p»^|a.^SVAt WhHarper Library® 61 Archives UniChicago, in. 606 Symphony's New Conductor?licago Maroon SEE WEEKENDPAGE 3FoundedIn 18!>2VOL. 76. NO. 7 0^11^,66 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY/OCTOBER 6, 1967 12 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSBACK FROM TALKNLF Confident-FlacksBy JOHN SIEFERT“The National LiberationFront claims to have won theground war in South Vietnam.”So reports Richard Flacks, anassistant professor of sociology, re¬cently returned from a round oftalks with representatives of theNational Liberation Front andNorth Vietnam.The talks were part of a con¬ference arranged by LiberationMagazine between 40 Americansrepresenting the anti-war move¬ment in this country and 35 Viet¬namese. The conference convenedin Bratislava, Czechoslovakia onthe week of September 6 to 13.The National Liberation Frontdelegates formed the highest leveldelegation the Front has ever sentoutside Vietnam.Among 1he representatives of theNLF present at the meeting wereMadame Binh, a member of theCentral Committee (the governingbody of the NLF) and Le Mai,President of the NLF's studentwing. NLF representatives stationedin Eastern Europe were also present.The North Vietnamese delega¬tion consisted primarily of leadersof student, labor, and professionalgroups. It did claim to have officialstatus.In an interview with The Maroon,Flacks reported that the NLF isextremely confident of victory. Theyalready claim to have won theground war in South Vietnam.As evidence, the NLF delegationcited the fact that the great bulkof American ground forces are tieddown defending the coastal cities,Soccer Wins OneThe soccer team, undaunted bythe fact that the “new StaggField” has not been built, rompedover Kendall College by a scoreof 5-1 in its season openerWednesday.Heroes for the Maroons includ¬ed Paul deGrazia who scored 3goals, Mark Manewitz who scoredthe other 2 goals and had 1 assist,Captain Mike Nemeroff who had3 assists, and Mike McLean whowas credited with 1 assist. American bases, and the areaaround the Demilitarized Zone.U. S. Strength DoubtedFrom the point of view of theNLF, it is extremely unlikely thatthe United States can launch anymajor offensive to dislodge themfrom the areas they now control.Flacks reported that the NLFdelegates claim to control virtuallyall the villages of South Vietnam.In addition, he reported that manyneighborhoods within the supposed¬ly government-controlled cities arealso coming under Vietcong dom¬ination.“The biggest surprise for weAmericans,” Flacks said, ‘‘was theextreme self confidence of theFront. But their self confidenceseems well grounded.“The basis for their self confi¬dence,” Flack said, “is that theyagree with most Americans thatthis is a war of attrition. But inthis war of attrition they feel theAmericans are suffering most.”American bombing of the northhas not been particularly effectivein damaging their ability to fight.The North Vietnamese do not par¬ticularly depend on the facilities webomb.”Furthermore, he reported thatthe North Vietnamese have takenextraordinary measures in civil de¬fense. The northern delegatesclaimed that two-thirds of the pop¬ulation of Hanoi has already beenevacuated.Both in Flack’s view and theview of the Vietnamese, the Amer¬ican bombing is largely directedagainst civilian populations.Claim Strengthening“This bombing has strengthenedthe government of North Vietnam.”Flacks said. “It has had the sameeffect that German bombing hadon the British civilian populationduring Woxld War II.”“The North Vietnamese havegreatly decentralized their govern¬ment,” Flacks explained. “Schoolsare divided into classes and scat¬tered through the countryside. Be¬cause of the bombing, local areasare becoming self-governing andself sufficient.”“We Americans wondered howthe Vietnamese could endure undersuch pressure and still feel thatthe war was hurting us more thanthem,” Flacks said. “But they have lived in a war zone for 25 years.They can tolerate conditions otherpeople would find intolerable.”Flacks reported that the Viet¬namese have a different emphasisthan the American anti-war move¬ment. Americans opposed to thewar emphasize the suffering of theVietnamese people. The Vietnamesethemselves emphasize their endur¬ance and their ability to win.They do fear the use of nuclearweapons against them, Flacks re¬ported, but believe the Americanpeople would not tolerate their use.“They have more faith in the de¬cency of the American people thanmany Americans,” Flacks reported.Political UnderminingAccording to Flacks, the Viet¬namese realize that the NLF can¬not win a purely military victoryin the south. They know they can¬not push our troops into the sea.“The trend,” Flacks said, “is to un¬dermine the American position inthe south politically.”The NLF recently issued a newprogram which calls for a neutralSouth Vietnam with a governmentbased on a freely elected assembly.This program does not emphasizethe goals and ends of the commu¬nist party.“They don’t conceal the fact thatthe major political force withinthe National Liberation Front isthe communist party,” Flacks said.“And there is no doubt in my mindthat the government in South Viet¬nam w'ill eventually resemble thatof the North.”LAC '68A planning meeting forstudents interested in theLAC '68 will be heldWednesday, Oct. 11, at4 p.m. in Cobb 112. Be¬gun in January, 1965,LAC is in its third con¬secutive year. The firstconference, lasting aweek, featured five ma¬jor outside speakers. Lastyear's LAC speakers weremainly from within theUniversity.BOORSTIN, MOULDER CHARGEDSDS Attacks 'Political' ProfsAmid bobbing red, yellow, andblue baloons, 60 students ofthe organizational meeting ofStudents for a Democratic So¬ciety (SDS) have raised the pos¬sibility of censuring ProfessorsDaniel Boors tin and JamesMoulder.Boors! in is the Preston and Ster¬ling Morton professor in the De-**, f, fTS*? jjFELLOWSHIPSStudents interested inobtaining Danforth fellow- 'ships should see Gerhard 'Meyer in Gates-Blake 431 1before October 10, next |Tuesday. iw-< -- pss / partment of History and author of“The Lost World of Thomas Jef¬ferson,” “Genius of American Poli¬tics," and other historical works.Chris Hobson, an SDS leader,claimed Boorstin pushed for the re¬moval of Professor of History JesseLemisch, an American History pro¬fessor, last year because Boorstinthought Lemisch’s convictions con¬flicted with his scholarship.Lemisch, commenting on his re¬lease from the University, stated,“Knowledge can only flourish ifthere are a Daniel Boorstin and aJesse Lemisch who can stand be¬fore a class and say we disagreeyet respect each other.”Hobson, referring to Boorstin’stestimony before the House Com¬mittee on Un-American Activitiesseveral years ago, said, “For him,the best contribution he could makefor the fight against communism isfirst the practice of religion and second to convey to students thesuperiority of the American systemto communism.”Moulder, second object of attackand chairman of the Departmentof Microbiology and a member ofthe University faculty since 1944, ischief advisor on biological warfareto the army at Fort Dietrich, Md.Considering possible actionagainst Moulder for his role inbiological warfare, one student as¬serted, “We’re not going to de¬mand him to leave the University;somebody said it’s easier to harasshim here.”Specific action against ProfessorMoulder will be planned at the nextSDS meeting.Protest against Boorstin may bein the form of a leaflet to be hand¬ed out at one of his lectures. Theleaflet is expected to point out thatpolitical motives do play a decisiverole upon scholarship. But Flacks reported that theNLF is modifying its program toprovide a base for other groups tocooperate with it in getting theAmericans out of the country.“Most of the groups not now inthe NLF,” Flacks said, “now realizethat the newly elected governmentin the South intends to cut themoff from playing any major role ingoverning the country.The NLF says to them that theyhave only one alternative—to join,and when they do the Americanposition will be undermined.”Peace Terms DescribedThe major question among theAmericans at the Bratislava con¬ference was, “What are the peaceterms of the National LiberationFront?”“The Front says it has one majorobjective — American withdrawal,”Flacks said. “Since in their viewthe Americans are losing, they feelwe have two alternatives—to with¬draw or expand the conflict into ageneral war in Asia.” Flacks saidthat the NLF representatives be¬lieve the United States does notwant that kind of war.“North Vietnam,” Flacks said,“is ready to negotiate as soon asthere is a permanent halt to thebombing of the North.”“The purpose of such talks wouldbe to help the United States find aface-saving way to withdraw fromthe south,” Flacks said. He re¬ported that the Vietnamese willnever again accept such a compro¬mise as the Geneva Accords.The Vietnamese view of the Gen¬eva Accords differs substantiallyfrom the one commonly held in theUnited States. In their view a vic¬torious Viet Minh agreed to a tem¬porary partition of the country tobe followed by free elections whichthe Viet Minh were expected towin.Instead, no elections were heldand the division became permanent.Status of TroopsThe status of Northern troops inSouth Vietnam, Flacks said, mightbe a topic of negotiation. “Theygive you a ritual statement whenyou question them about NorthVietnamese troops operating in thesouth which almost makes it soundlike they are not there. They don’twant to talk about them.”But according to Flacks, if thereis a halt in the bombing the NorthVietnamese might show a willing¬ness to negotiate by pulling someof their troops back, or stoppingtheir artillery bombardments acrossthe DMZ.According to the North Viet¬namese, their troops are in thesouth to act as a diversionary forceand tie down large numbers ofAmerican troops. They are sup¬posedly stationed primarily in thearea adjacent to the DMZ.“There is reason to believe,"Flacks said, “that a large numberof those troops are Southerners who went north at the time of partition.I don’t know whether most peoplerealize this but the most powerfulgroup of Northerners in the Southtoday is the present government.Both Thieu and Ky are northern¬ers.”Chinese Feared“Hanoi’s greatest fear,” Flackssaid, “is the Chinese. The worstthing they can imagine would beto have to cope with a large num¬ber of Chinese troops in NorthVietnam.”Flacks said a large part of NorthVietnam’s propaganda to its ownpeople has been on their traditionof resisting foreign aggression. Inthe past, the aggressors were usu¬ally the Chinese.“Their fear of the Chinese,”Flacks said, “points up the centralrole of nationalism in this conflict.One of the North Vietnamese said,‘In a sense all of us are communistsand none of us are.’ He meant thatthe source of their resistance is na¬tionalism, not communist ideology.”“For both Northerners andSoutherners at the conference,”Flacks said* “the ultimate goal isre-unification. But they look uponthis as a ten year process, and theSoutherners are very strong intheir desire to set up their own in¬stitutions and not be assimilatedinto the North.Chicago Govi. SupportRanks Ninth in NationThe University of Chicago nowranks ninth in the country in fi¬nancial support received from theFederal government, according toa survey recently published in TheChronicle of Higher Education.As of 1966, Chicago was receiv¬ing approximately $45 million peryear from federal sources, accord¬ing to the Chronicle. The bulk ofthis money came from the Depart¬ment of Health, Education andWelfare and the National ScienceFoundation. It also includes about$5 million in Defense Departmentfunds.Although Chicago’s rank amongschools receiving large amounts ofFederal money has fluctuated overthe years it has generally beenamong or close to the top ten. Ac¬cording to the new survey, it nowplaces behind Michigan, MIT,Stanford, Columbia, University ofIllinois, Harvard, UCLA, and Berk¬eley.The survey also found that whilein general Federal funds have al¬most doubled since 1963, their wid¬er distribution has created a per¬centage shrinkage in the share re¬ceived by the top 100 schools.Chicago received about $33 mil¬lion in Federal money in 1963 andranked 14th in the nation.O’Connell Calls Clause ‘Inappropriate’Dean of Students CharlesO’Connell has issued a memo¬randum to other deans and de¬partment heads stating that adisputed clause in the current Stu¬dent Handbook “has never in factbeen invoked,” that it “does notconform to past or current disci¬plinary procedures at the Univer¬sity,” and that it “will be reviewedsoon” when a faculty committee reviews disciplinary procedures ingeneral.The clause at issue states that"infractions of the law will auto¬matically place a student on pro¬bation from the time formalcharges are brought against himby police.”O’Connell, noting that the clausewas apparently inserted in 1947,admitted that “the current wordingof the sentence seems inappropri¬ate.”“Fall semester notes: AlgerHiss announces he will teach acourse on the New Deal (in which“I was a participant and knewsome of the people who made im¬portant decisions”) and also writea book about it. The course, sug¬gested by himself, starts October 5at the New School for SocialResearch and ends November 16.On November 11 Hiss wilt besixty-three.The Revolu¬tion will befifty.” For o tree copy of *h«current issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writeto Dept. CP-1, 150 E.35 St., N.Y..N.Y. 10016UTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingI. 51*4 Ik NEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StraatHYde Pari 3-8372Stursenf s»c Faculty DiscountWe Invite You to Examinethe Samigon AuxiliaryFISH EYE LENSI I 80 degree lens)The University ofChicago BookstorePhotography Department5802 S. Ellis * it George Rouault — "Mis- •Ierere" series, in the "Art lto Live With" Program, jOctober 16-20th, Ida fNoyes Hall.THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESBe Sure toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111See OurEverything to MokeYour Child's Fortya Success10MEXICAN RINATAS1,000 PARTYFAVORS ONLYWE HAVE ALL MATTEL'STALKING TOYS, DOLLS.BOOKS. GAMES, RECORDS.BALLET SHOES, LEOTARDS.SCHOOL SUPPLIES,EDUCATIONAL GOODSWE ACCEPT ALL MIDWESTCHARGE CARDSu/eeToys. Hefcbies \ Juvenile Furniture1708-1710 \ East 71th St.RE 4-4510 ES 5-44*4Free Parkin* Naif Door C&cJi the. ft&dRunner!atyour Tfymouth Dealers.^ ~7he new Plymouth RoadRunnernow at your Plymouth Dealerswhere the bentgoes on. .nan**1* -- ’m ■Right on Campusfor your travel needs large or smallair. Steamship, tours, railMIDWAYTRAVEL SERVICElobbytel. Ml 3-0800 administration buildingext. 2301, 2302. 2303no charge for our services exceptnominal fee for rail tickets.-0TRIANGLE PRODUCTIONS FRANKLIN FRIED PRESENTS7£WILSOXand special guest starBUDDY RICHand his orchestraOCTOBER 13. 14, 1967 • CIVIC OPERA HOUSEFRI. 8:30 P.M. & SAT. 11:00 P.M. $6 50, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50SAT. 7:30 P.M. • 46.50, 5.50, 4.50, 3.50, CHARLESAZNAVOURJudy:nsOCTOBER 27, 1967 • ORCHESTRA8:30 P.M.$5.50, 4.50, 3.50, 2.50 HAI NOVEMBER 10, 11. 1967 • ORC8:30 P.M.$6.50, 5.50, 4.50. 3.1 HESTRA HALL50PETESEEGERNOVEMBER 17. 18. 1967 • ORCHESTRA HALL8:30 P.M.$4.00, 3.50, 3.00, 2.50GLENYARBROUGHNOVEMBER 3, 1967 • ORCHESTRA HALL8:30 P.M.♦ 5.50. 4.50. 3.50. 2.50 THEASSOCIATIONNOVEMBER 23, 1967 • CIVIC OPERA HOUSE9:00 AND 9:00 P.M._____ ♦6.80, 4.60. 3,60. 2.50 mTickets at Ticket Central, 2I2 N. Michigan Ave., and all Montgomery Ward and Crawford Stores. Tickets by mail to Triangle Productions. 2II E. Chicago Ave.,Chicago, IH. 406II. Enclose e self-addressed, stamped envelope end 25 cents per order for handling. 'Student discount tickets ere available for some concerts to groups and organisations. For information phone Doris Block—717-8162.2 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 6, J967-mmmsr ■ .,. . »>»•Maroon Classified Advertisements§KATES: For University students, faculty,and stiiff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c [>er line.60c per line repeat.TO I'l.ACK Al>: Come or mail with ptiy-ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Mall, 1212 K.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.HOI Its: Weekdays 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.tn.DBA III.IN KS: Ails must Ik* in by 11 a.m.of the day before publication.Folt FI Id'll Fit INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0S0O, Ext. 3266.LOSTWIRE-RIM GLASSES. On Oct. 2, be¬tween New Dorm and Medici (along Wood-lawn * .i7th). Call .Marianne, MI-3-OK06,EXT. 3266. REWARD.WANTED TO BUYWill buy your used DRUM SET if atreasonable price, even if It’s a mess. CallJones at 363-3933. All Hours.Two tickets for Ravi Shankar Concert.W'ill pay almost any price. Call 667-79L1.You see, we have this big old door, &if wre stand it on cinder blocks and seta hrm mattress on It, we can pretend it’sa studio couch. (Who will ever guess?)What we need is the mattress (or 2). Anda couple of small rugs (9x12 or smallerand runners). And two desks, one small,one average. Try 321-7813 after 6 PM.RIDES WANTEDRide to San Francisco for 2. Will ShareCost. Will want to leave anytime betweennow and 10th of October. Call 363-3933.PUBLIC NOTICECORRECTION ON 53rd and KIMBAUK ADON SEPTEMBER 29. 1967 . . . COUPONSEXPIRE TODAY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,NOT OCTOBER 16 AS SHOWN ONCOUPONS . . PRINTER’S ERROR.HOUSES FOR SALE1 Bedroom house located in South Shoreonly 10 ntin. from Campus. Two wood-burning Fireplaces. 2 car garage. Under¬ground lawn sprinklers. Also fully carpetedwith a finished basement. $30,000. Forappointment, call 643-3168.Ideal home for University Family. 8 roomGeorgian with 3 bedrooms, 1*4 baths, 2fireplaces, full completed basement, gasheat, and 2 car garage. Excellent condi¬tion and in line neighborhood 15 min. fromCampus. Reasonably priced for sale byowner. KKsex-5-6938.FOR SALECouch. Small l>rop-l,eaf Dining RoomTable. Clal BU-8-0624.YAMAHA '66 250, Top condition, 3000miles. *450 00 or best offer. Call 288-3946.WORKFREE - LANCE WRITERS WANTED.MARQUIS WHO’S WHO, INC. needs part-time, free-lance writers to do short biogra¬phies of famous tieople In an interestingnarrative style. Remuneration is attractive.No experience necessary tho ability to writeessential. Call SU 7-2008. EXT. 4 (wkdyg.9-4) for appt. and details.Ideal part-time job for student. Possibilityup to $1000 monthly. Choose your owntime, clients, territory. 50% commissionfor getting advertisement and membershipsin a real estate newspaper and organiza¬tion. No minimum, unlimited maximum.Call CE 6-6386.Are you a graduate student who Is inter¬ested in books? If so, the University ofChicago Bookstore is probably interestedin you. We are looking for people to assistin the selection of books in your field.RESPONSIBILITIES MAY INCLUDE ASMUCH AS YOU ARE WILLING TO AS¬SUME. Hours are liexible, including eve¬ning work, from 6-12 hours a week. PhoneMI 3-0800, Ext. 4411. PERSONNEL OF¬FICE, 956 E. 58th St.An Equal Opportunity Employer. WAITER OR WAITRESS WANTEDWORK 3 days/week from 5 P.M. - 9:15P. M. Very Good Income. Exp. Pref. GOR¬DON’S RESTAURANT, 1321 E. 75th St.Call 752-9251 afternoons.PUBLIC RELATIONS MAN WANTED.Part-time. Call John after 11 AM, 667-9779.There are still a few openings for CHORUSAND ORCHESTRA MEMBERS for theGONDOLIERS. Call Roland Bailey at324-0420.Call MI -3-0800, EXT. 3330, The Bulletinof (lie Atomic Scientists needs part-timeor full-time people foe typing, dictation,and filing.GAL FRIDAY, Std. and non-managingdirector of newly formed company seekspart-time ai.de Ideal candidate should havesecretarial skills, arithmetic aptitude andflair for writing. Hours are flexible,ca. 15/weelc. Pay negotiable, but good.Contact Mr. Nlederhoffer at MI-3-0800,X4264 or 613-8992 late evenings ormornings.Need BARTENDERS AND WAITRESSpart-time, See John Plato after 11 A.M.at SMEDLEY S, 5239 S. Harper.FEMALE STUDENT BABYSITTERWANTED FRIDAYS 11:30 AM to 5 PM.$1.00/hour. Call 684-3105.WAITRESSES WANTED TO WORK EVE¬NINGS AT baroque lounge, 1510 E. 53rdSt., SEE BOB R. AFTER 8 P.M. FOR RENTNearby, economical, clean, quiet, warm,unfurnished apt., 3Vt rooms, private porchand bath, elec., and frig., $92.50. Freeutils. Also waiting list for coming vacan¬cies. $77.50 and up. 6043 Woodlawn. Wil¬liams. MU 4-2300.VOLUNTEERS NEEDEDBUND STUDENT of Business Administra¬tion is looking for volunteers to read tohim. The material will be both of aquantitative nature as well as of a morestraightforward literarv tyi>e. Please con¬tact RAMI RABBY at 324-6508, 5519 S.Blackstone Avenue, Apt. 101.PERSONALSDESPERATELY WANTED Ravi ShankarTickets: WILL PAY ANYTHING, CALL493-6150. LOVE.SOCIAL SCIENCE 125 MAKE-UP EXAMW'ILL BE GIVEN ON MONDAY, OCTO¬BER 16, 1967 from 4 to 5:30 P.M. inSWIFT 208. SIGN-UP NOW' IN GB 212.Test Administration Office by October 12,1967 to register for exam and pick upexam ticket.RUSSIAN taught by highly experiencedteacher . , . rapid method . . . trial lessonat NO charge . . . Call CE 6-1423, 9-5 P.MARMY RESERVISTS. Paid positions avail¬able in Army Reserve Unit meeting oncampus. Students or faculty interested inHULL HOUSE AT PARKWAY500 E. 67th ST.Presents"THE LAUNDROMAT"ROGER CCTNISHThrough Nov. 11 Friday and Saturday 8:30—S3.00Sunday 7:30—S2.50Student Discount, $1.00 off Phone Reservations 324-3880At last in paperback!THE FAMOUSGROVE PRESSBESTSELLER ABOUTTHE “SECRET GAMES”YOU PLAY-AND WHYYOU PLAY THEMnow $1.25. Published byGROVE PRESS.Distributed by DELL joining, phone Mr. Keats at 527-070, Ext. Will Leo S. Please Claim his ’’GIANTPS. POSTER PRINTER STILL NEEDEDURGENTLY AT IIILLKL. $1.50/Hour. CallPL-2-1127.Digestible, Dietary Delights; DiscursiveDivinity D. J., Dwight (Sunday).DON’T DISCRIMINATE —PATRONIZE MAROON ADVERTISERS! POM POM CATALOGUE" at the INK desk."What Makes a University Great?”—"Theaverage salary of all members of thefaculty ... is more than $15,500 . .‘Think Through the Guff" W'CBTHE FULTONIA HEALTH FOOD CEN¬TER IS A TRIP.Turn to Pago 5ASAHATTEROP... Sun Life Insurance Is a sure wsfto financial independence tor youand your family.At a local Bun Life representative, mayI sad upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LOT A88URANCI COMPANY 09 CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYHYDE PARK T.V.RENTS television for$6.50 a week FMradio for $5.00 amonth.HYDE PARK T V services television, hi fixiia/ii rnnn *.v. radios. ldpc re.corders, etc.HYDE PARK T.V. sells *«-*.GrnndigHYDE PARK T.V. offers * 10;■a a mu a *» *» a . w ■ j0 stu,jents y0Umention this ad.1463 East 53rd Street PL 2-2700v vs ‘••AYT’Vv n i * k ? k :f:)v>"***• * • *V'.‘ sw''-i'/u '• r '*. . . you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxe.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails ., luncheon . . . dinner , . . late snacks , * ,air conditioned5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933 TEXTS IN STOCKCalculus, J & K LockePhy. Sci., H & R HerodotusPolitics ThucydidesPlato MelvilleBenedict Rome. Tacitus GoffmanHobbs RousseauBurke GururumbaSTUDENTBOOK < CO-OPREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTOctober 6, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONThe Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editors Roger BlackJohn WelchExecutive Editors David L. AikenMichael Seidman News Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward ChikofskyLiterary Editors Ted HearneBryan DunlapEditor Emeritus David A. Sattermmsz - %' .''CAlternativesAs you may have noticed by now, there is little news intoday’s issue of The Maroon. We can’t afford to publish it.The Committee on Recognized Student Organizations(CORSO) has warned that it will not fully subsidize The Maroonthis year since it feels we can support ourselves if we reallywant to. This is true, and there are two ways in which thiscan be done:One is to print issues like this one in which the proportionof advertising is enough to finance the printing cost of thewhole paper.The second is to sell our product and thereby financemore pages with more articles and fewer ads.THE FIRST ALTERNATIVE we find highly distasteful.Our responsibility to the community involves more than gettingout twice weekly several pages of newsprint filled with ad¬vertisements. We have the capacity—in terms of staff andorganization—to regularly publish Maroons like the first oneof the quarter. But due to the high cost of printing we lost asmall fortune on that issue and don’t have much extra moneyto spare on others like it.We also dislike the idea of selling The Maroon since thatmeans a drop in circulation even if the new revenue is rein¬vested in added quality. It’s quite difficult to go from “free—take one’’ to “five cents a copy” or more without losing circu¬lation and thus advertisers and influence.We’d rather fold than put out more issues like this one.At minimum it will take an added annual ten percent of our$50,000-plus budget to publish the kind of newspaper we’d liketo. Either CORSO must change its mind or we must tack upa price tag—soon.Letters & WordsThe University of Chicago is one of those places where itis not too easy for one to carry on a crusade without receivingmuch opposition and little support from many quarters. Thereare simply too many cynics and critics to let any change in thestatus quo go unchallenged, a fact that is being impressed onus strongly these days.Criticism has been directed, first, towards the publicationSeptember 29 of a letter under the title “O-Week Dissent” andwith the signature "Name withheld by request.” It is felt byprobably a majority of our readers that such a letter—whichcan be described by adjectives ranging from uncivil at best tocrank at worst—should not have been printed, particularlysince the author refused to stand up behind his allegations.While because of the unexpected reaction the letter has pro¬voked we would hesitate to print another like it in the future,we are disappointed that much of our readership did not takethe letter for what we did—an extreme expression of the kindof bitterness that is being aroused in the wake of confrontationsbetween the University’s administration and faculty and at leasta small minority of its students. It is this kind of overreactionon the part of a very few and a more moderate dissatisfactionon the part of many more that provides evidence that some¬thing is wrong with a university that is run without a meaning¬ful student voice in policies that basically affect students.BECAUSE WE FEEL a student newspaper should not behampered by the restrictions everyone takes for granted in thecommercial press, we have not had strong qualms about usingmore expressive language than journalistic tradition recom¬mends. We had forgotten, however, that overuse can result inineffectiveness or sometimes concern not so much about pointswe try to emphasize through sharp language but concern aboutthe language itself, another undesirable reaction.An objective of any newspaper should be to stimulate de¬bate, and this was one of our major aims in the past week.We feel it is unfortunate, however, in that we have so far failedin this respect. For the debate we have stimulated has in manyareas been concerned not with the issues themselves but withour presentation of them.So Far ...We are optimistic about Dean of Students Charles O’Connell’scomments on the Student Handbook “automatic probation”statement. Academic freedom is a meaningless expression whenthe arbitrary use of civil transgressions against students isvirtually invited by such a clause.We await further encouraging news coming from O’Connell’sdirection—such as an announcement that students will haveconsiderable voice in this important review of disciplinary pro¬cedures which directly affect them. Letters to the EditorCivil LettersTo be made witness to a writ¬er’s obscene thoughts withouteven knowing his name seemsto implicate readers in an actinjurious to the writer and tocivility itself, as well as to theobject of his abuse. Yet to knowthat there are some who feel sostrongly that they cannot bringthemselves to responsible utter¬ance is important to us all. Suchpersons require our most humaneconcern.I suggest therefore that theEditor offer the writer of anobscene letter the opportunity ofhaving his name printed beneatha text either summarized in civilterms, or designated as LETTERWITHELD.McKIM MARRIOTTProfessor of AnthropologyIntellectual LifeThe interview with Mr. Leviwhich appeared in your Septem¬ber 29 issue is an appalling augurof what we can expect of theUniversity of Chicago in the fu¬ture. Mr. Levi begins by affirm¬ing that he wants to remain onthe path first set out on 75 yearsago. As I reckon it, 75 years agois 1892, and there seems little rea¬son to think that with leaderswhose eyes look unblinkingly to¬ward the past that the problems,the concepts, the goals of the19th century will ever be givenup.Mr. Levi speaks of the Collegeas one of the three most influen¬tial in American education. I don’tknow what Harvard’s achieve¬ment is supposed to have been,but certainly Nicholas MurrayButler and William Rainey Har¬per did not create great schoolsby looking back to 1792. I don’tbelieve that “75 years ago’’is just rhetoric. It seems too muchan expression of an attitude.For all that talk about researchand the intellectual life is nothingbut rhetoric. The Lemisch andStaughton Lynd cases are in¬stances of that. What intellectuallife is there when there is no aca¬demic freedomf What intellectuallife is there when the Universitymaintains the lie that male classrank in a coed school is necessaryfor graduate school admission?(And even if it were, that "neces¬sity” would end the moment theUniversity stopped compiling it.Why was not the same "necessity”forcing Columbia to compile it?)What intellectual life is there,really, when the University pre¬tends that putting (or keeping)its money in a particular bankis not a positive act, that onlywithdrawing it would be? Wouldit maintain the same position ifthe bank were discovered to beaffiliated with the Mao regime?How much intellectual life ofany meaningfulness can you ex¬pect when Mr. Levi offers, as anargument that students are reallysatisfied with his kind of College,the fact that so many of them goon to graduate school. Why? Howmany drop out? Why? What dothey think of what they are in¬volved in? This is like saying that most students approve ofJohnson’s policies because mosts.udents remain in Johnson’scountry. Or that most Negroeslove it here because they don’tcommit suicide or emigrate toAfrica.The intellectual life is a fiction.You can say anything you wantas lon^ as it doesn’t rock the boat.The University of Chicago is tothe world of ideas what w'hite lib¬erals are to the American politicalarrangement. There is no connec¬tion between the library and thestreet, and the University standsfor the library. Mr. Levi says,"The intellectual life is not theonly life worth living, of course.”That much he has made morethan obvious. However, Mr. Levihas already made the arrogantmistake of confusing intellectuallife with the academic life. Thejoke is on him, but in this dayand age it is dangerous, notfunny. More and more the bestminds in the country will imposethe sentence of exile on them¬selves. More and more the intel¬lectual life will be found outsidethe University. The world thatthe University represents is beingthreatened, and one day the gothicwalls will shake.GREGORY SAVAGEMistaken IdentityIn its October 3 Issue, TheMaroon printed a letter entitled"To the Bush,” which carried thesignature of “M. L. MITCHELL,Law School.” The records of theLaw School fail to disclose theexistence of any such individual,but they do indicate the presenceof one L. M. MITCHELL. Thelatter would like to state thathe has absolutely no interest inwhen, where, how, why and underwhat weather conditions the in¬mates of the University of Chi¬cago dormitories choose to engagein their mating activities. It ishoped that in the future TheMaroon will refrain from inject¬ing its editorial copy into its Let¬ters to the Editor columns.L. M. MITCHELLLaw School(Editor’s note: The Maroonapologizes to both Messrs. L. M.Mitchell and M. L. Mitchell, theactual author of the letter at is¬sue who is not Hated in last pear’sStudent Directory. Since the Reg¬istrar has not yet organized rec¬ords and is unable to provideacademic information on new stu¬dents, will the real M. L. Mitchellplease stand up and be identified f)Rational BeingsI enjoyed exceedingly the speechby Mr. Blum of Student Govern¬ment, given Wednesday the 27thin Mandel Hall. However, whilethe speech called attention to sev¬eral problems, it has moved meto a note of dissent.I respect the actions of the ac¬tivists. My dissent is caused bythe theory behind their actions.When this University was es¬tablished, an administration wasselected. The founders gave themthe right and power to controlthe running of the University. Asheirs of this administration, the present administration has a rightto direct University affairs andset down rules governing the stu¬dents, so long as basic humanrights of life, liberty, speech, andthought are not encroached upon.Its regard for us as rational be¬ings dictates that the administra¬tion listen to student opinions onis workings.Further, as students permittedto study in this institution, wemust acknowledge the Universityadministration’s power and rightto make decisions and rules. Asrational beings with integrity, teeare obliged to oppose those rulesand decisions with which we dis¬agree.MICHAEL A. A. JENSENBad ManagementThe extensive athletic facilitiesfor tennis, squash and handball atthe University are not managedas well as possible. For example:1. One side of the tennis courtsat Ellis and 57th is always locked;players cannot retrieve tennisballs when they are hit over thefence.2. The composition courts at58th and University are rarelyplayable. During the three weekslast May when weather did per-i**i* play, the courts were underrepair.3. Some of the best tennis play¬ers in the country competed inthe National Small College TennisChampionships played at Chicagolast June. There was no mentionof the tournament on any of theappropriate bulletin boards of uni¬versity announcements. The tour¬nament coincided with the SpringQuarter graduation exercises andmany parents and students mighthave attended.4. The two squash and handballcourts can be reserved by tele¬phone three days in advance for45-minute periods. So many peo¬ple call in reservations that by9:15 each day no courts are avail¬able for any period. However, ifa player chances by at a randomhour he is likely to find one ortwo vacant courts.Perhaps now, at the start of thefall quarter, steps can be taken toresolve these minor but vexingproblems.VICTOR NIEDERHOFFERGraduate School of BusinessLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Maroonreserves the right to condensewithout altering meaning. Typedcopy must be submitted by it rum.of the day before publication.rill* (JiM’a^o MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Univer¬sity of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool year and intermittentlythroughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quar¬ter and during examination periods.Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305 ofIda Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th St.. Chi¬cago, Ill. 60637. Phone Midway 3 0800,Ext. 3265. Distributed on campus anain the Hyde Park neighborhood freeof charge. Subscriptions by mail $6per year. Second class postage paid atChicago, Ill. Charter member of U S.Student Press Assn., publishers ofCollegiate Press Service.v*" - - ,„ ' , ' >;< - |Calendar of EventsMaroonFriday, October 6PARTICIPATE: S.D.S. meeting to discussranking and other events of last year.All welcome. Reynolds Club South Lounge,3:30LECTURE: Social Structure and Real Liv¬ing: Do They Co Together? ProfessorEugene Gendlin, Departments-of Psychologyand Philosophy, Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn, 8:30 P.M.PREMIERE: Jean-Luc Godard’s MasculineFeminine presented by Doc Films, MandelHall, 7:30 and 9:30. Admission for non¬members: $1.00.ACT: Politics for Peace, meeting. IdaNoyes Hall, Claister Club. 7:30 P.M.TRAVELOGUE: Israel, sponsored by Inter¬national House Association. Refreshments.International House Home Room, 1414 East59th, 8:15 P.M. Admission: Students 50c,members 75c, others $1.00.LECTURE Studies on the Mechanism ofAction of Thyrotropin—Dr. Jacques E. Du¬mont, Laboratory of Nuclear Medicine,University Libre de Bruxelles. Billings Hos¬pital, Room M-137, 950 East 59th, 4:00 P.M.DANCE FESTIVAL: Paul Taylor DanceCompany. Harper Theater, 53rd and Har¬per, 8:30 P.M. Tickets still available,Saturday, October 7SPORTS FANS: Soccer game versus ShimerCollege. North Field—in front of PierceTower, 5550 University, 1:30 P.M. S.D.S.: Steering Committee meeting, C-Shop, 12 Noon.SIBERIA: Into Siberia, film, with lectureby Raphael Green, University of Minnesota.Field Museum. Roosevelt Road and LakeShore Drive, 2:30 P.M.COLLOQUIUM: Professor Hans-Adolf Ja¬cobsen of Bonn University will hold acolloquium on The officers of the newGerman Army. Social Science 302, 10:00A.M.DANCE FESTIVAL: Harper Theater, 8:30P.M.Sunday, October 8FOLK DANCING: Cloister Club, 7:30P.M. Admission 25c.CHESS: Chess Club meeting to elect offi¬cers, start a tournament, and plan matches.New members invited. Ida Noyes Sun Par¬lor, 3:00 P.M.THEOLOGY: Stephen C. Rose will speakon The Grass Roots Church. Near NorthUnitarian Universalist Fellowship, 1718 N.Northpark Ave., 11 A.M.DISCUSSION: The Gospel According toPop Music, with Dwight Caswell, Univer¬sity Divinity Student and former discJockey on Stanford radio station. ChapelHouse of Lutheran Church of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, 5810 Woodlawn, 5:30for supper, 6:30 program. Supper costs 75c.PHOENIX: First staff meeting, anyone welcome. East Lounge, Ida Noyes, 7.00P.M.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: TheReverend E. Spencer Parsons. Dean of theChapel on Strurturing the Spirit. Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel, 11 A.M.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity Carillonneur, 3:00 P.M.Monday, October 9PARTICIPATE AGAIN: S.D.S. cotTee, dis¬cussion, literature. Reynolds Club SouthLounge, 11:30-5:00 P.M.MEETING: S.D.S. Chapter meeting. IdaNoyes, 7:30.OPPOSE THE WAR: Rear Admiral ArnoldE. True (U.S.N. Ret.) will speak on Viet¬nam—Dead End In Asia? Orchestra Hall,8:00. Tickets for 50c for students fromVeterans for Peace in Vietnam, P.O. Box4598, Chicago, 60680.SOC MEETING: Meeting for students inthe Social Sciences Collegiate Division tohear professors from five concentrations,and to elect a representative to the divi¬sion’s student council. Ida Noyes CloisterClub, 3:45 P.M.INDIA: Three films, Vanishing Veddahs,Oranns of Kiliar, and Our Original In¬habitants. Rosenwald Hall, room 2, 7:00P.M. No admission charge.SCULPTURE: First American exhibitionof Makonde sculpture. The RenaissanceSociety of the University of Chicago, Good-speed Hall, Room 108, 1010 East 59th.Until November 9.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 6, 1967October 6, 1967 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Dissent, anti Satire Etl Chikofsky, EditorMontreal '67 and Osaka '70:>— —EXP070& B7K75HThe Japanese poster for Expo ‘70Roger Blackif you asked the normal per¬son, sitting in his living room,if he would stand in line threehours to see a movie, he wouldanswer quickly, “Hell no.”And he wouldn’t. Unless hewere at Expo ‘67, where peo¬ple bat off several three-hourlines as a matter of course.I myself stood in line forLabyrinth e (the CanadianFilm Board's superexhibit) fortwo hours and a half in thecold drizzle on the first dayof Montreal’s transit strike,which is just now gettingsettled.With the strike on, and itbeing a cold, wet Thursday, Ifigured no one would show up.(It was the lightest attendedday of the fair.)Still 100,000 people, comingin private cars or taxis, jam¬ming the Victoria bridge, fill¬ing the Victorial Autopark,overloading the Expo sight¬seeing trains commandeeredto take the place of thestruck shuttle buses (“Onlythree to a seat,” said the driv¬ers of the little trains. Haha.)—still 100,000 people arequite a few.Dismounting the trains wecharged to the turnstiles,paid our $2.50 (7% exchangeon American currency givenhere), ran to the Expo Ex¬press, got off at Habitat ‘67,rushed to Labyrinthe wherewe found a line wrapped allthe way around it and ayoung Expo person holding upthree fingers and saying withslight condescensions, “Threehour wait—trois heures.”Undaunted (there have beenseven-hour waits at the Laby¬rinthe) , we (and all 100,000of us must have been in thatline) settled ourselves for theseige, watching out for pud¬dles and would-be line crash¬ers. If you don’t watch it,Expo gets to be a game. Youbegin to forget all the won¬derful incredible buildingswith their electronic musicand their 2000 hours of films,and you focus on gettingthrough the goddamn lines,getting your goddamn passe-port stamped, finding a placeto park, to sit down, to eat,to go to the bathroom. Youtry to “do” Expo.It is not that the Expo peo¬ple didn’t try to plan for thepeople. On the contrary, it isone magnificent case wherethe things designers and art¬ists have been trying piece¬ meal all over the world havebeen brought together.Following the lead of theBrussels World Exhibition in1958 (“Technology and Hu¬manism”), Montreal’s Expomade “Man and His World”its theme and built six themepavillions (“Man the Produc¬er,” “Man the Creator,” “Manthe Provider,” “Man the Ex¬plorer,” “ Man in the Commu¬nity,” and “Man and hisHealth.”)They also had some sayover what the exhibitors built,thus avoiding a “Man andCoca-Cola” pavillion. All thesigns giving directions, for¬bidding entry, etc. were co¬ordinated. Common signs weregiven symbols, which quicklybecame familiar.A great deal of attentionwas paid to the languageproblem. One was given theimpression that the Montreal¬ers and the free Quebec peo¬ple were touchy about gettingthe French put first every¬where. Where possible, biling¬ual words were used (e. g.Expo Express).The designers had a lot offun working out bilingual Ex¬po. The. British pavillion (theglorification of pop) looksacross to the French pavil¬lion with a vertically tilted“Grande Bretagne.” On thefront it says modestly, “Bri¬tain.”In fact, the designers hada lot of fun working outeverything. Expo was great. Itwas hailed as the catalystthat brought new recognitionand identity to Canada. Andit has.The problem was too manypeople came. (The Montreal¬ers are complaining that notonly did too many come, butthey didn’t spend enoughmoney while they werethere.) Expo ‘67 really wasn’tbuilt to handle 200,000 peo¬ple a day. But 200,000 peoplecame every day and said theyloved it, it was great, worth it.And the people who stayedhome said, “I would havegone but I heard that thelines were terrible.”The question is what couldExpo have done about it? Thebig pavillions expected a lotof people and had tried tomake continuous exhibits tokeep their lines moving. Someof the tie-ups were movies.But Labyrinthe, amongothers, had two movies goingsimultaneously and could take in 720 people at a time.To improve on this some¬one would have had to thinkof a way to let people sitdown while in line, and beentertained, or fed, which justabout amounts to buildinglarger pavillions.If all the pavillions hadbeen enlarged, if more hotelshad been built, and if thetransportation system hadbeen further automated sothat the 200,000 people perday could be accomodatedeasily, it is quite probablethat 400,000 would have comeevery day. Then the lineswould be twice as long; twiceas many people would comeaway just as exhausted, justas confused, and even moredehumanized.IF ANYONE CAN improveon Expo ‘67 it is the Japanese.Expo ‘70 in Osaka, Japan(“Progress and Harmony forMankind”) is the next first-category exposition sanctioned by the International Bureauof Exhibitions. It is the firstin Asia. (The bureau has giv¬en the nod to a lesser Expoin San Antonio, Texas nextsummer called Hemisfair. Or¬ganized partly to catch theMexico City Olympics trafficand partly to put San Antonioon the map, it will concen¬trate on the Western Hemis¬phere. Meanwhile, a group inNew York (Fun) City is try¬ing to get recognition for afirst-category Expo there in1975 to atone for the 1964-65fiasco.Americans have justabout outgrown their idea ofJapan as a producer of trans¬istor radios, deferential littlewomen in kimonos, and karateexperts. Instead we have cometo think of them as incrediblyindustrious little people whobuild fine electronic equipmentand monstrous tankers. Weare pleased that they haveadopted capitalism with avengeance and that they go tosome pains to emulate us. It has not yet caught upwith us that while the Japan¬ese may be individually minia¬ture, there are nearly a hun¬dred million of them, andthey are getting rich. Japan’sarea is only 143,000 squaremiles, making it the mostdensely populated country inthe world. (Osaka, the secondlargest city, has 3.2 millionpeople.) This compression hasforced the country to face upto urban problems that theU.S. has so far ignored (suchas high-speed ground trans¬portation).Japan is ceasing to be anice model of successfulAmericanization and is fastbecoming our competitor. Partof the reason for this is Ja¬pan’s conscious and enviableposition between East andWest. They can keep as muchof their own culture as theyneed; and they can take asmuch of the West as theywant.If Expo ‘70 does nothingelse, it will be an immensesuccess if it can showthe East-West cross-fertiliza¬tion of Japan (what MarshallMcLuhan calls hybridization).Americanization worked inJapan because they couldmeet us only half way. Theoral tribal culture could breedwith the American visual spe¬cialist culture. As we are con¬fused by the electronic tech¬nology and require suchopaque oracles as McLuhanto tune us in, Japan, with itsEastern tribal backround, un¬derstands it and has embracedit completely.The Japanese could use Ex¬po ‘70 to immerse us hot detri-balized clods (and what non-tuned-in Japanese remain) intheir new cool-hot East-Westhybrid. Most Expos have someinfluence. (Look what Expo‘67 has done for Canada.)But Expo ‘70 could have greatimportance.The Japanese have shownthat they are at least as gooddesigners as the Canadians(and moreover have been for1,000 years). The Expo ‘70 or¬ganizers have been watchingare sure to benefit from Mon¬treal’s mistakes. We can counton an Expo that will rut Osa¬ka and Japan very clearly onthe map.Mr. Black is a second yearstudent in the College major*ing in Political Science. (JVultureBookstoresA city the size of Chicagoshould contain some of the Na¬tion’s Great Bookstores, but itdoesn’t. The only way for stu¬dents to avoid spending ten hourstrying to locate a particular titleis to learn the strengths of parti¬cular stores and use the tele¬phone.Hyde park itself is one of thebest places in the city to beginthe search. Start with the Univer¬sity of Chicago Bookstore, 58thand Ellis, which stocks ail coursebooks and a large though unevenselection of paper and hardbacks.Watch for their sales, of shop¬worn books and library discards,which often contain real gemsburied in much dross. They havean excellent selection of newspa¬pers and literary type periodicalsand a pleasant special order de¬partment.Their extension in Judd Hallcarries books for courses in Edu¬cation.Staver’s, located at 57th andKimbark, is probably the best pa¬perback bookstore in Chicago fora student's purposes. Mr. Slaver's sometimes invaluable for this,selection is excellent and more The Book Center, 5211 S. Har-than makes up for their lack of per Court, is a swinging place,floor space. They are strong in strong in hippy-type books, Ger-math, physics, and especially his- man and French titles, odd-poets,tory, and good in literary criti- posters and mass-market paper*cism; They also stock British pa- backs plus a limited selection ofperbaeks (often underselling Am- academic paperbacks. A comingerican firms) and are adding a store, recently expanded,number of French titles. Special The used book market thrivesorder services are no faster than in Hyde Park, and some of themost other stores, but they’re nice following stores should be checkedpeople. if yoU can’t find or can’t affordThe Green Door, 1450 E, 57th, a new book,is also a good store, but in spite Mitchner’s book store is locatedof a good paperback selection, jn a convenient basement a part-some foreign languages and a fine men! just south of 53rd on Kim-list of children’s books, their main bark. Mr. Mitchner has a largeattraction will continue to be the collection not only of non-fictioncoffee house in the rear. but also of fiction and mysteries,Woodworth’s, 1311 E. 57th, was Note well that Mitchner’s is openat one time rumored to have been only in the evenings, sometimesa good bookstore, and you still as late as 1 a,m„ hence is themay happen to find the book only place in the city for someyou're after there. They do have emergencies.a lot of newspapers, magazines, Joseph O’Gara’s shop, at 53rdand stationary, and, bless them, and Kenwood, specializes in his-a postal substation in the rear. tory. and has a superb collectionDon't mistake me; their stock 0f used books in this subject. Hisof books is larger than Staver’s,but seemingly selected at random.Strongest in fiction.The Book Nook in the HydePark Shopping Center handlesmore commercial than scholarlybooks, as well as some games andhobby materials. Like the Univer¬sity Bookstore, they carry theModern Library line, and are AUDIO CONSULTANTSTwo Macintosh Basic ^00Two Macintosh C 8 S«%akOQPre Amps. EachPERFECT CONDITIONCall 256-4785 or 521-0460 prices are sometimes slightlyhigher than Mitchner’s, butO’Gara catalogues his stock andcan tell you right away if he hasor does not have a particular title.He also carries an extensive col¬lection of assorted paperbacks andback issues of science fictionmagazines.Van Tellingen’s store in HarperCourt carries a large but not verydiscriminating stock of u s e dbooks, real bargains sometimescrop up there, however.The University of Chicago Stu¬dent Co-op runs a book exchangein the basement of the RonaldsClub which has improved greatlyover the last year or so. Althoughtheir stock is still not largeenough to guarantee a hit everytime you go there, (whose is?)the prices ax'© very reasonable.Outside of Hyde Park there area few important sources whichshould be mentioned. Kx-ooh &Bren lane's has a number of out¬lets in the city, the most impor¬tant of which is the one at 29 S.Wabash in the Loop. Look toKroch’s for their large paperbackdepartment in the basemen 1,which carries a lot of unknownpublishers.When you’re in the Old Townarea, be sure to cheek out Bar¬bara's Bookshop at 1434 N. Wells,and Richard S. Barnes’ store —another history specialist — at1628 N. Wells. Surprisinglyenough, Marshall Field’s book de¬partment in one of the best inthe city.VultureLiturgyDuke Ellington and his Or¬chestra will present a Concertof Sacred Music here on Sun¬day, October 15.Two performances will begiven of the two-hour concert,at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m., in Rocke¬feller Chapel. Sponsor of theconcert is the Visiting Commit¬tee to the Division of the Hu¬manities. The Concert of Sacred Musicwas first presented in the GraceCathedral in San Francisco onSeptember 16. 1963. The sameyear, it was also given in theFifth A v e n u e PresbyterianChurch in New York City. Itwas performed in CoventryCathedral, England, in 1966.The R o c k e f e Her MemorialChapel performances will bethe first full presentations ofthe concert in Chicago.The concert of Sacred Music,which is a return to a traditionlargely neglected since the Re¬formation, is Ellington's own“offering to Cod” in the idiomin which he best speaks.Taking its theme from theBible, the Concert opens with‘Tn the -Beginning God . . .The entire presentation usesthe full orchestra, three sing¬ers, a dancer and a choir andincludes original works basedon hymns and spirituals, bothvocal and instrumental.Some of the these composi¬tions, arranged by the lateBilly Strayhorn, Mercer Elling¬ton and Duke himself, are “TellMe It’s the Truth,” “Come Sun¬day,” “The Lord’s Prayer,’’, and“New World a-Comin.”ADD TO YOUR PAD!CATHOLICSALVAGE BUREAU3514 S. MICHIGAN10 E. 41st ST. Edward Kennedy “Duke” El¬lington, whose musical careerspans a period of 50 years, be¬came one of the country’s jazzfigures in his early twenties. Heis best known to the public asthe composer of such songs as“Sophisticated L a d y, ” “Soli¬tude,” “Mood Indigo,” “I Let aSong Go Out of My Heart,” “IGot It Bad,” and “Do NothingTill You Hear From Me.”Tickets for the matinee con¬cert are available at the Uni¬versity Bookstore; the Rey¬nolds Club; the Student Activi¬ties office; and Dean Streeter’soffice. General admission is$2.00. ;Tickets for the evening per¬formance at 8 p.m. are avail¬able by mail from Duke Elling¬ton Concert, Room 1763, 221 N.LaSalle St., Chicago, Ill. 60601,Tickets are priced at $5.00,$4,00 and $3.00.CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER“A MAN & A WOMAN”In Color Anouk AimeeSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN— .4,"For anyone whose ever been In love"Students $1.50 with I.O. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. h Sun.open 1:30Chicago’s most complete record store—Every label in our huge inventory always at adiscount—Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed—Large selection of importand hard to get records.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TOComing: "Art to Live with" original works bycontemporary artists from the Shapiro Collection, Availablefor student loan. On display October 16th through 20th;Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East 59th Street.DISTRIBUTION, OCTOBER 20th AT 4-00 P.M.DISTRIBUTION, OCTOBER 20th AT 4:00 P.M.SEMINARS; FALL 1967Presented by the Ecumenical Christian Council at the University of Chicago,Open to all Students.L[I. RENEWAL AND REFORMAn examination of renewal themes as expressed in documents ofVatican II and their relation to the Reformation of the sixteenthcentury.Leader: Clyde L. Manschredt, professor, Chicago Theological Seminary;Director, Center for Reformation and Free Church StudiesFirst Meeting: Monday, October 9 Calvert House4:30 PM 5735 S. UniversityTHE DYNAMICS OF HOPEAn examination of the dynamics of hope from a theological andpsychological perspective The Meaning of Hope (paperback)by C.F.D. Moule will be used.Leader: Phillip V. Anderson, campus pastor, Augustana Lutheran ChurchFirst Meeting: Tuesday, October 10 * Chapel House• 4:30 PM 5810 S. WoodlawnIII. ART AND THE CHURCHA survey of the relation between the visual arts and the churchas it has been variously viewed in the Christian traditionthrough the centuries and is being reviewed and renewed today.Leader: Robert M. PolomskiFirst Meeting: Friday, October 13 Chapel House4:30 PM 5810 S. WoodlawnIV. THE JUST WAR: A REEXAMINATIONAn examination of the theory of the just war in the religioustradition and a reevaluation of its applicability fo contemporaryinternational relations.Leader: Philip M, Dripps, Methodist campus ministerFirst Meeting: Thursday, October 12 Calvert House4:30 PM 5735 S. UniversityEach seminar will meet once a week for si* consecutive weeks DISCOUNT RECORDS, INC.20 I N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)GOOD FOR 38 OFFLISTON ANYClassical • LIST5.794.79 NOW3.592.97All labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONVERVEFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP. eic. ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYJazz * Folk Music • Spoken • Show Tunes, EtcBUY ONE OR A HUNDREDiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiftiiiiitiii| THIS COUPON GOOD FOR j38%offl,stp^on i§E Any One Time Record §§ Purchase At f|| discount records, inc. 1I 201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake) §I Cl 6-2187 §s Good until Oct. 31, 1967itlilllllillllllllUlllllllllllllinilllllltlflllllltlfllllllflflllllfllllilllllllfllllllllilMONO OR STEREOJUST BRING THIS COUPON!!All labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.Browse our budget’ binsDiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX * RIVERSIDE • PRESTIGE • SCALAETERNA • MGM CLASSICS * VERVE • URANIAEVEREST • CONCERT DISC • PRESTIGE FOLK MUSICMONITOR * VERVE FOLKWAYS • COUNTERPOINT•Sorry, due to manufacturer's price policy imparted LP’s cannot be allowed in this offer.2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE October 6, 1967Is Herr von K. CSO Mystery Man?Edward ChikofskyIt would appear that Jean Mar-tinon, now in his final seasonas Music Director of the Chi¬cago Symphony Orchestra,must have a certain sympathywith the perennial sacrificiallamb, considering the circum¬stances surrounding the non¬renewal of his expiring con¬tract, the indifference withwhich his musicality has beengreeted in many circles, and, inparticular, with the repertoirewhich he has scheduled for thecoming season; including suchitems as the Faure Requiemand, appropriately enough, end¬ing the year with Beethoven’sMissa Solemnis (Agnus Dei,anyone?).But, all the fight has not yetbeen completely attenuated, notif we are to judge by the man¬ner in which the Sacrificial Sev¬enty-Seventh Season of theCSO began last week with LaSpecialite de La Maison Mar-tinon: Igor Stravinsky's LeSac re du Printemps.MARTINON, II O W E V E R,seemed less preoccupied withexploiting the work for itsshock value than as a static de¬lineation of its musical ele¬ments. Rhythm was the key¬note, and Martinon was not tobe diverted from the propulsivethrust of the score; to such anextent that he had a tendencyto underplay the numerous con¬trasting episodes that arestudded throughout.This could be attributed to a number of reasons, but themajor one, I assume, was theutilization of Stravinsky’s some¬what neo classical 1943 revisionof the score, such that thework came out sounding assomething of a stylistic hybridbetween the lush and somewhatdecadent contours of the orig¬inal version with the dry as¬ceticism of the later Stravinskysymphonies. Thus, rather thandepict the score in terms of itsundeniably romantic elements,Martinon chose the somewhatless personal “nouveau Stravin¬sky” approach and, while onewas not always swept away,the validity of his somewhatunorthodox conception was nev-in doubt.Whatever reservations onemay entertain as to the 1943revision vs. the original, theone undeniably positive com¬modity was the quality of or¬chestral execution. If there issuch a thing as a note-perfectperformance of Le Sacre, in¬credible as it may seem, then Iheard it last Friday. When oneconsiders the technical com¬plications of execution (450-oddtime-signature changes!!), it isan indication that the CSO isstill the razor-sharp ensembleit was when Martinon inher¬ited it from the late FritzReiner.BUT, IN spite of Martinon’stechnical expertise, there is ap¬parently a changing - of - the -guard at hand. Martinon hasnot been offered an extensionAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V/s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% dl*«ount to ttucUnt* with ID card*■ ■ ■HYDE PARK THEATERLAKE PARK AT 53rd STREETTelephone: NO 7-9071STARTS FRIDAY OCT. 6th"A SUPERBFILM I -Life Magazine"BRILLIANTCINEMA ART.”— Bosley Crowther.Now York TimesJOYCE'S■es of his five-year contract, whichexpires this May, and the Or¬chestral Association has beenquite open about the fact thatit is searching for a replace¬ment. Certainly, it has a greatdeal to offer on the tradingmarket: an ensemble that hasbeen often referred to as themost Germanic orchestra out¬side of Germany and an orches¬tral association that may per¬haps be the most wealthy inthe world.With all of this, speculationhas been rampant as to JeanMartinon’s successor for the1968-69 season, and word hasreached these offices that a de¬cision may have been reached.RUMOR HAS IT that the Or¬chestral Association has per¬suaded the noted Germanmaestro, Herbert von Karajan,to accept a contract for an un¬disclosed but sizable salary. Aspart of the agreement, the ru¬mor continues, Karajan will ap¬parently bring his DeutscheGrammophon recording con¬tract with him to Chicago.Where this would leave RCAVictor, which currently pos¬sesses an exclusive contractwith CSO, is unknown.If this appointment is indeedthe case, and I repeat this isonly rumor, the Aryan seg¬ment of Chicago’s musical pop¬ulation may indeed rejoice overthe acquisition of one of the world's foremost musical mo¬guls ; one whose sharply etchedinterpretations represent theepitome of clear-eyed, incisivelogic and clarity.FOR TIIE REST of us, how¬ever. who do not forget extra¬musical considerations so easi¬ly, we must fervently hope thatHerr von K. will be willing tomake the relatively minor con¬cession of permitting the Chi¬cago Symphony members to ap¬pear on stage without the cus¬tomary swastikas that haveadorned the arms of so manyof the orchestras he has beenwont to conduct in the past.The fact tfcat the OrchestralAssociation should purposelyseek out a man such as vonKarajan to lead the Orchestraactually comes as no surprise,for they have attempted sim¬ilar maneuvers in the past.INDEED, IT IS to be remem¬bered that in 1948, the Orches¬tra secretly acquired the serv¬ices of Wilhelm Furtwangler,the German conductor who re¬mained in Occupied Europe allduring the war and readily col¬laborated with his countrymen.What prevented Furtwangler’sappointment in Chicago was anopen letter sent to the ChicagoSymphony by Jascha Heifetz,Gregor Piatogorsky, NathanMilstein, Vladimir Horowitz, and many other musiciansthreatening to never again per¬form in Chicago if Furtwanglerwas engaged. (P.S.: The Or¬chestral Association beat ahasty retreat and withdrew itsoffer.)Yet, there is something of adistinction between Furtwan¬gler and Karajan. Furtwanglerwas never a Nazi Party mem¬ber; he was simply a tragicallynaive artist who deluded him¬self into a sense of false secur¬ity by believing that the Artistwas above all political consid¬erations and, thereby, was will¬ing to lead any orchestra solong as the government lefthim alone (while in reality, theGermans did not.)Karajan, on the other hand,readily joined the Nazi Party,and according to no less thanHarold Schonberg of the NewYork Times, was directly sup¬ported by Hermann Goeringthroughout the war. If it istrue that he is being engagedthen, apparently, this does notbother the Trustees of the Or¬chestra who conveniently over¬look such “non-musical” con¬siderations. But there are stillthose of us who will neverforget.Mr. Chikofsky is a fourthyear student in the Collegeinvivt n I n Ph iJ/ionnh 11Admitlanca will ba damadto all undtr 16 yaari of ago.UWWVWVWWVVWWWWt BNAI BRITO HILLEL FOUNDATIONHILLEL STUDIESSEMINARS -CONTEMPORARY JEWISH RELIGIOUS THOUGHTMONDAY 7:30 p.mCLASSICAL JEWISH LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION(Hellenistic and Rabbinic Period) SUNDAY 11:00 am.HISTORICAL STUDY OF THE HOLOCAUST WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.TEXT CLASSESREADINGS IN JEWISH MYSTICISM(Zohar in Hebrew) WEDNESDAY 4:30 p.m.MODERN ISRAELI POETRY WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.(Advanced Hebrew)LANGUAGEELEMENTARY HEBREW TUESDAY AND THURSDAY 5:00 p.m.INTERMEDIATE HEBREW TUESDAY AND THURSDAY 5:00 p.m.HUG IVRI (Conversational Hebrew) WEDNESDAY 4:30 p.m.INTRODUCTION TO YIDDISH MONDAY 4:30 p.m.YAVNEH CLASSESBIBLE WITH TRADITIONAL COMMENTARIESTALMUD (Beginners) Times to beTALMUD (Advanced) announcedMAJOR PROBLEMS OF JEWISH LAW5715 Woodlawn Avenue PL 2-1127October 6, 1967 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3CCP Starts New SeasonThe Contemporary ChamberPlayers (CCP) of The Univer¬sity will begin its 1967-68 sea¬son with a concert of works byLuigi Dallapiccola, the Italiancomposer, at 8:30 p.m. on Tues¬day, October 10, in MandelHall.The concert, which is open tothe public without charge, is sponsored by the University’sDepartment of Music and theWilliam Vaughn Moody Com¬mittee.Dallapiccola 'will discuss theworks to be peiformed and willconduct his Liricke Greche andParole di San Paolo. RalphShapey, Music Director of theCCP, will conduct Dallapiccola’sCinque Canti and Preghiere.RELAX FROM YOUR STUDIES — PLAY BILLIARDSat cool comfortableMISTER Q BILLIARD LOUNGE\ 15 minutes away in South Shore Ch 221-7734 7727 S. EXCHANGE Hrs. 10 a.m, >J (10% Discount With This Ad) ^Episcopal Churchat The University of ChicagoBond Chapel Services9:00 A.M. Sundays Sung EucharistStudent Choir—Sermon12 noon ThursdaysHoly Communion and MeditationBrent HouseOpen House 7:30 PM. Sunday, October 8OR. AARON ZIMBLER, Optometrist»N THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FRIED CONTACT LENSESNEWESf STYLING IN FRAMESThe wonderfulnessof a 24x30"Bill Cosby poster.saw®*' *8^-Free. WithChicago’s SundayAmerican.Start a collection. Cover your wallwith the coolest posters this sideol Old Town. Many more greatpersonalities coming up. BLACK POWERAND THE URBAN CRISISSUNDAY, OCTOBER 810:30 A.M.A report by the minister, who wIM have attended the Emergency Confer¬ence on the Unitarian Universalist Response to the Black Rebellion to beheld in New York City the latter part of this week. Quoted from the Con¬ference call:"This Conference Is sponsored by the Commission on Religion and Raceof the Unitarian Universalist Association to bring together, by invita¬tion, approximately 125 Unitarian Universalist laymen and ministers toanalyte the summer, 1967 riots, and to plan how Unitarian Universalists,locally and denominationally, can help give a new level of commitmentto the Negro and to the cities by setting new local and denominationalpriorities.”atTHE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF CHICAGO5650 South Woodlawn FAirfax 4-4100Jack A. Kent, MinisterREVOLUTIONAND THE NATURE OF MANSunday mornings at 70:30October 75 through November 72MAN AND THE REALITIES OF POWER OCTOBER 15AGGRESSION IN MAN OCTOBER 22MAN AND HIS CULTURE OCTOBER 29MAN AND THE SEARCH FOR MEANING NOVEMBER 5THE DIGNITY AND FREEDOM OF MAN NOVEMBER 12About Our Experiment....You will notice that our church service will begin at10:30 A.M*We invite you to come just as we are starting on experiment in timing.The church service itself will run from 10:30 to about 11:30.After church there will be time for people to exchange Ideas with eachother and with the minister. Sermon "talk-backs” (what was your reactionto what was said in the pulpit?) « adult discussion groups - etc., etc., etc.Take your coffee with you and join the conversation of your choice! Mostgroups will break up about 12:30, but those who would like to stay onand keep talking are welcome. , &WEEKEND MAGAZINE October 6t 1967,=?Maroon Classified AdsContinued from Page 3"He who uses word 'bullshit’ may alsospeak it.” Old Eastern Proverb."The Gospel According to Pop Music”A Supper (75c) at Chapel House, 5810 S.Woodlawn, sponsored by Lutherans Sun¬day, 5:30 P M.POLITICS FOR PEACE, special massmeeting for all interested in political actionfor PEACE, Tuesday, Oct. 10, 7:30 PM,Ida Noyes Hall, Cloister Club.POLITICS FOR PEACE has been buildinga political base in South Shore for halfa year. Our purpose is to inform thePublic about the WAR and to create thepolitical means to oppose the WAR.'Guff is a four-letter word.” WCB•SAY WHAT??????The sun rises and the sun sets—LOUIE.The last thing U. C. needs is anothertradition! Homecoming Dance, 8:30 to¬night at' Pierce.Wanted: Bass Guitarist for Junior Walker-Type Group—Contact 136 BJ.PART-TIME EMPLOVMENT, STUDENTCO-OP.BANDERS ISnowacceptingAPPLICATIONSfor thepositionofMANAGERandASSISTANTMANAGERTAKCAMAONCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 9 P M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062 SEVILLE IS BACK:GET TRIMMED AT 136 DODD.Any student interested in planning LiberalArts Conference is invited to a meetingWed., Oct. 11, 4 PM in Cobb-112.ELLINGTON tickets. STUDENT CO-OP.You may delay, but TIME will not-Franklin. Female student wanted to babysit in ex¬change for room. Call 684-1369.La patience et l’amour, se sont les deuxmoities du genie. A. FranceLEST WE FORGETMEMO TO THOSE WHO HAVE FORGOT¬TEN THE REIGN OF R. M. HUTCHINS—"Custom without reason is but an An¬cient Error.”£cirocfrueSORRY GANG: Alan declines to run.Babysitting Service, STUDENT CO-OP"Vulgarity is the dull man’s substitute forwit, abuse his version of argument, andcomplaint, his style of protest.” Voltaire IIDisregarding the plot, my life is a cheapversion of Last Year at Marienbad.Homecoming Dance, 8:30 at Pierce withthe Knights of Soul. HYDE PARK’S FINEST LOUNGENow opening at noon, we offer you Schlitzlight and dark. Lowenbrau from Germany,and Watney’s from England, all on draughtand cooled to perfection.Noon ’till 7 p.m.: Schlitz only 25cFri.-Sat. THE JUDY ROBERTS TRIO1510 E. 53rd ST. 752-3647 r^JitHdc *iP1438 EAST 57th STREET-^AnnouncedFALL SEASON-1967-1968FOR ADULTSMODERN DANCE by JOANNA HALL. M.A.BALLET by LOUIS CONTE....MODERN JAZZ by LOUIS CONTEREGISTRATION DAILY FROM 2:30 TO 6:00 P.M.For information call BU 8-35004PUBLIC NOTICETYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR IN ’’CLIP THE COUPONS" ADfor - COUPONS EXPIRETODAY. OCTOBER 6. not Friday. October 16 As COUPONS READ in September 29 ISSUEPAPERBACKS JUST RECEIVED1IThe Prose of Sir Thomas Browne |by Norman J. Endicott $3.95 jIThe Policy Sciences jby Daniel Lerner and Harold D. Lasswell $2.95 j=The Trachtenberg Speed System of Basic Mathematics !by Ann Culture and Rudolph McShane $1.95 lGeneral Book DepartmentiThe University of Chicago Bookstore j5802 S. Ellis Ave. j. 5§_ ’ ^m' memm W * m m ,m m * * * m m\The onfywv to catchthe PtoadPunnet is at,your Plymouth Dealers.ihenew Plymouth RoadFunner\J don at your Plymouth Dealer^T where the beatgoeson.Weu«7 W.m.r Zro«.—bra Arts, Ino. CHICAGO PREMIERE“TRUDY and the MINSTREL”Rollicking New Musical for ChildrenOpening October 7Weekends Performances thru Dec. 10Sat. 10:30 a.m. 2:30 p.m. Sun. 2:30 p.m.GOODMAN CHILDREN S THEATRE200 S. Columbus Drive • CE 6-2337CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL212 N. MICHIGAN AVE.j RALEf&JiSPORTSL $65.00 _More quality,more value, more fun• Sturmey-Archer 3 speed hubwith trigger control• Brooks leather saddle• Dunlop Amberwall Tires• Front and rear caliper brakes• All steel tubing construction• Three-point chain guardanchorage• Shock stop grips• Boy's and girl's modelsavailable• Double rear mudguard staySee the DL22 today.You’ll know quality whenyou see it.Only a Raleigh is really a $s RaleighART’SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST.1710 E. 87th ST. 363-7524SA 1-5883 •.. big selections in stocknow for thebike riding season!LIGHTWEIGHT RACERBUY NOW ONEASY TERMS $4495The Schwinn Racer is an ideal tour¬ing model at a low budget price.Lightweight styling, Schwinn tubu¬lar rims, sports touring tires ondfoam cushioned saddle. Schwinnquality throughout.ART'SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST.1710 E. 87th ST. 363-7524SA 1-5883October 6, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONDAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALSCocktail Hour 4-7 P.M.Beer .30c — All Drinks .50-.60c5239 S. HarperAcross from Harper TheatreSmcdlcu’sBe Practical!Buy Utility ClothesComplete selection of boots,overshoes, insulated ski wear,hooded coats, long underwear,corduroys, “Levis”, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with adUSEDHI-FI and STEREOEQUIPMENTGUARANTEED$10 AND UPCALL 463-3585 or 521-0460DINE AT FULTONIANatural and Organic Health Food,Vitamins, Minerals, Food Supple¬ments, Fresh Fruit and VegetableJuices. Also Special Dietary Foodsand Baked Goods.Eat Well in a HeautilulTropical SettingFULTONIA HEALTH FOODCENTER & RESTAURANTOpen Daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.521 East 63rd Street 684-5700Alvernia M. FultonNutritionist, Food Consultant.Hero of the Battle of Midway!A dove with a sharp beak & talons!Hear Rear AdmiralARNOLD E. TRUE(U. S. N. ret.)speak on“VIETNAM—DEAD ENDIN ASIA??”ORCHESTRA HALLMONDAY, OCT. 9220 S. Michigan8 p.m.Tickets S3.00, $2.00, SI.00Students & Servicemen 50cAt Orchestra Hall box office fromVeterans for Peace in Vietnam, 1608W. ladison St., Tel. 421-2699.SUPPORT OUR MEN IN VIET¬NAM — BRING THEM HOMEALIVE! JOIN THE OCTOBER 21stMARCH ON THE PENTAGON.Call for info. REYNOLDS CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY. EXT. 3573M-F 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-12 p.m.SPECIAL OFFER!* To Students, Faculty and Staff:! Gourmet Cheks! For Cultural events, restaurants and theatres at two for the} price of one.Only $7.00Gift DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.THE CHICAGO MAROON October 6, 1967If Matthew Thornton had signed his namewith the Scripto Reading Pen, he’d be remembered today.Scripto’s new Reading Pen makes what you write eas- new kind of pen with a durable Fiber-Tip. Get the reier to read. That’s why Scripto calls k the Reading Pen. tillable Reading Pen for $ 1. Refills come in 12 colors.It's a new Fiber-Tip pen that writes clear and bold. Available in a non-refillable model for 39*. Write withNot a fountain pen, not a ball-point, this is an entirely Scripto’s new Reading Pen. You’ll be remembered. m New fiber tipfromspray bad breath awayWHISPERnew aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017A MemorandumTO: STUDENT AND FACULTY WIVESRE: UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT (An Invitation)At The University of Chicago, wives of students, faculty, residents and interns, constitute a highly appreciated group amongthe several thousand people employed on the regular staff.Despite tradition, University SALARIES are fully competitive these days, with provision for regular merit increases and fre¬quent pay range improvements.University regular employment BENEFITS are better than competitive, including 3 WEEKS VACATION, PAID SICK LEAVE,REDUCED TUITION for University courses, FREE BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD and many others. Employees also participatein the University's many 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 or with courses in chemistry,biology, microbiology, etc.Office positions of many kinds for those with typing, shorthand, bookkeeping or related skills. Also some cleri¬cal positions which do not require special skills or background.Administrative or professional positions for those whose experience or specialized field of training quali¬fies them.Although we have some openings for part-time workers, the greatest choice of employment is for those who can work full¬time, ancf who plan to work for a year or more.You are invited to explore your employment opportunities by contacting the University Personnel Office at 956 E. 58thStreet; hours 8:30 to 5:00, Monday through Friday* Or call Midway 3-0800, Extension 4440.Of course the University is an equal opportunity employer.October 6, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7our •fShe f-^arty l/]/]artinvites you to visit6th ^Innual *LiJine +S?afe-Saturday, October 7than d3,rom Sunday, October 8th10:00 Jl.W. to 10:00 P.W.Vo discount o^ered will be less tb an 20%and Some ivi tn e as biab ai 30%Dlie following are sample prices from the more than One ShouSand WJiwhich are to he on Sate inesSt. ^ohanner Sdfoilergarten SpatfeSe 1064 Vintage regular $2.98 ufe $1.76(jeisenheimer V]auerchew Sfjatfese 1064 Vintage regular $3.98 Safe $2.78\UJarcohrunner S~einste Srochenteerenausfese 1033 Vintage regular $47.50 Safe $23.73Vrzig er ? tJurzgarten Siusfese da hin et 1064 Vintage regular $6.99 Safe $3.30{plateau Cjautlreffe Vouirag 1064 Vintage regular $3.39 Safe $2.13dhabfis 71]ont Je ^l]ifieu ler dru 1064 Vintage regular $3.39 Safe $2.37dhabfis oCes Preuses 1064 Vintage regular $3.99 Safe $2.88dbateau J ffguem 1061 Vintage regular $13.99 Safe $8.08Sarsac 1064 Vintage regular $1.89 Safe $1.10Sohaji Slszu 4 PuttonoS 1061 Vintage regular $3.75 Safe $2.01rjC Or tie ^eruSafem SlusfeSe 106! Vintage regular $3.98 Safe $1.00oCancer J regular $2.98 Safe $2.30dbateau rjCapte 1062 Vintage regular $2.98 Safe $1.68dbateau oCatour 1032 Vintage regular $14.95 Safe $11.03dbateau VJouton Saron Phiffifj 1061 Vintage regular $7.98 Safe $3.43dbateau rjCa *)JJission Slant Sri on Vintage 1062 regular $5.98 Safe $3.88Verneuif Seaujofais 1064 Vintage regular $1.49 Safe $1.18Srouiffg 1064 Vintage regular $2.19 Safe $1.38djrands dchezeaux 1043 Vintage regular $ 11.95 Safe $7.31dbambertin dfoS tie Seze 1061 Vintage regular $9.95 Safe $6.231860 Vintage Vludeira regular $37.50 Safe $18.731033 Vintage V]entliz port regular $6.98 Safe $3.30•Some of ill eSe items are in short Supply therefore weSuggest early attendance in order to acquire the hest values and the widest possible SelectionD,'lie Party Wart2427 ddast 72nd Street at Exchange 351 dlast 103rd Street at South Park8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 6, 1967