TU aVOL. 76, NO. 10 0 ERSIT/‘AGOJlrtiilv23 A FoundedIn 1892OCTOBER 17, 1967 8 PAGESTeach-In ^reviewsEnd-the-WarWeekThe call to resistance was heardhere Thursday evening, at a“teach-in” on the draft sponsoredby Chicago Area Draft Resisters(CADRE).More than 400 persons in Man-del Hall attended the rally, a pre¬view of this week’s anti-war andanti-draft protest activities in Chi¬cago and across the nation.Richard Flacks, an assistantprofessor of sociology at the Uni¬versity, who recently returnedfrom a meeting with leaders of theVietnamese National LiberationFront, urged students to lay asidetheir despair of stopping the warin Vietnam.“We have the power to createconditions in this country whichwill make the politicians considerit necessary to stop the war,” hesaid. “We can start clogging upthe war machine,” he continued,by such tactics as refusing induc¬tion and turning in draft cards.Flacks noted that even the topeditors of Time magazine, and anCome one and all to TheMaroon's first staff meetingof the year, 4:30 p.m. Fri¬day at Ida Noyes 303, at¬tendance required; refresh¬ments. Also, first-year andother Maroon trainees wish¬ing to develop writingskills are invited to attenda four-week workshopseries 4:30 p.m. eitherTuesday or Wednesday, be¬ginning today at Ida Noyes303; food for thought; forfurther information contactDavid Aiken at 288-7961or Ext. 3265. organization of leading scientistsand engineers who supported Pres¬ident Johnson in 1964, are nowagainst the war. They feel “power¬less,” however, to stop it, he said.NLF ‘Confident’“The only people who did notseem to feel powerless and frus¬trated as the bombs rained downwere the representative of theNLF whom I saw in Czechoslo¬vakia,” he remarked.“They are supremely confidentin their ability to achieve their ob¬jective. They believe they have al¬ready defeated American troopson the ground, that in some waysthe bombing is strengthening thespirit of resistance in the North.”After Flacks’s speech, formerstudent Robert Schwartz, a staffmember of CADRE, mounted thestage to burn his draft card.Staughton Lynd, radical histori¬an on leave from Yale, also spoke,urging participation in this week’sprotest activities.“Collective turning-in of draftcards,” as was tried yesterday atthe Federal building in the Loop,“is a way of saying we’ll take theinititative, not wait for the govern¬ment to come to our doors one byone,” Lynd said.Resistance an American TraditionDraft resistance, Lynd said, is inkeeping with the American tradi¬tion of “resisting or abolishing”any government which systemati¬cally takes away universal humanrights, as stated in the Declarationof Independence.He commented that the actionplanned for this week, including apossibly disruptive protest at thePentagon is probably not unconsti¬tutional. “If people are arrested onthe 21st, they surely will be held to have been exercising their con¬stitutional rights,” he said.Nevertheless, he warned, thereis a chance that the courts willnot decide this way. He predicted,“We are in for a repression worsethan McCarthyism, because thereis a fear of the black liberation The Chicago Maroon—MARC PoKEMPNERTHE RESISTANCE: Gary Racier (left), outlines draft resister program,Turn to Page 3 and Robert Schwartz (right) illustrates.Federal Building Is ClosedAgainst Draft Card ReturnBy JOHN WELCHManaging EditorFederal authorities closed theFederal Building yesterday after¬noon to keep a representative ofarea draft resistance groups fromdelivering to the U.S. Marshal thedraft cards of 40 young men whowere “disaffiliating” themselvesfrom the Selective Service System.Four people were arrested, tried,sentenced, and jailed without bene¬fit of legal counsel.Paul O’Brian, a leader of thedraft card turn-in, said after theU.S. officials refused to accept thedraft cards that he would take thecards to Washington Friday andhand them to Attorney-GeneralRamsey Clark. Since the U.S.Marshall won’t take the draftcards, O’Brian commented, “we’llgo over his head.”Invoking a two-year-old restrain¬ing order barring demonstrationsinside the Federal Building, Feder¬al people locked all but two door¬ways against the anti-draft people,and arrested six Chicago AreaDraft Resistance (CADRE) mem¬bers who slipped through the heav¬ily guarded entrance. Convicted of ContemptThe first four arrested were im¬mediately taken before Judge Ed¬mund Robson, who convicted themof “civil contempt” for breakingthe court restraining order. Ac¬cording to a WCFL reporter whowas present at the trial, theCADRE members were not al¬lowed to plead innocent and weretransported to Cook County Jail tobegin serving ten-day sentences,all before their lawyers arrived atthe Judges chambers.When informed of the arrestsand incarcerations, CADRE leaderGary Rader commented, “I’mvery sad.” Another CADRE mem¬ber, Don Tylke, said the arrestswere “typical” of what his countrystands for.Explaining the court order ban¬ning demonstrations, Rader addedthat an American Civil LibertiesUnion leader had told him that therestraining order was probably un¬constitutional. It was decided tosend three people carrying thedraft cards in to the U.S. Marshal.Confronted by GuardsAs Rader went from door todoor, guards inside the Federal Building closed and locked them.At one doorway, he managed toget inside, only to be grabbed byFederal marshals and shoved backout. “This man is illegally block¬ing my way,” Rader complainedto city policemen who stood by.Commander Reardon of the FirstPolice District declared that hecould not take action since thebuilding was Federal property.Later, a girl with CADREwalked past the guards, and car¬ried the packet of returned draftcards to the U.S. Marshal’s office.The office was locked, the Mar¬shal’s secretary was gone, and aguard quickly appeared to leadher from the building.Demonstrators, carrying signsreading “Closed on Account ofFear” posted themselves at alldoors to the building as Radervowed to carry out a “fast” forthe rest of the day unless let in¬side.The attempted draft card turn-in was part of a national anti¬draft action yesterday. Besides theChicago affair, a group called TheTurn to Page 3Lutherans Open New Seminary Here$8 MILLION WORTH: The Lutheran School of Theology squatsalmost complete, across 55th Street from Pierce Tower. By DAVID £. GUMPERTEditorial AssistantThe secretary stepped onto theelevator from the third floor andwithout thinking reached to pressthe first floor button. Suddenly shehesitated and pushed the secondfloor button. “You know, thatmight not have been such a goodidea,” she said to no one in par¬ticular. “The last time I got offat the first floor I got hit by thesand blaster.”Students, faculty, and adminis¬trative personnel at the newLutheran School of Theology on55th St. between University andGreenwood Aves. seem to have ad¬justed well to sidestepping sand¬blasters and working with thesteady din of construction equip¬ment in the background although piles of saw dust blow into unalertstudents.The huge $8 million complex isonly a month from completion, butconstruction workers still abound,putting the finishing touches inplace.This weekend the school willhold an academic convocation andwill be dedicated. Saturday LordCaradon, minister of state for for¬eign affairs and permanent UnitedKingdom representative at theUnited Nations, will speak at theconvocation in Mandel Hall. Sun¬day the seminary will be dedi¬cated in ceremonies at RockefellerChapel.Three Year JobThe school, which has 198 stu¬dents in its bachelor divinity pro¬ gram, has been three years in themaking. In that time it has cre¬ated a considerable amount of con¬troversy because of the apartmentbuildings that were taken over bythe school for its site and housingfor students. The buildings hadhoused several hundred Universityof Chicago students, nearly all ofwhom have since been forced toseek other housing.The classrooms and library arecompletely finished, leaving the of¬fice building and auditorium stillto be completed.The complex actually consists ofthree buildings each three storieshigh, although from 55th St.it looks like one giant structure.It occupies the area from 54th PI.to 55th St. and from GreenwoodTurn to Page 3Bookstore: Profitable, ChangelessBy BARBARA HURSTThe University of Chicago Book¬store is one of the few collegebookstores in the nation that givesneither a rebate nor a discount toits students.The reason, says store managerCharles F. Hughes, is that thegoodwill that a discount would pro¬mote among students would hardlymake up for a great loss in profits.Bookstores at most other majoruniversities — say, HarvardYale, and Columbia — offer someform of rebate to student pur¬chasers.The University Bookstore is notonly self-supporting, but turns overa “reasonable profit,” saysHughes, which the University putsin a general fund and uses to sub¬sidize less profitable organizations.“I think the Bookstore has almostreached its saturation point,”Hughes said. “I don’t see how wecould increase our profits, evenwith whatever added business adiscount would bring in.”According to Eugene L. Miller,manager of campus operations, theBookstore did attempt to give tenpercent student discount one yearin the ’twenties, but went farenough into “the red” to call sucha program “not economicallyfeasible.”Financial DifficultiesBecause of the financial difficul¬ties associated with such a dis¬count, the number of universitybookstores with such programs isdecreasing, says Miller, citing areport by the National Associationof College Stores. The loss inprofits, he adds, might make im¬possible the added services pro¬vided by the Bookstore — pur¬chases made at cost for the rest jof the University.The Bookstore must also contendwith competition from privatebookstores in the area, saysHughes. In a 1966 proposal favoringa discount to students, a Univer¬sity Investigating Committeedetermined that the presence ofmany bookstores in the college ar¬ea adds intellectual stimulationand contributes to the generalcommunity as a whole.If the University Bookstore wereto give a discount, enough busi¬ness might be drawn away fromthe neighborhood stores to forcethem to close, Hughes says. This,he points out, would be “unfaircompetition” and would seem anunfair act on the part of the Uni¬versity.The actual decision regardingBookstore policy, adds Hughes, ismade by the University adminis¬tration, not the Bookstore staff.Recommendations favoring dis¬counts to students have been fre-Franklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd Streetr pizza'sPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 quently submitted to the admin¬istration, but as yet none have beenreceived favorably.One made in 1966 specificallycalled for a ten percent discounton hardcover trade books. The term“trade books” covers most generalreading — non-textbook material.Expansion ProblemsA student discount is not theBookstore’s only concern, how¬ever. At the moment, more press¬ing is the need for larger, moremodern facilities. A proposal toexpand and remodel the presentfacility has been drafted, butas yet, according to Hughes, therehas been no opportunity to presentthe proposal to anyone in power.“At the present time we (theBookstore) occupy roughly 7,000sq. ft. of selling space. About 5,000sq. ft. of this area is used forbooks. This is nowhere near suf¬ficient.”In the proposal submitted lastyear, the Bookstore Committeecalled for a new building with atleast 42,000 sq. ft., half of whichwould be used for books. This isan increase of 500 percent total,and more than 300 percent in thebook department.“Right now we are compelled tokeep shuffling books around in or¬ der to find space for all our stock.We have been forced to cut outpast stock which included men’sand women’s clothing and a largergift section. That area now housesour physical science material.”No Longer a LuxuryBut the expansion of the Book¬store no longer a luxury, but anecessity, since the land that thestore rests on belongs to the Uni¬versity Hospitals — They are plan¬ning to expand their facilities andutilize the area for a new surgicalwing.“What we need,” admitsHughes, “is a totally new andmuch larger store. The addedspace is necessary to build up thekind of complete campus storethat we need.”The problem, he adds, is notmoney. The Bookstore is currentlymaking enough of a profit to ad¬vertise a loan of roughly $1 mil¬lion over a period of twenty years.“Using the past record of sales asa base unit, we can project intothe future and be reasonably cer¬tain of meeting such a loan.”“In the year that I have beenTurn to Page 5THE MONDAY LECTURESLaw School Au ditorium 8:00P.M.Oct. 23 JAMES S. COLEMANConflicting Theories ofSocial ChangeOct. 30 RICHARD C. LEWONTINEvolution as a World ViewNov. 6 ALVIN W. GOULDNERThe Romantic Movement andSocial Sciences .Nov. 13 LEONARD KRIEGERCulture, Cataclysm andContingencyNov. 20 GERALD HOLTONOn the Irrelevance ofScientific ExperimentsSERIES ADMISSION $10.00 (no single lecture ticketsavailable) U. of C. students and faculty may request com¬plimentary tickets by calling 3137. The Chicago Maroon—MARC PoKEMPNEREMPTY AISLES: For once the Bookstore isn't mobbed with studentsclamoring for books that probably aren't there anyway.New Books Just ReceivedProtest and Prejudiceby Gary T. Marx $8.95Sociological Theory and ModemSociety by Talcott Parsons $12.50Tikopia Ritual and Beliefby Raymond Firth $12.50General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.MIDWEST ARTISTS FOR PEACE_“FESTIVAL OF PROTEST”against the war in Vietnam!ATMandel Hall—Sal., Oct. 21 si 8:30 p.m.Sun., Oct. 22nd 7:30 p.m.Sponsored by University of Chicago Student GovernmentOutstanding Midwest Artists Performing inMusic (Classical & Jazz), Art, Poetry, Drama, FilmsStuds Terkel—M.C.Book Center, Harper Court $5.00, $2.50Tickets Available at H.00 The 23rd Street Brauhaus:Food, Drink & People.311 E 23rd St Just 3 blocks west of McCormick PlaceOpen daily 11 am to 11 pm / Friday & Saturday until 2 amSunday 12 noon to 9 pmTelephone: 225-6171Raoul Walsh’sPURSUED ANOTHER RAOUL (WHITE HEAT) WALSH SICK HERO:ROBERT MITCHUM IS PURSUED. WEDNESDAY IN SOC. SCI. 122 AT7:15 AND 9:15. .754 DOC FILMS.THE CHICAGO MAROONV.CWiM". ... vn October 17, 1967\\1 nChicago Students Meet NLF Representativesa *By CAROLYN DAFFRONFour University of Chicago stu¬dents attended a meeting last weekbetween American radicals andstudent representatives of theSouth Vietnamese National Libera¬tion Front (NLF).The meeting was held in Montre¬al at the office of the Union Gener¬al des Etudiants du Quebec, whichwas responsible for bringing theVietnamese students to Canada.The Chicago students—Jeff Good¬man, Jerry Lipsch, Howie Mach-tinger, and Ilene Stein—went asindividuals connected with the na¬tional office of the Students for aDemocratic Society.There were three NLF studentrepresentatives at the meeting,pages 27, 34, and 37. One of them iscompiling a book of poetry written by the Vietnamese people duringthe war; another is writing a studyof Vietnamese poetry during thelast 200 years.Without Fanaticism’Lipsch said he was “very im¬pressed by the NLF students. “Onecould not fail to be,” he said “be¬cause of their courage and endur¬ing sense of purpose, without ar¬rogance or fanaticism.”Both Lipsch and Miss Stein usedthe adjectives “spontaneous” and“joyful” in describing them.Issues discussed included theformer ranking struggle in theUnited States, draft resistance,and the need to build a multi-issuemovement instead of striking onlyagainst the war.According to Lipsch, the NLFmembers were sympathetic to the problems of Americans opposed tothe war and felt that the dissenterswere the “true patriots.”Lipsch said that the NLF mem¬bers were definitely not commu¬nists. “They had too naive a viewon the viability of a wartime coali¬tion (the various NLF groups),after the war to be communists.”‘Not Anti-American’“They say that they are winningthe war—that they’ve already wonit. They presently control 10 mil¬lion people (out of a population of14 million) and eighty percent ofthe land mass.”Lipsche claimed that the SouthVietnamese students were “clearlynot anti-American.” He said thatthey “loved our founding fathersand the Declaration of Indepen¬dence.” Miss Stein added thatNine Buildings Torn DownContinued from Page 1to University Aves.Nine apartment buildings ex¬tending along the north side of 54thPI., the west side of WoodlawnAve., and the south side of 54thSt. are also owned by the school and are being used to house sem¬inary students almost exclusively.15 Buildings in AllAccording to Frank Zimmer¬man, assistant to the president ofthe Lutheran School of Theology,144 apartments are now being oc-Mandel Draft Counsel: Don't GoContinued from Page 1movement today. Courts may be¬gin to make decisions which theyshould not make.”Letter from a GeneralMore support for draft resisterscame from a retired brigadiergeneral in the Army. A letter fromGen. Hugh B. Hester was read atthe teach-in, calling “Mr. Johnson’swar on the Vietnamese peasantsbrutal, cowardly, illegal, immoral,and genocidal.”“The interests of the Americanpeople are not in any waythreatened by the Vietnamese,”Hester’s message said. “The onlyaggressors in Vietnam are theJohnson administration and its sat¬ellites.”Gary Rader, 23, a former North¬western student who resigned fromthe Special Forces reserves lastApril after burning his draft card,also extemporized about the evilsOBSERVERSAnnual appointments oftwo student observers tothe Undergraduate Disci¬plinary Committee arenow being considered bythe president of StudentGovernment. Anyone wish¬ing to serve during the pre¬sent academic year shouldcontact Jeffrey Blum at theSG Office in Ida NoyesHall. of Army life andService system. the Selective“If you go into the Army, youwill either be shipped to Vietnam,or you will release another man togo to Vietnam. Either way, youwill have blood on your hands,”Rader said.He urged students not to applyfor conscientious objector status,but to refuse to co-operate in anyway with the draft system. “Beinga CO allows the system to ruleover you. You let the system de¬cide whether you’ll be classified asa CO or not,” he remarked. cupied by seminary students inseven of its nine buildings. Twoyears ago, in the fall of 1965, sixbuildings were torn down to clearthe building site.Zimmerman expressed hope thatthe controversy would be forgottenand the school accepted by theUniversity community. “We arehopeful of contributing our shareto the community and hope thatwe will be perceived in that spir¬it,” he said. He pointed out thatseveral seminary students are al¬ready enrolled in courses at Chi¬cago.Students at the school appearedextremely pleased with their newfacilities and had no complaintsabout the construction work stillgoing on around them. “I thinkeveryone is one hundred percentsatisfied,” said one student in hissecond year. “Everyone is look¬ing forward to new experiences ina new building and setting.”Tape Recorder Rental Service• Wollensack • Martel • Panasonic • Portables and Office UnitsAll First Class like new EquipmentPhotography DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARdaily — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL i INSURANCE!HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 “they have a lot more confidencein the American people than mostof us do.”Meeting with the NLF represent¬atives made it impossible for MissStein to believe that the Vietna¬mese people are weary and unin¬formed about the war or anxiousfor peace at any price. “They see the war as somethingthat could continue for ten or twen¬ty years, maybe forever,” shesaid. “They will not accept peacewithout freedom. The people ofSouth Vietnam know the joy. . .ofworking for peace with freedom. ..and they won’t accept it withoutfreedom.”From Dissent to ResistanceContinued from Page 1Resistance organized card-ins atmajor cities and many smalltowns. A second day of resistanceis planned for December 4.200 PicketsBefore the abortive attempt toturn in draft cards, approximately200 people picketed the FederalBuilding and listened to state¬ments supporting the card return¬ers. “Together,” read the nationalResistance statement, “we are de¬claring our absolve refusal to co¬operate in any way with the Selec¬tive Service because it is an inte¬gral part of a system that pursuesa brutal war in Southeast Asia,that exploits the black people ofAmerica ....“The realities of American lifenow demand that we move fromdissent to resistance,” concludedthe statement.A spokesman for Chicago Vetmr-MEETINGA meeting for all thoseinterested in planning forthe 1968 Liberal Arts Con¬ference will be held tomor¬row afternoon at 4 p.m. atCobb 112.Bm ans for Peace declared that 1968must be the year that the UnitedStates turned away from its pathof world domination.Shapiro LoanThis FridayThe Shapiro Collection, a large,permanent art collection withpaintings, watercolors, and graph¬ics by artists such as Picasso,Miro, Rouault, Matta, Braque, isnow on exhibit in Ida Noyes Hall.Students, faculty, and staff ofthe University may check out apainting for a quarter at a time.On October 20, numbered regis¬tration cards will be distributed at8:30 a.m. on a first-come basis,indicating when the loanee will becalled to choose a painting at theafternoon distribution.Since it is not always possible toacquire a first choice, it is sug¬gested that several choices bemade during the exhibition.The paintings will be loaned forone quarter only and the chargewill be $1 per painting to coverinsurance premiums. ValidatedID’s must be presented when theloan is made.p MNOLLL...^fyeauiy. anSZOtUHtm AVENUE J&osmelic ofalonFAirfox 4-2QQ7CatcJi theTfoadRunner!atyour 'Pfymoufh Theaters.Ihenew Plymouth RoadRunnerdon at your Plymouth Dealer iwhere the beatgoes on.C1967 Warner Bros.—Seven Arts, InSAMUEL A. BELLBUY SHELL FROM BELL"since imPICKUP a DELIVERY SERVICE52 l Lake Park493-5200 IDA NOYES HALLINFLATION 99 — never heard of the word at theCheapest prices on Dinners, Burgers & Steaks 5:30 to 1:00 A.M.» J , . . i L -1 October 17, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONEDWARD CHIKOFSKYThe Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 18WJeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editors Roqar BlockJohn WalchExecutive Editors David L. AikenMichael Seidman News Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward ChikotskyLiterary Editors Ted HeerneBryan DunlopEditor Emeritus David A. SofterA Bookstore“I don’t know exactly how or where proposals (forenlarging the Bookstore) get lost,” store manager CharlesHughes observed ruefully the other day. “Apparentlythey get forgotten between committees.”Although any first-year student could explain to Mr.Hughes at length that his experience is far from unique,we can nevertheless take only limited pleasure in seeingsomeone other than an undergraduate get “forgotten be¬tween committees.” The unfortunate facts of bureaucraticpolitics are such that until someone “remembers” Mr.Hughes, all the petitions, study groups, and explosivesthat irate Bookstore-haters can muster will not change thedeplorable situation in that haven of inefficiency on 58thand Ellis.Quite frankly, we are rapidly becoming bored withthe arguments perennially used to explain why the Uni¬versity of Chicago must continue to be one of the few top-ranking schools in the country without an adequate book¬store on its campus. Usually, it is pointed out that theBookstore can’t begin to solve its problems until it getsout of the hopelessly outdated facilities that now house it.Then, with rythmic predictability, the argument aboutthe University’s precarious financial situation is trottedout. Despite Chicago’s $25 million endowment (roughlyfourth largest in the country) the University just can’tafford to do everything it would like to. Other things, likeimproved faculty salaries, the new arts center, and theRegenstein Library, must take priority over the Bookstore.After roughly fifty years of sporadic protests againstthe Bookstore on this campus, these arguments unavoid¬ably have something of a hollow ring. We can understandthat the University lacks unlimited resources and that atany given time there are important things that must bedone before administrators can begin worrying about aBookstore. But people have recognized the need for anew Bookstore here since the present one was temporarilyhoused in the former stable (its present site) fifty yearsago, and apparently we still have not moved far enoughdown on the priority list to make serious plans for its con¬struction.But even if we were willing to swallow the whole“limited resources” bit, we would still remain uncon¬vinced that there are no stop-gap measures that couldpractically be taken. If space is really the problem, forexample, we see no reason why the Bookstore should notbe willing to use some of its much vaunted profits to renta store front somewhere in Hyde Park and operate fromthere until some permanent solution to the space problemcan be worked out. The present store is not only crowdedand inadequate. It is unusable and by now quite possiblyunsafe, and it is a continuing disgrace that the University,with all its inventiveness, can find no way of getting hebooks out of this ancient relic.Moreover, we have equal difficulty in understandingwhy the Bookstore almost alone among such establish¬ments finds it absolutely impossible to institute some sortof a discount system. There may really be insurmountableobstacles standing in the way of a co-op type set up on thiscampus, but at the very least the Bookstore could usesome of the money it annually turns over to the Univer¬sity’s general funds to absorb the losses it would incurthrough lower prices. The von Karajan Story:Swastika over CSO?What are we to believe of thegrowing plethora of talk relatingto Herbert von Karajan’s theore¬tical ascendency of the podium ofthe Chicago Symphony Orches¬tra?It would have previously ap¬peared that the Orchestral As¬sociation had kept so quiet onthis matter as to belie criticismof their possible decision in vonKarajan’s favor, but with therevelations of The Maroon justten days ago, it seems that theyhave, in all actuality, gone anddone what so many had fearedthey would do all along: stick aknife in the back of Chicago.What is the most puzzling as¬pect of the Orchestral Associa¬tion’s actions with regard to vonKarajan is their seeminglymonomaniacal blindness both tovon Karajan’s past, the Orches¬tra’s not-so-ancient history, andthe senseless antagonism that itis bound to, and indeed, cannothelp but, incur, both from amongvast segments of its public, whowould be far less inclined tocontribute to the Orchestra, and,more urgently, from musiciansthemselves, both resident andguest artists, who after all, arethe people to whom the respon¬sibility falls in keeping theChicago Symphony a world re¬nowned ensemble with the repu¬tation it presently enjoys.IT IS INCONCEIVABLE thatthe Orchestra could have soquickly forgotten the Furtwang-ler incident of 1948. It hasn’teven been twenty years since thecream of the world’s concert art¬ists had to threaten the Orchestrawith virtual blacklisting for at¬tempting to hire a musician ofthe Third Reich, and, yet, herewe are again with the same sit¬uation before us.Perhaps the Orchestral Asso¬ciation feels that it may be ableto get away with its subterfugethis time by assuming that ittakes just twenty years to cool off the “hot heads” who still holdGermany responsible for her ac¬tions of not quite one generationprevious.It is indeed a very sad com¬mentary on the times that one isheld to be “overly sensitive”about an issue of still currenthistory simply because hechooses not to forget and willnot sweep “by-gones” under therug. But this is what the Orches¬tral Association seems to believeis all that is at stake here: a few“soreheads” who still rememberDachau, Belsen, and Auschwitz.CONVERSELY, one openlywonders which party is really ontrial in this affair. The issue hereat stake is not really von Kara¬jan himself, for there is nothingto be said of the man for whomhis record does not speak farmore eloquently. Having becomeGoering’s musical “protege,”having left Austria in a rage inthe mid ’30s because it outlawedthe Nazi party, having not onlyput up with, but by his partymembership, stood up to becounted in favor of race extermi¬nation, the kindest term in whichone may address him is amoral-ist.But, does one blame a maddog for his actions? Rather,when such a beast is consciouslyand knowingly imported into aneighborhood, how may one feelanything but loathing for thekind of master who would perpe¬trate such an act upon his neigh¬bors.This last point should havebeen a paramount considerationof the Orchestral Association.The Jewish population of Chicagogoes a long way towards provid¬ing financial and artistic supportfor the Orchestra, and the en¬gagement of von Karajan (curi¬ous how it is pronounced thesame as “carrion”) would be oneof the most pointed example ofthe old maxim of “biting thehand that feeds.” And it is from among these people that the Or¬chestra must rely to meet theiryearly budget deficits.WHAT OF THE musicians ofthe Orchestra? Apparently theOrchestral Association has notseen fit to broach the subjectwith them. How many Jews inthe Orchestra, and their numberis considerable, would sit on thesame stage with von Karajan?What would the Union have tosay if large numbers of theirmembers refused to perform?What of von Karajan’s exorbi-tent salary? Paying a conductormore for one week’s work thanit pays its musicians for an en¬tire year is not usually a recom¬mended tactic for ensconcing aconductor and orchestra, and,even on an objective analysis,$200,000 to conduct but ten weeksof concerts tends to border onthe incredible. These are all im¬portant questions that the Or¬chestral Association should askitself, along with the somewhatrhetorical query as to why itseems to bee making a positivehabit of flirting with such politi¬cally unsavory characters.Lastly, what will be the reac¬tion of prominent guest artistsWill a petition blacklisting Chi¬cago from the concert circuit beimplemented anew What of thepredictable reactions of such art¬ists as Isaac Stern and Artur Ru¬binstein, the latter of whom hassaid many times: “There aretwo countries in the world inwhich I will not play; Tibet, be¬cause it is too high, and Ger¬many, because it is too low”.The Orchestral Association has,one hopes, taken all of the afore¬mentioned considerations intodue account in making their de¬cision to offer Herbert von Kara¬jan a position in Chicago. Theyare making their bed and nowmust sleep in it, but I wouldmost humbly offer them oneparting modicum of advice: Lookvery carefully under that bed be¬fore finally retiring it in.Letters to the EditorTenants ActionThe Maroon did a good job inits October 10 issue in document¬ing the housing shortage for stu¬dents in Hyde Park. I would liketo emphasize two points, how¬ever.First, this is a problem for alllower-income people in this ar¬ea, not just students. And sec¬ond, since the University wasinfluential in creating the presenthousing situation in Hyde Parkfor its own financial and psyco-logical security, it is unlikely tochange its policy for the benefitof its tenants without strongpressure from them. The Univer¬sity is a realtor, and the mostpowerful in the area. Even withsmaller and more amenablelandlords, it is often extremelydifficult for tenants to keep con¬ditions in their buildings toler¬able. Let me give you an exam¬ple of one method of pressuringlandlords, and winning results.Last November, four units inour six-flat building at 51st andKimbark decided that the timehad come for a united effort tocorrect the numerous code vio¬ lations in our building. We hadbeen without heat and hot waterfor two days out of each week,roaches ran wild, and paint andplaster were peeling from theceiling. Individual complaints tothe owner had achieved no re¬sults, but we found that as a ten¬ant union we could effectivelypressure the building department.The landlord was taken to court,promised he’d make repairs, andthen failed to do so. By the thirdtime, the court appointed a re¬ceiver to use our rent money tomake the repairs which the land¬lord refused to.Most tenants in this area withsimilar problems do not know ofthe existence of successful tenantunions who can help them withtheir experience, do not know ofthe free legal services which areavailable to tenant unions, etc.We are trying to coordinatetenants in this area who feel thatthey as individuals are unableto improve the housing situation.We are trying to build a groupof tenants which is strong enoughto bargain collectively with thelandlords, to lobby the Univer¬sity for more low income hous¬ ing, to educate other tenantsabout their legal rights, to pres¬sure landlords to sign contractswith the unions (a huge improve¬ment over the Illinois statelease) or to take other action toimprove the living conditions oftenants in this area.NANCY RENAUDHyde Park Area TenantsAction Committee363-2391Letters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded In 1892. Published by Universityof Chciago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 50637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mall $6 per year. Secondclass postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 17, 1967 t. i.- vA'ammmmsm Plus co change, plus cest la meme merdeContinued from Page 2store manager,” he points out,“the 1966 proposal recommendinga new building is the only one tohave been submitted to the ad¬ministration. Eventually, such aproposal would be considered bythe Board of Trustees.”As yet, no recommendation hasgotten that far. “I don’t know ex¬actly how or where the proposalsget lost,” says Hughes. Recommendations for improvingthe Bookstore have been submittedconstantly over the last ten or fif¬teen years. Apparently, Hughesconcedes, the “powers that behave other things to do.”The recent controversy sur¬rounding the Bookstore’s opera¬tions is hardly a new development.Records show disputes about theBookstore dating as far back as1907, when the Senior CollegeStanford Ends the RankStanford has become the latestmajor educational institution toabolish undergraduate class rank¬ing. Effective this term, no rankwill be compiled by the university.The end of ranking was recom¬mended last May by Stanford’sAcademic Council and promul¬gated by the Board of Trusteesthe day after Congress agreed to pass a law wherein ranking be¬came irrelevant.In the Stanford plan, however,both graduates and undergradu¬ates may obtain their rankingsfrom individual schools and de¬partments.Other major schools that haveended the rank are Haverford andColumbia. Council accused the store of “exor¬bitant prices, indifference, and dis¬courteous treatment of studentcustomers.”Fifty Years LaterFifty years later, in 1959, TheMaroon began an editorial cam¬paign against virtually the samepractices which had been criti¬cized in 1907. Prices were, asusual, the main bone of con¬tention. “The Bookstore has stonilyrejected any suggestion for offer¬ing student books at discount. ‘I’min business to make money ...’Dempster S. Passmore, head ofthe store summarizes his posi¬tion.”Students interested in action onthe Bookstore front demanded andgot concrete proposals from Stu¬dent Government: a student runco-operative and book-ordering cen¬ter — both to offer books to Uni¬ versity personnel at discountprices.Proposals they got, redress theydidn’t. Both plans fell through inthe latter part of 1960 when severalpublishers refused to co-operatewith the new venture.In January of 1961, The Marooncalled for a boycott of the Book¬store. Support for the movereached substantial proportions.Picket lines and parades involvedhundreds of students, while over200 faculty members signed a peti¬tion demanding reorganization ofthe facilities.During the summer, the chieftarget of the whole bally-hoo, theBookstore’s general managerPassmore, resigned his post, andthings returned more or less tonormal.The intermittent gurrilla war¬fare was resumed last year, when,during another period of attack, a Bookstore window was bombed.When police investigated thebombing the next morning, theyfound a letter to the Maroon at¬tached to the wall.The letter, written by a disgrun¬tled Bookstore employee, sug¬gested in presumably symbolicrhetoric that, like the Phoenix, anew bookstore might arise fromthe ashes of the old.m ' v .g 1 u <Maroon Calendar of EventsTuesday, October 17EXHIBIT: Shapiro Collection, Ida NoyesHall.FILM: "Like a Beautiful Child", tradeunion movie sponsored by Student Mobiliza¬tion Committee, Reynolds Club South, 12,12:45, 1:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (The James Fronk Insti¬tute) Professor Ronald D. Parks, Departmentof Physics, University of Rochester, "TheDegradation of Long Range Order in Super¬conductors", Research Institute 4:00, 4:15p.m.CROSS COUNTRY: Vs. Valparaiso Uni¬versity, Washington Park, 4:30.FILM: Doc Films, "The Magnificent Am-bersons", by Orson Welles, Social Science122, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m.SPAC MEETING: SPAC Assemblymen ab¬sent will be shot. All others invited. Rey¬nold's Club South, 7:30 p.m.REPORT: By Professor Richard Flackson his meeting with NLF, sponsored by SDS,Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 p.m.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING: j International House Assembly Hall, 8:00-10:30 p.m.CONCERT: Organ and brass: EdwardMondello, organist, and members of theChicago Symphony Orchestra, RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 8:30 p.m.DECORATE THE HILLEL SUKKAH: 5710Woodlawn.Wednesday, October 18EXHIBIT: Shapiro Collection, Ida NoyesHall.LECTURE: Dr. Dennis P. Burkitt, Fellowof the Royal College of Surgeons, MedicalResearch Council, London "Chemotherapyand Epidemiology of Burkitt's Lymphoma",Billings P-117, 12:30 p.m.. EpidemiologicResearch in Africa' Billings P-117, 4:00 p.m.LECTURE: Silvan Tomkins, City Univer¬sity of New York, "Affect: Primary Motiveof Man", Beecher Hall, 102, 3:30 p.m.SOCCER: Vs. Northern Illinois. NorthField, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: Hiroshi Nikaido, MassachusettsGeneral Hospital "Biosynthesis of Lipopoly-saccharides in Salmonella. Biochemical-genet- i ic Studies" Abbott 101, 4:00 p.m.Center of Middle Eastern Studies), AllanCunningham, Department of History, SimonFraser University, "Recurring Problem:Treaty-Making", Social Science 122, 4:00 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub, 7:00-10:30 p.m.FILM: Doc Films "Pursued" by RaoulWalsh, Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15p.m.MEETING: Student Government Assembly,Absent assemblymen will be shot, regardlessof party, Ida Noyes Lounge, 7:30 p.m.MEETING: Last minute details for stu¬dents going to Washington. Ida Noyes Foyer,7:30 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dancers from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida NoyesHall, Dance Room, 8:00-10:00 p.m.RECITAL: David Eicher, cellist, and LyleSettle, pianist; Robert Schumann's "Dichter-lube", Beethoven's "Variation for Cello andPiano" on a theme from Handel's "JudasMaccabeus" and Chopins "Ballad No. 1 inG Minor", International House, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, October 19EXHIBIT: Shapiro Collection, Ida NoyesHall.LECTURE: David Luck, Rockefeller Uni¬versity, "Mitochondrial Biogenesis", AbbottHall, 12:30 p.m.LECTURE: Aleksandr V. Isacenko, visit¬ing Professor in Department of Slavic Lan¬guages and Literature at Yale University,University Professor, Bratislava, "The IrishMission to the Slavs", Rosenwald 2, 3:30 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: Professor Robert Wilson,Weston Accelerator Laboratory, "The 200BEV Synchrotron" Eckhart 209, 4:30 p.m.POLITICS FOR PEACE: Don Rose speakson 2nd Congressional District; PFP beginsplanning for 1968 elections. Cars leave foroffice from front of Ida Noyes, 7:45 p.m.GROPPI: Milwaukee civil rights leaderFather James Groppi speaks at DunbarHigh School, 2722 South Parkway, 8 p.m.FILM: BJ Cinema presents Albert Lam-orisse's highly acclaimed "The Red Balloon"and also his film "White Mane." Free ad¬mission, Judson Dining Room, 8:30 p.m. Speaker's ProgramPlan Is OutlinedIn a meeting of student organi¬zations held yesterday at IdaNoyes, Student Government Presi¬dent Jeffrey Blum outlined a newplan for providing this year’sspeaker’s program.Though Student Governmentpreviously sponsored the program,this year it will be unable to do so,he said. Because he felt that thestudents would like to have aspeaker series, Blum proposed thata consortium of student groupscould run the program.According to Blum, ten groupscould provide two speakers each,or fifteen groups could each ar¬range for one. The consortiumwould reserve a sufficient numberof dates for Mandel Hall and otherlocations on campus.Each group would handle its ownspeakers, and the consortiumwould try to work out a balancedprogram.Among the problems faced bythe consortium would be those ofadvance fees and losses, size ofmaximum loss, profit distribution,and control over speakers.HELLO NEW FACULTY AND STUDENTSWELCOME TO HYDE PARK-KENWOODHYDE PARK FEDERAL SAVINGSis celebrating NEWCOMERS MONTH just for you!Stop by HYDE PARK FEDERAL SAYINGS, say "Hello” and pick upthese wonderful "WELCOME GIFTS"• Your own savings account at Hyde Park Federal with the firstdollar deposited for yon.• One year's free subscription to the Hyde Park Herald.• Your Newcomers guide full of maps, announcements, everythingto acquaint you with your community.• Ry depositing $500 in your new accountor by adding $500 to your present account,we offer everybody in October this qualitybathroom scale. ill!All Accounts Insured to $15,000HYDE PARK FEDERAL SAVINGSIn the Hyde Park Shopping Center MU 4-6000October 17, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONMOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OrTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925VStudent DiscountsSpecial!For Back-to-SchoolStyle Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tebles end cherts. 10 yrs. e«pMANUSCRIPT UNLIMITEDM4-SB5B84* No. Wabash Avo.. FREEAlbert Lamorisse’s “THERED BALLOON” and"WHITE MANE” thisThursday, Oct. 19, 8:30p.m. Judson Dining Rm.FREEUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor STAMP IT!IT'S THE RAGEregularany g; er^\^ - i LINE TEXT CThe llnr-» IHPrcrptiCTIBLE METALPOCKET RUBBER STAMP. ■ 2".Send rheok or money order, fi¬gure to ineli''1' Zir Code. Nopostage or handling charges. Addsale. tax.Prompt shipment on CaarwitaadTHE MOPP CO.t. 0. Be. 11623 Lanai Sgaare StatoeeATLANTA. CA . 30326DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55tli St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6666EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESTYPEWRITERSname brand typewriters - Portable - Standard - Electric,done by Factory trained mechanics on typewriters andadding machines.by the month on Portable, Standard and Electric type¬writers. and also adding machines & calculators.Typewriter DepartmentThe University off Chicago Bookstora5802 S. Ellis Avo.THE NEW MORALITYA Lecture on Christian Scienceby Lenore D. Hanks, C.S.B. Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarfcwe sell the best,and fix the restThursday, Oct. 19 8:00 P.M. foreign car hospital The Joseph R. Shapire "Art to Live With” Collection is pre¬sently on exhibit in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 East SMi Sheet. Ifyou wish to borrow one of the woiks: cards will be given outat 8:30 A.M. Friday, October 20lh, on a first-come, first-servebasis, one per student. Distribution will take place beginning at4 P.M. There will be a $L00 charge. Works may be kept throughDecember Wi.SEMINAR ON OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENTFOR RETURNED PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERSAND INDIVIDUALS FROM SIMILAR GROUPSAs in previous years a uoa credit sewiwer will be SeM everytwo weeks in the evenings to discuss tbe problems of under-developed areas.Interesfed in Attending?LEAVE YOUR NAME AT JUDD 322OR PHONE: Ml 3-0800. EXT. 2921IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALE,HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person et 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or fid shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near heme or schoolFirst Floor, West Wing, Ida Noyes HallSponsored by Christian Science Organization at U. of C.THE CHICAGO MAROON October 17, 1967Ihe only wav to catchthe T^oadFunner is at,your Plymouth Dealers.The new Plymouth RoadRunnernow at your Plymouth Dealerswhere the beatgoes on. to01967 Warnor Brou.—Seven Arts, Ino. ** ^ THE 1967-68 ENCYCLOPAEDIABRITANNICA LECTURE SERIES"the intellectual life -outside the university "OCTOBER 18,1967Maurico 8. MitchellChancellor, University off DenverOCTOBER 25,1967Warren ProocoSenior Editorial ixocutivo,Encyclopaedia BritannicaNOVEMBER 1,1967Clifton FadimanAuthor, CriticNOVEMBER 7,1967RobertM. HutchinsPresident, Center for the Study off Domocratic lnstitutionsNovember 15,1967Sir William HaleyEditor-in-Chief, B.B.C.Lectures will be at 8:15 p.m. in the Law School, Weymouth Kirkland Court Roomexcept the Hutchins lecture, which will be given at Rockefeller Chapel.:' t m m *Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty, Iand staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon Business Of¬fice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.HOURS: Weekdays 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINES: Ads must be in by 11 a.m.of the day before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0600, Ext. 3266.LOSTSILVER FLOWER ENGRAVED CIGARETTELIGHTER. FRIDAY NIGHT. JIMMY'S. RE¬WARD. CALL CAROL at 667-1824.FOR RENTLGE. 4Vj Room Apt., English Basement, lo¬cated in East Hyde Park. JlOO/month, leasetakeover. Call HY 3-4107 or 222-3186.RIDE WANTED Frightened by challenges yet eager to createa life of your own? Public relations execu¬tive, healthy, emotionally secure, worldtraveled, seeks independent-minded gutsypartner, man or woman, to start adventurousventure in Chicago appealing to — that'sa beautiful secret! Must match my invest¬ment. Let's communicate! Box 98, CooperStation. New York, N.Y. 10003.Chauncey Boucher loves you."This subiect brings me to the vilest off¬spring of the herd mind — the odious mili¬tia." G. Davis. Writers' Workshop. PL 2-8377.Yes, there is a modern dance group at U.C.If you're a dancer (male or female), you'reinvited to call Ext. 3574 for more information.EAT IT — at the Bandersnatch.NOT GOING TO D.C. TO MARCH AGAINSTTHE war? IF NOT, SEE . . .the "FESTIVAL OF PROTEST AGAINSTTHE WAR IN VIETNAM" on Campus,this weekend, Saturday and Sunday at 8:30PM. Professional entertainment with StudsTerkel as emcee. Tickets available at SGOffice, Ida Noyes, 1-5 PM, daily. $5.00,$2.50, $1.00 — to cover costs of perform¬ances. For more information, call SG, Ext.3273.RICHFIELD IS SILLY.Women of the College — like Volleyball?Join an intramural team — TODAY! CallExt. 3574 for further information.Prof. Richard Flacks reports on his meetingwith N.L.F., Tuesday October 17, 7:30 PM,Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall.Take a Trip. Travel to Snell Coffee Hour,Tuesday, October 19, 9-11 PM.College of Complexes — 9:30 PM. — $1.00Admission, for "Diet-Rite is more dangerousthan LSD" — Friday, 20th, 105 W. Grand. Te adoro.POLITICS FOR PEACE. Thursday, October19, Don Rose speaks on the 2nd Congression¬al District; PFP begins planning for 1968elections. Cars leave for office from frontof Ida Noyes. 7:45 PM.Get high in Snell's Basement — Come tothe Coffee Hour on October 17, 9:00 PM-11:00 PM.Baklawah, ma'mul, falafel, tabbuleh ... Avery special bake sale of Middle East Deli¬cacies. International House on Saturday,October 28, 11 AM-6 PM. Proceeds to therefugees of the June War.GOING TO D.C. TO MARCH AGAINSTTHE war ?????? If not, SEE ....the "FESTIVAL OF PROTEST AGAINSTTHE WAR IN VIETNAM"On campus, this Saturday and Sunday at8:30 PM . . . Professional Entertainment withStuds Terkel, emcee. Tickets available atSG office, Ida Noyes, 1-5 PM daily — $5.00$2.50, $1.00 — to cover operating costs ofperformances. For more information. CallSG at Ext. 3273.WANTEDOne bedroom apartment wanted for Winterand Spring Quarters. Pref. Hyde Park area.Call 731-5740. Need female student to cook dinners forthree Grad, students. Free meals. Call 538-1027, mornings.Mutual Psychedelic Experience Snell coffeehour — Tuesday, Oct. 17, 9 PM.Two blue-eyed soul sistersNeed Two Girls to shareNorth Side Town House,Call 743-3624.FOR SALEDouble Bed. Call 684-8165.Olivetti Portable $30.00. 324-1597.TR 4A with wire wheels. Low miles . . .Toneau cover . . . white soft top ... inperfect condition. $2000 or best offer. CallTed at 285-0825.Findar stratogasser w. amp 8, speakers.$350.00 or best offer. 324-5751, eves.For Sale — Acid, Sugar cubes, joints free,at the Snell Coffee Hour Tuesday, October17, 9 PM-11 PM.Sugar cubes 5c (acid-free). Snell Coffee Hour.Tues., Oct. 17, 9 PM.GIRL wants ride to October 21st WashingtonMarch. Will pay half expenses, drive part¬way. Room 2321, Rickett House.ROOMSRoom for girl in private home. $40.00 permonth. Cali MU 4-5076 5-9 PM or weekends.Room available for female student in ex¬change for babysitting or rent. Call 684-1369evenings.WORKWAITER OR WAITRESS WANTED TOWORK 3 days/week from 5 PM to 9:15 PM.Very Good Income. Exp. pref. Call GOR¬DON'S RESTAURANT, 1321 E. 57fh ST.,at 752-9251, afternoons.TYPIST for 50 page MA paper In Englishwith German sources and quotations. Call363-4841 after 5:30 PM.GENIUS WANTEDnear Campusnear graduate student housingResponsible, challenging positionrequires good office skills,ability to deal with public, andability to organize.call Mrs. SUTTON or Mr. BERGERat 684-6000.WANTED: Males, 18-35, to serve, as subjectsIn Sleep Lab experiments. Poor sleepers aswell as good sleepers are invited to reply.Subjects selected will be well paid. Call Ml3-0800, ext. 2341 (or 2353), 9 AM-5 PM, Mon-day-Friday.Ushers wanted for Monday Lectures. CallMr. Gornto, FI 6-8300.PERSONALSBuy the Village Voice.We are equally happy.S.G. Assembly meeting—Wednesday, October18 7:30 PM, Ida Noyes Lounge.BEWARE—M.B. (or at least be cool)Mr. Kite will arrive at 9:15 E. 53rd on Sat¬urday at 8 PM.A free newspaper in a cheap university.EAT FLOWER POWER—Ferdinand . . .Snellidelic (Psychedelic coffee house) Tryyour art. Snell — October 17 — Tuesday —9 PM.Creating a new magazine: poetry, prose,pictures, contact Susan at BU 8-4910 or Allan,apt. 7A, 5455 S. Blachsfone.PatronizeMaroonAdvertisers Orson Welles’ "THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS”ORSON WELLS' COUNTERPOINT TO “CITIZEN KANE", SET IN SMALL TOWN AMERICA. TO¬NIGHT IN SOC. SCI. 122 AT 7:15 AND 9:15. 75<f DOC FILMS.Astronomers,salesmen,designers,programmers,chemists,psychologists,writers,sociologists,economists,metallurgists, artists,accountants,physicists,mathematicians,etc,etc,etc.That’s what.General Electricis made of.General Electric is made up of a lot more than justengineers — because it takes a lot more than engi¬neers to tackle the problems we deal with. Likehelping to unsnarl traffic jams, in our cities, fight¬ing air pollution or finding new ways to providepower for underdeveloped nations. It takes sociol¬ogists, meteorologists, astronomers, writers —infact, it takes people with just about every kind oftraining. But, more than any of this, it takes people with nerve, gumption, intellectual curiosity-people who care about what happens to the world.So it’s not only your major we’re interested in.It’s you. Why not see our interviewer when hecomes to campus and find out whether you’re thekind of person General Electric is made of.GENERAL ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employer7October 17, 1967>*'Yi Tl 'Vim « THE CHICAGO MAROON .M l ...» AL) .Y\T\247, 248, 249, 250...there are 250 breath-fresheningsprays inWHISPER"new aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Awe.. New York. N.Y. 10017over-caseI You get one with every[ bottle of Lensine, aj removable contact lens! carrying case. Lensine,\ by Murine is the new,| all-purpose solutionfor complete| contact lens care.I It ends the need> for separatesolutions for-• wetting, soakingand cleaning yourI lenses. It’s the5 one solution forI all your contactlens problems.lor contacts HYDE PARK T.V. RENTS television for$6.50 a week FMradio for $5.00 amonth.HYDE PARK T.V. SERVICES television, hi firadios, tape re¬corders, etc.HYDE PARK T.V. SEUSGrundigm HYDE PARK T.V. offersmention this ad.1463 East 53rd Street PL 2-2700 |- - - — r V- .■-r==E=$ nmsHSBUKisTALK STRAIGHT WITHThinking of returning to the U.K. ? You'll get goodstraight talk about scientific opportunities from theteam of ICI scientists visiting your campus shortly.They'll tell you about jobs available now, where theyare, how much they pay, what the housing situationis. If you've only just arrived, you can still talk pros¬pects with them.ICI's recruiting teamwill visit your campus on October 26 and 27Contact them throughMr. L. S. CalvinCareer Counseling & Placement5706 S. University AvenueI If 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 re-ierto read.That’s why Scripto calls it the Reading Pen. tillable Reading Pen for $1. Refills come in 12 colors.It’s a new Fiber-Tip pen that writes dear and bold. Available in a non-refillable model for 39f. Write withNot a fountain pen, not a ball-point, this is an entirely Scripto’s new Reading Pen. You’ll be remembered. a New fiber tipA fromm\S^8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 17, 1967