'DIe Alumni Association5733 University AvenueChicago 37, IllinoisG680\ IIN1.001.JC·Vi.....-I-<Q)>'"0<C•0MVJro;:l'"0.S;'"0C-•1.00VJuEQ)'"0rou<C•0N�..J.....-cQ)'"0;:l.....---- r:/J•c�I 0I Ut '"0cro0...roU.. ' '. rj;I_, � .1. •.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 19682 1967-'68Nine monthsWhat was it all about?The College The WarResistance. PleikuThe March on WashingtonSaigon, DMZ, Hanoi,N ames on a map DeathHenry Moore's Bald BombGiven on a cold day-DecemberMemory of a colder day, years agoKhe SahnWhat was it all about?The College The Election (Regulated insanity)Romney rocks .. Rockefeller says noNixon againMcCarthy, the need for PeaceKennedy behind the scenesAnd then He said, "N 0"We met that night at the quads and said, "Wow"LBJ, now a man.What was it all about?The College The UniversityAn Ivory Tower in an Ebony MoatBeadle-Levi, Booth, O'ConnellHigher tuition-lower gradesRegenstein, the big holeDrugs, Pot, keeping coolFall to winter to springThe quiet changesAnd what was it all about? Student Village4 Look back on your freshman self; hopping nervously offthe plane or train or bus; maneuvering your lonely trunkfulof personal belongings over to a cab; riding away with anunfamiliar address in an unfamiliar city to an unfamiliarlife.Most of us didn't really know why we were going here; ifwe thought we did, we often discovered that we had tochange our minds in a few years' time. And, considering thehours of hindsight we could enrich ourselves with today, wek new very Ii ttle a bou t the four years of our life we werebound for.But we all came to Chicago, anyway.Chicago: once called City of the Broad Shoulders, what isit now?One of the great cities of the world in sheer size, it lacksthe glamour that a city is entitled to. To say "Chicago"should evoke a set of hyperbolic, yet basically true, stereo­types - connotations, a spirit. But it doesn't. The roaringtwenties have roared away into the unreal past, and nothinghas replaced them as Chicago's image. It isn't even HogButcher for the World anymore; they do that in Omahanowadays.chicago river5old town6 Dowdy Chicago isjealous without hope of itsmore spectacular sister - suave, cosmopolitanNew York and brash, flashy Los Angeles. TheChicago River is not the Hudson; Lake Michiganis not the Pacific. Is the Picasso anywhere near asstriking as the Statue of Liberty - or the WattsTower, for that matter? As America progressedfrom its worldly Eurpoean past to the chaotic blue­prints of the Californian future, Chicago wasdropped right in the dull, ordinary middle of today.Chicago: ignored because it is too familiar andutterly mysterious. It doesn't go in for space-agetechnology - only dumb things like steel, out ofwhich most things are still made. Organized Cul­ture has little influence here - if you really want tothink, you may have to do it by yourself.An industrial metropolis attached to a slice ofthe rural Midwest. Glassy towers on the lakefront;squalid slums a mile inland; and the masses of theno longer poor living beyond both in the safesuburbs.Chicago is big enough and important enough and excitingenough not to be judged by the same charitable standards ofurbanity that we apply to the average middle-sized city; it isa great city. But what does its greatness consist of? Thesheer defensiveness of its boosters comes from having toboost a Second City in all the distinctions of greatness.He who persists in admiring Chicago will find it hard tosupport his pride by comparisons with the spectacles of oth­er cities. Having no image to suggest to us, it can show usonly the honest glamor and fascination of the complexitiesof big-city life in America today: those which remain inNew York and Los Angeles also, but only after the touristsgo home. There is in the muddled aspirations and problemsof Chicago something representative of much more thanChicago.Chicago: the Great American Logical Contradiction.City of monotony and conformity which nevertheless has atleast one of everything and everyone. The city which neverplans ahead and is always there tomorrow.Chicago: City of the American Shoulders, huddling ner­vously in the middle of our age, good and bad. It has every­thing: sixty storeys and tenements; rich, poor, and middle­middle; white and black; right and wrong; a university. maxwell street78We live on an island. The dry landthat connects us to the what-it-is wecall the world, is a fiction. Is HydePark a logical extension of Wood­lawn, Kenwood, or South Shore?Does it belong to the Loop that wecan see looming through the north­ward smog? Or South Chicago? Wehave more in common with the lake.Hyde Park is integrated, more orless. Praise it for its advances, or cas­tigate it for its hypocrisy; comparedto almost any other community inthe country, it is still a rare neighbor­hood indeed.Here, Education is not just thetraditional rite of passage the com­mon man subjects himself to; in oneway or another, most Hyde Parkersbelieve it to be a real thing in its ownright. Those mythopoeic authorities,PhD's, are your neighbors. Tenbookstores for 40,000 people. Aca­deme is here and now; and a strangeisolated world it is.Is Hyde Park part of Daley Chica­go, or Dirksen Illinois, or JohnsonAmerica? Dissent is conformity, thestatus quo daring.Thus we show what we knew any­way: Hyde Park is strange.910 Black and white, in a sea of black, in an ocean of white.Most of us came from the ocean; we grew up there, hardlyaffected by the swarming troubles of the distant ghetto. Allof a sudden, there it was all around us. Urban Problems arerealities.Storefront churches and carry out soul food, seen fromthe EI platform. Howling Wolf, Paul Butterfield, and everyband on campus playing the blues. The family in the down­stairs apartment is on A.D.C. The kid who stops you on thesidewalk tells you he's in the Blackstones; what are yougoing to do about it, hey man, got a quarter?There are no abstractions left to us. Comfortable defini­tions and comfortable answers don't work. After watchinga scraggly child get shaken down by an older boy down theblock, how can you expect him to understand the reward ofvirtue? But by the same token, how can you spin sociologi­cal excuses to yourself while you're getting mugged?Maybe things will work out.1112· '."';.)0.;. .... '!."" •• _'/(';.,,;:, • .;.1314Hyde Park is full of changes. It isprobably one of the most variableneighborhoods in Chicago. Almostevery block is distinguished by someunique quirk of architecture or plan­ning that delays the contempt thatfamiliarity should bring.Blocks of plain, square, dirtythree-story apartment buildings.Blocks of vacant fields, sown withbroken glass and half-buried bricks.Blocks with the odd, nine-to-five feelof the outlying parts of the campus.Tree-smothered blocks with old,ripening Victorian homes - agemeans money. Blocks of clean,sterile townhouses - newness meansmoney. Dowdy hotels for the elderlyand well-to-do; doorman ned highris­es for the better-to-do. The park andthe lake.It can be a pleasant diversion tostroll across Hyde Park, imagining itto be the world and counting the va­riety of countries that it contains.1516The Quadrangle must be credit­ed with some kind of architecturalcharm. A monolithic gray citadelpresenting an even face to the out­side world; an ivory tower witharrow slits for the defenders. It'snot showy so much as it is solid.Rapidly weathered by our pecul­iar Chicago atmosphere, the graystone looks as if it were meant tobe used and grow old, without anyintention of being changed.171819Occupation: Student. It is astrange occupation. No up to facethe rush hour at eight thirty, coffeebreak, lunch, coffee break, off to facethe rush hour at five; it's over.Schedules and deadlines pervade ourlife, and are sometimes ignored. Thedividing line between work and rec­reation is irregularly flexed accord­ing to what we can get away with.And do we really study while weare being Students? How muchthought goes into the quizzes, pap­ers, and reports that are suppose tomake us think? A field spread withHume papers would be fertile, in­deed.But then, do we ever stopthinking? How many bull sessionsare supported by our common stockof Gen Ed? How often do we rereadfrom curiousity that book weskimmed through in haste before thelast exam? We have learned, thoughnot always satisfactorily, to work,play, and do nothing at more or lessthe same time.22Apartment life is, perhaps themost desired living arrangement forthe student body. Many move in,and few move out.The reason is obvious: freedom.Freedom to have your own furniturein your own arrangement. Freedomto suffer under your own cookingrather than someone else's; to eatfood when you want to eat it. Free­dom to live with, and avoid whomyou want to avoid. The freedom,maybe to smoke pot or invite yourgirl over for the night. The freedomto go to hell in your own handbasket.The will may not be there, but theoption is.There are other, subtler, freedomsinvolved: luxuries, in a way. Stand­ing on your own back porch, tryingto find the Big Dipper; leaving thering on the bathtub until you feel likecleaning it off; painting a mural onthe wall of your room; being able tohave guests in for dinner and let .,tthem stay for a month. No guards atthe door if you come home late, nomaids to mess up your careful disor­der. It's rather like having your ownhome.2324 And, of course, along with all the happy careless freedomcome the responsibilities that commencement speakerswarned us about with wagging heads. So there really arethings you have to do to live the good life, after all. We haveall probably been surprised a bit to make this discovery.If you are going to depend on your own cooking you maydecide to learn to cook passably and cheaply. If you want tohave your own furniture, you may have to learn to like whatyou can buy for ten bucks on 63rd Street. You may find outthat, maid service gone, there are some kinds of mess thatyou will want to spend effort cleaning up. The phone billmust be paid; the landlord must be kept happy. In loco par­entis is no longer there to give you that slight considerationfor your crimes against man and nature: if you do get bust­ed, it will in all probability be the police, not the residenthead. Apartment life offers you the chance to live as youwish - moderated by the costs of your wishes.More and more aspects of your life are serious; up to you.It is fine to live with people of your own choosing. But dormlife insulates you from the worst as well as the best of otherpeople - after all, you aren't really living with them. In anapartment you are. The best of friendships will see con­siderable adjustment on both sides. And it is often surpris­ing, in retrospect, how many strangers you will have livedwith.Apartment life is a life of entanglements, good and bad,the hardest life a student can lead; it is force-fed instructionfrom the day you sign the lease.But then, you have to learn.25NEW YEAR'S DA YWith death in my head, Isteppedonto the sallow streetsof Chicago. Still the same:Skl'without sun, hung overfrom an industrial cough.Treeswithout leaves, uselessbranchesscratching the sky,leein patches, branding thegroundwith fossil footsteps.Bricks, bricks,a cit)' of grimy vultureswaiting for people tocomeand die inside them.And the people alsolook unreborn.The alarm rings. You grope out ofbed toward the noise, tripping over apile of books on the floor and knock­ing the clock off the desk. Again, itdoes not break: amazing.You crawl over thefloorofyourroom trying to select your clothes26 -,,--------- _----------and books from the general collec­tion. Yougo to the bathroom. Thefloor needs washing: you will get thatdone on the weekend, of course.Damn: you forgot you were out oftoothpaste. You steal some fromyour roommate's tube. (You will get some more on the way home, ofcourse. )Staggering down the stairs, youwonder why the landlord doesn't dis­infect it, and thank God you got outof it into the fresh noontime air.Staggering back up the stairs jivehours later, you are too busy to no­tice the smell, for little whats hisname, the seven-year-old insistedthat he ride you piggyback andthreatened to tell the Rangers on youif you didn't. You drop him at thesecond landing and run gasping up to the peace and security of your home.You are hungry. There is nothingin the refrigerator but grape jelly andone can of beer. You take the beerand pray your roommate hasn't for­gotten that it is his turn to cook to­night. You sit in the battered arm-chairin the living-room and watch thedust motes fly around in the sun­beams. Somebody overturned anashtray on the rug. The floor needsto be vaccuumed. The windows need(Continued on page 28)27(Continued from page 27)to be washed. You must get thatdone on the weekend; it's getting in­tolerable.Although it's Fridav, you resolvedto be good and write up all youroverdue Bio experiments. So vou28 """'71"" '#"A"+_� �,sadly spread your books out on thefloor and wait for someone to giveyou an excuse to stop studying.Finally someone does; your room­mate comes home with groceries andthe new Country Joe album. It ob­viouslv has to be listened to. and. of course a little beer would lubricatethe critical ear. You run to the phoneand call Kimbark Liquors.Time for dinner: chicken again.with that godawful recipe he learnedfrom his mother that has mayon­naise in it. But vou're hungrv.A friend calls up and asks If you'redoing anything tonight because hemay just drop over. That's fine, YOusay. Four friends drop over. CountryJoe, a few more times. Many beers.A game of hearts, until your room­mate spills his beer all over the deck. Find something else to do.After a while you notice - sur­prise - that someone is rollingjoints over in the corner. A few day­dreams later, and you're all set forbed. You will get up early, go to thelibrary, and study, also clean the house, (windows, floor, walls). Damnit; you forgot the toothpaste2930Will someone say a good word forthe dorm system?For it really isn't quite as bad asyou might think after hearing peopletalk about it. Security it provides: aguaranteed hot meal, a guaranteedroom; quaranteed companionship aswell as some assurance that you canescape from it when you want to.And oh, the satisfaction of the guar­anteed gripes, bitches, and com­plaints. There will always be some­thing to complain about.And the security of identity. Everydorm is different, and every house isdifferent. The legends of past yearsare magnified, passed on, and re- pea ted (witness the ancient sport ofwindow-walking in Pierce). All thedorms can be typed: B-J, the gloomyeremitic hive, suited for thoughts ofimpending death; Pierce, burningwith the fevers of geometricallystacked celibacy; Snell-Hitchcock,too dilapidated to avoid individual­ism. And, of course, New Dorms,guarding, like Fort Knox, the pre­cious resources of the University ofChicago. The tenants of each dormare not unaware of their respectivestereotypes. After all, even for indi­vidualists, it is rather pleasant tohave the name of your residencemean something special.32 -_.--r-t-.! If ;. I,33Walls of smooth prisonplasterjoining. turning. risingInto levels of mereexistenceGreen, white squares thatencompassa being, cagedIn body,But freeTo understand the reasonfor cages.When you try to get up for amorning class at Woodward Court,it's not too easv. Reaching for thealarm you get the vague feeling thatyou'll soon be back to sleep. Usuallyyou are. The view from the window,no mailer where it faces, is not too34 pleasing at 7'30 in the morning. Youhave neither the sky-line of the Loopgiven to Pierce, or the campusgrounds given to 81. The sun breaksinto vour room, but not easily. It hasto cut over the tops of old houses towake to vou from your re-newed sleep.If the battle between sleep andd u t v should mvst eriou sl y end in acon viction to attend class. the longprocess of morning preparation be­gins. Fumbling in the large closet fora robe. )'ou go stumbling blearv-eyeddown the corridor in the direction ofthe bathroom. If someone elseshould happen to be up at the sametime, recognition is slow, and gener­ally not accompanied by words; anod of the head or a sleepy grunt issufficient. Life isn't perfect. Half the time, when l'OU have an 8:30 test,Four roommate is enjoying a leisure­ly evening, lastly untilfour in themorning. Even ifshe doesn't, youcan count on your neighbors, or thepeople above and below you to gath­er in the halls and frolic in the rooms at all hours of the night. BUtl'OUcan't reallv be too indignant, .l'Ou'vedone your share of late-night noise­making.35tAs .I'OU make your way down thetwisting hallwav to the staircase andperhaps the tunnel, rou sometimeswonder about the mind of the manwho positioned the elevators. How­ever, your thoughts are usuallv toojumbled; thev rest on a peeling piece a/plaster, or on another meaninglessnote pasted on some doorwav.Somehow traversing the CommonUnit you can wonder how if is thatthe switchboard is still silent, or theguard is still awake. More often,though, these thoughts are centered on which brand of poison will beforced on vou at breakfast or whatentertainment is planned for t h isevening.Gelling up to that common cafete­ria, your worst fears generally cometrue: Goodrich Rubber sent in a new36shipment of pancakes. You sit with afriend to get moral support: lots oftimes the food tastes as bad as itlooks. When such is the case youthink about last night's coffee hour,or that girl down the hall they say isusing drugs. In a conscientious mood, you might even think of class.When you jinally leave for class,and perhaps a short stop at the C­shop, New Dorms is temporarilyforgotten. However, the long bleakhalls and cement-blocked walls arealways there. Phrases like "a house is not a home" jill your mind. Wood­ward is a cool place to stay, but youwouldn't want to live there.37Fraternity life is not the coldindifference of the dorm massesor the close compactness of apart­ment roommates, but rather asmall group of similiar individualsliving together as "brothers."This University's fraternity spiritis not that of the "r ah-r ah" bigten colleges but ranges as far asmere boarders in the same build­ing. However, each house takespride in its own distinct stereo­type and chooses pledges to fittheir mold.3839TheFacesofChicago4041424344Student VillageJohn SiefertWill the Student Village be a myth orreality? With the location selected between55th and 56th, Cottage Grove and Univer­sity Ave., architectural design nearlycompleted, the job left for the Universityis to find donors for its $24,000,000 enter­prise.The Student Village will consist of anathletic complex - gymnasium, fields,swimming pool, track and tennis courts; aCenter for the Arts - theater, music, art;and housing units included dining, recrea­tion and study facilities. Also surroundingthe old-style courtyard will be a book­store, snack bar, and post office.The residence halls will accomodateapproximately 900 students. There will benine undergraduate towers: four overlook­ing the central courtyard, two on 56th andone on 55th. The graduate students will behoused in townhouses: two facing the newStagg Field and eight bordering the court­yard./,,'/,/ / The Alumni Association5733 University AvenueChicago 37. IllinoisIJ1i45The University of Chicago Bookstore is one ofthe time-honored traditions of the campus. It ishard to imagine a time when the overcrowded, di­lapidated. structure has not been the butt of humorand attack by students and faculty alike.This year, however, saw the disappearance ofone of the most remarkable features of the Book­store; the Brassiere Department. Though the windsof change rarely even shuffle the dust on the shelvesof that venerable monument, it was, perhaps, a signthat someday someday a new building willtake its place.4647Sweet hours of fruitlessness, dallying over a coffee inSwift, a chocafe in the Medici, a pitcher of draft in the Ea­gle. How pleasant it is to do nothing for hours; to wait pa­tiently in the C-Shop for your class to begin so that you canskip it; to sit down with; to argue, gossip, sing, and remin­isce woozily amid the dark din of Jimmy's, until the bellrings, and the waiters try to upend your chair on your table.These hangouts of ours are the only places where we canafford to be serene.4849Henry MooresoOn December 2, 1942, scientists work­ing in a laboratory housed in one of the oldStagg Field squash courts produced thefirst self-sustaining nuclear reaction. Enri­co Fermi, who had been in charge of thehistoric project died in 1953. Much of hisold staff, however, gathered at the Univer­sity on December 2, to commemorate theaccomplishment, along with many of ourcountry's foremost nuclear physicists,Professor Fermi's widow, and many ofChicago's top administrators of today and1942. Dr. Herbert Anderson, a member ofFermi's original team, and now head ofthe University's Enrico Fermi Institute forNuclear Studies, was in charge of the ac­tivities. The 25th anniversary weekend in­cluded a series of seminars related to thebreakthrough that Fermi had achieved,the premiere of a 30-minute movie on theproject, and the unveiling of a commis­sioned sculpture by Henry Moore entitled"Nuclear Energy" which was placed onthe spot where the lab had stood. A crowdof several hundred gathered at Stagg Fieldto see the unveiling take place at 3:36p.m., the exact moment the reaction begantwenty-five years ago.51Benjamin Britten's Curlew River.52Students had a choice during LiberalArts Conference, April 3rd through 6th -four days of enjoying the dismissal ofclasses or four days of continuing theirlearning process.April 3rd Wayne Booth opened the con­ference with a speech entitled "Who KilledLiberal Education," followed later in theevening by Daryl Hine's play, "Death ofSeneca" and Doc Films' "Party Gir1." Itwas April 3rd and students were interestedin the conference. Then it was April 4th,Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassi­nated and the University closed its door inmourning .. and in fear.53Miss University of Chicago, leanette LaVelle The 1968 Washington Prom en­ate has been described as one ofthe best in recent years. The en­tertainment was supplied in IdaNoyes Hall by the Otis RushBlues Band and the Ross Ander­son Dance Band. As usual for thisevent, dress varied from the men'stuxedo and the ladies' formal tothe most casual of casual wear.Despite competition from Walterleschke, custodian of Ida Noyes,who dressed as George Washing­ton, the belle of the ball had to bethe University's choice for its1968 Queen, leanette LaVelle.She competed for the title withfi ve other coeds. The selection wasmade on the basis of charm, intel­ligence, poise, personality, and ofcourse, beauty. Nearly fivehundred guests looked on as Deanof the College, Wayne C. Booth,escorted the new Miss Universityof Chicago down the staircase inthe traditional Grand March. Hercoronation, and the presentationof her five princesses marked thebiggest social event on campus.54Walter Jeschke as George Washington555657S9Art for Young Collectors,Fallquarter, Goodspeed Hall•..... __ . ---�-�f606162The Shapiro Art Collection was again made available tostudents and faculty of the University this year. As in thepast, people affiliated with the University were allowed torent pictures in the Collection for a dollar charge. Includedin the extensive collection were works by Picasso, Miro,Rouault, Matta, and Braque. The forms varied from paint­ings to graphics, to water colors. Prior to distribution thecollection was on display in Ida Noyes. As in previousyears, many art enthusiasts slept at Ida Noyes the nightbefore distribution to be the first to secure well knownworks of special preferences. Following a course laid in pre­vious years, the entire collection was rented out within amatter of hours.63Silenceof untouchingheartsBrokenby themelodvof thePeopleClark KessingerThey are all good. Their music isreal and the feeling that they bring isgenuine. There is nothing put-onabout them. The occasion thatbrings them together is the eighthannual University of Chicago FolkFestival. Folk Festival? Festival of64 Howling Wolfthe Folk? Music of the People? Itsounds a little trite and worn out.Maybe you never knew anybody whocould play the bagpipes. Perhaps youdon't even know anyone from Louis­iana, much less in a Cajun band. Yetthere is something about their music that makes it the music of the peo­ple, everybody's music, your music.There is the sound of humanity in it.The intensity of Howlin' Wolf, theway he cries and moans when hefeels bad, the way he shouts andstruts when he feels good, these areHowling Wolfexpressions of his humanness. He isdoing what he feels, and generatinghis own emotions within us. The joyand exuberance that Clark Kessingerexhibits when he performs is felt byus all. He is glad to be alive and notashamed to admit it. We become a Johnny Shinespart of the music because we canplace ourselves in it.George Armstrong starts with hisraucous clamor, reflecting an ancientand honored heritage. Then they allcome: Howlin' Wolf. KilbySnow,the New Lost City Ramblers, Clark Kessinger and Gene Mead. JackJohnson, the Osborne Brothers, theCajun Band, Johnny Shines, BukkaWhite, the Poplin Fam il v. and theothers. They sing and play - a festi­val of sound. From the stage of acold, gray building that looks like it65Bukka White Kilby Stonewas designed for anything else but agathering of banjo pickers and sing­ers of down-home blues a warm thand feeling of common understand­ing floats out to infect the audience.The people in the audience becomecaught up with the people on the stage and there is a communicationbetween them that is the essence offolk music. The sounds are as variedas the personalities. Kilby Snowplays the rippling autoharp with afacility that is astounding. Bukka White draws the bitter-sweet countryblues ou t of the wooden heart of aguitar. The New Lost Ramblers singAppalachian ballads with a countrytwang and nasal backwoods harmo­ny. The urban blues of Howlin' Wolf66Gene MeadBukka White and George Armstrong John Jacksonare both primitive and sophisticated.Almost every aspect of traditionalfolk music is represented.Next year they will be back. May­be not all of them will be back in per­son but they will be here neverthe- less. There will be new faces and newsounds but the spirit will still be thesame. Like the charm of the musicitself, the charm of the Folk Festivalis based on tradition and grows withage.67This was the year of the New Left in Student Government. With thedisintegration of the old GNOSIS machine, SPAC was swept into officewith two thirds of the assembly seats. Jeffrey Blum was elected President,and an ambitious student-power platform was adopted. After the earlypassage of some resolutions, however, the Assembly failed to meet be­tween October and January. The Executive Committee, slightly more rad­ical than the Assembly as a whole due to some leftists dropping out, lentits support to a number of ventures. Among these were the conference onthe City and the University, the Student Mobilization Conference, and theStudents for a Democratic Society. More closely involved with Universityaffairs was the undergraduate academic affairs committee, chaired byEdward Birnbaum. Much of the student-generated commotion aboutgrading reform and course structure changes came from the committee,including proposals for a Pass-Fail system and changes in the PhysicalSciences common core course.Other activities were sponsored by sub-groups of Student Government,including the National Student Association activities, and those of suchorganizations as the Charter Flights, Corso, and student loan fund. TheNSA was more active than in previous years, sponsoring a student drugconference, two dance classes, and a few of the Liberal Arts Conferenceseminars. The Charter Flight program ran both airplanes and busesaround the country over vacations, with the European charter flight pro­gram still one of the most popular student government operations. Theloan fund was taken over by the student coop when SG officers declined totake personal responsibility for the loan, as had been done in the past.68Heretics on a liberal campus, the Young Repub­licans are a haven for those who oppose Democratpolicies and wish to promote alternatives within theRepublican Party. They have worked in local polit­ical campaigns for years; Tom Ireland, a member,is currently running for Congress.The YR's sponsored a mock political conventionthis year which was attended by delegates fromacross the Midwest. Nixon was nominated on thesecond ballot, with Edward Brooke as his runningmate. Among other things, the platform called forabolition of: H UAC; the draft; legislation prohibit­ing marijuana and "unnatural sex acts"; censor­ship; farm price supports; and minimum wageem ployment restrictions.With any luck, the leadership being trained inthe U of C Young Republicans may someday pre­side over the long awaited withering away of thestate.69\By all objective standards, Students fora Democratic Society is the dominant po­litical organization on campus. Over halfthe incoming freshmen this year expressedinterest in joining. The President of Stu­dent Government, Jeff Blum, is a member.SDS is a forum for all those who areconcerned with the increasingly maligntrend in our society toward uncontrolledcentralized authority, far removed fromthe decisions of individual citizens. It is afamously ecumenical organization; itssupporters range from laissez-faire capi­talists to Marxists.Perhaps because SDS is so powerful onthis campus, it has been more active thisyear than in the past; here, at least, its jobof persuasion has been highly successful.Targets this year have been IDA, DowChemical, the army, and Hubert Hum­phrey. In addition to its normal protestactivities, it has started a fortnightlynewspaper of fact, scandal, and generaldisturbance.707172The University is an isolated communi­ty where students are surrounded by invisi­ble walls. It is here they study, preparingfor the outside world. It is here they dis­cuss their budding ideas with fellow stu­dents. It is here they socialize, enjoyingprecious moments of freedom without re­sponsibility. Yet they are all too aware ofthe outside world, a world with poverty,ignorance and sickness. They can delaycontact with this world, but many seek tohelp and willingly assume the responsibili­ty by serving others.73,I \\'74Many University students express theirneed to serve others by helping youngerstudents from the Woodlawn area. TheStudent Woodlawn Area Project (SWAP)and Student Tutors Elementary Project(STEP) provide tutoring and counselingservices for junior and senior high-school­ers. Friends of the International VoluntaryService (IVS) works not only on a nationalscale but also sponsors service projects forthe local area. Volunteer InstitutionalService Activities (VISA) aids recreation­al therapy for mental patients at Chicago'sState Hospital.Each group and each individual servethe community and by doing so bring theoutside world closer to the University and,if only in a small way, betters that world.75While The Chicago Maroon's severest cnticshave never accused the paper of being dull, this wasa year when dullness was impossible. Provost Leviwas to become Chicago's new president; peacemarchers clashed with federal marshals at the Pen­tagon; the tuition was raised to $2100. The Maroongave its usual heavy play to student activism, be­ginning with a harsh jab at Levi's concept of a Chi­cago education, later moving on to parietal hours,the war, and the University's relationship with so­ciety. "Call it non-objectivity if you like; we thinkof it more as crusading journalism," Editor JeffreyKuta wrote, while maintaining that no facts werebeing misrepresented. But by the Winter Quarter,The Maroon seemed to have taken a softer line onmany issues, and it became clear that the paper wasactually publishing a broader range of materialthan it usually did: its new Weekend Magazineprinted "Culture, dissent, and satire" together withother features while The Chicago Literay Reviewcontinued to supply book reviews; the Maroon'sregular section included more news on academicsand student life and regularly covered sports. Theincreased expense of a better printer and a cut inCORSO funds were offset by more advertising rev­enue. Students would often find a prettier-lookingand thicker paper if they waited late enough in themorning for it - the campus' 11,000 copies had tobe delivered from Hinsdale, 30 miles away.76Jeffrey Kuta - Editor-in-Chief Roger Black - Managing EditorJohn Moscow - News Editor77James O'Reilly, DirectorLuigi Pirandello's "Each In His Own Way" was Univer­sity Theater's major production for the fall quarter. Start­ing the 'play every week' policy for the winter quarter wasthe play Oedipus Rex, starring James 0' Reilly, UT assistedthe Renaissance Players for the following week's play,"Mankind The Play of the Sacrement." Faculty and stu­dents participated in Lord Byron's "Cain," held in Rocke­feller Chapel, Students directed the productions of 'TheChangeling," "The Undeniable Miscellaney" and "Anti­gone." However the major production of the quarter, "Tro­jan Women" was under the direction of James O'Reilly.Richard Wernick, U of C Symphony conductor composedthe choral accompaniment for the play featuring the profes­sional actress Lorrie Young,Lanny Unruh in rehearsal for Pirandello's "Each In HisOwn Way."78Jerry Wasserman as Doro Palegari and Lanny Unruh as Diego Cinci in "Each In His Own Way." Joan Cagen in"Each In His OwnWay."79Joel Cope and Lorry Young in .. TroganWomen." Lorry Young and Joan Mankin in "Tro­gan Women."Joel Cope as Tallhybius and Lorry Young, quest artist, as Hecuba in Euripides' "Tro­gan Women."80Joan Cagen as Delia Morello in "Each In His Own Way."81After the first round1 thought I might havebeen.1 felt The rhythm growinglike a beardupon my naked pulse.After the second round I1 was pretty sure ...For 1 saw the notes likestrange birdssettling on a lonely marsh.After the third round Jknew J wasTurning it off, I heard forthe first timethe melody in silence. , .It's eleven o'clock. and you're onthe air. On the other side of the air isyour audience, a mystically invisible,unmeasurable quan tity whom youare trying to please. Once again, thee er v battle of the radio waves isabout to commence.82 "Good evening, ladies and gentle­men, or what have you, and welcometo the Mike Thomas showThere had been some question asto whether there would be a MikeThomas show at all tonight. Whenyou checked into the studio this af- ternoon, the Chief Engineer and hisjolly cohorts were crawling over theequipment, soldering cable A to boxB; attaching connector X to jack Y;testing, replacing, and running out oftubes. The auxiliary frammiston hadgone out of whack, blowing out themotor newons, or something.Not again, you groaned, lookingout the window. Even the weatherwas frustrating; it was one of thoserare clear days when you can see far­ther than the transmittor will carry.But my evening everything was working again. Some exotic newpiece of equipment RCA never heardof was apparently improvised out ofodds and ends.There was a new note from theBusiness Manager on the bulletinboard. Yes, the new longer-range FM transmitting equipment will beinstalled. Yes, the FCC is still goingto grant us a license. However,there's a new hitch you don'tbother to finish.Office gossip as you come in. Thenewscaster went into "mike shock"83at the end of his broadcast: he re­fused to give up the microphone untilthe engineer velled , "Good night,Chet,' , at him. Fortunately, you'vegotten over that, haven't I'OU,almost?.Maybe you 'Il get a ca// from a lis- tener tonight. Only one last week:this guy said he liked the show a lot,bu t would you please stop p la yi ng'Alice's Restaurant." It was the sec­ond time around that evening, youplayed it every show and he was sickto death of it. Well, you think, at least he does listen regularly.But now you're alone in yourglassy little box, along with the mi­crophone and a zillion records andthe audience, trying to be a profes­sional, and not doing too badly, con­sidering.84"The first number tonight, folks,is one I'm sure you've heard before.But I like it, so you're going to hearit again. It's 'Alice's Restaurant,' byArlo Guthrie8586Presidential politicking on the Chicagocampus took shape in the form of a stu­dents' move for Eugene McCarthy. Stu­dents manned booths and attended meet­ing to show their support. And they worethe familiar blue and white buttons.The undertaking that involved mostChicago students was the Wisconsin pri­mary of April 2. Students for McCarthyknocked on countless doors and madeinnumerable phone calls and the result oftheir labors was evident. McCarthy wonand the race was on.87CRISISRiots followed the April 4 assassi­nation of Dr. Martin Luther King,Jr.88 �/j'f../89Pleas for the troops to leave.90Relief for the riot victims.91The intramural sports program ran through itsnormal course. Competition on graduate and un­dergraduate levels, on fraternity and college houselevels, took place again this year. The season beganwith football. The "touch-tackle" program ranmore in the direction of tackle than touch, as nu­merous broken bones and bruised muscles were theresults of this "non-contact" activity. Movingthrough the elimination process of four or fivegames, played on the fields separating the Midway,the winner of this endurance contest was the Ea­gles. Next came a variety of lesser competitionsincluding the cross-country "Turkey-Trot," wonby Thompson South on the undergraduate level.Following came competitions in swimming andwrestling, in which Thompson North was victo­rious on the college house level, and Psi Upsilon onthe fraternity level. Also on the Fall-Winter sched­ule were events in target-shooting, and basketball.In the basketball final the interdivisional championN ooners defeated Phi Gamma Delta for the cham­pionship.92The Alumni Association5733 University AvenueChicogo 37. Illinois9394 Chicago soccer, 1967 edition, proved to be oneof the most successful years in University history.The team scored more victories than any squad in21 years of Maroon varsity soccer and with anoverall record of 6-5-1 posted the third winningseason in that period. A total of 37 separate teamrecords were broken or tied as the entire squadput out a total-team effort.Leading the parade of victories were three de­parting students: forward Mark Manewitz, goalieDave Gadian, and defenseman Mike Schecht­man. Manewitz at center forward finished theseason as the top Maroon scorer in history; he setrecords for total goals, assists shots, and gamesplayed. Mark picked up 10 of the team's record25 goals this year and was named Best OffensivePlayer. Goalkeeper Gadian has to be given muchcredit for the Chicago success; in but a single yearhere Gadian came within 19 saves of matching theall-time career saves record and set the seasonrecord at 224. But fullback Mike Schechtmanwas the all-around team star, and although hisdefensive position lent few chances for record­breaking, he was named Best Defensive Playerand Most Valuable Player of the squad.The highspot of the year was the Maroons'October II upset of Notre Dame. Playing beforeover 500 Chicago spectators, the booters over­came an early 2-goal deficit and swept to a 4-2victory over the famed Irish. Manewitz made a 3-goal performance in this contest, matching a sin­gle game record he set early in the season.95Six years can be a long time. TheChristmas Tournament began in 1961,and since then the Chicago basketballteam had never captured first place. Theprospects for the tournament of 1967 werevery hopeful, however. Three of the sixmen who composed the first string wereseniors: Marty Campbell, "Wink" Pear­son, and Gary Day. The Maroons hadcompiled an encouraging 4-1, the lone lossfinding the Maroons downed by a singlepoint. It seemed that after six years, theimpressive gold trophy would come intothe possession of a Chicago team.Chicago's first game on that tense eve­ning of December 29 was against Knox.This game was particularly importantbecause Knox was judged to be Chicago'smost formidable opposition.The Maroons took the lead from theoutset, leaving the floor at halftime with acomfortable 13 point margin. In the sec­ond half Knox rose to the challenge andseriously threatened Chicago's victory.The Maroons secured a one point win,however, and unsurprisingly defeated Col­orado, 73-61, the following evening. Eye­ing the trophy after Colorado's defeat, oneMaroon player commented, "The Coachfinally has his paper weight!" It was animpressive paper weight, which befittedChicago's first tournament win.969798 Veteran coach Joseph Stampfled his1967-68 Chicago basketball squad to itsbest record since 1962 and notched one ofhis best seasons in ten years at the Univer­sity with the Maroons finishing 14-5.Primarily responsibile for the successwas Marty Campbell 6'5" fourth year cen­ter. Campbell was one of the top Chicagoplayers in recent years and led the squad inscoring, rebounds, and field goal percen­tage. In his four years here he amassed 931points and became the third highest scorerin U of C history. Coach Stampf, howeveris well known for his emphasis on defense;his team s usually fi nish in the NationalCollegiate Athletic Association's top tendefensive squads. This year the teamnabbed second spot in the NCAA's Col­lege Division. The main driving force be­hind the defensive strength was firey guardWilliam "Wink" Pearson. Also vital forthe team were Randy Talan, second highscorer, Dennis Waldon, third in scoringand rebounds, Gary Day, second in re­bounds, and Fred Dietz, another topguard. Top game of the year was a 55-53upset over Denison on February 24; Illi­nois College, Grinnell, and Kendall alsolost big games.A streak of bad luck blocked the Uni­versity wrestling squad's attempt to toplast year's 6-4 record, one of the best inChicago's history. Even so, the 1968 teamdefeated four of the five regular varsitysquads which the 1967 team beat; it failedonly to repeat an upset victory over lIT.Several veteran grapplers were unable tocompete this year, and other regularsmissed matches due to illness or injury. Inseveral meets, the Maroons were forced toforfeit as many as three matches.The team did very well, however, intournament action; this is competition inwhich individual performances are of mostimportance. Chicago finished third in theCarthage Quadrangular Tournament, fifthin the Lawrence Invitational competition,and eight in the Lake Forest Tournament.The highlight of the year was the team's17-16 victory over St. Joseph's College inFebruary; in this meet the Universitycame from behind to win the last matchand thus the victory.Second-year student Jim Capser wasbeyond doubt the outstanding wrestler ofthe season; undefeated in nine matches inthe In-lb. class, he finished with a 14-2record and scored two tournament victo­ries. Other top men were Steve Biggs,Dave Clark, and George Lane. w,r�� --- _______99100 A magnificent record-setting performance in theannual Chicago Intercollegiate Championshipscapped an excellent year for Coach WilliamMoyle's varsity swim team. Paced by third-yearSteve Larrick, the squad improved by one on lastyear's five victory total and set a dozen individualrecords in very tight competition.Larrick scored at least two victories in everydual meet of the season and picked up the maxi­mum of three in half of them. He set new varsityrecords in the 100-yard freestyle event, the 50-yardfreestyle race, the 200-yard freestyle, and onthe freestyle relay team. Although he broke hisown records several times, his best performancecame in the intercollegiate tournament, when he setthree individual records and let the squad to thirdplace.Two veteran fourth-year finmen also swam wellthis season; both Chuck Calef and Mike Koch­weser finished their final year at Chicago in finestyle. Koch-weser, the squad's distance expert, setrecords in both the lOOO-yard freestyle and thefreestyle relay team. Calefs specialty was the verydifficult individual medley, and he won his in al­most every meet. Chuck also swam breast strokeand won the 100 and 200-yard breast stroke eventsin the intercollegiate tournament. Other top Ma­roon performers included sprinter Carl Johnson,diver Dave Barnes, butterfly expert Brent Carlson,sprint-and-relay man Mark Tindall, and back­stroker Dave Rider.The University gymnastics squad was hit for thesecond year in a row by an apparent lack of inter­est. In a sport in which teams often carry as manyas 25 men, Chicago could field only fi ve regularlyparticipating gymnasts. And although the Univer­sity players competed in all scheduled events, theywere simply unable to overcome the often stagger­ing numerical odds they faced.Chicago gymnasts, however, often performedvery well on an individual basis. Dave Mars wasprobably the squad's top performer, as he wonnumerous firsts in long horse vaulting and also didwell in still rings. Alan Mangurten was the team'sparallel bars expert and also starred in trampolineand side horse. A late starter, Mark Sackett,proved an excellent all-around man and did espe­cially well in the floor exercise event. Another fineall-around man was Gordon Grobbe, who faredbest in the still rings and side horse events. PaulSeguin and Drake Deming also competed for theChicago cause.101"Let's win This gameC hicago warriors gotv' ever to vieldA vic torv to the foeOn to the goalAgain 011 every playLet's fight fightWin this gameChicago's Way"(an old Chicago fight song)Bernard FitzgeraldFootball at the Universit v of C hi­cago is a frustrating experience forthose who participate. Ever since the"Ban the Ball" sit-in on Stagg Field,the absence of football has been oneof Chicago's cherished traditions.The University abolished varsity102 football man)' years ago in an erawhich saw the former national cham­pion Maroons also drop out of theBig Ten athletic conference. Late inthe 1950's however, it was seen thatmany Chicago students were inter­ested in playing football. So for these students, the athletic departmentestablished a football class. Thisorganization, open to all students oncampus, practices daily, as wouldany varsity team would and at theend of the year plays several con­trolled scrimmages with are a JuniorColleges or second-string varsityteam.The 1967 Chicago football classhad one of the best "seasons" of anysuch class since its inception; thesquad finished with a record of twowins and two losses against very tough opposition. including one reg­ular varsity squad. Chicago openedthe season with a tremendous 45-14victory over the North Central Col­lege Junior Varsity team on October16. The wide-awake Maroon defensepicked up three interceptions and two fumbles and capitalized on all ofthem. while the offense, headed b vquarterback Bob Conway. racked upcontinued touchdowns. Conway. agraduate student. threw for twotouchdowns; John Lehnhardt, a venfine runner. scored three himself, and103Tim Mc Gre e ran an interceptionback six ty-fi ve yards for anot her.In the season's second contest, arough defensive battle, the Maroonssuffered a tight 8-0 loss at the handsof Wilson Junior College. The visi­tors scored on a twenty-one yard pass in the jirst period and ran for atwo-point conversion. Chicagoreached the seven-yard line in theclosing minutes of the game but wasunable to capitalize on the position.Lake Forest hosted the football classon October 28 for the annual match between the two city rivals. In a vervwell played contest, the Lake Fore;tvarsity team beat the Maroon class28-12 with a fourteen point surge inthe second half Chicago led at theend of the jirst quarter 12-0 and wasonly two points behind at halftime,104Pages 102-105, pictures, C> 1968 Robert Rice14-12. The University held the ballfor all but thirty seconds of the thirdquarter and at one point marchedfrom their own twenty to the LakeForest one-yard line. But two fifteen- yeard penalties and a touchdowncalled back on a referee's mistakeprevented any Maroon scoring.Chicago climaxed the year with a13-7 victory over the Wheaton Col- lege Junior Varsity on Novermber 9.Rich Jackman opened the scoring byscoring on afumble recover v, andWarne Harvv secured the victorywith a ten-yard TD run.105106If we consider ourselves as livingin an academic community, this im­plies that, sooner or later, we willencounter the field of academics.Try as we might, we cannot skipall our classes, fail to write all ourpapers and read all our books. Wewill eventually learn the names ofsome of our teachers. We will be ex­cited by some of them. And, givenfour years' time, we will find that wehave learned something.We could have gotten our BA'sanywhere; but we chose to come toChicago, and those who chose tostay received not only a BA, but alsoan education .•107At the University of Chicago many students goto classes, and many don't. Classes are, in thewords of the great powers of the Administration,both "challenging and exciting." Whether they areinteresting and well taught is a question which gen­erally is lost in the stampede of challenge and ex­citement. The classes, which those in the knowwould have us believe average nine students perinstructor, have been known to range from threestudents in a section up to forty-three. It is alwaysa thrill for a freshman to enter his first class andfind thirty people there when he expects only six. Itis even more of a thrill for the instructor, who hasbeen promised for the fourth quarter running thathis sections this time will be small and easy to han­dle. As the student learns from his classmates andthe various deans, the instructors are among thebest in the nation. Simultaneously the instructorsare hearing from the deans that this year's crop ofstudents may be the "best ever." Then again, asmany soon learn, it may not. It is nearly impossibleto describe a stereotype class at the University.There is no such class. Some of the rooms arelarge, new, and well-equipped; others are small,cramped, and under-equipped. Some classes last anhour and meet three times a week; others meetonce a week for three hours; others meet at night.Some instructors allow voluminous discussions toblossom forth in their classes, while others recitethe same notes they have been reciting for years.Depending on when your classes meet, where theymeet, how long they meet, and who your instruc­tors are, you may attend classes here. Thenagain108109110I�1III112�·"""""""I··'·'··" :(. '.., '113114115Oriental Institute117Organized in 1966 as the newest of theUniversity's five collegiate divisions, theNew Collegiate Division is still in theformative state. NCD utilizes many of thenewest innovations in course structuringand is pioneering in the specialized experi­mental courses in thought analysis. Themaster of the NCD, James Redfield, As­sociate Dean of the College, is still lookingfor ways to improve and streamline theDivision as it evolves under his control.Included in the New Collegiate Divisionare Civilization Studies, History and Phi­losophy of Science, Philosophical Psychol­ogy, History and Philosophy of Religion,and Ideas and Methods. All the depart­ments are chaired by picked scholars, anddisplay the freedom of thought and re­search which is sometimes lacking in theother four divisions. For instance, all stu­dents who enter the Division are expectedto do independent research work andprojects.118All the life of the University eventually comesout of this building. Despite all the fancy teachingaids of our school, books are still the main store ofknowledge, and Harper Library is the main storeof books. From AC I (encyclopedias) to Z 9999 (li­brary science theses) they run. All human knowl­edge has been squeezed somehow in between, in­completely, perhaps, but more than any of us willever command.119The hole wasdug.And in it wepiledthe dust ofyears, neatlybound, lined instacks.I rushed from mv physics classover to Stagg Field. I felt somewhatprivileged at being in vited to such anevent as the ground breaking of theJoseph Regenstein Librarv. Perhaps.upon reflection. I should have beenless awed. but the invitation was so120 impressive, that it seemed incumbantupon me to RSVP to the Office ofThe President and show my lowl vstudent corpus along with the mem­bers of administration. faculty. trus­tees. and other worthy souls whowould be present. That I had never been to a ground­breaking was undoubtedly why Itook the whole thing so seriously.The invitation was so impressive.Somehow the fact that work hadbegun weeks before seemed unim­portant. So there was a huge hole onthe site with gigantic mechanicalmonsters wollowing in the antede­luvian bog. Ap p are ntly "ground­breaking" should not be taken tooliterally; it is more of a spiritualevent, a concecration.There were three speeches. A 1- though I didn't know it at the time, itwas the Director of the Universit vLibraries, Herman Fussier, whoreally gave the perfect description ofa groundbreaking. He had apparent­ly been to groundbreakings before:"A groundbreaking, is, I suppose, what Dan Boorstin might describe asa semi-synthetic historical event."The sacred ceremony itself, it seems,consisted of the relevant dignitarieswielding somewhat uneailv crome­plated picks and shovel with blackhandles and UC seals. They dug.121excevated on the order oj l O cc s ofsoil, on a part of Stagg Field far[rom the actual library. The ceremo­nl' was most unceremonious - itwas run by members of the press,prim arilv by one, who I could notidentify. but who seemed to have natural leadership quailities. Heprompted appropriate poses while heand his colleagues snapped awal'.Most "important" people showedlittle interest in this. A few construc­tion workers looked on from a dist­ance. God on!v knows what they thought of the whole affair.It was soon over, I discovered,though it was difficult to determineexactly where the end had been. Insome respects, the groundbreakinghad seemed most unsatisfactory; itwas too much of a publicity gim-122possible largely through the $/0,000,000 gift of the Joseph and HelenRegenstein Foundation will be thelargest building ever erected oncampus, covering most of the formersite of Stagg Field. It will containspace for three million volumes, spe-mick. Although I thought I had beena privileged guest, perhaps I was justthere to make a good impression.But the invitation was so impressiveThe Joseph Regenstein Library, a$20,000,000 research library, made cial areas where individual scholarsmay work, and will eventually haveits own computer and direct linkswith the Computation CenterImpressive.123124The faculty of the University is, as a unit, one of the bestconcentrations of academic ability in the country. Evenmore important for the students, they are excellent teachersas well. There tends to be a much closer rapport betweenfaculty and students here than at many other schools thathave a comparable academic reputation. Fraternities andCollege Houses think nothing of having members invitetheir favorite faculty instructors to dinner, and many of theinstructors are quite happy to share the evening with theirstudents. Faculty interest in student affairs extends beyondthe "sherry hours," however. When controversial academicissues that would effect the students come before the Ad­ministration, many of the faculty are willing to speak open­lyon the side of the students. Obviously not all instructorscan or do fit this mold; yet enough of them do to make lifeat the University appealing to students.125The silent men hurryon their way,the quads are dottedwith them.The silent men pullingmore thana brief case worldhurry fromoffices to classsearching,with a messageyet to find."Crescat scientia vita excolatur."More than motto, this phrase ex­presses the unique spirit characteriz­ing this University. Loosely translat­ed as "let knowledge grow frommore to more and thus be human lifeenriched" it attempts to capture in126 words an inexpressible and inexplic­able essence felt by all who havewalked the quads. Students, fromtheir first few days on campus, gen­erally feel themselves part of an in­tense intellectual community. Theseeds of this community sown by fel- low students in dormitories and cof­fee houses, are brought to harvest inthe classroom. Most active in culti­vating and directing this intellectualgrowth are the instructors.Among these men, our faculty, wefind diversity of opinion. numerousschools of thought and wide diver­gence in approach and viewpoint.but common to all is a continuingintellectual curiousity coupled with asureness in respective disciplines.Representative of this group of dedi­cated men. our faculty is Mr. Arthur edge of the Humanities with stu­dents.Because he is a teacher and also ascholar he will seek ever increasingknowledge.Heiserman.As with most of his colleagues.Mr. Heiserman lives in a series ofconcentric worlds. Certainly of greatimportance is the world of the class­room. It is here that he has the great­est opportunity to share his knowl-127"Crescat scientis vita excolatur."128"Let knowledge grow from more to more and thus be human life enriched." Pages 126-129, picturesOl968 Robert Rice129We must in all honesty admit thatwe are Intellectuals. The meaning ofthe term is philosphically subtle andvariable; it's currently consideredimmodest to apply the term to one­self. But Intellectuals is what societywill call us who live, work, or studyin an academic community. Like itor not, we are a social class.Like any class we have our uni­forms, our styles of life and thought,which we follow half-consciously.Yet, no matter how much we stressthe conformities by which our valuesare bound, we aren't fair to ourselvesif we neglect our individualism. Inde­pendence from conformity, the ac­tive seeking of what seems worthy tous alone, are in themselves values ofour class. We share a certain mulishhesitancy to live our lives in any waythat we aren't sure we approve of -is it too much to call it "freedom tobe ourselves?" Yet if there is suchfreedom to be found, we Intellectualsare at least looking for it.131Administrators are the spokesmen of the University.They pass the pronouncements that affect the lives of thestudents; they are sought by the MAROON to defend andexplain the deeds of the Administration to their suspiciouscharges. They are the men who receive the personalizedrespect or criticism - the latter is probably more common- of the student body. When trouble brews, they drink it.132George W. Beadle Edward H. Levi - these men areat the top. One has been President of the University for sev­en years; the other will soon take his place.The University of Chicago is one of the most ambitiousschools in the country; more than any other man, the Presi­dent will take the responsibility for fulfilling those ambi­tions. Will the University carry off successfully a twohundred million dollar expansion? Is the climate of learningimperfect, even for a single student?The President will, in the end, hear of it when anythinggoes right or when anything goes wrong. We of the CAP &GOWN are in no position to assess their record. We can,however, give our thanks to the men who undertake the job.Charles O'Connell, Dean of Students; Wayne C. Booth, Dean of the Col­lege; Meyer Eisenberg, Acting Dean of Undergraduate Students.133George W. Beadle, President134Edward H. Levi, President Designate135Peoplebecoming faceless names,numbers to becoded,stamped,filed,unlesshandled by one whoremembers faces.Mary Collins, Fanny Regal, Skip Landt.,It is onl v a nine-to-five job butthrough it is directed most of theUniversit v life outside of academics,from dormitor v dances to DocFilms, from concerts to StudentGovernment charter flights. A II mustpass the cluttered desk in the office136 of Student A ctivities where MaryCollins deftly goes through the pro­cess of organizing the disorganized.Knowledgeably she handles the mul­titude of would-be problems con­stantlyfinding their war to IN H 209.Should you seek the whereabouts of an S DS meeting, a Mortarboarddinner, a Renaissance play, or achess tournament; should l'OU re­quire a room for a meeting, noticesto be "mimeoed," appro val for yourextracurricular - you can usuallyobtain the answer to your questionsfrom Mary. Should she not knowherself, she can quite capably directyou to the proper persons.While admirably performing thedu ties of her job, acting as a clear­ing-house and answering service, shehas even more admirably infused an otherwise tedious and time-consum­ing job with the spirit and verve of anardent enthusiast. She always has acheerful smile handy to counteractmidwinter blues and a ready laughfor even the oldest of jokes. Alwayswilling to listen, to help, aware of how to make her nine-to-five jobmore than ordinary, Mary Collinsmore than serves the universitycommunity from behind her clut­tered desk.1371968 GraduatesDavid AbrahamFlushing, New YorkGeneral Studies in SocialSciencesCaroleJ. AndersonFernley, NevadaAnt hropologyRobert W. AprilChicago, IllinoisChemistry138 George N. AckermanWatertown, Sough DakotaGeneral Studies in HumanitiesH. Lenox S. AndersonPortland, OregonHistorySuzanne ArataPeoria, IllinoisFar Eastern Studies Douglas Q. AdamsSeattle, Wash.LinguisticsScali F. AndrewsLincoln, MassachusettsHistoryMitchell ArlookScarsdale, New YorkSociology Jeffery L. AddingtonMiles City, MontanaBiologyJohn At AmonChicago, IllinoisChemistryChristina ArchStickney, IllinoisEnglishDavid AschBeaverton, MichiganStatisticsKathleen S. BalbusKalamazoo, MichiganPolitical ScienceJack Vincent BarberaHuntington, New YorkGeneral Studies in Hum.Janina W. BataszewOak Park, IllinoisSlavic Language and Literature Ruth G. AtkinsWoodbridge, ConnecticutAnthropologyGeoffry C. BallMonson, MassachusettsEnglishMartha A. BarnesMonroe, WisconsinEnglish LiteratureCarolyn A. BatchelorSmyrna, GeorgiaEnglish Carol S. AxelrodNew Haven, ConnecticutArt HistoryYona Liebersohn BallChevy Chase, MarylandEconomicsAlice Anne BarskiChicago, IllinoisPsychologyAnn BaylesBloomfield, ConnecticutGeneral Studies in Hum. Susan Cameron BackmanNew Hartford, New YorkHistoryLon S. BannettPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaPublic AffairsVictor BassCroton-on-Hudson, New YorkSociologyJohn M. BealChicago, IllinoisPolitical Science139Gary F. BenensonNew York, New YorkPhysicsRebecca S. BiekDowagiac, MichiganAnthropologyAlan BloomSamerville, MassachusettsB.S. MicrobiologyKathrvn Florence BoneseMullica Hill, New JerseyB.S. Biochemistry140 Dwight W. BergerRenton, WashingtonB.S. MathematicsJonathan A. BirnbaumWest Orange, New JerseyBiologyPaul BluestoneNew York, New YorkSociologyRandall BoubjergIowa City, IowaPolitical Science Stephen BerlinSilver Springs, MarylandHistoryNathan BlauOak Park, IllinoisBiochemistryRita J. BombaChicago, IllinoisChemistrySandra J. BrewerChicago, IllinoisBiology Allan R. BerubeMonson, MassachusettsEnglishDiana BlockNew York, New YorkGeneral Studies in Hum.Alan B. BondGreat Falls, MontanaB.S. ZoologyRobert H. BrierDayton, OhioBiologyAmy BromsenNew Rochelle, New YorkEconomicsMargaret BruellHewlett, New YorkRussian CivilizationPatricia Elizabeth BuckleyHasbrouck Heights, NewJerseyCivilizational StudiesCharles Ellis CalefChicago, IllinoisBiology Kenneth Lawrence BrownPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaB.S. BiochemistryPhilip C. BrzozowskiChicago, IllinoisSociologyPaul BursteinChicago, IllinoisSociologyMartin L. CampbellEvanston, IllinoisBiochemistry Thomas Howard BuschDayton, OhioGeneral Studies in Hum. Nadine ButchartKalispell, MontanaStatisticsTodd Gene CappNew York, New YorkGeneral Studies in Hum. Laura K. ChenvenNew York, New YorkGeneral Studies in Soc. So.141Robert L. ChevalierHinsdale, IllinoisB.S ZoologyGary AI/en ChopakCranston, Rhode IslandMathematicPatricia A. ClinePalo Alto, CaliforniaHistoryCharles ColbertLeonia, New JerseyArt142 Betty Ann ChewningPortland, OregonHuman DevelopmentDavid Barry CitronLas Vegas, NevadaSociologyThomas R. ClothierChicago, IllinoisSociologyDiane Ellen ColeEast Meadow, New YorkPolitical Science Edward Mark ChikofskyJamaica, New YorkPhilosophyMarvin G. ClaitmanWest Orange, New JerseyPsychologyDennis Sanford CohenDetroit, MichiganMusicLouis L. Cons/anCalumet Park, IllinoisBiology Gary Walter ChismNormal, IllinoisEconomicsA ndrew Mitchel ClarkBrooklyn, New YorkHistoryRichard A. CohnBronx, New YorkBiologyJane Greer CoulsonOak Park, IllinoisHistoryNancy A. 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Inaddition to services rendered, therewill be the simple satisfaction ofknowing you have done your bit forsociety; and in particular, for yourfellow students.1163THE CO-OP SUPER MARTin the newHyde Park Shopping Center55th and Lake ParkFOOD-LOVERS will be especially pleased by theextensive selections. High quality meats andproduce - frozen foods - everything for familymeals and enterta i ni ng. A ho me econo mist tohelp you plan. Parking for more than 500 cars.The Co-op Super Mart is owned by over 10,000families, with profits returned to its owners. Yetyou do not have to be a member to shop and en­joy.After graduation, the Alumni Association will be your direct link with the University andyour classmates. Membership is free and automatic. 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I,.:, '�··"·'�"·'-'·-.�'-n'-�'- .-. . .",;:.' .Compliments of The Chicago MaroonFIRST THINGS FIRST!To lay a strong foundation for your family's financial fu­ture, you should make life insurance a first investment.Life insurance provides immediate protection for your fam­ily and, if you survive, an added income for your retire­ment years, It also provides you with a definite programfor systematic saving.authorized BMC sales and servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.chicago, illinois 60615 Let me show you how the Sun Life of Canada can benefityou and your family. Yon will be under no obligationand you will see what we mean when we say-'FirstThings First!'home of team wink��-� foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.---..., Ralph J. Wood, Jr., '48UNIVERSITY INSURANCE COUNSELING SINCE 1950SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANY OF CANADA1 N. LA SALLE ST.FR 2-2390 CHICAGO 2, ILLINOIS798-0470167",_,;;. ":,,,,<,'i':L-�-Open Daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.521 East 63rd Street 684-5700Alvernia M. 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Employees also participate in the University'smany activities and functions.There is a great variety of employment opportunity at the University. Typical positions in­clude:Technical positions in research and clinical laboratories for those with experience orwith courses in chemistry, biology, microbiology, etc.Office positions of many kinds for those with typing, shorthand, bookkeeping or relat­ed skills. Also some clerical positions which do not require special skills or back­ground.Administrative or professional positions for those whose experience or specializedfield of training qualifies them.Although we have some openings for part-time workers, the greatest choice of employ­ment is for those who can work fullti me, and who plan to work for a year or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the UniversityPersonnel Office at 956 E. 58th Street; hours 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday. Or callMidway 3-0800, Extension 4440.Of course the University is an equal opportu nity employer.169PL 2-9032RANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic Salon JIM'S FOOD MART1021 East 61st Street.Frozen Foods• Fresh Meats• Vegetables5700 Harper Avenue Fairfax 42007STATIONERY ,TEXT BOOKS . GENERAL BOOKSSCHOOL SUPPLIES . * TYPEWRITERS . * GIFTS* PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES * TAPE RECORDERS*SNACK BAR • *TOBACCOMAIN ...THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORESEDUCA nON BRANCH ..• At Main store only. DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCH ..I90 EAST DELAWARE BRANCH170 5802 ELLIS AVENUE582I KIMBARK AVENUE65 EAST SOUTH WATER STREETI90 EAST DELAWARE PLACE MI 3-Q800 EXT. 3306MI 3-Q800 EXT. 3304FI 6-8300943-3141LEICA • BOLEX • NIKON • PENTAX • TAPE RECORDERSDiscounls 10 Sludenls and facu"yMOST COMPLETE PHOTO AND HOBBY SHOPON SOllTH SIDE1342 EAST 55TH STREET HY 3·9259_ AA, , /(I J' "t%,� SFLOWER SHOP"Flowers for All Occasions"Candy1308 EAST 53RD ST. MIdway 3·4020CHICAGO, ILLINOIS'uIIat. LTD•.Anliqut &Modern .JewelrySpecializingAuthentic AntiqueEngagement RingsWedding BandsReasonably Prices5J8n.Michigan Avenae I �Iephone 321-1360171Suellyn Hetrick, Editor-in-Chief.Tony WestJoseph Sell . . Copy EditorBusiness ManagerSpecial acknowledgements:Director of Student Activities, Skip LandtMAROON Editor-in-Chief, Jeffrey KutaNews Editor, John Moscowii 172 W. Paul Harder, Managing Editor.William G. Nowlin, Jr., Photography .Patrick White, Layout Editor.Mary Joan Hasche, Circulation Manager. Barbara Yondorf, Advertising Manager.Assistants ... Lionel DeimelSusan KupperMike MarshallLeo MoldavarJennifer SeiffertPhotographers Erik BorgSteve KorwinJerry LapidusRichard ParkerMarc PokempnerRobert RiceJeffrey SmithLarry SteinbergDavid Travis173The University,Hard to describe,impossible to explain.Bu t for a yearit was our life.And we lived it.174175_-)\tl1," . .t.:"�. "t176The Alumni Association5733 University AvenueChicago 37, Illinois