGHT SHOWl UTUftDtT FOLLOWING LAST BtOUlAR (mumDm. 5 Dec*IN THE WAT i r THE GOOD, THEOf THE NIGHT i AD ATM UGLYDm. 12 Dec 13tVIM nilWNI -i n Peter Seder*NANG'EM HIGH HOVE YOUALICE B. TOMASDec 19 Dec 20Paul Newman Peter O'ToolWINNING NIGHT OF THE GENERALSDec 26 Dec 27UM)ER GROUND FILM Ronton PolonskiFESTIVAL II ROSEMARY’SJABYTWA put a price on your headthat even your parentsmight agree to pay.*By Inflight Motion Pictures Inc.on transcontinental non-stops.We’re out to get you home for theHolidays. Fast.Which is something that your parentswill probably enjoy too.Something else they’ll enjoy is our faresfor students. (Students, that is, who arebetween the ages of 12 and 21 and who haveTWA’s Youth Card.) On a standby basis,you’ll get 40% off regular coach fares.Which doesn’t mean you’ll be flyingsecond class oranything like that. You still get all the great food andTWA features like movies and stereomusic? But it won’t cost you like it doeseveryone else.And TWA flies to nearly all the majorcities in the U.S., plus we have a specialyouth fare to Hawaii.With all that going for you, there’sonly one excuse for not going home forthe holidays.Getting your haircut.mm :.M ■ K‘M %■ ft -■ *Hyde Park: Fantasies Or Cold Reality?Continued from Page Threethe cause of their loneliness. “I take nowalks at night,” said one student. “Fearreigns after dark.”The long trek from Drexel and 57th toHarper Court, and the fears and possibledangers implied, inhibit many studentsfrom venturing out of their apartments.Also, the famous cold, grey Chicago daysand windy, cloudy nights can even make anapartment with a noisy radiator and fallingplaster look inviting. “The only time I envy students at North¬western” said one student, is when I wantto go somewhere at night, and I have tothink twice before going.”The physical set-up of the University isalso conducive to loneliness. As one studentwrites, “It’s just very easy to retreat intoyour shell here — no one will bother you. Itreally is hard to meet people here. Peoplesit next to each other in class for ten weeksand never exchange more than threewords. And if you live in an apartment, it isvery easy not to see anyone.”David TravisORIENTATION PICNIC: During O-week students stare at Lake Michigan, someapprehensive of what awaits them. “Retreating into your shell” seems to bethe easiest road to take on this campus,and it seems to be the one most heavilytravelled. Without a student union, moredormitories, more mixers, students inevita¬bly have to make a determined effort tomeet people. There are opportunities how¬ever.“Hyde Park is what you make out of it,”said one student. ,Unlike Hyde Park residents, however,most students do not “make anything out ofit.” Students are afraid. And many attrib¬ute this fear to the nature of the Chicagosuddent himself. “People are afraid of eachother” said one student. “I think the major¬ity of students here are shy and somewhatintroverted,” stated another. “Most ofthem were alienated intellectuals whenthey came here, and have always been tooshy to come out of their shells.”Thus, many students continue to blametheir loneliness on their surroundings.“People are afraid of each other here. Butonly here, I’m sure. If the same peoplewere in say Berkeley (or would they beanyway), they would smile, maybe.” HydePark however continues to be an active,organized, well-integrated community. Theloneliness, which appears to be inherent inthe nature of the student himself, blocksout the opportunities which students haveto meet others. Students become cynical,depressed, and alienated.Hyde Park, as one student described it,becomes “the capitol of fantasyland.”0 child flower quickin God’s hand yourprayer of peacewill bloom it will bloom2t<0U^The Generation of Love: poemsby Mary Norbert Korte, photographs by Jess Villalva, introduction by editor Clayton C. Barbeau. $2.95 at all bookstoresThe Bruce Publishing CompanyAn Affiliate of Crowell Collier andMacmillan, Inc. 850 3rd Avenue, NewYork 10022 David RosenbusnRAIN: The weather of Hyde Park, everchangeable, turns many students off.STOP NAIL BITINGWITHNow you can stop your nail biting, cuticlechewing habit, TODAY!, 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 WHAM!"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.3311 W. CARROLL AVE.f CHICAGO. ILL_60624 _'Can’t find STOP-BITE at your drug store? Thenclip this out and send, with $1.50.COOL, WILD,GROOVYAUDIO-LITESa panorama ol light to thebeat of music . . . ever changingpatterns to the mood andrhythm of any sound source.Easy hook-up to any F.M.Radio, Stereo, Tape Deck.Fully transistorized.Now available in seven styles.Seeing is believing.SEE THEM ON CAMPUScjoA.1 STEPHEN CLARKUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO684-4542AMERICAN COLLEGE DISTRIBUTING CORPORATICNP.O. Box 636, DeKalb, III. 60015 DO YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPINGFOR PEACE, NOT PROFIT/17"i CvuA37"'wall hanging of logotranslated into 18 languages;moss green with matching envelope.4 for $ 1.00100 for S20.00YW (M CaliAnother gentle seasonHaunted by echoesof young laughterforever stilledWith one voice wecry-Enough!An end to killing—now! Af tJullimon necklace chain (as shown)or same on key ring$3.005fi ijwWvui paper /ni/olnruic *66 per sheet$1.00 note |w/envelopes10 per pack$1.00AiuftUiMuMwifafyACM Nnrth Manlp Driv/p f -tea.407 North Maple DriveBeverly Hills, California 90210NameAddress.City .State. .Zip.Quan. Quan.All proceeds go to further the work ofAnother Mother for Peace, which is anon-profit, non-partisan associationvUiose goal is to eliminate war as a meansof settling disputes betweennations, peoples, and ideologies. Holiday Peace CardMedallion on necklaceMedallion on key ring SealsStationeryTOTAL AMOUNT ENCLOSED $.Enclose check or money order. (Add 5% sales tax if in California.) To assuredelivery by Dec. 25, your order must be in our office no later than Dec. 15.. . . and we’d sure appreciate help with the postage!Dfcflmhpr 5 HtV/MirflmLjMluaLjaMtmTheUniversity of Chicago PressAnnouncesBooks Eligible for theLaing Prize 1969A Decade of Health Services: Social Survey Trends inUse and ExpendituresRonald Andersen and Odin AndersonDisease, Pain, and Sacrifice: Toward a Psychologyof SufferingDavid BakanFrom Petrarch to Leonardo Bruni: Studies in Humanisticand Political LiteratureHans BaronThe Idea of the Humanities and Other Essays Criticaland HistoricalRonald CraneReality and the Heroic Pattern: Last Plays of Ibsen,Shakespeare, and SophoclesDavid GreneWorld Population: An Analysis of Vital DataNathan Keyfitz and W. FliegerSlavery in the Americas: A Comparative Study of Cubaand VirginiaHerbert S. KleinThe Chinese Knight-ErrantJames J. Y. LiuFiery Dust: Byron’s Poetic DevelopmentJerome J. McGannMusic, the Arts, and IdeasLeonard MeyerQuests Surd and Absurd: Essays in American LiteratureJames E. Miller, Jr.A Criminal Justice System and the Indigent: A Study ofChicago and Cook CountyDallin Oaks and W. LehmanGaila Placidia Augusta: A Biographical EssaySteward I. OostLetters from MesopotamiaA. Leo OppenheimPersona: Social Role and PersonalityHelen H. PerlmanThe Fiction of Nathanael West: No Redeemer, NoPromised LandRandall ReidThe Modernity of Tradition: Political Development in IndiaLloyd I. and Susanne H. RudolphSocial Order of the SlumGerald D. SuttlesThe Limits of SymbolismBernard WeinbergThe University of Chicago Press The Laing Prize honors and celebrates valuablecontributions to learning. The Board of UniversityPublications and the Press hope that it will encouragefurther worthy contributions from the academiccommunity.The GORDON J. LAING PRIZE is an annual award of$1,000 presented by the Board of UniversityPublications. Any author who was a member of theUniversity of Chicago faculty on the date his bookwas published by the University of Chicago Pressis eligible.The following books have been awarded theLaing Prize:1968 Education and Social Change in GhanaPhilip Foster1967 Asia in the Making of Europe, Volume I, Books 1 and 2Donald F. Lach1966 Ancient Mesopotamia: Portrait of a Dead CivilizationA. Leo Oppenheim1965 America’s Failure in China, 1941-50Tang Tsou1964 The Rise of the West: A History of the Human CommunityWilliam H. McNeill1963 History of Literary Criticism in the Italian RenaissanceBernard WeinbergThe Laing Prize was named in honor of GordonJ. Laing, who came to the University in 1899and served as chairman of the Latin Depart¬ment, dean of the Humanities, and as generaleditor of the Press for almost thirty years. It ispresented to the author of the book whose workadds the greatest distinction to the Press list.5750 Ellis Avenue • Chicago, Illinois 6063716/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969. . , .—University's Role In Renewal ExaminedContinued from Page 11rector of the planning unit of SECC withoffices on campus. Technical and adminis¬trative work usually in the province of mu¬nicipal government agencies were takenover by the University, SECC and the plan¬ning unit. The University felt that the Com¬munity Conservation Board could or wouldnot move rapidly enough toward renewal.Therefore, the University undertook to dothe plan itself by contracting with the city.The planning unit did the actual work.The University thus used its power ofpersuasion to promote its program of com¬munity conservation. The advantages ofthis method were efficiency, speed andstrong control. The disadvantage was alimiting effect of University strength on thefinal plan because public good will wasweakened. In addition, a discrepancy be¬tween what the University and what thecity considered good urban renewal pro¬grams appeared. This was not as serious aproblem as community good will was.“Shoulder to shoulder against the lowerclass"The Federal Housing Act of 1954 providedthe framework around which various un¬coordinated projects could become a pro¬gram. The greatest compromise for bothsides to accept was that no renewal andconservation program could take place un¬less the community accepted integration,treated integration as a class and not a ra¬cial problem and discriminated againstlower income families. In short, integrationcould not succeed unless the class level ofboth races was equal. As Mike Nicholssaid. “This is Hyde Park, white and black,shoulder to shoulder, against the lowerclasses.”The final community renewal plan in¬volved regeneration in two stages. In 1954one area was cleared under slum clearancelegislation and the 55th Street businesses,the shopping center and the high rise apart¬ments and townhouses were completed UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS: Splitting 55th Street into two parts, the large apartment buildings ironically house few mem¬bers of the University, for the rents are exorbitant.around 1958. No public housing was calledfor in the final plan but some small unitswere added later. Demolition of other areasdid not begin until 1960.The black population which had reached49 percent in I960 went back to 38 percent,the percentage before the renewal began.The project cost over $46 million in publicfunds and $250 million in private funds in¬cluding $29 million by the University.Urban renewal, once looked upon withhigh hopes, is now generally opposed bycitizen groups. Voices, a local newspaper,said in its article “Mayor Daley; Solventbut Worried” that was printed in the Na¬tion, “The main issue is the matter of realestate ... Here as in most major citiesland use is the key to most wealth and pow¬er: it stimulates, corrupts and destroys.Real estate manipulation built Chicago’svast slums ... Real estate interests willcontinue to renew the city in a spokelike pattern stemming from the Loop andthrusting westward and southward to hookup with other renewed neighborhoods. Theplan is simple. The goals are: run out theblack, the brown and the poor and bringback if possible the suburbanites while lin¬ing the pockets of various real estate men11Julian Levi has another view of the prob¬lem of land use. Regarding expansion ofinstitutions in urban areas he said in 1963 inan American Council on Education pamph¬let, “It is these institutions which must ex¬pand and they are in the ones which mustfind the space. There is an overriding na¬tional interest in their ability to do so.” Henoted that a university also need:: a sur¬rounding community compatible with thecharacter of the institution. Faculty musthave educational facilities for their college-oriented children.He gave the following statistics on the success of renewal in Hyde Park-Kenwood:the crime rate is down to one-third of its1953 figure, the median income of the areais $8,000, 70 percent of the population iswhite collar and 70 percent of the popu¬lation has a high school education or more.“If universities are able to meet their re¬sponsibility only through urban renewaland eminent domain then the universitymust reconcile itself to the fact that it willhave the full joys and pleasures of dis¬cussion and attack in the public arena.”Regarding the charge that expansion re¬moves blacks he said, “The children andgrandchildren of the very families dis¬placed may well in time be ... the benefi¬ciaries and benefactors of the displacing in¬stitutions. In the difficult problems of raceand the culturally deprived family, higliereducation has taken the child of the humbleimmigrant to the threshold of opportunity,usefulness and in many cases greatness.”"I know the way homewith my eyes dosed.”Then you know the way too well.Because driving an old familiar route can make youdrowsy, even if you've had plenty of sleep,If that happens on your way homefor Christmas, pull over, take a breakand take two NoDoz®. It'll help you drive homewith your eyes open. gNoDoz. No car should be without it. I©1969 Bri$tol-M,«rs Co.ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUISidentifiesthe world’s bestbeer drinkers!This “patch”December 5, 1969/Maroon Feature Issue/17mrr -r| Belle. HowellAUTOLOAD STEREOTAPE RECORDERCtoptetty au&Maftcjteel-Tb-mltoaduy... a gentle cushion of airguides the tape from thefull reel past the headsand onto the take-up reel.Three-way automatic reversingwith continuous forward andback play.Superb 4-track, 4-speed stereosound, solid state circuitry,pause and audible search,sound-with-sound, single knobspeed control. Electronic andaudio specifications meet rigidaudiophile standards.I new world ol soundlor only$199°°• CHARGE or 3UDGET PLANMODEL1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 KarlheinzStockhausenManna for theinner man.mCohn A Stemtttourn Sc CampusShopIN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsWARNINGBEFORE BUYING A GUITAR ORAMPLIFIER, COME TO THE WORLD’SLARGEST GUITAR STORE.CHICAGO GUITAR GALLERY216 SO. WABASH AVE. (DOWNTOWN)WE BUY, REPAIR, TRADE, & SELLre HA 7-8434 HA 7-0423SPANISH IMPORTS18/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969 4 Groups of Students plan to settlein Israel between 1970 and 1973in Kibbutz or urban collective Hopeto form communities based on eco¬nomic equality and social de¬mocracyOPEN JOINT SEMINARJAN.2-4CAMP AUGUSTINALAKE GENEVA,WISCONSINTransportation provided fromChicago $30 for the seminar(food, transportation in¬cluded)For more information write:Ichud Habonim6658 N. FairfieldChicago 60645or call:Barbara Tell274-1011With the advent of the new deep colors andzippity patterns by Gant ... the white shirt hasbecome extinct - like the crew eat and thenarrow tie. The loss is unmourned.Our complete new Gant collection features theTown collar in solid colors from $9; stripes at$10; others to $12.What ever happened to thewhite shirt?say“i love youwith a diamond frilihllhmtb119 N. Wabash at WashingtonENGLEWOOD EVERGREEN PLAZAnCCOCCCOCO'SOOCCOCOSGCCOOOOSOSCOQCCOSeOCOSOSOSCCCCOOOCiCOC^PeCOC^BELL SHELLSERVICE5200 S. Lake Park493-5200Buy Shell From Bellsince 1926Lseccccccc<>seciC09000QiQoaaec«ocoaaosoc«c«co<soGcosccc<occc««««coc^Corned .5iorisl #$ 1645 E.55»h STREET ** CHICAGO, ILL. 60615 £S Phone: FA 4-1651 S Checker TaxiHASIMMEDIATE OPENINGS• EXCELLENT EARNINGS• WORK ANY NUMBER OFDAYS PER WEEK FROM 2to 6 DAYS• DAYS or NIGHTS•Work dose to home or schoof-MALE or FEMALEMINIMUM AGE 21APPLY845 W. WASHINGTON8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. DAILY8:00 AM to 11:00 AM: SAT.CALL 421-1314 137 002 139 421/22SOLO FOR ELECTRONICINSTRUMENT WITH FEEDBACK137 005 ITfiCT/!C0NTACT/S0NG OF THE YOUTHS138 811*f . neulwhe1 thorn trup/nnDeutsche <5rammophon Records, MusiCassettes and 8-Track’Cartridgesare distributed in the USA by Polydor Inc ; In Canada by Polydor Records Canada Ltd•Also available on MusiCassettes“Also available on MusiCassettes and 8-Track Cartridges,karlheinz Stockhausen:"gruppen* for 3 orchestras'carre' for 4 orchestras and 4 choirsconductors:michael gielenmauricio kagelbruno madernoondrzei markowskikarlheinz StockhausenSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGSSAVINGS SAVINGSS(John's Mens Wear1459 E. 53rd.BELLBOTTOMSALESHIPMENTJUST ARRIVEDSA VINGSSA VINGSSA VINGSSA VINGS SA VINGSS i!U!Continued from Page Sevencondition. It can drive people out of dormi¬tories. Rita Datolla, 73, complained “Idon’t really dig the dorm. I would rather bein an apartment. Communal living withpeople not of my choice is not to my lik¬ing.” This is not a problem in fraternities,as most of the people are fairly compatible,and fraternities attract the same type ofpeople, though each house has its own char¬acter. Psi Upsilon, for example, is general¬ly regarded, often to the consternation ofits residents, as the ‘jock house’ while Al¬pha Delta Phi seems to contain a sober,career-oriented group.Apartments are a different matter be¬cause deciding whom one will live withcauses many dissensions among friends,and this is often done rather ruthlessly.And once one actually lives with his room¬mates for a while, problems of conflictinglife styles can be discovered. There is al¬ways a certain level of bickering amongroommates, but at times severe personalityconflicts develop which can only be solvedwhen someone moves out.Social life is a determinant in decidinghow to live, and here fraternities take thelead in social activities, fulfilling theirtraditional role. Yet some of these charge asocial fee, although it has additional ben¬efits. Alpha Delta Phi keeps a free refrig¬erator of beer on the honor system, and hasregular parties. Phi Sigma went en masseto see Hair with their social dues. And onefraternity member commented that his fratreceives invitations from local nursingschools and colleges to their social events:an unheard of social activity to the rest ofthe University.The story of fraternities in the Universityis one of contiual decline from the 1920’s,when there were 40, to today, when onlyeight remain. The decline began in the1930’s when more and more students de¬nounced interscholastic sports as unintel¬lectual. The number dropped further as the BACKYARDS: Wooden stairways and posts create a fire hazard in most HydePark backyards.University quit Big Ten football in 1940 andthe conference completely in 1946.Hutchins: the Frats pallIn 1944 there were only 32 frat members,although after the war the number climbedto 200, about which it hovers today. Chan¬cellor Robert Maynard Hutchins ruled in1945 that no undergraduates could joinfrats, thus forcing those frats that survivedthis edict to recruit grad students andchange to an image of relatively in¬tellectual boarding houses.Fraternities never really recovered fromHutchins, although his dictum has longsince been lifted. The interfrat councilhandbook quotes RMH as saying, “On theother side of the coin, it may be said thatOut of oldendays and the...hoary past, covered withcobwebs and steeped incrusty-tradition comes -THE IDANOYESWASSAILPARTYFriday, Dec 5, 19697-9:30Ida Noyes HallWassail Brass ChoirSANTA CLAUS Cake & Cookies Caroling no fraternity ever made a bum out of aman.”Thus frats seem to be individual bodies ofrelatively homogeneous groups of men, wholive a life style basically different from thatof most of the other students at the Univer¬sity. On the whole they are straighter, lessintroverted than the rest of the University.While differences among individuals unde¬niably exist, it is noteworthy that a goodnumber of people can live together in thiscommunal, group-oriented place. Fratmembers will maintain that their ‘jock’ im¬age is false, although they have no drive toestablish a new image on the campus. Onemember commented “By Big Ten standardthese are radical frats.” The general attitude of frat members isrthat if they are left alone that’s fine withthem, and they won’t bug other people intheir turn to get interested in the fraternity.They seem to be the only people who on thewhole are happy with the way in whichthey live.What will happen to fraternities in thenext few years is a good question. Thenumber of new pledges has been less thanexemplary, and unless new members areattracted in larger numbers in a short peri¬od of time, only a handful will still survive.One frat has only ten members, four ofwhom are graduating this year.What makes It?People living in dorms are generally dis¬illusioned about its social life. Said DavidKuperstick, 73, “It’s subdued-organized forsemi-recluses. If you have some means oftransportation, it is not too bad. Social lifeis what the individual makes it. There is noeffective group action.”This year the housing office has in¬creased allocations available to individualdorm houses in an attempt to improve thissituation, but its success has not been yetmeasurable. Lawrence Straus, 71, presi¬dent of one of the undergraduate houses inBurton-Judson summed up the troublewhen he said, “Some people think of adorm as a kind of hotel in which peopleonly eat, sleep and study. Others think thatdorms should be more liveable and can beif there are more activities by individualhouses.” Straus has already organized andpulled off a student-faculty champagne re¬ception for newly installed dean of the Col¬lege Roger Hildebrand, and has alsoplanned several group trips to plays.In apartments residents tend to feel thatwhatever social life there can be, they pro¬vide by themselves. The fact that mostapartments are quite a few blocks fromcampus contributes to the general feelingContinued nn page 22s Punch a friend |i for Christmas *He’ll love you for it all year long.PunchPunch is noi for everyone. Only for your kind offriends. The people who are witty, wise, discrim¬inating-and always terribly difficult to "gift "Punch to the rescue.Is your friend the jaded sort? Nothing couldbe more stimulating than this lively magazine ofsatire, mailed every week from London li prickspomposity with devastating barbs It speaks outbluntly on the major issues i and idiocies) of ourtime. 52 weeks a year.Is your acquaintance an avid reader? Punch offers articles of rare literary stature about per¬sonalities and events of world-wide interest. Andfor everyone from literati to just-lookers. Punch'sworld-famous cartoons are sheer delight liachissue has more than a score of theml or theatre-goers, cinema buffs, or simplygood friends Punch offers a fascinating varietyof essays and commentary to please every tasteAnd as a business gift. Punch has few peers.It lends distinction to your relationship, and itcompliments the recipient in a most unusual wayThe Excitement Of The l nfamiliarPunch's contributors include such well known,brilliant commentators and writersas David Irost lot television tame P (i Wodc*house, and Anthony Powell ButPunch also introduces American readers to manynew names and new features That means freshwit. different view-points |t\ a pleasant changefrom doing business at the same old newsstandYour gift of Punch will be announced by ahandsome Cireeling Card. 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I ....«.. /• - *IV Mlu. 1, .... |1 ■' 1J 4<Mr.o.| Cite /l|» 1| Lill « ar.l t.. i eqj /ram |*L-Ifc \MMmI Vtmanasknth 201 rum* tar-: W.*S| • 4 special * kmxmI numbers• Delightful sill jranwkri ll| '• - ■■■... 1. |CMC I - U.w;ov c» M:wir’v» • , -< h>. «imi. \> i• u... mi iu»k r .-jw-ii-ijwgiiii iDecember 5, 1969/Maroon Feature Issue/194 f \COMPONENT SMI •••FULL SIZE 11" TURNTABLEDUST COVER INCLUDED GARRARD AUTOMATICRECORD CHANGERSTEREO CARTRIDGEwith DIAMOND NEEDLEM cA MINI PRiCEIAC CONVENIENCE OUTLETSTEREO INDICATORILLUMINATED SLIDE RULE DIALFIVE PRECISION CONTROLS(Treble, Bass, Balance,Loudness, Function) TAPE/AUXILIARY INPUTSAM/FM/FM STEREO TUNER/AMPLIFIERTUNING CONTROLSTEREO HEADPHONE JACKCOMPLETE5 PIECE SYSTEMA FANTASTIC VALUE! Model 4800 offers a COMPLETE 5 PIECESTEREOPHONIC COMPONENT SYSTEM with AM/FM/FM STEREO/TUNER/AMPLIFIER, 2 SPEAKER ENCLOSURES, GARRARD RECORDCHANGER and DUST COVER. THERE’S OILED WALNUT FINISHCABINETRY, 30 WATTS and a ONE YEAR WARRANTY on LABOR andPARTS! SEE AND HEAR IT NOW!SPECIALOFFER|—1 8" WOOFER and 1 2" TWEETERin each enclosureMASTERWORKB A PrOdUCt Of * M,f*. Suggested List.COLUMBIA RECORDS-r=» radio, television,high fidelity &striaf electronicindustrial electronicssales & service HAVILIrSWHERE SERVICEIS » TRADITION" 1368 EAST 53M. CHICAGO 60115 • PL2-7800lit 20/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969...» vra ' ijjE.AV.CfFi .( isc.iir.rC The GreetPenisExplosion1532 V WELLS(upstairs)C Imago. Oldtownour stuff:BELLIOTTOMSSHIRTSLEATHERSVESTSBELTSGLASSESHAIRY CHICKENS(rFROM $6.b0THEIGUYS PANTS'THAT GIRLSLOVEThe GreetPenisExplosion110-, DISCOUNT WITH|STUDENT I DHours:11 10 Daily12 6 SundayA timely survey-*CONSCIENCEIN AMERICAA Documentary Historyol Conscientious Objectionin America, 1757-1967Edited byLillian SchllsselEspecially pertinent for to¬day, this unique anthologyfollows the course of con¬scientious objection a9 itdeveloped in the U. S. fromcolonial times to the pres¬ent. It is the vital record ofthe collision of convictionsbetween the individual andthe state. The documentsare not essays or tracts;they are the real responsesof men who undertookconscientious objection intimes of crisis.Cloth, $6.50; Paper, $2.75(D-210)fofluttonrmmmmmThe staff of the Maroon wishes allof you a very happy holiday season/whether you celebrate Chanukah orChristmas/ or Vietnamese Tet, orArmenian ten-day-late Christmas/ orwhatever. Also a happy New Yearto you and yours.PentaxNikonCanonMirandaLeicaRolleiFor:Best selectionBest serviceBest priceoitcamerasprojectorsenlargerstape recorderssee:CHARGE or BUDGET PLAN1342 E. 55th St.HY3-9259 ELIZABETH CORDONHAIR DESIGNERS1620 E. 53rd Si. BlJ-8-2900THE85EUROPEIt's the lowest round trip airfare . . . and it goes right toLuxembourg rn the heart ofEurope. Daily departures.No group restrictions. Justspend 22 days or more inEurope and return by May15. Call your travel agentNOW.To ICELANOIC AIRLINES630 fifth Ave (Rockefeller Center).NY 10020 • PL 7-8585Please send descriptive Folder CN.City,My Travel Agent is.iICELANOIC .mimes*• wrruuto:STILLLOWESTAIR FARESTO EUROPEof any scheduled airline. BECAUSE THERE IS NORadio Free America.-“Ours is the only publication which lets the rest ofthe world tell its story to the American people."Malcolm Muir, Jr., Editor in ChiefYou won’t agree with everything youread in ATLAS. We don’t. Each month we reprintexactly what the world press is saying. Pravda,Le Figaro, Der Spiegel, The Times of London,The Peking People’s Daily—and 600 more. Andeach month more senators, Cabinet members,international business leaders, newspaper edi¬tors—each month more informed people sub¬scribe to ATLAS. Since just last year circulationhas more than quadrupled, from 30,000 to125,000. We couldn’t attract the people we do,if ATLAS wasn’t saying something.it is.Consider just a few articles in our Juneissue. From France’s newsweekly L'Express,ATLAS translates a deeply provocative editorialcalled “The Risk France Runs.” It’s written byL'Express’s founder-editor, Jean-Jacques Ser-van-Schreiber. He warns: France and otherWestern nations must henceforth elect polit¬ical leaders “at least as qualified as thosechosen to rule industrial empires.” He care¬fully then spells out democracy’s classicmalady.Next, an historic interview by the editorsof Hamburg’s enterprising Der Spiegel withHenry Ford II. In a burst of blunt candor, Fordacknowledges he was wrong in underestimat¬ing German cars, wishes he had bought Volks¬wagen 20 years ago. He finds the Germanssporting competitors. But he is "furious” withthe Japanese. He promises to show them “whatcompetitive fighting is.”From Stockholm’s daily Dagens Nyheter,a delightful essay in which a gifted Swedisheditor ponders a weighty question: Why Amer¬ icans never call their new President “RMN”.From the East African Standard of Nai¬robi, a startling, documented report on howFrance has quietly maintained top military andpolitical power in eleven African republics.Also: From Prague’-s brave but nowbanned intellectual monthly, Listy, a powerful,beautiful, tragic fantasy. From Rome’s L'Ex-presso, a dramatic charge by a rebellious schol¬ar-priest. From The Jerusalem Post weekly,Israel’s Art Buchwald states his terms for aMid-East settlement.Each month you’ll find humor, businessforecasts, cartoons, fiction, the lively arts, sci¬entific reports, editorials—articles on whichfuture headlines will be based. Each monththese are what 125,000 subscribers see inATLAS.We publish ATLAS because there is noRadio Free America.We can because this is America:•?SEND ME A 12-MONTH INTRODUCTORY SUB¬SCRIPTION TO ATLAS FOR $4.50 ■ • • JUST HALFPRICE, STARTING WITH THE NEXT ISSUE.Atlas Subscription Dept. 800P.O. Box 296), Clinton, Iowa 52732NameAddressCity State ■'*□ Payment Enclosed, [1—042—11— 11 |.*|8l 1 |l,Zip Code□ Bill meDecember 5, 1969/Maroon Feature Issue/21Dormitories: Cant Wait To Escape?APARTMENTS VS DORMS: Students have Monty Fulcha choice between bay windows andbrick or gothic and gargoyles. Isn't Hyde Park architecture diverse? Steve AokiContinued from Page 19of isolation felt by many apartment dwell¬ers.The proximity to campus of the dormsand frats, however, is enjoyed by manyresidents. Ruth Emyanitoff, an inhabitantof Snell, a dorm on the quads, exclaimed,“What other dorm on campus can you get *up five minutes before your class and stillbe on time?” This convenience of locationis a factor in persuading people to remainin dorms and frats.There are basically two kinds of peoplewho live in dormitories: those who havebeen assigned to them and those who forvarious reasons decide to return to themfor more than one year. The second groupis generally satisfied with dorm life; themeal and maid service, convenience of lo¬cation, number of friends around. If notoverly enthusiastic about it, many are will¬ing to put up with it for another year untilthey can just find an apartment or onecheap enough to afford, or can convincetheir parents to let them move. The firstgroup, particularly in the College, consistsof freshmen and transfer students who livein dorms for a minimum of one year. Dur¬ing this time they establish friendships to the choices they have for living in HydePark. They are for the most part not overlydisgusted with what they live in, and manyrelish the opportunity to be independentand to guide their own lives. Alienation,paranoia, frustration — these are feelingsrampant in Hyde Park, but they do notcome from the way students choose to livehere. The bleak social life, the inclinationof students to study, the introverted lifemost of them follow — these contribute tothese feelings. Because their apartments ortheir rooms are one of few things whichstudents can shape to suit themselves andtheir personality, it is one way in whichstudents can work to make something inwhich they enjoy living and in which theycan live comfortably if not sumptuously,bearably, if not estatically.(good for possible apartment roommates)and can be gradually assimilated into theUniversity community. It is here that manystudents begin to form their opinions aboutthe University from talk with up¬perclassmen and see their role in it. It isalso here that many of them determinewhat fashion they will live in and the prosand cons of the alternatives.Rooming with a kleptomaniac?For new dorm inhabitants there can bealienation and frustration, particularly ifthere is an acrid personality conflict be¬tween roommates or if one cannot standlooking at cement walls or being in a re¬stricted institution.The men’s dormitories include Burton-Judson (B-J), with five undergraduate andthree graduate student houses. The roomsthere are primarily singles, and it is per¬haps the most popular dorm on campus;Hitchcock, another extremely populardorm has suites containing a living roomand a fireplace; Boucher, mostly singles, isa mixture of graduates and undergradswho are generally satisfied with their lifeat 53rd and Ellis; and Pierce Tower, most¬ly cramped doubles with increasing num¬ber of singles this year; a good number ofits inhabitants want an apartment; Lower Flint, only male bastion in WoodwardCourt; the preponderance of women makesthis a favorite dorm.Women’s dormitories include Snell, awomen’s upperclasswomen dorm next toHitchcock on the quads, almost unani¬mously praised by residents; Eleanor Club;both singles and doubles, preferred bymany to Woodward Court; Blackstone, anupperclasswomen’s dorm, wMch has manyreturnees; Woodward Court or Saarinen’sComplaint, as well as that of most of itsdenizens; it is mostly doubles, though likePierce the number of singles has been in¬creased to help combat the alienation anddepression felt by past residents. With sixhouses, five female and one male, it is theone most people have refused to return toafter one year of living there.Thus students feel more or less resignedprevievTBlow-up Elvira Madigan North byNorthwestBunuel von Sternberg Cukor OphulsViscontiChaplin Garbo Keaton Fields WellesFalstaff A Hard Day’s Night RashomonThese are a few of the films, directors and actors Doc Films will be bringing you next quarter. As always, ourgoal is to present the best of American and foreign cinema, classic and recent. As always, an associate membershipadmitting you to over 25 films, will be only six dollars - the best entertainment buy on campus! Winter Quarter 1970promises to be one of the most exciting ever at Doc Films - and we'll be welcoming you back with Bo Widerberg'sbeautiful ELVIRA MADIGAN on January 9. - (for more details call extension 2898)GDoc Films America's oldest film society j22/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969MAROONbusiness officeHOURSOVER QUARTERBREAKWEEKDAYS 10-6 PM(312)643-0800 x3264CHARTER FLIGHTSSeats N.Y./London/N.Y. $179 Dec.17-Jan 5 288-1238PERSONALSMgED BUTTONS MADE? Call 955-3614, "In" Sanity South — 51stnear Harper.Wallow in Wassail + Cristy Tradi¬tion — Ida Noyes Wassail Party —Tonight — FREESeriously minded, mature, unhung-up males looking for similarly un-hung-up chicks for serious involve¬ments. Replies kept confidential.Maroon box 89.Unlaid/20 daysIf I were deadI couldn't attracta female flyJane appreciates the Stones to theheart of her bottom.Wil all the people who have beenborrowing BanderS natch spoons,forks, ashtrays please be nice andbring some back?You don't really have to study thathard for that Monday final — needan excuse not to? ALFIE Sat, Dec6 in Cobb Hall — 7 & 9:30 CEFPaul Brin, Joel Garber,Remember them? We do you!Satisfy your craving for creativity,join the Yearbox. Staff meeting highnoon Wed. at the Yearbox office .—Top of the 'Snatch, Ida Noyes.GET LIT tonight light show andNirvana music 8 PM at Gargoyle5655 University.Come to ALFIE this Saturday andget a freak preview of CEF WinterQuarter — starting off with ULYS¬SES (no not the one with KirkDouglas) and MONTERREY POP,7 & 9:30 Cobb Hall.1970 has officially been declared asthe year of the box. Don't go with¬out a BOX this year. Year Box IS.Freak out your folks with HolidayGifts from "In" Sanity South —51st Near Harper.SANTA SUIT may be rented fromStudent Activities Office Ida NoyesHall, 209, X3591Handsome, Skillful studs looking forpractice. Enthusiastic females pleaseapply. Maroon Box 69We Want your bodies. B-Snatch.Mature Females needed for experi-nhental relationships. Maroon BoxHung-up Hyde Park chicks lookingfor males to help them overcometheir repressions. Apply Maroon BoxI go to bed in Hyde Park Thinkingabout you.Pissing a few minutes ago Ilooked down at my penis affection¬ately.We close Tue Night. Til then nouody can feed you better than theSnatch. Cram while you can.Knowing it has been inside youtwice today makes me feel beauti¬ful.You've got "Star-Spangled" nailsvour coffin, Kid!All together now! Glory be to theEat Lady, the Strong Man, theEire-eating Sultan, as it was inthe beginning is now and ever shall‘e one circus, three rings, forever°nd ever. Hooray! GARRICK'S THE GUARDIAN DECa-8.HOW MANY COWBOY BOOTS GETRUINED OUTSIDE THE ELECTRICCIRCUS BECAUSE GALOSHES ISA FORBIDDEN WORD?SHAPIROS NOW DUEReturn to Ida Noyes 209 25c fineper day after Dec 6thThe Guardian Protects you fromExam-time Blues."I am sorry to have to introducethe subject of Christmas in thesearticles. It Is an indecent subject,a cruel, gluttonous subject; adrunken, disorderly subject; awasteful, disasterous subject; awicked, cadging, lying, filthy, blas¬phemous and demoralizing subject.Christmas is forced on a reluctantand disgusted nation by the shop¬keepers and the press; on its ownmerits it would wither and shrivelin the fiery breath of universalhatred; and anyone who looked backto If would be turned into a pillarof greasy sausages." — GeorgeBernard ShawWRITER'S WORKSHOP (PL 2-6377)SHAPIROS NOW DUEReturn to Ida Noyes 25c fine perday after Dec 6thGARRICK'S The’Guardian Dec 5-8.iome Sound Advice! MUSICRAFTCares Enough to have a CampusRep, Lowest Prices — Free Deliv.on all stereo components. Call BobTabor 363-4555 for price quotes.RIDES AND RIDERSRider wtd NY/NJ Dec 20 Ret Jan4 955-2887Ride wanted Dec 12 to Schenectady,NY., or Exit 24 of NY Thruway.Call X3563, Rm 425.Riders wtd to BALTIMORE/OCdep before Xmas date flxbl RetJan 3 or 4. Call Andy 752-9708BOGARTThe Treasure of Sierra Madre Star¬ring Humphry Bogart tonight 7:15 &9:30 Quantreli: Hitchcock FilmsCAROUSELMusic Theatre of Hyde Park pre¬sents Carousel. Tickets $3 and $2.25.Dec 5-6-7-12-13-14. Sunday MatineeDec 7 only, $2.50, children $1.50.Harper Theatre, 5238 Harper Crt.SCENESFOTA Presents UT's Production ofDavid Garrick's The Guardian Dec.5, 6, 7, 8 8:30 PM Ida Noyes Lib.Tickets $2 at Reynolds Club Deskor at Door.MOVIE Humphry Bogart in Treas¬ure of Sierra Madre tonight at7:15 8. 9:30 in Quantreli HitchcockFilmsTired of prejudice? Want to dosomething about it? GAY LIBER¬ATION NOW!! Males and Femalesseriously interested call 955-7433.U OF C SPECIAL PROJECTSDRAMA GROUPPRESENTSRAISIN IN THE SUNDEC 6 1969 INTERNATIONALHOUSEADMISSION FREERemember Cilia Black? Hear hersing the theme of ALFIE and in¬cidentally see the movie SATUR¬DAY, 7 & 9:30 Cobb Ha»l - CEFStomp at UC-SVNA GUERILLADANCE — Tonight Mandel Corridorwith Watermelon Band at 9:00FREE TO THE PEOPLE! Frank M.JOSEPH JARMAN ROSCOE MIT¬CHELL Lester Bowie Malachi Fa¬vors Le AACM de Chicago FIRSTEUROPEAN RECORDING NowAvailable $5 MU 4-4037DANCE FREE! SVNA sez come toMandel Hall Corridor TONIGHT —WatermelonSANTA SUIT may be rented fromStudent Activities Office Ida NoyesHall. 209, x3591SHAPIROS NOW DUEReturn to Ida Noyes 209 25c fineper day after Dec 8thLIGHT SHOW at Gargoyle tonight8 Pm. $1.25.All next quarter & probably for¬ever, The BanderSnatch will beopen for lunch 12-2 Mon-Sat.BEETHOVEN NINTH SYMPHONYThe University Symphony Orchestra,University Chorus, Collegium Mu-sicum and the Lutheran School ofTheology Chorus will performBeethoven's Ninth Symphony duringWinter Quarter in honor of the200th anniversary of the composer'sbirth. The work requires a largechorus and all members of theUniversity Community interested insinging are invited to call EugeneNarmour at 285-5164 or James Kiddat 643-5446 for information concern¬ing rehearsals and auditions."Pray think of us poor children-who wander in the mire" — IdaNoyes Wassail PartyHillel Book S3le — until Jan. 1 only. Some hardbacks for almost nothing.Paperback prices go up after Jan.CONCERTO COMPETITION Eachyear the University Symphony Or¬chestra sponsors a contest for stu¬dents interested in performing aconcerto with the orchestra. Thecompetition is open to instrumental¬ists who are members of the or¬chestra and pianoist and singerswho are members of the University.The competition will be held duringthe first week of Winter Quarter.Interested Musicians are invited tocall Eugene Narmour at 285-5164for more info.See Some of the Cain's Co. Cast atits Best: Nick Barton, Edna Ep¬stein, Kenneth Northcott, David Ru-daII, Diane Rudall in Garrick's TheGuardian, Dec. 5, 6, 7, 8 8:30 PMin Ida Noyes Lib. Tickets $2.03.Let Not This World Be Too MuchWith Thee: See the Old-WorldComedy, The Guardian.Four American student groups planto settle in Israel in Kibbutz orurban collective between 1970 and1973. Open joint seminar in Chica¬go area Jan 2-4 1970 For moreinfo, call Barbara Tel 274-1011.SUNDAYS. Margaret's Church — The Episco¬pal Church of South Shore — 2555E. 73rd St. (corner Coles)7:30 am Holy Communion9:00 am Family Eucharist &Church School11:00 am Choral EucharistYEARBOXIn your box: articles, posters, arecord, a balloon, photographs, arecipe and a coloring book, andmore. 1970: the year they put itin a box.ATTENTION FACULITYMembers (owners) of QUAD CLUB:Did you know the Xmas bonusmoney you give is distributed ar¬bitrarily by the manager? Not onthe basis of who serves you, not onthe basis of individual earnings, buton the basis of whom he likes.Give this year but stipulate distri¬bution according to earnings. Makesure your bonus reaches those whowork for itQuad Club wages are $1.50 for fulltime black waitresses as well asstudents. $1.60 min wage appliesonly to firms in interstate com¬merce. Question: if job recruitersfrom other states eat in the QuadClub, does this mean the QuadClub is in interstate commerce andshould be prosecuted?NO CHRISTMASAS USUALRemember Vietnam. In place ofgifts for your friends, make dona¬tions in their names to The ChicagoPeace Council, The Black PantherParty or The Special Fund to Re¬build Destroyed Homes in NorthVietnam. Also peace Christmascards are available at the PeaceCouncil office, Suite 1416, 343 S.Dearborn.U OF BOOKSTORETHANKS!!!!The Bookstore loaned us thair de¬livery van to expedite delivery oftoday's large issue. Thank you, &we'll look forward to the GrandOpening in the Stagg Labs.PICKETJoin the Peace Council in picketingand leafletting State Street storeson Dec 6th, 13th and 20th. Thedemonstrations will begin at noonat the Federal Building.PEOPLE FOR SALE"May We Do Your Typing?" 363-1104.PEOPLE WANTEDFaculty member looking for an un¬derstanding girl student interestedin playing with a girl. Handicappedput pleasant. Call 363-3257Needed: Grad student with culinarybent to help student-mother week¬end evenings 5 to 9 Call 373-5041after 6 PMNeeded: Grad Student or wife tocare for two year old and infantwkds mrnings & aftnoon 9-12. fall373-5041 after 6 PM.Recreation worker or occupationaltherapist experienced w childrenfor hospital for emotionally dis¬turbed children, Hyde Park. StartJan, call 643-7300 NOWSANTA SUIT may be rented fromStudent Activities Office Ida NoyesHall, 209, x3591JOBS! JOBS! and more JOBS!Students, Teachers. International,Stateside, Recreational Jobs. All oc¬cupations and trades. Enjoy a vaca¬tion while you earn. Hurry! Thebest jobs are taken early. Write:"JOBS," P. O. Box 475, Dept. CP3-1, Lodi, Calif. 95240Literate, friendly, reasonably butnot anally neat woman looking forseme as roommate. Move in begin¬ning of next quarter, own room,$65 a month for an apartment that'sworth much more. 955-1881. WANTED: Paid medical examinersfor insurance exams. Resident typedoctors preferred. Full professionalfees paid by nationally known in¬surance firm. Ralph J. Wood. FR2-2390.IDA NOYES WASSAIL PARTY —Tonight — FREEAll Hail, WassailWanted: Theater Manager for HydePark Theater. Experience not neces¬sary. Call 726-9293ROOMMATES WANTEDWorking girl & Grad looking for3rd Fern for apt. on 56th 8< Univ.Own Rm $55/mo. Call 955-0560Gay student to share 5 rm. Apt.(53rd & Harper) with M & F start¬ing Jan. 1. Own rm. $52 + util¬ities. 955-7433Third roommate to share largeapartment immediately. 56th andKimbark. Own room. $68 per month.363-91414th Fern roommate wanted to shareApt. in South Shore. Own room$55 Mo. 684-5690Fern student wanted to share Apt53 & Univ own room avail immedCall 667-8179Quiet 4th-year male student wishesto live in home of a faculty familyWin & Spr. Arrangements negotia¬ble. Call 493-4540 5-6 PM and keeptrying.Male Grad to share Apt. 3 blksfrom campus-45/mo-own room-nowor after Dec 19-Call 667-6639Women! Tired of squashing cock¬roaches in an overpriced underheat¬ed apartment? Move? I'm lookingfor a roommate to share miy neat,clean four room apaitment. You getyour own room, pay $65 a month.Call 955-1881. Own Room in 3 Bdrm Apt. Jan 1,33/Mo, 2 Blks Away 643-8210.Grad male wanted to Share Lg HdPk Apt w/2 others. Own Room$51.67/Mo. 752-6151.FOR RENTLarge comp, turn 2 brm SouthShore Apt on campus bus $150 mo.221-1189Nice, clean room near campus.Linen provided. Call Ml 3-9257 orOR 4-0557SANTA SUIT may be rented fromStudent Activities Office Ida NoyesHall, 209, X3591Apartment available Dec 15-2Rooms, Blkstn near 59th $115 CallNO 7-4700, X8636 9 AM-5 PM.Immed. Sublet—Then Lease 2ViRooms Top Floor Corner ElevatorBldg. Near 54 & Harper. PL 2-5531.House:One or Two Reasonable Sane peo¬ple wanted to live in Townhouse.Also some furnishings to sell. CallKen 363-0996.Apt. to Lease $190 Mo S3 Harper,5 rooms. Call 288-1238.EAST HYDE PARK-VERY DESIR¬ABLE APARTMENT. 5 Rooms, mBath Av. Jan 1, Rent $165. 684-7983.WANTEDQUICK — before we'll need huskiesto get to campus — a full sizeboys bike. 324-3005SHAPIROS NOW DUEReturn to Ida Noyes 209 25c per dayfine after Dec 8th Ski Boots Sz. 12, and/or Skis, Bind¬ings poles. 643-8210 Lonn.FOR SALERolleicord IV, f/3.5 Xenar, goodcondition. Offers 324-3005. AlsoWeltaflex twin-lens reflex f/3.5. Mer-itar, $20 or haggle.Girl's watch, gold circular faceblack band BU 8-6610 x22181967 CORVAIR MONZA Low milesleaving country phone 955-0086Household goods, several itemsPhone 955-0086Minolta SHT 101 fl.7 55mm newwith guarantee card $190 363-4300ext 501 after 7:00Drive home for vacation—1964 VW,new muffler, battery, engine over¬haul, sunroof, radio. $550 Call 288-8646 or NO 7-4700 x8195 ask forBob DruryFurniture-upholst chair, recliner,marble coffee table, book cases752-0180 eves.Japanese-made AM/FM/FM-STER-EO/CASSETTE SOLID-STATE POR¬TABLE; US retail-$190, desperationprice-$l00 (or highest bid abovethat) Call 955-6330OLIVETTI PRAXIS typewriter justoverhauled by factory $150 - BernieGustin x3611 eves 955-2167Student Directory - 50c StudentActivities, Ida NoyesXerox Copies 9c, 7c, 5c & 7c, 5c, 3c$10 runs. 10 percent Discount on9c 7c 5c rate.MODERN IMPRESSIONS1031 West Polk at UICCPhone: 829-0248South Shore at its best — 3-befj-room, ]'/i bath, Georgian brick. Fullbasement, attached garage, largefenced yard, fireplace. 324-1728 eve¬nings.THE BUSINESS STAFF OF THEMAROON THANKS YOU FOR APROFITABLE CHRISTMASMAIL YOUR CLASSIFIED TO THE MAROON1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, 60637DATES TO RUNNAME, ADDRESS, PHONECHARGE: 50* per line, 40* per each line if the ad is repeated in asubsequent, consecutive issue. Non*University people: 75c 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.For the soldiers of the Seventh Cavalry who were killed at the Little Bighorn River and the passengers who were lost on theMaiden voyage of the Titanic. God bless their souls. _December 5, 1969/Maroon Feature Issue/23^ V../U .. ,U 1.1SAVEon all Spirits and Winesfor your vacation needsLOWEST PRICES IN THEMIDWESTCHOOSE FROM THE TREMENDOUS WINESELECTION - 1400 DIFFERENT WINE VINTAGESFROM 1822 to 1967All nearby states have much higherprices. Stock up before leaving Chicagoand save as much as $200 per fifthThe Party Mart2427 East 72nd StreetBA 1-9210with this coupon onlyCanada Dry full case $27512 NO DEPOSIT FIFTHS24/Maroon Feature Issue/December 5, 1969Volume 78, Number 25 The University of Chicago Friday, December 5, 1969Assault Halts Undisciplined HearingSteve AofciNO! Jo Desha Lucas, discipline committee chairman, argues with Burt Michaels,counsel for the defendants during the hearing Tuesday in Eckhart hall. By Rob CooleyThe Lucas disciplinary committee “ad¬journed” Tuesday afternoon without evercoming to order after committee memberHerbert Anderson (physics professor) as¬saulted SDS member Burt Michaels, de¬fense counsel for twelve students facingdisciplinary action for participation in amilitant boycott November 12 in front ofHutchinson Commons.The assault came when Michaels walkedbehind the three committee professors, whowere carrying on a discussion among them¬selves, and picked up the portable micro¬phone from the table in front of disciplinarychairman Joe Desha Lucas (law profes¬sor).Michaels began speaking into the micro¬phone, saying that it “would be very un¬fortunate if we had to disrupt the trial rightin the middle of it to hassle over lettingpeople in.” About 20 seconds after he start¬ed speaking, Anderson and Lucas stood upand started attempting to get the micro¬phone away from him.Anderson grabbed Michaels’ right armwith two hands and shoved him some 30feet across the front of the room while Mi¬chaels stiffened but attempted no direct re¬sistance. Audience members began to yell“assault, assault,” and Anderson droppedhis hands and stood still for a moment,grinning.The audience broke into excited yells andclapping, and Lucas attempted to restoreorder by gavelling steadily for some 30seconds with no effect. When he stoppedgavelling, however, the room fell silent.Lucas announced that “if you people can¬not be quiet, we will simply have to adjournthis meeting.” A voice called from the backof the room, “hold it in a bigger place.”Lucas responded instantly with a bang ofthe gavel and the statement, “this meetingis adjourned.”Student Action in Discipline UrgedBy Sue LothStudents should be voting members ofdisciplinary committees investigating dis¬ruption in the University, according to thereport of the Wegener subcommittee on dis¬ciplinary procedures released Thursday.The subcommittee of six faculty appoint¬ed by the committee of the Council of theUniversity Senate and three student se¬lected students was asked last spring “tostudy possible future changes in dis¬ciplinary procedures with particular refer¬ence to disruptive activities and to thequestion of student participation in dis¬ciplinary hearings” and to investigate dis¬cipline policies of other institutions.Steve AoklCHARLES WEGENERWants students to help decide discipline The majority of the committee recom¬mends that each University disciplinarycommittee be chosen randomly from threepanels of 20 faculty, five law faculty, and 32students appointed every autumn quarter;and that it connsist of four members of thefaculty panel, one member of the law panelserving as counsel to the committee, andtwo members of the student panel. Thechairman, appointed by the President, whowould vote only in case of tie, and fourvoting members of the committee wouldconstitute a quorum.The proposed faculty panels would be ap¬pointed by the president, after consultationwith deans and (for the faculty panel) theCommittee of the Council. Each studentcouncil in the colligiate divisions, the Divi¬sions and the Schools would appont one stu¬dent to the third panel; Student Govern¬ment would appoint 16.Two minority opinions cm the disciplinarycommittee recommendation were also in¬cluded in the report. In the first, businessprofessor Harold Demsetz presented statis¬tical evidence which “strongly supports thebelief that the inclusion of students on thedisciplinary committee results in a reduc¬tion in the severity of the sanctions” forserious disruptions. He recommended thatno students be members of the committee.In the second minority recommendation,associate math professor Paul Sally andTim Lovain, 70 used Demsetz’s data to ar¬gue that “participation by students on dis¬ciplinary committees, even when they arenot in the minority, resulted in moderateand highly differentiated sanction.”They recommended that the committee , have three students, threefaculty, and onelaw faculty member, including a chairmanwho votes only in case of tie.The recommendation on procedure “toinsure a fair and orderly hearing” wouldgive 21 people, including the dean of stu¬dents, a dean of students, or the deans ofthe schools, the divisions, and the College,Continued on Page TwoMemorial ServiceStudents gathered in Mandel Hall Thurs¬day afternoon to hold a memorial servicefor Fred Hampton, chairman of the IllinoisBlack Panther party. Hampton was killedin a gun battle with police early Thursdaymorning. One other Panther, Mark Clark,was also killed. All three professors left quickly, as didsome 50 audience members and witnesses;but more than 200 stayed on to discuss theincident.Reacting to Tuesday’s hearing Lucas saidThursday that the committee has “votedthat it is not prepared to hold a hearingjointly or before a large audience anymore.However, Michaels said that the twelvestudents who had asked for a collective de¬fense have agreed to appear in Mandelhall today at 1 p.m., “with or without thecommittee.” Michaels expressed hope thatthe committee would be present and added,“while the committee hasn’t agreed, ithasn’t said no.”Instead of granting the collective defense,Lucas said, “students'charged in the boy¬cott will be invited to give their evidence inan environment where the committee canlisten to it. There will be members of thepublic present, but in limited numbers.”In a statement issued Thursday morning,Lucas commented on the incident betweenMichaels and Anderson, saying that Mi¬chaels was “escorted a few feet until hewas no longer standing in back of the com¬mittee.”Lucas said that the general level of noiseand confusion made it impossible to hold ahearing, and told the audience that if thenoise did not subside the hearing wouldhave to be held i.n a place where it could bemore easily maintained, which was greetedwith some shouted responses which “in¬tended as repartee dealing with ‘law andorder.’ ”The attempted disciplinary hearing fol¬lowed an SDS-organized rally in MandelHall at 2 pm. TTie rally was well advertisedby posters on campus and by a renewednon-militant picket line requesting boycottof Hutchinson Commons and C-Shop diningfacilities. The boycott varied from 90 to 100per cent effective at the C-Shop and held atabout 50 per cent in Hutch both Mondayand Tuesday afternoons.At the rally, attended initially by some 85students, Michaels and progressive laborparty member Kathy Rakochy, 70, outlinedthe SDS position on the demand for freemeals for food service workers and the de¬fense planned for the trial.Michaels said the thrust of the defense atthe hearing would be that the University isguilty of racist bossism and “the Universityshould be cm trial, not us. It seems to us thewhole thing’s topsy turvy.”. Mrs. Rakochy explained that “if you’reContinued on Page ThreeSteve AokiThe police had come to a house whereHampton and other Panthers were stayingacross the alley from the Panther head¬quarters on West Madison St intending tosearch the place, when they were firedupon from within.AROUND AND ABOUT THE MIDWAY'Boycott Comps'Some members of the fourth year class ofthe medical school plan to boycott the com¬prehensive exams next week for the follow¬ing reasons:• Refusal by the faculty to engage inmeaningful discussion concerning the quali¬ty and validity of these exams.• The irrelevant and picayune nature ofpast exams as stated by previous medicalstudents.Reasonable people can reason together when cool minds prevail. We hope reasonwill be reaffirmed and bitterness will notprevail.We urge the faculty to cancel theseexams and discuss ways in which theseexams can become a learning experience.Name Withheld By RequestThe writer is a fourth year student in themedical school.'The Guardian' at UCThere will be a special production thisweekend of David Garrick’s two-act come¬ dy, The Guardian in Ida Noyes Library.Billed as “An Unusual Evening of Eigh¬teenth Century Music and Chamber Come¬dy,” The Guardian will be preceded andfollowed by an offering of harpsichord mu¬sic by Haydn and Bach. The Guardian isunder the direction of Donald Shojai, assis¬tant professor of English, and features theacting of Kenneth Northcott, chairman ofthe Germanics department, Nicholas Ru-dall, assistant professor of classics, his wifeDiane, and Edna Epstein, Nick Barton andRon Mclvor. The set is designed by VirgilBurnett, and the music will be performedby William Hayashi and Evangeline Cobb. The Guardian is co-sponsored by the festival of the arts (FOTA) and UniversityTheatre. Tickets are two dollars per personand will be sold at the door, and refresh¬ments will be served at the conclusion ofeach performance. There will be four per¬formances, Friday through Monday at 8 30p.m.Human DevelopmentBernice Neugarten, professor of humandevelopment has been appointed chairmanof the committee on human development.Mrs. Neugarten replaces William E. Hen¬ry, professor of psychology and human de¬velopment, who resigned to devote moretime to teaching and research at the Uni¬versity.Commitee Will Include 5 Faculty, 2 StudentsContinued from Page Onepower to charge students in wiriting withacts disruptive to the University.In informal hearings and hearing proce¬dures, the report said, “the committee pre¬sumes the innocence of the student charged,assumes no facts or conclusions, ignoresany previous history of disciplinary ac¬tion. .., and reaches its decision. .. solelyon the basis of the evidence actually beforeit.”No “prejudicial inference” should bedrawn from a students refusal to testify, itadded. With the approval of the committeepublic hearings could be granted, the re¬port said, and students should have theright to keep a record of the proceedings.Failure to appear before the committeecould result in sanctions not to exceed onequarter’s suspension.The Wegener subcommittee also calledfor the establishment of a faculty-student-administration review board with power togrant clemency, lessen sanction, or, if with-f in a certain time a student could show hewas denied a fair, impartial hearing or newevidence had been discovered, has the pow¬er to order a new hearing.Also among the nine recommendationsfor disciplinary policy listed in the 53-pagereport are proposals for:• A new University statute defining dis¬ruption as prohibited activity subject to dis¬cipline;• Council legislation defining disruptiveacts;• Definition of possible sanctions, in¬cluding disciplinary probation, deferredsuspension, suspension, and expulsion;• That a student’s failure to identify him¬self adequately “upon proper requests of aproperly identified university official in theperformance of his duly” is subject to dis¬cipline not to exceed one quarter of suspen¬sion;• That present discipline in other partsof the University be retained, but that theCollege, the divisions, and the schools withi CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998 {k Has what you need from a $104Yused 9 x 12 Rug, to a custom▼carpet. Specializing in Remnants ^ *Mill returns at a fraction of the < I^original cost.4Decoration Colors and Qualities.▼ Additional 10% Discount with this|Ad.! FREE DELIVERY>♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ NEELY’SSTANDARDSERVICETo Our CustomersI have moved to a larger and moremodern station. So that we cancontinue to give you more ef¬ficient and better service.Please join us at our new location.6600 So Stony IslandPhone BU 8-9645Thank YouSam M. NeelyNeelys Standard ServiceTAI-5AM-Y6.NRESTAURANTSERVES GOOD CHINESE FOODDAILY 11 A.M.-9 P.M.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS OPEN12 NOON - 9 P.M.CLOSED MONDAY288-91001318 EAST 63RD STREET 684-1062 their student councils review existing provi¬sions and involve “significant if not pre¬ponderant” student participation in the dis¬cipline; and• The subcommittee’s nine voting mem¬bers, including professor of humanities andNCD Charles Wegener, committee chair¬man, have been asked to discuss the reportnow on the agenda of Tuesday’s UniversitySenate meeting.To pass into University legislation, pro¬posals must receive a majority vote fromthe Council’s 51 members. The proposedstatute must be approved by the board oftrustees.Other members of the Wegener subcom¬mittee include: Edward Deutsch, chem¬istry instructor; Ronald Singer, professorof anatomy and anthropology; Janice Spos-fard, associate professor of biology; lawstudent Peggy McQuade, and Steve Orman,’70. Allison Dunham, professor of law, hasserved as counsel of the subcommittee, butis not a voting member. Commenting on the appointment, D GaleJohnson, dean of the division of the socialsciences, said “I am very pleased that MrsNeugarten has agreed to be the chairmanof the committee on human development.She is an internationally recognized scholarin the field of aging. Her long experience inthe committee means that she is admirablyprepared for this important position.”She served as associate chairman of thecommittee on human development from1965 to 1967 and as executive secretaryfrom 1955 to 1962. She has been director ofgraduate training program in adult devel¬opment since 1958.Mrs Neugarten has written or co-author¬ed six books and some 50 research papers,monographs, and review articles, most ofwhich deal with adult development, middleage, and aging.She also is a member of the Council ofthe University Senate, and serves as chair¬man of the University Committee on wom¬en.amarehouseBELL BOTTOM SLACKS FROM $6.0010% DISCOUNT WITH STUDENT I.D.HOURS: Monday thru Friday - 12 to 10Saturday - 11 to 9Sunday - 12 to 62837 N. 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Pwi Bonk Bldg.EffendiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE955-5151For ReservationsNEWBUTTONStu plus all kinds of Freakyh Posters and Psychedelic G’rfties.See our new Outdoor Blacklite,just $6Call us at 955-3614 for Custom Buttons51st iharper'Ml ... x -s.1,17 * r-I Radinsky Tenured;Decision ReversedSteve AokiREHIRED RADICAL: Leonard Radinsky's offer of a three year re-appointmentwas reversed this week by the anatomy department. He will be given tenure.IS Members Face Harassing ChargeIn a special meeting Wednesday Novem¬ber 26, the tenured faculty of the anatomydepartment voted to grant tenure to LenRadinsky, assistant professor of anatomy.That vote reversed a previous decision oftwo weeks ago to deny tenure in favor of athree-year reappointment.The faculty’s recommendation is nowbeing reviewed by an ad hoc committee onthe divisional level. The University provost,John Wilson, will make the final decision onRadinsky. With the approval of the anato¬my faculty, it is expected that Radinskywill get tenure.Radinsky, an active member of the radi¬cal New University Conference (NUC),was a supporter of last year’s sit-in. ManyBy Nancy ChismanThree members of the International So¬cialists group on campus were summonedthrough the office of James Vice, assistantdean of students, to appear before a dis¬ciplinary committee of the University lastFriday.The three students, David Brown, a grad¬uate student; Charles Gans, ’72; and RobinSandow, ’72, were cited for harassing May¬nard Krueger, professor of economics andthe unpermitted auditing of one of his sec¬tions of Social Science 111. Two of the threestudents have already met with Jo DeshaLucas, chairman of the disciplinary com¬mittee, that was formed to discipline stu¬ dents who participated in a militant boycottof Hutch Commons November 12, for pre¬liminary hearings. No decision has beenmade on public hearings. Krueger, whoran on the Socialist ticket for Vice Presi¬dent in 1940 with Norman Thomas, servedon the second disciplinary committeeestablished last winter after the two weekoccupation of the administration buildingended. The committee’s review of theaction resulted in the expulsion of severalstudents.One of the summoned IS students saidthere was no conspiracy against Krueger.Members of the campus organization re¬portedly were concerened with the study ofDefendents Will Meet TodayContinued from Page Onemaking $78 a week and you have to spend$10 on food at Hutch, that leaves you on $68— on which many workers have to supporta family.” She quoted a black worker assaying, “How could you be happy on $2 30an hour, holding two fulltime jobs to sup¬port a family?”Rakochy said workers support the de¬mand for free meals and the boycott, butcan’t join picket lines or even say muchabout their views for fear of losing theirjobs. She charged that “one worker gotcalled in yesterday and told that she wasresponsible for the C-shop being 100 percent shut down, and if they saw her talkingto any more students, she’d be out.”During the somewhat lackadaisical rallythe audience slowly grew, and when thegroup moved ever to the Eckhart lecutrehall about 2:45 it nearly filled the 220 avail¬able seats.At Eckhart the microphone was working,and Michaels seated himself at the podium— “Good afternoon, I’m Mr. Lucas” — andcontinued discussion of University racismand discipline.By 3 pm nearly all seats were taken andsecurity guards were blocking the halls toprevent additional students from entering.Michaels shifted his attention to his prob¬lem, which was partially solved when about40 or 50 students left their seats and stoodor sat in the aisles. Additional studentswere let in to fill up most seats; but at 3:15,with some 280 persons in the room andabout 15 more in the hall, a security officerannounced that no more would be let in dueto city fire regulations.The disciplinary committee — Anderson,Lucas and Romance languages professorBernard Weinberg — came in at 3:20, fiveminutes late. Lucas did not call the meet¬ing to order, but rather occupied himself,according to students near enough the po¬dium to hear, with the seating problem.Michaels had left his podium position andthe microphone when the committee camein and, he said later, attempted to work out a seating arrangement with Lucas. It waswhen that failed, he said, that he returendto the microphone, touching off the assaultincident.After the committee had left, studentsdiscussed the incident for about 45 minutes.One male student said that “in some de¬gree we played into their hands by givingthem an excuse not to hold the trial publi¬cly.”Another student thought the committeeshould be informed that “most of thesepeople here came to hear the trial, not todisrupt it,” and that the group had no in¬tention of distrupting a future public trial.Michaels said that SDS had “consistentlytold the committee we wanted a place bigenough for all observers,” and attributedthe committee’s refusal to move to Mandelhall to a deliberate attempt to have an ex¬cuse not to hold an open hearing. “Theywere afraid to hold an open meeting,” hecharged.A woman student commented that “thisis really a unique thing, that a facultymember should lose his cool so much as tophysically push somebody around. Theymust really be sweating it back there.”The 200 people remaining at 4:15 votedalmost unanimously in favor of a statementalleging that “the disciplinary committeewalked out unprovoked before the hearingbegan, after a member had physically at¬tacked a defense counsel (Michaels)” andrequesting that a new open hearing takeplace “on or before this Friday. If this isnot agreed to by the committee, we intendto hear the defesne case anyway,” thestatement concluded.Charges were dismissed against three ofthe 16 students originally charged becausethe photographs and statements by wit¬nesses did not provide sufficient evidenceof participation in the disruption.At a meeting Tuesday night, SDS voted tocontinue their boycott of Hutch and C-shopat least through today.Michaels said Wednesday the statementwas signed by dbolit 100 people'. Marx in Krueger’s class. Earlier in thequarter, IS members had distributed a leaf¬let to students in the class criticizing thereading list of the course. The leaflet de¬clared the inclusion of Marx and Engels inthe course was to prove them wrong. “Thebias in the Soc 111 reading list is best inter¬preted as a reaction of fear to the currentsocial turmoil. It goes counter even to theliberal UC ideal of ‘showing both sides”—e.g. giving the illusion of a value-freecourse by including authors of contrarypoints of view,” the leaflet said in part.The summonses were delivered to thethree students several days after one ofthem was evicted from Krueger’s 9:30class. At one point earlier in the quarter,Krueger remarked that he had often beenbothered by right wingers who disagreedwith the way he conducted his class, butthis was the first incident of left wing dis¬ruption. Other harassment of the professorreportedly took place outside of the class¬room.Krueger expressed surprise when ques¬tioned about the summonses, but offered nocomment on the action.IS has seven or eight active members oncampus, who are among fifteen or sixteenin the Chicago area chapter. members of the campus left felt that the-original decision of the faculty not to granttenure was based on Radinsky’s radical po¬litical stance. He was elected to the Councilof the University Senate last year.Ronald Singer, chairman of the depart¬ment of anatomy, said that the proceedingsof the tenured faculty were “extremelyconfidential” and could not be made public.He said that the faculty had “all the infor¬mation they needed” on Radinsky beforethe second meeting was held. He also saidthat when letters from other faculty con¬cerning the Radinsky case were sought lastweek, only one letter was received from ajunior faculty member. The tenured facultydecided to review their decision two weeksago when junior faculty and graduate stu¬dents expressed dissent with the first deci¬sion.Leigh Van Valen, assistant professor ofanatomy, said that “new information”presented to the tenured faculty Wednesdaymade the difference in reversing the deci¬sion. He said that not only other junior fac¬ulty in the department, but also other pro¬fessors and students who wrote letters inRadinsky’s support, were responsible forthe reversal.Radinsky declined to comment on the de¬cision itself until he is officially notifiedaround December 15. He said that it was anunusual move for the tenure committee to •explain their reasons for the original denialdecision to the junior faculty. He contendedthat the junior faculty’s and student’s dis¬agreement with those reasons was a majorfactor in reversing the decision.The Maroon incorrectly reported thatRadinsky has studied at Boston Universityand Brooklyn University. Radinsky has aPhD from Yale and taught at Boston Uni¬versity and Brooklyn College as an assis¬tant professor before coming to Chicagotwo years ago.Laws Says Her Review UsualJudith Long Laws; an assistant professorin the business school who was denied ten¬ure last month, told the Maroon Tuesdaythat it was not unusual for the businessschool to decide on tenure for junior facultyafter two years of teaching, which in hercase included one year as an instructor.This was confirmed by associate dean ofthe business school Gary Eppen.At last Thursday’s womens’ committeehearings, the University Women’s Associ¬ation (UWA) had incorrectly stated that thetenure decision had been made earlier thanusual for Mrs Laws, who is doing researchon women. They told the committee thatnormally junior faculty contracts are re¬viewed “based on their performance duringtheir first two years as assistant profes¬sor,” but according to Mrs Laws, this is notnormal procedure for the business school.She said however that the review after twoyears was “not what I had expected” whenshe was appointed to a three year term asan assistant professor.Professor Bernice Neugarten of the com¬mittee on human development and chair¬man of the committee on university womenreported that the committe had found “noevidence that the usual procedures werechanged for Mrs Laws” and no evidencethat research on women is not encouragedin this University. She pointed that thereare “two or three new courses” in womenand cited several dissertations on the sub¬ject in the committee on Human Devel- and psychology.Mrs Laws said that she has had “greatdifficulty at this University” in having herwork on women seriously judged, eventhough it “has been evaluated highly by ex¬perts in the field.” When asked whether shethought the University of Chicago more dis¬criminatory than other schools in its atti-Continued on Page SixJUDITH LONG LAWS Sieve Aoki•r*. / «, » Aopment and the departments of sociology.Tenujr?, Qqq$/pn .Not, UpujualDecember 5, 1969/Maroon News Issue/3EDITORIALContinued from Feature Page Onethis special news supplement. We think students have a right toknow all the news when it happens.The actual news of the past two weeks is of a varied and dis¬tressing nature.Tenure decisions concerning two young faculty membershave distressed us. The reversal of the original denial of tenureto Leonard Radinsky, assistant professor of anatomy, is a strangecase. The unusual reversal of the senior faculty decision has notbeen sufficiently accounted for. If Radinsky’s academic work isgood enough to win him a tenured position, as it has, why wasn’the given one in the first place? The senior faculty deny thatpolitical factors were of importance. They also deny that manyjunior faculty sprang to Radinsky’s defense — a denial that is con¬tradicted by statements from some junior faculty.The case of Judith Long Laws, an assistant professor in thqbusiness school, worries us even more. Radinsky’s case was re¬opened, at least, and he was rehired. Mrs Laws and her case seemsto be something the business school would like to dispose of asquickly as possible. What about their verdict of her academic workas not good enough — only one year after she’s gotten her PhD?What about their self assurance that they are qualified to judgeMrs Laws’ research, which deals with women, seriously, with im¬partial deliberation and authority — when this University showsa distressing lack of, perhaps even repression of, research onwomen? The budding annals of research on women are full ofnames of people who were kicked out of the University of Chicago,such as Naomi Weisstein and Marlene Dixon.Aside from the tenure cases, news that is perhaps more di¬rectly offensive to students has come out of the disciplinary hear¬ings scheduled for this week and next. The alleged offenses ofthe students on trial took place November 12, the seventh weekof the quarter. Trials are being held after an inexplicable delay,during tenth week and exam week, when spectators have lessopportunity to get news, and when defendents face the trying taskof finishing a quarter’s academic work while preparing a defense.The hearings are taking place under very ugly circumstances.We were amazed to read that the disciplinary committee grantedan open hearing for a collective defense — and now are expressinghorror and astonishment that so many students showed up. Theaccount of Tuesday’s abortive hearing by Jo Descha Lucas, chair¬man of the disciplinary committee, appears to us to be an injudi¬cious array of excessive rhetoric and misrepresentations. Take alook at the photograph on today’s front page. Does it look likeHerbert Anderson is “escorting” the student out of the room? Wefind the committee’s charges that the observers at the would-betrial were unruly and their insinuations of the student speakers’stupidity and connivance to be highly offensive, If this is the kindof “impartial” attitude the committee intends to display to thepersons it prosecutes and judges, we can feel nothing but appre¬hension about the hearings’ outcome. We think the committee hasexaggerated and distorted the facts of Tuesday’s hearing to givethem an excuse to hold more secretive hearings, and to deny stu¬dents a collective defense.Last year when the disciplinary committee started wieldingits axe, we felt a premonition that is now apparently comingto pass. Discipline — severe academic discipline — for actions“against the mission of the University” was once a dangerous andfeared weapon. Now that the precedent of its use has been set,we see a terrifying trend of a more and more casual use of thisweapon.The University, perhaps, does not realize what implicationsits blithe use of the disciplinary committee carry. If today we seestudents disciplined for their rude, disrespectful disagreements,what’s to stop us from seeing them disciplined next year for politedisagreements?Perhaps there are many students who are not more wary ofdisagreeing vociferously with the University this year than theywere last year. We think the University is breeding repressionand a climate of fear that is against everything it purports tostand for, and which, if unchecked is going to destroy it. NUC Accuses University PolicyOf Exclusion of Women FacultyLast year we learned that women com¬pose but %Vz percent of the University’s fac¬ulty. Many people argued that this low per¬centage explodes the university’s myths ofequal opportunity and impartial selectionand deprived them of important knowledgeand experience. Now we learn that 6Vfe per¬cent is too high a percentage of women forthis university. Take the case of JudithLong Laws.Three weeks ago Professor Laws wasgiven a two year terminal contract fromthe graduate school of business, in whichshe is an assistant professor. Ihat is, shewas fired. Both procedural and substantiveaspects of this decision indicate that it isanother high-level example, like the dis¬missal of Marlene Dixon of this university’ssystematic practice of exploiting, excludingand suppressing women.While Professor Laws had been told herwork would be reviewed after two years asan assistant professor (i.e., three years atthe university), it was reviewed after onlyone year at that level and two years at theuniversity.The review committee considered neitherher dissertation — the major work she hascompleted since her appointment — nor anin press article.The committee used evaluations fromjust two of the twelve courses she hastaught and consulted neither businessschool junior faculty nor any of the womenstudents from outside the business schoolwho have been about half of ProfessorLaw’s students.They attacked as “vague” and “pre¬sumptuous” her proposal for research onthe sexual identity of women, which hassince been approved by the scientific panelof the National Institute of Child Health andDevelopment.This research is very important to wom¬en. It can help them to understand thatwhat male-dominated society teaches eachis her own peculiar failing or inadequacy isnot unique, but rather a symptom of social¬ly determined oppressive patterns. This re¬search can help everyone to understand theprocesses through which women are op¬pressed and that understanding can help usfight oppression of women in the wholesociety. Mrs. Laws’ work and her teachingat the University have encouraged manywomen graduate students to launch theirown research on women. The dismissal ofLaws, following so closely the dismissal ofMarlene Dixon, means that women stu¬dents will have no one to provide guidanceand encouragement for them to study theirown oppression and to fight it.It is not accidental that the two facultyTHE CHICAGO M AROONEdi4or: Caroline HeckBusiness Manager: Emmet GonderManaging Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Editor: Sue LothPhoto Editors: Phil Lathrop, Steve AokiFeature 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, Alien Friedman, Sarah Glazer, PeteGoodsell, Stan Goumas, Susan Left, GerardLeval, Joseph Morris, Tom Mossberg, EllenSazzman, Audrey Shalinsky, David Steele,John Stevens, Carl Sunshine.Photography Staff: Mike Brant, Steve Current,Richard Davis, Monty Futch, Ben Gilbert,Mark Israel, Jesse Krakauer, Jerry Levy,David Rosenbush, Paul Stelter.Founded In 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students daily dur¬ing revolutions, on Tues¬days and Fjridays 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 Chicago, III. Subscribersto College Press Service. GADFLYmembers mostresponsivf^cHhfMieed^ifwomen students have been dismissed. It isno accident that concentration on women’sstudies is a fast road to being fired. Bothcases are dramatic examples of the dailyoppression of women at the University ofChicago. Consider:• A woman student will learn in psy¬chology class that women have an intrinsic(and inferior) nature which is biologicallydetermined; she will learn in history classthat women who were not the wives andmistresses of famous men have contributednothing to history — except for a fewfreaks involved in the fight for women’ssuffrage.• A married women is faced with theself-fulfilling prophecy that she must sub¬ordinate her own career to her husband'sinterests; a single woman with the self-ful¬filling prophecy that she will marry anddrop out anyway.•Women faculty face discrimination inpromotions — as we have seen — and areoppressed by the nepotism rule, selectivelyinvoked: Naomi Weisstein, who showedhow psychology has presented a distortedpicture of women, was fired a few yearsago because of this rule.Academic women, however, still enjoy aposition of far greater privilge than non-academic employees. Gradate student andjunior faculty wives provide a ready pool ofworkers for secretarial and laboratoryjobs; as these women move with their hus¬bands, rapid turnover helps the Universitykeep wages down and repress anyone whoattempts to organize a unionDown the line women are tracked intolower paying jobs and even if they manageto be hired for a higher status job, are paidless for the same work. In the nationaleconomy this wage differential betweenmen and women keeps the working classdivided and holds down the salaries of allworkers. ITuis, in the University the pre¬dominance of women in the lowest payingjobs — in the hospital and cafeterias —helps the University keep the wages inthese jobs at their present sub-standardlevel. Moreover, for these women the lackof free child care facilities, means theymust spend a large part of their salarieson baby-sitters.In a male supremacist institution, nowomen faculty member conscious of herstatus as a woman can receive a fair eval¬uation from her male colleagues; inevita¬bly, studies of women’s oppression will beviewed as unscholarly and inadequate. The“professional standards” applied to suchwork purport to measure its quality. Infact, they look not at quality but at kind.Research on women challenges one of thefoundations of the institution and thesociety. It enlightens women to their op¬pression and provides ammunition withwhich ec fight it. “professional standards’’enforce the mutual interests of those whorun the University and who profit from theknowledge and labor of its products, thegraduates. They want students to learn cer¬tain kinds of things and not others. Theydeliberately distort and repress informationwhich could help liberate those they ex¬ploit. Research helpful to women or anyoppressed group can never meet “profes¬sional standards” which justify and perpet¬uate exploitation. Judy Long Laws’ workmust be measured, not by these bankruptstandards, but by the understanding itbrings to women of their identity and(thereby of their oppression. By thesemilitantly “non-professional” standards,Mrs. Laws deserves to be rehired.This column was written by members ofthe New University Conference.The Maroon prints Gadfly columns onany issue relevant to the University com¬munity. The opinions of the guest colum¬nists are not necessarily endorsed by theMaroon. Individuals interested in submit-ing columns should contact the editor.I Maroon News Issue/ December 5, 1969Discipline Hearing—3 Different ViewsThe following is the text of a statementissued Thursday by Jo Desha Lucas, pro¬fessor of law and chairman of the specialdisciplinary committee concerning theC-Shcp and Hutch boycott.On Wednesday, November 12, the officeof the dean of students reported that anumber of persons physically blocked theentrances to the Coffee Shop and Hutchin¬son Commons in the Reynolds Club andforcibly prevented students, faculty, andstaff from entering either room, in viola¬tion of the University’s regulation againstdeliberate interference with its operationalactivities. On November 14, the committeeof the council of the University senate ap¬pointed a committee to hear and determinecharges brought against students involved.Sixteen persons were identified, eitherthrough witness statements or through pho¬tographs taken at the event, and chargedwith infraction of the regulation. Each wasnotified to appear for an interview with thechairman of the disciplinary committee. Atthat interview each person charged wasnotified of the precise charge that hadbeen made, was given a copy of any state¬ments linking him to the event, and waspermitted to examine the photographs thatwere taken. He was given in writing astatement of his procedural rights andprivileges, and the matter of a time andplace for a hearing was discussed withhim.The first person who appeared raisedwith the committee chairman the questionof whether the persons charged couldmake what he called a “collective de¬fense ” He was told that the committeetook the view that an infraction of a regu¬lation is a matter of individual responsi¬bility, and that the committee could makeno commitment to imposing the same dis¬cipline on everyone involved, and that itmust be made abundantly clear to eachperson charged that he has a right to ahearing individually, public or private, butthat if the nature of evidence and informa¬tion that a group of persons charged wish¬ed to present to the committee was such asto lead them to believe that it could bepresented most effectively at a joint hear¬ing, the committee was perfectly willing toschedule such a hearing. Eleven persons ofthe sixteen originally charged ultimatelyindicated their desire to participate in thejoint hearing. It was tentatively scheduledto be held in Room No. 1, Ricketts Labora¬tory North, a room with a capacity of ap¬proximately 100 persons. Objection wasraised to this room on the ground that itwas too small, it being stated that manymembers of the community might be inter¬ested in the views expressed in their pre¬sentation. The chairman of the committeeagain stressed the fact that insofar as thepersons involved were simply seeking ahall in which to address the general public,he assumed that such was available tothem, but the purpose of a hearing beingfor them to address the committee andpresent their case to it, it was necessary tohold such a hearing under circumstancesin which order could be maintained and anorderly presentation of evidence managed.He told them, however, that the committeewould investigate the availability of aroom somewhat larger than the room inRicketts. After a canvass of the possi¬bilities, the committee scheduled the hear¬ing in Room 133 Eckhart Hall. This roomhas a capacity of approximately 220.The hearing was set for 3:15 pm on De¬cember 2. The committee members ar¬rived in the building at 3 pm and waited inRoom 130, adjacent to the hearing room,until the persons charged and the wit-nesses and representatives or spokesmencould be admitted and seated and the roomfilled with spectators to the extent thatseats remained. At some moment before3:15, the committee was told that therewas an overflow of about 15 or 20, andpermission had been asked for them to sitjn the rear of the room on the stairs, itbeing represented that they are permittedb> do so in classes. After making inquiriesnbout the view of the fire guards and se¬curity officers present, the committeeaSreed that this would be done. SomeoneSee 'Lucas,' Page Seven Steve AokiCLOSE-UP: Escorted? Pushed? Anderson and Michaels 'confront' each otherduring the disciplinary hearing Tuesday.By Kathy Lindsley, Pat Scott, HoustonStevens and Randee RusselWell over 200 students met in EckhartTuesday to hear the collective defense ofthe eleven students being tried by the Uni¬versity administration for a militant boy¬cott over the demand for free meals forcafeteria and dietary workers. As the roombegan to fill the campus cops began to ex¬clude students while continuing to admitfaculty and deans. People inside movedinto the aisles to provide seats and calledfor the other students to be let in. When thejudges (also jury) arrived, Burt Michaels(a member of SDS chosen by the defend¬ants as their counsel) asked that the peoplebe allowed to enter. He was assured thatthis would happen. But the people were notallowed in and Burt returned to the plat¬form. When he took the microphone, Her¬bert Anderson, Professor in the departmentof physics and Fermi Institute, (impartialjudge) grabbed at the microphone. “What’syour name?” shouted Anderson. Burt toldhis name and asked “What’s yours?” An¬derson did not respond, whereby Burtturned to the crowd and asked if anyoneknew who the man was. At this point Ander¬son began hitting him and pushing him offthe platform. Anderson then returned andtore out the mike.Mr Lucas, professor of law, testi¬fies “. .. the members of the committee se¬cured the microphone from the young manand escorted (sic) him a few feet until hewas no longer standing in back of the com¬mittee.” Knowing that 150 eyewitnesses(with the exception of the suddenly near¬sighted Mrs Anderson) saw Mr Andersonstrike and shove Burt Michaels and tearthe mike from the cord, Lucas blithelystates that Michaels was escorted off thestage and the microphone was “secured.”If Lucas’ interpretation is correct, 150people must have hallucinated. Maybepeople are hallucinating when they see rac¬ist oppression or workers at the Universityof Chicago. (When we shut down the C-shopand the Hutch in support of workers theycall it infringement of civil liberties, yetwhen they attack us they call if pre¬servation of law and order.)Meanwhile, after Anderson’s attack,Lucas, preserving order, banged a gaveland declared the meeting adjourned. Thusthe University disrupted a trial that both the defendants and the audience had want¬ed to take place because it was afraid toconfront SDS on the issues of free mealsand University racism.During the campaign this panic at thethought of dealing with SDS accusationsface to face has made itself apparent sev¬eral times. Once personnel director FredBjorling refused to speak to a rally outsidehis office and used police to keep SDS outof his office building. Another time the ad¬ministration refused to send a spokesmanto defend its position at a forum on the freemeals demand. A third time the Universitycompletely dropped its facade of rationaldiscourse when it had a member of Inter¬house Council lead two SDS people on awild goose chase through Harper Library,down through Kelly, over to Eckhart, intoMandel, around the Reynolds Club desk,and up into WHPK where he dodged themand ran off. All this to keep them from ameeting with Bjorling that they had beeninvited to by the head of IHC. Clearly theUniversity of Chicago is afraid of some¬thing.To several of us this may seem strangewhen we think of last year. Then the Univer¬sity was always chasing us around holdingcurriculum meetings in every depart¬ment to implement student power and dis¬cuss “How we can make university educa¬tion exciting, rewarding, and RELEVANT!That was right up their alley because theywere keeping us in their framework. Butthis year, we have taken another look attheir framework, not only as a teacher, butas a boss, and we find that there is a needto challenge some things that are basic tothe university. That’s why they’ve tried todiscipline 14 of us, and that’s why they tryso hard to avoid confrontation with us.What they didn’t want to talk about at thetrial were a number of questions that hadcome from our experience working in part-time campus jobs. For instance, we wouldhave liked to ask the committee why in twooffices in Billings that do the same work,one employs all white workers making 30cents per hour more than workers at theother office which employs all black work¬ers. We wanted to find out why a whitewoman in SDS was hired at Billings at astarting wage of 7 cents more than a blackSee 'SDS/ Page Seven By David Anglin, Brian Cartwright andJohn FriedmanWe attended the disciplinary hearing De¬cember 2 of SDS students involved in themilitant picket of Hutch Commons. In thelight of the gross distortions contained inthe December 3 broadside issued by chair¬man of the disciplinary committee, JoDesha Lucas, to the faculty and students ofthe University of Chicago, we feel it neces¬sary to set the record straight.The doors to Eckhart 133 were unlockedat 2:45 and students entered, virtually fill¬ing the room by 2:50. At the time securityguards barred further students from enter¬ing. Burt Michaels of SDS, using a micro¬phone which was set up at the front of theroom began a WSA rap interspersed withcomplaints that the room was too small andthat faculty were still being admitted whilestudents were being turned away. Theguards, publicly counting eight empty seatsadmitted a few more students. In responseto this action students were motivated tovacate their seats so that perchance, theguards would admit more of those outsidewho were being denied admission. Thecommittee then entered the room amidjeers. It is apparent from the description ofthe assembly by Dr Lucas that he was ei¬ther astonishingly unaware of or chose toignore the reasons why “though there wasa considerable number of vacant seats ...some people were leaving their seats forthe aisles.” Instead, he makes it sound likeirrational behavior contributing to a “highstate of confusion. ” Only he was confused.Dr Lucas speaks of one student “shoutingto the crowd” and of another “clutching abullhorn.” Reasonable terminology wouldhave been “addressing the assembly,” or“holding” the horn. Moreover, no impartialaccount would have mentioned the bullhornat all since it was not even used until afterprofessor Anderson had ripped the micro¬phone from its wire and the committee haddeparted. Professor Lucas pictures the au¬dience as an unruly mob stirred up by se¬ditious agitators.As no further spectators and witnesseswere being admitted to the room, Burt Mi¬chaels told the audience that SDS witnessesremained outside and that cafeteria work¬ers would soon finish their shift. He askedthe committee to admit the witnesses andlet the cafeteria workers attend the meet¬ing. Dr Lucas calls this “making some sortof speech” and “shouting instructions tothe committee.” The committee sat for afew minutes without calling the meeting toorder. When Michaels tried to use the mi¬crophone, which students had been usingfor the previous half hour without adversecomment by either security or by anymember of the committee, Professor Lucasangrily asked Michaels his name; simulta¬neously Professor Herbert Anderson stoodup, grabbed the microphone from Michaels,ripping the cord, and pushed Michaelsabout ten feet until he was off the dais.Since no one had previously asked Michaelsto relinquish the mike, the audience wasinfuriated. There was general hissing andbooing, while people shouted “law and or¬der” and “summons Anderson.” Lucas’ de¬scription of a lunging, shoving, Herbert An¬derson in the phrase “one of the membersof the committee secured the microphonefrom the young man and escorted him afew feet until he was no longer standing inback of the committee” exceeds even thebounds of academic deadpan.Then, says Lucas, “in one of those unex¬plained quiet moments ... I explained tothe assembly that if order could not be hadin that room the hearing would have to beadjourned and held in a place where itcould be more easily maintained.” Therewas no such quiet moment: after Ander¬son’s action the audience was in an uproar,and now for the first time was it appro¬priate to speak of “shouting to the crowd,”not of “explaining to the assembly.” Theaudience treated Lucas’ words as a threatto hold closed hearings (which, in the con¬text, is what they were) and “took up aconstant clapping” to keep time withSee 'Anglin/ Page SevenDecember 5, 1969/Maroon News Issue/5Lottery Is Obscene with High StakesBy Steve CookBingo is illegal in this state, even forchurches, but it is all right for the SelectiveService to play games with people’s lives.Monday night, little blue capsules con¬taining the birthdates of draft-eligible menwere drawn out of a fishbowl to determinepriority in the draft. College students with2S deferments would be eligible for con¬scription in the order of their birthdateschosen in the lottery Monday, though theymight not lose their deferments for severalyears.Number one, September 14; numbertwo, April 24; number three, December30..The 7:30 newscast had only the “topten.” My number wasn’t there; I waiteduntil the 8 pm news.Christ, what a deal. It’s bad enough to bea citizen of this country which insists onmurdering Vietnamese people, but to besubject to this obscene game...As I waited, I thought about the draft.The lottery is supposed to make the draftsystem more equitable, I had been told.The rules are the same for everyone. Thedraft had been such an incredible mess be¬fore.Then I realized I had never thought aboutthe draft in terms of myself. When I was afirst-year student, four years of a 2Sseemed really great. And the war justcouldn’t go on that long.I once knew a guy named Kevin who isnow in jail in Missouri for draft resistance,I remember talking with him the night be¬fore his sentencing. He was upset, I wasn’tsympathetic. I still had three years leftthen.Last year I interviewed John Welch andRob Skeist for a story on their resistancework. After talking about the movement fora while, Welch turned to me and asked,“What are you doing about the draft?” I told him I didn’t know. I still had twoyears left then.Now I am a third-year student and I don’tplan to be a minister. What then?The 8 pm news was on. I caught it atnumber eighty.“Number eighty-one, April 4; numbereighty-two, September 5; number eighty-three, April 3; number eighty-four, Decem¬ber 25..Jesus would make first priority.My number still hadn’t come up. I couldbe before eighty or after eighty-five. Kafkawould love this.“Number one thirty-six, March 11; num¬ber one thirty-seven, June 25...”There I was, 137 until I’m thirty-fiveyears old. Middle priority, I’m going tohave to sweat it out a year, month bymonth.Male students all over campus werewatching TV or listening to the radio. “Lot¬tery parties” were quite the thing Monday;a bottle of wine made it a little easier totake.It really wasn’t that the pre-lottery draftwas so screwed up, anyway. The draft isonly a small part of the problem in thiscountry. They don’t need a lottery for thethouunds of people who do research for thePentagon; the Defense department payswell. And where were the little blue cap¬sules for the men who made this war, theLBJ’s, the Nixon’s, the McNamaras, andthe Lairds?The radio announcer said that David Eis¬enhower was number thirty. Good for him.He should volunteer.I went over to console a friend who wasnumber five. His fourth-year roommatewas there.“Man, I’ve been uptight over this thingall day,” he said. “I started Buddhistchants this morning. If you ask for theright things, you’re supposed to get it.” “Did it work?” I asked.“Sure did,” he grinned, “I’m number360.”As I left, he muttered a good-bye in Chi¬nese.Maybe there were a lot of people like mewho had finally really thought about thedraft. Maybe the movement had gained afew more souls Monday night.Continued from Page Onetude towards the study of women she an¬swered affirmatively. “There is good re¬search, new, novel and demythologizing atsome other universities.”Mrs Laws did graduate work at HarvardUniversity and for her PhD dissertationwrote a study of self-actualization motiva¬tion. Her current research is on self-identi¬ty theory. Last year Mrs Laws taught aseminar with Marlene Dixon, whose dis¬missal from the University sparked lastwinter’s sit-in.Questioned whether she thought this facthad affected her tenure decision, Mrs Lawsreplied that she was “clearly associatedwith her politically ... I have been calledupon to defend her in many situations.”Mrs Laws said that she and Mrs Dixonwere working on a book together, but thatthe evaluation committee had not recog¬nized this in the evaluation. Mrs. Laws saidthat she did not know who the members ofher evaluation committee are, and said“The paradox is that the person most in¬volved knows least about it.” She said thesecret identity of the committee membersprevented her from asking “the questions Iwant to ask” about her case.Mrs. Laws said, “In a sense, no pressure I passed two glassy-eyed friends of minton the way home.“Hi, I’m 289 and he’s 314.”No chance for radicalization, I thought“Divide and conquer;” Nixon’s got it allworked out. When you’re last priorityyou’ve got nothing to lose.Now if I’d been born one day earlier.Steve Cook, ’71, is associate news editorof the Maroon.has been put on the business school. I havenot seen any signs from the business schoolthat they are willing to be responsive to theconcern that’s been expressed.”Associate dean Eppen of the businessschool said that he did not think there hadbeen any discrimination in Mrs Laws’ case.He commented, “It wasn’t a secret thatJudy was a woman when we hired her andif we wanted to discriminate against herthat would have been the time to do it.”Mrs Laws said, “In a personal commu¬nication the committee (on UniversityWomen) told me they have decided not toget involved, because there’s no issue aboutwomen in my case. That says somethingabout the role of the committee in the Uni¬versity.”When iformed of Mrs Laws’ comment,Mrs Neugarten responded by emphasizingthat the committee is “not a review body toreview individual cases.” The committee’spurpose, she said is to “research the pol¬icies and procedures on women and to seeif there are any discriminatory policies inthe University.” She said, “We have notbeen asked by Mrs Laws to look into hercase. It was brought up by students at ahearing and the members inquired whethersomething special should be done.”UWA Finds No DiscriminationGOING HOME FOR THE'CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYSCALL-374 8555KEY CLUB TRAVEL2910 E. 79th, CHICAGO, ILLINOISROUND TRIP TO: EXCURSIONFARE THRIFT OR ECONOMYFARENEW YORK 00 to o O 10200SAN FRANCISCO 17100 18400LOS ANGELES 17100 18400DENVER 9900 10800MIAMI — 15400SEATTLE oo 21400| NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICE |antA ^JrtiveA Gallery of Pots and PlantsLargest variety of exotic houseplants and one-of-a kind ce¬ramic planters in the Uni¬versity of Chicago area.Combine a specimen from the largest variety of exotichouse plants in the Chicago area with a one-of-a-kindceramic pot at potter's prices, or select one of our owncombinations for a uniquely beautiful gift.5210 S. Harper Ave. (in Harper Court) 5IN %HARPER COURTCHANCES ROUR SPECIALITYWorld-famous choicest steakburgerdraft beer —free peanuts {«-i/Mirioh Ysiue/ kcember Open daily forcocktails, lunch, dinnerand in between5225 S. Harperin Hyde ParkTelephone 363-1454Closed MondoysDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th s>.363-7644 £CompleteSchoolSuppliesThe Card Nook9:30.6 P.M. 1456 E. 53rdMon.-Sat. 955-2510 Deadline for application for financial assistance for theacademic year 1970-71 is February 1.All students who wish to receive financial assistance must apply. Applications areavailable in the Office of Admissions and Air, 5737 University.CARLOAD TIRE SALE"Mobil Premier" Premium Quality• 100 Level • Full 4 Ply• Nylons • WhitewallsSAVE 50%Buy 2 And Get 2 FreeTIRE SIZE775-14/775-15825-14/815-T5855-14/845-15900-15/915-15And Away You Go...tor Smooth DrivingNew tires? Oil change? Whatever yourcar needs, you can be sure of fast,friendly, efficient Ciuto service, here. HYDE PARKCAR WASH1330 L 53rl SI.LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROONMuffed itThe Student Government letter about theOmbudsman selection does not set therecord straight. In fact.• The committee which reviewed the appli¬cations consisted of two faculty membersand the dean of students.• The two candidates selected for inter¬view were both unknown to both facultymembers.• The decision to interview these twobased on a reading of the applications, SGrecommendations, letters from facultymembers, advisers and others in support ofthe various candidates, and academic tran¬scripts. The committee concluded thatbased c,n these factors, the two students se¬lected for interviews had significantlystronger applications than the rest.• All of the candidates except one wereknown to the dean of students. Some whowere not selected for interview were knownto one or the other of the faculty.• Some of those who were not interviewedhad worked as extensively with the Univer¬sity in one position or another as the twowho were.• The committee considered interviewingall of the applicants. After considerable dis¬cussion, they decided to interview onlythose who seemed to be the strongest candi¬dates. Perhaps all applicants should be in¬terviewed, though this is time-consuming,especially if there are large number ofpeople seeking the job.Karl J BemesderferAssistant to the president'C'est pour toi . . /When push comes to shove (first Hutch¬inson and then at Tuesday’s “trial”) oneis pushed to ruminate upon who or what isshoving whom. Somehow, the Universitycomes out being the benevolent dictator¬ship, reacting as wildly as only benevolence can in the face of ingratitude.UC/SDS, on the other hand, comes off assanely paranoid ingrates, with a somewhatpedantic and sophomoric uncoolness. Butsanely paranoid. Despite an incredible ten¬dency to dump their entire lead of garbageindiscriminately upon our heads, they areultra-responsibilities.After all, UC/SDS is wily doing what lib¬erals have so often been told to do. Start athome. Don’t come down to the ghetto toclean up this society; start at home in thewhite suburb, the elite enclave, the blockwhere you live. The sickness is right hereat home — the sickness is ours as well asthe revolution.Starting at home doesn’t mean beau¬tification programs and playgrounds in thesuburb.Starting at home is attacking the sick¬nesses of our society — the injustice, dis¬crimination, hate, pollution, oppression,and just plain atrocity — where it occurs onour block. Our community. This the Univer¬sity cannot handle. Understandably. Theseare not internal and isolated beau¬tifications, they are the fundamentalagonies of a society, reflected on our block.The revolution is not only now, but here.“C’est pour toi que tu fais la revolution.”Peter LehmanI didn't do it!I was a participant in the SDS boycott ofthe C-Shop and Hutch Commons in supportof the free meals for cafeteria workers de¬mand November 12, and I am now one ofthe fourteen students who are going to bedisciplined for this action. I rememberbeing really surprised and shocked when Iread in the November 14 Maroon that a‘‘mil d-mannered secretary” had beenthrown to the ground and kicked during theboycott. I didn’t recall any such thing hap¬pening, and I knew that none of us wouldhave intended anything like that to happen. This hardly compared with my surprise,though, when at my preliminary hearing Ilearned that I was being accused of doingthe kicking. I went to see my accuser in thefull expectation that she was deliberatelylying for the administration. (I had everyreason to think that this was possible, sinceat Harvard last year a student was accusedby a dean of having touched his elbow andnudged him out of University Hall. Over ahundred students were willing to swear thatthe student in question hadn’t in fact donethis; that he had been engaged at the timeof escorting another dean out of the build¬ing. But of course the testimony of the deanwas taken over that of all the students at acivil hearing, and as a result the student’sprobably going to get a year in jail becausethe dean was willing to perjure himself onbehalf of the University.)Anyhow, with such thoughts in my mind Iwent to see the secretary. But actually shedidn’t strike me as being an administrationlackey. She seemed to be an honest person,and I do believe that she was hurt duringthe boycott. It seems that she was caughtin the middle of the crowd when the Stu-dents for Capitalism and Freedomlaunched an attack from behind the crowd.She says she was thrown off her feet duringthe melee and that the.n I kicked her. I toldher that I was willing to swear that I didn’tdone it; she replied that she was “prettycertain” that I had — certain enough tohave signed a statement when an adminis¬tration official who was standing aroundasked her to point out who had done it. Ican understand why she picked me out,since I was standing right in front of thedoor during the melee and she must haveconnected my face with the foot that kickedher. What is significant, though, is that shealso said that she was really sorry that ithad come to this; she said that it hadn’tseemed to her that we were trying to hurtanyone at all I’m going into all this because I thinkthat, whether the secretary intended it ornot, her statement is being used to frameme and to discredit the whole purpose ofthe boycott. The boycott was held in supportof campus workers — not as an attack onthem. The charges that the Administrationsubmitted to the Maroon is completely un¬true; it is a deliberate attempt to turn theboycott into an anti-people demonstration.It can’t go unanswered.Barbara Foley, UC SDSEvaluationsOn Friday, November 22, and again onMonday, November 25, I went to the Ma¬roon office to ask for publicity for thisyear’s social sciences collegiate divisioncourse evaluation.What in the hell is wrong with the Ma¬roon staff? At a time when student opinionof courses and faculty is seldom solicited,and then not systemically, the Maroon re¬fuses to give any coverage to a systematicattempt (by students) to solicit studentevaluations of courses and faculty.Since this letter is not appearing until af¬ter the end of classes for the autumn quar¬ter, it is now too late for the Maroon toprovide us with the kind of publicity weneeded. Nevertheless, we still intend topublish an evaluation of courses taught dur¬ing the autumn quarter. We are, therefore,asking those students who had classes inthe social sciences collegiate division au¬tumn quarter and did not receive courseevaluation forms in their classes to go toGates-Blake 428 and fill them out.In the future our council hopes the Ma¬roon will more adequately fulfill its role asan organ of communication in the univer¬sity community by letting students in theCollege know what efforts are being madeto develop student evaluations of coursesand faculty.Harry Greenwald, chairmanCollegiate division student councilWhat Happened? Was He Assaulted or Escorted?Lucas . . .Continued from Page Fivewas dispatched to admit those people.When the committee entered the hearingroom, it found it in a high state of con¬fusion. People were sitting on the floor inthe aisles, though there was a considerablenumber of vacant seats. Indeed somepeople were leaving their seats to take uppositions in the aisles. The personscharged, or some of them, for the crowdscene was such as to make quick identi¬fication impossible, were sitting on the leftend of the dais. One was shouting to thecrowd and another was clutching a bullhorn. There was a group milling aroundeach of the side exits of the room, in¬cluding a person whom I recognized as oneof the unidentified persons in the picturesof the disruption that occasioned the hear¬ing. She was shouting at the crowd. Thegeneral level of noise was high. On thedais itself was a young man I first took tobe a University employee testing a micro¬phone that had been provided to help thechairman of the committee make himselfheard. When he began to shout instructionsto the committee, I asked him who he was.He stated that he was one of the “counselfor the defendants.” He had taken up aposition behind the back of the committeeand at this point he leaned over me andtook possession of the microphone that wason the table in front of me and began mak¬ing some sort of speech. I rose and in¬structed him to get off the dais. At thispoint one of the members of the committeesecured the microphone from the youngman and escorted him a few feet until hewas no longer standing in back of the com¬mittee. The young man began to shout thatne had been the innocent victim of an un¬provoked assault and the level cf noisefrom all sides mounted. At one of thoseunexplained quiet moments, to my knowl¬ edge the only one that occurred, I ex¬plained to the assembly that if order couldnot be had in that room the hearing wouldhave to be adjourned and held in a placewhere it could be more easily maintained.This was greeted with some shouted re¬sponses which I did not hear very clearlybut seemed to be intended as reparteedealing with “law and order.”The audience took up a constant clapp¬ing. I hammered with a gavel for a briefperiod but this proved to serve no functionbut that of a metronome. At this juncture Idecided that there was simply no possi¬bility of holding a hearing and I adjournedthe proceeding. The committee then leftthe room.The persons charged will be notified of anew date and place when they will be af¬forded an opportunity to present their caseto the committee.SDS...Continued from Page Fivewoman who started the same day doing ex¬actly the same job.We’d especially like to ask Mr. Bjorling ifhe could raise a family on $60 a week, andif not, we’d like to ask him why he said that$2.07 per hour is a good wage for a blackwoman food service worker. And finally wewanted to find out why they hire all blackwomen in the jobs on campus that have theworst working conditions and the lowestpay, and then refuse them even the min-imul benefit of free meals.We would like to raise the question ofMrs O’Connor, a, racist supervisor at Bur¬ton-Judson cafeteria. She was at Pierce fora while, but the workers hated her so muchthat they demanded that she be fired. Didthe University get rid of a racist super¬visor? No! They merely transferred her toBJ where she fired several black workersto save money — doubling the work load ofthe other workers. Just in the last week, she fired a black woman for being out twoweeks with the flu. We would like to see theUniversity try to explain this.The University can’t answer our charges,but we can answer theirs. We spent hourspreparing a defense to present to the peoplewho came to the trial. This was not becausewe expected to get justice from this courtwith a clever defense. On the contrary,* inspite of all Lucas’ stress on due process inhis recent leaflet, it means nothing morethan that we will be found guilty of thecharges with due process.The reason we want to present our de¬fense is to meet the charges behind thecharges — the charges that we were andare beginning to fight racism and tolbuildanalliance between students and campus work¬ers. Yes, we interfered with the normal op¬erations of the University; yes, we inter¬fered with the normal extra oppression ofblack workers on campus. We want out de¬fense to explain why we fight for freemeals and why we call this a fight against racism. We want workers and students tounderstand this because they are the oneswho have an interest in joining us in thesestruggles. Moreover, only a mass move¬ment of workers and students would havethe power to prevent the movement frombeing smashed by periodic reprisals, likethe current discipline.We do want to stay in school — we wantto stay to continue the fight for free meals.The University claims it has a right tothrow us out because we disrupted its nor¬mal operations. We charge that the univer¬sity has no right to continue its normal ex¬ploitation or to throw people out for dis¬rupting it. Now we are continuing the fightwith a boycott of Hutch and the C-shop. Webelieve that we will have to fight militantlyto win even this demand. Not only will avictory for us cost the university money,but it will give a tremendous boost to work¬ers’ and students’ struggles here. Knowingthis, the University picked the first oppor¬tunity to get rid of SDS and scare otherstudents and workers from fighting for freemeals. But we will not be intimidated! Weare fighting to win — AND WE WILL!We will be presenting our defense todayat 1 in Mandel hall to students and workers.We have invited the judges to the trial, buthave received no word as yet if they willcome. All are invited to attend.Anglin . . .Continued from Page FiveLucas’ gavel. When Lucas stopped gavel-ing, the crowd stopped clapping, and Lucas“adjourned” what had never in fact beencalled to order.The words and deeds of the men on thisdisciplinary committee have shown that,far from being impartial judges, they arein fact angry parties to the dispute. Whenthey themselves disrupt a hearing, theycannot fairly rule on the “disruptions” ofothers.M»mb#r 5, 1969/Maroon Nows Issue/7pTHE BYRDSBALLAD OFEASY RIDERINCLUDING:BALLAD OF EASYRIDER/OIL IN MY LAMPARMSTRONG, ALDRIN AND COLLINSIT'S ALL OVER NOW, BABY BLUEJESUS IS JUST ALRIGHTSECONDWINTERincluding: THE CHAMBERS BROTHERSLOVE, PEACE AMD HAPPIMESSincluding:Wake Up/ Lets Do It / Bang BangI Can't Turn You LooseON COLUMBIA RECORDS SS•rcciuMwv^«»rc«seg idmicoinusa Also available on tapesNASHVILLE SKYLINEBOB DYLANincluding:I Threw ItAll AwayNashvilleSkyline RagGirl From theNorth CountryLay Lady JOHNNY CASH ATSAN QUENTINincluding:A Boy Named Sue Wanted Man I Walk The LineStarkville City Jail San Quentin AllTAJ MAHAL/GIANT STEPincluding:Take A Giant StepGive Your Woman What She WantsYou're Gonna Need Somebody On Your BondKeep Your Hands Off Her /Six Days On The Road OD.SWEAT*^^ You've Made MeSo Very Happy^S*SpinmngWheel/Moreand MoreGod BlessThe ChildI GOT DEM OL’wsmt WVKAGAIN MAMA!MfinffsoM nrINCLUDING:TRY/MAYBE/ONE GOOD MANTO LOVE SOMEBODY/WORK ME, LORDINCLUDING:QUESTIONS 67 AND 68/BEGINNINGSUSTEN/LIBERATION /SOMEDAYTHIS CHRISTMAS TAKE ALOOK AROUND. AND JOIN US IN AGREETING: PEACE AND JOY.GOODWILL TOWARDS MEN.8/Maroon Nows Issue/ December 5, 1969v ‘ *m! i'j/n i >* n s i J* .(At.