illJljj; “ .1™' BillliliM -s. * - ' "Uttiv* ef Chicago LibrarySerial Roc* Dept*Harper U22I Chicago * III* 60637 Non-Profit Oxg.U. S. POSTAGEPAIDChicago, Illinoisiiti. FoundedTK\ In 1SS21VOL. 77, NO. 26 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1968 UNIVERSE# fAGES, 2 SECTIONSOF CHICAGO^ArchivesThe Maroon — JERRY LAPIDUSSURPRISE! Veteran teacher Gerhard Meyer, who Tuesday turned65, is given an unexpected tribute at Hutchinson Commons.Gerhard Meyer, 65,Enjoys A BirthdayProfessor of Economics GerhardMeyer celebrated his 65th birthdayin gala style Tuesday evening.Nearly 100 students and facultyturned out for a dinner at Hutch¬inson Commons to help Meyer cel¬ebrate the occasion. Among theguests were Provost Edward Leviand Dean of the College WayneBooth. presented with a gift from PeterRatner representing Shorey House.Meyer has been on the Univer¬sity faculty since 1937. PlanVoted by StudentsBy BARBARA HURSTStaff WriterA new suggestion for changes inCollege grading was advanced lateyesterday afternoon at a meetingon grading sponsored by StudentGovernment (SG).It combines many parts of theoriginal four alternative proposalsto be considered by the Committeeof the College Council:• All common core courses (phy¬sical science, biology, humanitiesand social science) would be givenon an honors-pass-fail basis. No op¬tion for present A-F grades wouldbe allowed.• All free elective courseswould carry a student’s option ofeither present A-F grades or hon-ors-pass-fail.• Honors-pass-fail grades wouldbe given in those second quartetcourses (divisional requirementsuutside field of concentration)which do in fact fall outside of the student’s division In second quar-j tet courses which fall inside of thestudent’s division, the divisionwould be given the option. It couldrequire either of the options orleave the choice to the student.• For courses within the stu¬dent’s field of concentration the de¬partment would have the option ofwhich system to use.Ease AdjustmentThe points of the above propos¬als most crucial to those who at¬tended the meeting were the firsttwo. It was generally felt thatH-P-F grades in common corecourses would facilitate the fresh¬man adjustment to the College andpermit him time to adjust himselfto the social situation as well. Ifthe college takes away grade pres¬sure, the first quarter will bea much more pleasant one, saidDean of the College Wayne C.Booth, who attended the meeting.The grade option in free electives would also give students more free¬dom. They would, it was felt, bemore apt to take courses theydon’t take now for fear of receiv¬ing low grades and damaging theirgrade point averages.“We would hope,” said Booth,“that H-P-F in electives wouldmake some difference in the typeof electives taken.”Spokesmen ChosenIn response to a letter fromBooth to (SG) President JeffreyBlum, ‘68, inviting SG representa¬tives to today’s meeting of theCommittee of the College Council,“lections of representatives werealso held.Elected were Edward Birnbaum,68, chairman of the SG academicaffairs committee; Blum; AlanLahn, ‘69 as an informal stand-infor the Inter-House Council; andColleen Minor, ‘69, a political sci¬ence major. They will participate..Turn to Page 7MEETING HEREMcCarthy Supporters Eye Two StatesRoger Weiss, associate professorin the Division of the Social Sci¬ences, served as master of cere¬monies. He praised Meyer for hisconcern with the problems of stu¬dents and of his real interest inteaching.Levi and Booth also compli¬mented Meyer for taking his teach¬ing extraordinarily seriously inspite of the pressure on the facultyto publish or perish.Meyer was presented with astereo cartridge to symbolize thestereo set the guests presented himas a birthday gift. He was alsoGerhard Meyer By TIMOTHY S. KELLEYStaff Writer“I think we have a gread candi¬date,” Sam Brown told supportersof Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn.) for President in a rally heldWednesday night, and he advisedthem to “get the man’s namearound.”Brown, the coordinator of the na¬tional Students for McCarthy cam¬paign, spoke in Kent 107 along withSteve Kaplan, a research assistantfor the Adlai Stevenson Institutefor International Affairs, and PaulBooth, former National Secretaryof Students for a DemocraticSociety.Brown called the Minnesota Sen¬ator, who is actively seeking todeny the Democratic nominationto President Johnson, “a man ofincredible integrity,” “incredibleintelligence,” and “incredibleguts.”Answering those who have ex¬pressed fears about McCarthy’sloyalty to the cause of Vietnamwar opposition, Brown said simply,“I trust Gene McCarthy.” If stu¬dents will actively support McCar¬thy,” he said, “I’m sure that hewill live up to that confidence youput in him.”Asks Student VolunteersWith regard to how studentscould give their support to Mc¬Carthy, Brown alluded to the cru¬cial April 2nd primary in Wiscon¬sin. He described the campaignfor McCarthy in that state as “astructure capable of absorbing stu¬dent volunteers over the quarterbreak.” “Plan to go there,” he urgedstudents. “Spend a week or tendays.”Money, according to Brown, isharder to come by for a Demo¬cratic peace insurgent than, forinstance, a Republican campaignfinanced on a massive scale. “It’snot the kind of campaign that peo¬ple play politics with, and give be¬cause it’s politic,” he remarked.He indicated that small donationsin large numbers from people suchas college students would have toconstitute a major portion of thefinances of the campaign.McCarthy on PeaceBrown said that after recentlytalking with McCarthy about thedraft, he had been surprised at thedegree to which McCarthy seemedto concur with students in thepeace movement today.The Senator had reaffirmed hissupport of selective conscientiousobjection (objection against a par¬ticular war without necessary re¬ligious objection against all war),called for the resignation of Gen.Lewis B. Hershey as a first stepto reforming the Selective Service,and commented that some of thefinest of today’s draft-age youthwere in jail protesting the war in¬stead of serving in the armedforces.Kaplan, who spoke first, as¬sessed McCarthy’s chances in Illi¬nois where, he pointed out, theSenator’s strategy will be to tryto elect sympathetic delegates tothe convention in August ratherthan to enter the risky Presiden¬tial Preference primary, which is not binding on the delegatesanyway.Three Districts CitedKaplan said that the three Con¬gressional districts in Illinoiswhere McCarthy’s chances of ob¬taining delegates’ support bestare the 9th, in northern Chicago;the 13th, in northern suburbs ofChicago such as Evanston, Wil¬mette, and Winnetka; and the 2nd,which includes the University ofChicago, Hyde Park-Ken wood, andSouth Shore communities.“The prospects aren’t bright, yetthere is discontent about the warand other things in Illinois,” Kap¬lan concluded.Booth described “a yellow streak that is ten inches wide in our bodypolitic.”“The war in Vietnam is funda¬mentally a war of cowardice,”Booth declared, and he also hadwords of criticism for those whooppose the war, but do not activelywork against the war in politics.“There are doves, there arehawks, and there are chickens.Bobby Kennedy is one of thechickens.”Steve Perkins, representing theUniversity of Chicago group knownas “Students for a Political Alter¬native,” announced a conventionon February 3rd, apart from theregular party organization, to se¬lect peace candidates for the 2ndCongressional district.Rumors of Rape UnconfirmedRumors of another rape spreadyesterday throughout the College.According to the reports a girlwas attacked somewhere between56th and 57th Sts. on Woodlawnave. on Wednesday, but no spe¬cific time was given. According tosome sources, the alleged rape wasnot reported to any authorities.No officials in the administrationhad heard of anything outside therumors. University’s security of¬fice said that no such incident hadbeen reported. According to Chi¬cago police, no rapes occurred inthe area south of 37th St. over thepast few days.Director of Student Housing Ed¬ward Turkington, officials in theProvost’s office, and Dean of Stu¬ dents Charles O’Connell all deniedknowing anything about the possi¬ble crime. They did join, however,in requesting that, if a rape hadtaken place, the victim report toStudent Health or other medicalfacilities for an examination.NEW SCHEDULEAs of the next issue, classi¬fied ads for the Tuesdayissue must be submitted byFriday afternoon; ads forFriday must be submittedby Wednesday afternoon.This schedule supercedesprevious ones and no ex¬ceptions will be made to it.A.Pre-Dawn Narcotics Raid Is Made at Stony BrookA force of 198 police stormed theNew York State University atStony Brook early Wednesdaymorning arresting 33 students forviolations of the narcotics laws.The raiding party of 72 policecars arrived on the campus about5 a.m., armed with warrants forthe arrest of 38 students. Dividedinto 32 teams, the police routedthe dormitories without the know¬ledge of university officials.Suffolk County grand juryhanded the police a secret indict¬ment for the arrest of 38 studentson the basis of a three-month in¬vestigation done by undercoveragents.The student government in astatement to the press yesterdaycharged that the police had ex¬ploited the university with “secretpolice” tactics and that the presswas sensationalizing the issue.John L. Barry, Suffolk County |Police Commissioner, who led the !raid, accused the several univer- jsity officials of failing to co-oper- Iate with the police on the problemof narcotics. Barry stated that hefound no evidence “of any type ofpolicing” of the narcotics prob-lems on campus. Because of thisevidence Barry said he decidednot to notify the university of theraid.According to Dr. John F. Toll,president of the university, “thepolice have their jobs to do andwe have ours.”Some university officials havedisagreed privately concerning thetactics used by the police in the raid. Students defended the offi¬cials, stating “We consider loyaltyto the students more importantthan cooperation with the police.”Harvard DraftJail or exile would be preferredto military service by more thanone-fifth of the Harvard seniors pol¬led by The Harvard Crimson, ac¬cording to a Crimson article pub¬lished yesterday.Based on responses from 529 sen-’iors, 43 percent of the class, thesurvey showed that eleven percentwould rather leave the country, andan additional eleven percent wouldgo to jail, rather than be drafted.Six percent of the respondents saidthey would attempt to fight induc¬tion through legal means.About 61 percent said they wouldserve in armed forces if drafted.Only six percent said they ap¬proved of present United Statespolicy in Vietnam. The alternativeof reduced military effort leadingtoward negotiations attracted 42percent of those polled, while im¬mediate withdrawal was favoredby 38 percent.Only 19 percent of those polledfavored continued military effortat the present level, with effortstoward negotiations, while onepercent favored increased military’effort. Berkeley PowerBERKELEY, Calif. (CPS)-Astudent-faculty commission has re¬commended autonomy for theBerkeley campus of the Universityof California and sweeping changesin the way the campus is run,including a much greater role forstudents.The commission, composed of sixfaculty and six student senators,was appointed to study campus pro¬blems after a student strike whichoccurred in December 1966.Campus observers said most of jthe work, however, was done bythe four or five most radical mem¬bers of the group. Two facultymembers, generally regarded asmore conservative, plan to submita minority report. The commissionwas chaired by Caleb Foote, aliberal law professor, and HenryMayer, a graduate student in| history.The commission made its propos¬al for a more autonomous campus jand a board of regents and univer- 1sity president which would primar¬ily act as “defenders” of the juniversity and its budget in theface of “inroads on civil libertiesand academic freedom” from thestate administration of GovernorRonald Reagan.WELCOME BACKErrors in Maroon CATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUReach a HieghtDue to hasty composition a num¬ber of identifications were omittedfrom The Maroon, January 16. Un¬dersecretary of State Nicholas deB.Katzenbach, a former professor oflaw here, spoke with former Un¬dersecretary of State George Ballin the Atlantic Cooperation con¬ference held through the weekend.Gilbert L. Lee, Jr., vice-presi¬dent for business and finance,commented on the appointment ofMichael J. Delaney as campus se¬curity chief.John Siefert, staff writer, wasthe author of the news analysis onPolitics for Peace.Commenting on the possible ef¬fect of new Selective Service pol¬icy on graduate deferments wasKenneth Northcott, dean of stu¬dents in the Humanities Division.Also, an editorial in The Maroon,January 9, incorrectly stated thattwo-thirds of Chicago men andabout half of the women live inapartments. The correct figure isabout 55 percent of upperclassmenonly.Koqa Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items Prom TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!(490 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 3514 So. Michigan10 East 41stPlease rush methe questionnairefor CUPID COMPUTERU. of C.’s computer dating serviceNameAddressCUPID COMPUTERBOX 67,CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS 61820GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPER10% student discount on table service5% student discount on take-out serviceHY 3-2559(Eat Mor# For Loss ITry Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersTHE CHICAGO MAROON January 19, 1968 Cornell ResearchITHACA, N.Y. (CPS) - In themidst of national criticism of uni¬versities who do military research,Cornell may sever connectionswith its military research arm.A committee appointed by theuniversity’s board of trustees hasrecommended separation betweenCornell and Cornell AeronauticalLaboratory (CAL). More than two-thirds of CAL’s $30 million in re¬search is performed under con¬tracts from the Defense Depart¬ment. About half of the militarywork is classified.The committee gave three rea¬ sons for its recommendations: thelack of significant educational andresearch interaction between theuniversity and CAL, the need toprovide the laboratory with an ef¬fective independent board of dir¬ectors, and the overlap and poten¬tial conflict between CAL’s in¬creasing overseas research proj¬ects and the university’s expand¬ing program of international stud¬ies.On this latter point the commit¬tee said, “International scholarscan only work effectively if it isclear to everyone, and most par¬ticularly to the people in the coun¬tries involved, that their goal ispure scholarship.Pcfetotcfe, Ifo. Hlr7104 SO.JEFFERY AVEIN SOUTH SHORE Phone DO 3-2700FOR THE FIRST TIMEOur famous make GANT SHIRTSom20%-50% OFFFor a limited time, we are offeringour entire stock of GANT SHIRTS,including Button Down Solid andStripe Dress Shirts and All SportShirts, Also included are our NEW“TOWN COLLAR” SHIRTS.LARGE SELECTION IN ALL SIZES!SALE Limited to One Week: Jan. 19-26.JESSELSON’SSSKVIN6 NYM SARK SOS QVIS B6 Y1ARSWITH THI VSRY ROT AMO FRDWMTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO i-9186 1140 K. 59r4Law Students Plan Anti-War Action.. * . i *» <Seventy-four students at the Law i the anti-war movement. J primarily on the draft—legal re-School who oppose the Vietnam Discussion at the meeting, initi- search on current cases involvingwar met Wednesday afternoon to ated and chaired by first-year law individuals who have refused in-discuss the role of law students in | student Charles Isaacs, centered | duction, investigation of the allegedADMINISTRATORS ATTACKEDGuerilla Theater' Protests SuspensionsA “guerilla theater” was put onyesterday afternoon in HutchinsonCommons by a dozen of thestudents who were suspended fol¬lowing last year’s study-in againstthe rank.The act attacked Provost Levi,Dean of the College Wayne Booth,and Dean of Students CharlesO’Connell. An attack on JamesRedfield, master of the New Col¬legiate Division, was scratched atthe last minute.The play began a few minutesafter noon, after the three admin¬istrators who normally stay in thecommons from 11 a.m. until noonhad left. Four students, represent¬ing “Pope Edward” and thedeans, and a herald entered onthe balcony and called for silencein the crowded Commons, the her¬ald pounding the floor with hisbroom.The herald called for student re¬cantations of theirs sins, and someseven students followed by admit-Shapiro CollectionDistributed TodayPieces in the Shapiro Art Collect¬ion will be chosen at 4 p. m. todayaccording to numbers that weredistrubuted on a first-come first-served basis this morning.About 40 students were ready tobed down in the Ida Noyes lobbylast night as The Maroon went topress. The first students had ar¬rived at 7:20 p.m., eager to getlow numbers that would insuretheir choice of paintings.Walter Jeskche, Ida Noyes care¬taker, had predicted they wouldtry to “break last quarter’s re¬cord’’ and come at 7 p .m.Jeskche said he would try tokeep the students “a little moreunder control—than last quarter.Last time people kept walkingwhere they shouldn’t, just so theycould keep awake and not losetheir places.”The paintings will be lent fortwo quarters, not one as The Ma-1roon reported on Tuesday. Insur- }anee is $2 per painting for the twoquarters.SKI ASPEN$175.00Leave Chi. March 16, 4:30Arrive back in Chi. March 24.Includes all train, bus, deluxequad room priv. bath (no dormson this trip), all tow tickets, out¬door pool, taxes, skiing vail andAspen.Northwestern U. Ski GroupCall Dick 764-6264 or 262-3765Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest ing their “sins”: “I am a turdfloating in a Chicago street” or“I am garbage mouldering on aNew Dorms plate. My sins includethat horror, animal lust. I willnever fuck again.”‘Callow Kids’After the students recanted theirsins “Pope Edward,” dressed in ayarmulka, a torn T-shirt, with acardboard bow tie, spoke, ex¬claiming “Worms! Youth CallowKids! You have breeded calumny,doubt, and non-violent coercion.”A fter his speech a “dissenter”spoke up, calling for students totake power at the University. “Wedo not need him, we never have.We have only to tell them to goand their power is lost. Twowords: ‘Get Out!’ And they aregone.”According to Robert Salasin, ’69,one of the students who staged theaction, “We (the returning stu¬dents) wanted to indicate that wewere here. We were not satis¬fied with either our treatment orthe treatment of students as awhole.“All the things that were wrongwhen we left are still wrong. None of the administrators’ promiseshave been kept, or will, as is thenature of the administrators. Noneof the ideals will be upheld.“This campus is run to makemoney. There is no social con¬sciousness at the University.”Landt DisturbedAlthough most members of theadministration were not in theCommons, Student Activities Di¬rector Daniel (Skip) Landt waspresent. One of the speakers toldhim “I will see you hang in frontof Ida Noyes.” -Landt said he was disturbed bythat but was even more upsetabout the invasion of the Com¬mons with its captive audience.“Not very much was objection¬able if done elsewhere,” Landtstated. What they do before agroup of people gathered there inthat room is another matter,though.”The ceremony was sponsored byStudents for a Democratic Society.It coincides with the end of theAutumn Quarter suspension per¬iod of those who participated inthe demonstration.fust .Irrived!--four beautiful rocking, chairs (mahogany andbird’s eye maple), a stunning matched bedroom rocker andstraight chair set, some carved wooden tables, and an AntiqueSonora Victrola!Hr are also featuring these unique Collector’s Items:• In R.S. Prussia Collet tor’s Case (guaranteed old!)• .1 striking Rose Medallion Punch Bowl• .1 signed Pairpoint Lamp and ShadePlus our usual selection (check both front and back rooms)of ornate, unusual, and inexpensive gifts.Now Open Daily \<jon to 9 PM (closed Mondays) and W eekends1621 East Hyde Park Blvd. 684-3030Saturday TONIGHTSundayThe Renaissance Players withThe Collegium Musicum will presentMANKYNDE 'THE PLAYE OF THESACRAMENTEAll performances 8:30 Cloister Club Ida Noyes Halstudents $1.00 others $1.50c i 7'I 8 • ft i * non-representative character of lo¬cal draft boards, and counselingof men on their rights with respectto the Selective Service.Several students challenged thepropriety of using draft counselingas a means of opposition to thewar, urging that the act of advis¬ing an individual on his rights“should be regarded as neutral tothe political issue of opposition tothe war.”‘Not Desirable’Though one might engage in suchcounseling with the private motiveof keeping people out of Vietnam,it was argued, counseling underthe auspices of a group officiallycommitted to an anti-war positionwas “not desirable.” An allegedconflict between the appearance ofobjectivity and the public espousalof political goals was invoked, andthe possibility of creating a separ¬ate, politically-neutral group to or¬ganize draft counseling was raised.Others took the position thatdraft counseling could legitimatelybe undertaken by an avowedly anti¬war group; that members of sucha group could provide accurate in¬formation in an objective manner to individuals regarding theirrights under the draft law; andthat discussion of the draft effect¬ively provided an appropriate oc¬casion for discussion of the war.To Organize OppositionThey emphasized that the pur¬pose of the meeting was to organ¬ize opposition to the war and thatdiscussion of draft-related activitieswas relevant only in the contextof that purpose.Rick Boardman, head of theAmerican Friends Service Commit¬tee’s Draft Counseling Committee,addressed the group briefly. A sug¬gestion that a three-day programfor draft counselors be arrangedresulted in the formation of a steer¬ing committee of volunteers thatwill pursue the problem of howand under whose auspices the pro-Turn to Page 6Black Power“The Church Confronts BlackPower,” a two-day forum spon¬sored by the Episcopal Society forCultural and Racial Unity(ESCRU), will convene at the Cen¬ter for Continuing Education Fri¬day, January 26.NOW IN PAPERBACK!The bookthat sentDebray toprisonREVOLUTION INTHE REVOLUTION?By REGIS DEBRAY“Indispensable reading.”— Times LiterarySupplement (London)“Icily brilliant.”— Le NouvelObservateur (Paris)950, now at your bookstoreGROVE PRESS REGIS DEBRAYrevolutionIN THErevolution?’...A PRIMERMARXISTIN LATIN AMERICA-NEWSWEEKThe guitar has superb tone and craftsmanship. Give ityour time and special touch. Sound and beauty...appreciation and skill... friendship... peace.Over 35 models of electric, classic and folk guitars.Love at first sound. nagstremSend*25< for color catalog Electric and folk □ Classic □ GUITARSUNICORD, INCORPORATED 75 Frost Street. Westbury. N Y. 11590A subsidiary of Gulf + Western IndustriesJanuary 19, 1968,L'» .1 THE CHICAGO MAROON* k i3uv j >V\rr 3 I{•:,ii'Kimmm g is* ■ mkm mm Mmwm, ,The Chicago MaroonFiunM in imJeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business Manager ji Managing Editor Literary Editor ..David L. Aiken iI: Executive Editor .. ..Michael Seidman Associate Editors. ...David E. GumpertEdward W. Hearne if1 News Editor John Moscow0 Photographic Editor David Travis Editor Emeritus Daniel Hertzberg 1Joan PhillipsDavid A. Setter <> ' mmFine StateWhen we settled down Wednesday night in front ofthe TV to hear about the state of the Union, we fullyexpected to be treated to yet another example of thatprecise, visionary, and unhackneyed prose for which ourPresident has become justifiably famous. Still, none ofour exalted expectations quite prepared us for the levelof eloquence the President reached in his stirring call toaction.It would not be possible in this limited space to fullycatalogue the virtues of the President’s speech. We wereimpressed by his proposal to create 100 new FBI agents(perhaps the ultimate solution to America’s social ills),heartened as always his continued willingness to stop thebombing whenever North Vietnam is ready to saw itselfoff from the mainland and sink into the Pacific Ocean,and inspired by his provocative, novel, and fearless callfor an end to “rising crime and lawlessness.”But perhaps what impressed us most about the Pres¬ident’s speech was the new tolerance and understandinghe showed for the “young people” of this country. Longa neglected, powerless and frustrated minority, those un¬der 25 had given up hope that the Establishment wouldever come to any kind of reasonable understanding oftheir problems.But now, with the force of two powerful sentences,the President has done more to cross the gaping chasmknown as the “generation gap” than all of his predeces¬sors put together. “I will ask for more vigorous enforce¬ment of all our drug laws by increasing the number ofFederal Drug and Narcotics Control officials by morethan one-third,” the President said, looking at his audi¬ence with his patented “and I mean business” glare. “Itis time to stop the sale of slavery to the young,” he con¬tinued. Here, at last is the key to the problem posed bythe hippie generation. All we have to do is “stop the saleof slavery to the young” and middle class respectabilitywill emerge triumphant once again.While the President went no further in explaininghow he planned to implement this modern-day emancipa¬tion proclamation, we can only assume that a number ofhis other policies are really organized around this objec¬tive. We can think of no better way of ending “slavery,”for example, than by drafting the young men who appearparticularly prone to it. The army, democratic institutionthat it is, gives these wayward youths an idea of whatfreedom is all about and makes them less likely to partwith their liberty so freely. •The President realizes, of course, that eventually wemay have peace again, and while this event is admittedlyunlikely, he is nevertheless preparing for a time when itmay no longer be possible for all of our youth to learnwhat freedom is all about in the army. For this reason,President Johnson is continuing his policy of rehabilitat¬ing enslaved youths all over the country at federal ex¬pense in the numerous penitenturies built for that pur¬pose.With freedom like this waiting for anyone who wantsit, we continue to be amazed that anyone could chooseslavery instead. ...» * i ! i; i ■“ 1» S' i i » ■ *7. - )!/'■} i * .. I o >' i4 THE CHICAGO KAROON January 19, 1968 JOHN MOSCOWGen Ed at Chicago:No Liberating' ForceIt is possible to receive an edu¬cation in the College today, butas pressures towards specializa¬tion increase it is becoming pro¬gressively more difficult. TheCollege is in danger of becominga tool of the graduate schools,teaching methodology ratherthan background, disciplinary jar¬gon rather than inter-disciplinaryanalysis. Such a trend is contra¬ry to the needs of educating astudent — “liberating him’’ —which a college is supposed toperform.Under the present set of re¬quirements, students are e x-pected to take four courses in a“common core” sequence, fourmore courses in divisional re¬quirements, and the rest of theircourses as dictated by the de¬partments in which they are con¬centrating, usually including somefree electives. Yet at graduationstudents are supposed to be youngbio-chemists, historians, or polit¬ical scientists, rather than aspir¬ing scholars with a backgroundin bio-chemistry, history, or po¬litical science. The emphasis iswrong.IN ACQUIRING an educationthere are certain necessary pro¬cesses. A student must learnhow to read and write intelligent¬ly. He must learn how to thinkclearly and express his thoughts.He must acquire some fund of information—the larger the bet¬ter—on which to draw whenfaced with problems. Only thenis he equipped to go out and doresearch, or independent work ofary value, as do what we callgraduate students.These definitions have not beenaccepted by most of the depart¬ments at Chicago. Rather thanhaving a student furnished, orgiven time to acquire, an ade¬quate fund of information withwhich to reason not only cogent¬ly but correctly, the departmentsare forgetting content of the rea¬soning process in favor of its* style. They would rather have astudent who thinks like a politi¬cal scientist than one who ar¬rives at empirically correct de¬cisions about politics.Thus there are many coursesin which one can learn how to bea political scientist, but few inwhich a knowledge of politics isimportant. A course offered inthe past, on the theory of party,was a marvelous exampleof this—offering as it did a widevariety of theories about politi¬cal parties, many of them wide¬ly accepted but none of them“true.”It is difficult to see how sucha system educates a student. Hecomes out from it with a wideacquaintance with “the lit-. erature of the field” but littleI t < > » f knowledge of the facts of thecases mentioned. When he isfaced with a problem later, in¬stead of reaching into his mem¬ory for the relevant facts in aprevious situation, he comparesthe opposite theories to arrive athis decision. Often what has beenpostulated as reality for analy¬tic purposes is accepted by fu¬ture students as reality.SUCH students are not educa¬ted, for it has been drilled intothem that the theory is all-important, so that even whenthe facts clearly disprove it theyignore empirical anomalies andstick with the theories. They aremental cripples, handicapped intheir future work by their college“education” and not liberated byit.Chicago should avoid that pathand stick closer to equipping itsstudents with the mental where¬withal to deal with any prob¬lems, not just theoretical exer¬cises in a given discipline.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago 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. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers} of pCollegiate Praas larvica.January 19, 1968 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Dissent, and Satire Section TwoA guide to Hyde Park restaurants. By Avron Yonkf.THERE ARE MANY THINGS you cando in Hyde Park, but finding a goodplace to eat isn’t one of them. Thereare no great restaurants around thisUniversity and there are precious fewgood ones (and these, conscious oftheir rarity, charge outrageous prices).However, in the poor ones that we arestuck with you find occasional dishesof good food. Here is a guide to them:VALOIS, 1518 E. 53rd. Ah, Valois . . .Classic. SEE YOUR FOOD and often, thestrangest and most beautiful assortmentof people in Hyde Park. Cheap food, cafe¬teria style. Chicken, gravy, and straw¬berry shortcake especially good. **CAROL’S, 53rd and Harper. OLIVERTWIST, DON QUIXOTE, now CAROL’S.The northeast corner of 53rd and Harperseems to be jinxed against restaurants.Yet CAROL’S survives, though the foodis bad and the prices hysterical. Why?Maybe it’s a front for the Tristero Con¬spiracy. Late flash: the corner of 53rdand Harper is again vacant.COURT HOUSE RESTAURANT, 5211 SHarper. Excellent though relatively expen¬sive, with the exception of lunch and lateevening snacks. Worth spending the moneyto try Beouf Fondue Bourguignone (spe¬cialty of the house) or any other full-course dinner; salad dressing really good!Small but well-chosen wine cellar andAmazon waitresses.YMCA CAFETERIA, 53rd and Dorches¬ter. Inexpensive YMCA food. Open meal¬times only. *KIM-THOMAS REXALL DRUGSTORE,53rd and Blackstone. Shelters anotherHyde Park hamburger place — this oneclean and priced right. Breakfasts fine.Barton’s candies, confections, & dredelsavailable at the counter. *CHICKEN A-GO-GO, 5601 S. Lake Park.Good chicken to Go-Go (sic). Unfortunate¬ly no delivery. **JANE LEE, 1316 E. 53rd. Fairly goodand reasonably priced Chinese food. Quiet.Wonderful service. Delivery. **MORTON’S, 56th and South Shore - Allof their ads are true!!!!! Food is excel¬lent with a huge menu. Highly recom¬mended! ****CAMPUS CERTIFIED FOODS, 57thnear Kenwood. A grocery and take-outdelicatessen featuring the best sandwichesin Hyde Park, the friendliest employees,fine imported foods and chocolates, ex¬cellent cuts of meat, and, when notcrushed in cellophane and/or left overnight-some fine bakery goods. Also, superchopped liver-made with schmaltz. **VzJACKSON INN, 1607 E. 55th. Chinese(or Cantonese if you prefer) food on alevel with JANE LEE. Good combo-dinnerprices and good service. **WAH HING, 1368 % E. 53rd. Good Chi¬nese food to take out. Don’t have it de¬livered unless you enjoy it cold. *TAI SAM YON, 1318 E. 63rd. First rate Chinese food with city-wide reputation. Tobe avoided on the weekend. Seaweed soupexcellent — but try everything — aboveall, don’t be put off by location . .. it’sworth the trip even if you have to go bycab or round up some Brothers. Whileyou’re on 63rd Street, check out FultoniaHealth Foods at 521 E. 63rd. Super. ***for both.TANNENBAUM PHARMACY, 55th andCornell. In the rear of Mr. Tannebaum’sestablishment is a first class hamburgerjoint where you can get freshly squeezedorange juice!!! Snatch a magazine fromamong the immense collection at theentrance to read at the grill. (If Mr. T.spots you, though, you’ll have to pay and what will your friends say when you showup with a copy of LUST?! **UNIQUE RESTAURANT & DELICA¬TESSEN, 53rd and Harper. The best res-taurant/delicatessan in Southeast Chica¬go, though usually crowded and alwaysfrenzied. The food is boring (I speak afterinnumerable visits,) but not bad. Avoidfull dinners unless waiters-hassling is yourbag; also avoid french fries and bananasplits sometimes served without the ba¬nanas. Pastries, bagels, lox, pickled fish,herring, potato salad, chopped liver, sal¬ad plattes (only when lettuce is in season),sandwiches and fountain specialties high¬ly recommended. Coffee is usually great.Blintzes are also good but often served partially cooked. 55 cent breakfast Spe¬cial is (was?) featured before 11 A.M.Seating is courtesy of the incredible Mrs.Unique and her companions ... male andfemale He created them ... Unadvertisedextras-Vala’s in the freezer and EnglishOvals, Players, and Medalliste cigars atthe counter. (Woe-what Hyde Park reallyneeds is a tobacco store) **%*O’NEILL’S, 61st and Ellis. An unfortu¬nate replacement for STERN’s DRUGSTORE where Poppa Stern dispensed dex-edrine etc, etc. with mad abandon untilhe “lost his lease.” Poor food — terribleservice. Open 24 hours. Va*WALGREEN’S CAFETERIA, Co-opContinued on Page UireeCHICAGO REVIEWSpeaker SeriesROBERT CREELEYreading his poetrySaturday January 20 8 P.MMandell Hall$1.50 - Students $1.00 at doorOrder Seats NOW!George Bernard Shaw'sStaged by Broadway Guest DirectorWARREN ENTERSPerfs. nightly except Mons. thru February 7Mats. 2:00 p.m. Thurs. January 18 425GOODMAN THEATRE - CE 6-2337CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL • 212 N MICHIGAN AVSAMUEL A. BEU"BOY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE ItUPICKUP 4 DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Perk493-5200CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award WinnerCannes Grand Prize WinnerSTUDENT RATE$1.50 with I.D. CardGood every day but Saturday2nd YEARAnouk Aimee-American“For Anyone Who Has everbeen in love'*Sun-Times Four StarsIn Color"A MAN & A WOMAN”Mon. to Fri. starts 6:30 pm.Sat. & Sun starts 2 pm.INTERNATIONAL HOUSEGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th StreetGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLD!Tobacco s-Candies-StationeryNewspapers-Magazine s-CosmeticsOpen Monday-Friday 10:15 AM-5:45 PMSaturday and Sunday Noon-5:45 PM NEEDSeight more women for the chorus ofTROJAN WOKENandone MALE actor for the role ofthe Greek messengerFINAL AUDITIONS!Fri. Jan. 19 7:30 pm.Ida Noyes East Loungewho will be Helen of Troy?maybe you! Always Plenty of Snow!SKIING T DAYS i T NITES A WEEK12 BUNS TO *r100 FEET~alL DAY SKI-BUS PACKAGEfrom CHICAGO EVERY SATURDAY i SUNDAYRound Trip—Tow Ticket—Leuon—Lunchl‘- On/y 75 Minute* from CklcogoI GROUP & STUDENT RATES EA 7-1220JTIT. f U4> Lake Geneva, Wis. 414-248-6553The Motet Choir of the Collegium MusicumHoward Brown, musical directorJohn Klaus, conductorandlire Chamber OrchestraJohn E. Solie, conductorPresentA concert of music by Brahms, Gabrieli, Boyce, and PurcellSunday, January 21, 19683:00 P.M.Mandell Hallrree and open to the publicTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Wood lawn Ave.Sunday afternoon at 3:30FEBUARY 4Johannes BrahmsCjennant^se^uiem l^jaenieTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRwith members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRANeva Pilgrim, sopranoHenri Noel, baritoneRICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTICKETS:Students of all collegesand universities $2.50Reserved $4.50General Admission $3.50UC Fao//5taff $3.00Available at: Univ. of ChicagoBookstore, 5802 S. Ellis AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore,1311 E. 57th StreetCooley's Candles,5211 S.Harper Ct.For further information,Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3387 call Marcel Carne’s BIZARRE BIZARREmad comedy set in Edwardian Engl and .Theatre of the Absurd twenty years ahead of its time. Tonight. Soc Sci 122. 754 7:15 and 9:15. Doc FilmsAMERICAN 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 - BatteriesIQS, dlnouwt to rtudowH with IP cirdiLTD.Antique &Modern JewelrySpecializingAuthentic AntiqueEn gage merit RingsWedding BandsReasonably Prices ml sfcmesPRE-INVENTORY SALESAVINGS UP TO 75%• Damaged• Broken• OverstockedALL JEWELRY 10% OFFOnly One WeekASK FOR YOUR DISCOUNTml Ao&esJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7266Convenient hours: Noon to i p.m. dally538 n. Michigan Avenue i Telephone 321-1360CULTURE VULTUREw All right Culchoor fans, CultureVulture has swooped down out ofits nest in the jumble of third-floor Ida Noyes and here is whathe has found out there in TheHinterland.FilmsIngmar Bergman’s The SeventhSeal is being presented at Burton-Judson Cafeteria Saturday night at8 and 10 for all of you who havethe few days to spare in a “Whatis Berman trying to say’”discussion.This week Doc Films is present¬ing Marcel Carne’s comedy Bi¬zarre, Bizarre in which an innocu¬ous botony professor is surroundedby such wholesome creatures as apsychopathic butcher strangler anda villanous Anglican Vicar whosepart-time occupation is lechery. Itwill be in Soc. Sci 122 at 7:15 and9:15.Tuesday, Fritz Lang’s You OnlyLive Once appears. This is anotherone of Lang’s American pictures,which far surpasses in cinematicbeauty the more frequently seen M.Off campus, the Clark is havingone of its best weeks in history.Tomorrow is Howard Hawks’ ElDorado, WEEKEND’S film critic’scandidate for best film of the year,along with the highly praised WarWagon of Arthur Kennedy. Tues¬day is Edgar G. Ulmer’s science-fiction Journey Beneath The Des¬ert. For those who like theirsadism pure and joyful, The Kil¬lers, made by Don Siegal (Inva¬sion of the Body Snatchers) willbe shown Thursday. One of thestrangest Hemmingway adapta¬tions ever.The Aardvard is continuing itsgreat films series with Van Stern¬berg’s Blue Angel along with thefamous Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.These run through Sunday, afterwhich Rossellinni’s Open City takesover.Call the Town Underground: they are showing either Bunuel’s Exter¬mination Angel or Welles’ Falstaff,Vulture couldn’t find out which intime for the press. Both are mag¬nificent films and deserve to beseen.PoetryPoetry, often as old and dustyas the volumes in the lower depthsof Harper Library stacks, will berejuvinated Saturday in the personof Robert Greeley. The poet, whowill give a reading of his works,will appear live at Mandel Halltomorrow at 8 p.m.TheaterMiracles such as Christ risingfrom a bloody book, stabbings,bawdy songs, corruption of an in¬nocent — is this a new under¬ground film? No it is the Renai-sance Players’ productions of Man-kynde and The Plays of the Sacra-mente. Subtitled a cycle play anda miracle play respectively, theywere first performed during theend of the dark and bloody MiddleAges — full of poverty, misery,killing, fear, and subjugation. Is itpossible that they could have somerelevance to our times in the mod¬ern computerized world ofThe Renaissance Players, a groupformed last year, will be assistedby the Collegium Musicum whichwill provide the accompanimentfor the explicit songs which pro¬vide a comic interlude. When theywere first presented, the playswere totally accepted as reality.Today it might be a little moredifficult but with the help of mod¬ern technology books can spoutblood, Christ can arise, arms canbe cut off and nailed to posts.Friday, Saturday and Sunday at8:30 p.m. in the Cloister Club inIda Noyes.Off Campus on the North Side,The Chicago City Players are pre¬senting Three New American Playsfrom Off-Off Broadway premieringthis week at Baird Hall Theatre,THEATERAn Intimate Classic 615 West Wellington. Instead ofproducing the seventeenth Chicagoproduction of Charlie’s Aunt orThe Odd Couple, this group is of¬fering some meatier stuff — Lunch¬time (no pun intended) by LeonardMelfi, The Successful Life of Threeby Maria Irene Fornes (which wonan Obie Award in New York), andCalm Down Mother by Megan Ter¬ry (the Viet-Rock girl.) Discoverthat there is life on other streets north of 59th. The plays will berunning for the six week-ends, Jan¬uary 19-February 25. Friday andSaturday at 8:30, Sunday at 7:30.Tickets for all students $1.50. Res¬ervations 525-0430.TVThe Avengers is back!!! In ourmind the only good program onAmerican television, channel 7,Wednesdays, 6:30. This is not anad.SOMETHING VERY UNUSUAL oc¬curred in Reynolds Club Theater lastweekend, where St. Joseph’s College pre¬sented Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex. The bestway to describe it would be as “intimate”Greek tragedy, an effect which was inno small part achieved by the excellentperformance of James O’Reilly in the titlerole. His characterization combined boththe necessary sense of tragic grandeurwith that of an intense and extremelyabsorbing humanity. This synthesis placedhim at a level where the audience nolonger needed to view him with awe froma distance, but with sympathy and under¬standing as toward any human being.Real concern was generated by the flawsin Oedipus’ character, and the result wasto involve the audience much more deep¬ly in the play.Adding to this air of intimacy and at¬tachment was the “reconstruction” ofReynolds Club Theater. Seats were placedon the stage, and the action was per¬formed in the middle of the room withthe result that the average viewer dis¬tance was halved. The set itself and thecostumes were extremely varied and col¬orful, thereby riveting attention on thestage. In short, the production ran coun¬ter to many popular misconceptions con¬cerning the drabness and aloofness ofGreek tragedy. Next to Mr. O’Reilly, one must cite theexcellence of the chorus. As a group, theyprojected the emotive quality of theirwords with great power and clearness.Here also one should mention the imag¬inative use of music and choreography,which added greatly to their effectiveness.However, as individuals, the members ofthis group left much to be desired bothdramatically and vocally, a fact under¬scored by the tremendous richness of tonein Mr. O’Reilly’s voice.The rest of the cast, I am sorry to say,did not impress me particularly, with thepossible exception of William Gawlikow-ski as Creon, the king’s brother-in-law.Irene George as Jocasta came across onlyin the scene in which she begs Oedipusto end his inquiries about his past. Mostimpressive of the smaller parts was thatof the blind prophet Teiresias, playedquite effectively by Thomas Cowperthwait.John Bettenbender’s direction could notbe faulted. Pacing, tempo, movement onstage — all were pitched at exactly theright level. Tension was never once per¬mitted to lag; where dramatic talentfailed, the play itself and the stagingsustained the interest. If this type of pro¬duction is utilized more in the future, itcould conceivably go far in rekindlingmass interest in the classics.STEPHEN GOODMAN•Vi* A'l'A'A i ‘ i i i > i j J J J * a J A A i 4 \ ‘ * EATContinued from Page OneShopping Center. On the same order, butmuch better than WIMPY’s q. v. Goodservice to go. Also, Richard’s Wild IrishRose available in Liquor Dept. %*WIMPY’S, Co-op Shopping Center. Ifyou’ve forgotten what Howard Johnson’sis like or you’re steeling yourself for be¬fore taking the Expressway East, dropin. Vi*HYDE PARK COFFEE SHOP, 53rd andHyde Park Blvd. Unpretentious, dare Isay wholesome, American food. Servicesporadic. Also has real orange juice andgood chicken sandwiches .. . very reason¬ably priced ... however ,beware, they arealways out of something you want. *MR. PIZZA, 1465 E. 51st. Take out anddelivery. Larger than life-sized pizzas —not as thick and greasy as NICKY’S.**STATION JBD, 51st near Harper. Somesay it’s still the best restaurant in HydePark (since they refuse to advertise inthe Maroon, you can’t be sure). Featureprime ribs. Fairly expensive. **VfcLEONARD’S DELICATESSAN, also 51st-near Harper. Small and inexpensive withbakery goodies — while you’re in theneighborhood, buy some flowers at ArtMiller’s and visit Hyde and SeecAntiques. *SURF AND SURREY, 50th and SouthShore Drive. Expensive. Let Mommy andDaddy take you when they visit. Break¬fasts are super and almost reasonable(in price, that is). Service good. (Anotherthing Hyde Park really needs is a restau¬rant that delivers breakfasts .. . ) ***GOLD CITY INN, 5228 S. Harper. Farand away the best Chinese food in HydePark, probably some of the finest in theCity. Ask Bing or his delightful daughterfor daily not-on-the-menu specials: steakwith black mushrooms, Big Shrimps (Mon¬days and Tuesdays only, or crab meatwith lobster sauce. All superb. Try thelotus root soup too, when it’s in season.Reasonably expensive — about $3.00 a per¬son; less if you choose standard fare.Sit near the kitchen and dig theutensils. ****GORDON’S, 1321 E. 57th. Since the Uni¬versity and Julian Levi “renewed” 55thand 57th Streets, it’s the closest restau¬rant to Campus. Despite its reputation,the food is O.K. and much improved. Oc-cassionally greasy or sloppily prepared.Sauteed Chicken Livers best on the menu,also Salad Plates. Be prepared to contendwith truck stop service and always orderquickly and carefully or Isabel will T.C.B.Prices O.K. too. Always closed onTuesdays. **HASTY GRILL, 53rd and Kenwood.Hamburger joint par excellence. Enter¬tainment by the cast from Last Exit toBrooklyn, Soul-style. Greaseburgers witha touch of excitement. Whatever you payis too much. 24 hour service, naturally.No stars.HOBBY HOUSE, 1342 E. 53rd. Dawn todawn you’re just a few steps away fromfood poisoning and pederasts at the HobbyHouse. Surprise — the food is still inter¬esting — the patrons, more so, especiallybetween 2 and 6 A. M. Again, open 24hours. Inexpensive. If you’re high, check out the mirrored room in the back. Avoidwashrooms. *ENRICO’S, 1411 E. 53rd. Fairly expen¬sive but good Italian food and an excel¬lent hors’ d’oeuvres table (free with din¬ners). Chuckwagon lunch, with unlimitedaccess to the table, at $1.45. The pizza isalways worth trying. Mixed drinks andwine served. Occassionally with live Fla¬menco entertainment in the evening. Pro¬perly CAFE ENRICO AND GALLERY -by virtue of a multitude of strange paint¬ings. Everything from soup to nuts at thehors’d’ oeuvres table, except no soup andno nuts. ***RIBS ’N BIBS, 53rd and Dorchester.Ribs, bibs, chicken, sandwiches. Take-outand delivery only. All good and fairlypriced. **NICKY’S RESTAURANT AND PIZZA,53rd and Kimbark Plaza. Fair to goodItalian and American food and pizza. Ex¬cepted in is Nicky’s Special Pizza, whichis outstanding. Heartrendingly slow serv¬ice. Best to have delivered. Mixed drinksand beer. Walls are splattered with not-to-be believed paintings, which tragedy upontragedy, are for sale. The new place lacksthe atmosphere of the old Nicky’s on 55th,but then, squalor wasn’t really atmos¬phere, was it? Prices are medium. **LA RUSSO’S, 1645 E. 53rd. A really findItalian restaurant in a sombre second floorparlor. Veal Marsala, Barccioli, in factevery entree is excellent. Quiet, with goodservice. Prices average. Cheese antipastoalone worth the trip. Good drinks, thoughwine not special. Choice of spaghetti orravoli side dish with dinner. One of fewplaces in Hyde Park where you can es¬cape, relax, and eat. ***VfeTHE OTHER SIDE, between I.C. tracksand Cornell on 53rd. Visit to enjoy theentertainment, which can be good, not themediocre coffee house food. Do not bedeceived, despite Esquire’s pronounce--ment, THE OTHER SIDE is not the local“hippy Hangout,” The NONESUCH is. . .Sorry, THE OTHER SIDE has also justgone out of business (this article was in¬tended for the Orientation Issue) — trythe Harper Coffee House in the HarperTheatre — maybe you’ll find a hippy there.SARNAT’S DRUG STORE, 57th andBlackstone. Fountain specialties. Also theysell wine and beer. *MEDICI COFFEE HOUSE, 1450 E. 57th.Serves a fine selection of excellent coffees,teas, and chocolates. Also soups, Persiandishes (sometimes), hamburgers, and su¬per breakfasts. Depressing on a grey daywith its dim lights and dimmer Rem-brant’s. Cold in winter and hot in sum¬mer (temperature, that is). Desserts arevery special, try a Never on SundaySundae. Service is slow, but in a com¬pletely relaxed situation, who cares? Af¬ter dinner, there’s always the pleasureof new shipments of Green DoorBooks. ****CIRAL’S HOUSE OF TIKI, 1612 E. 53rd.Just opened — we haven’t had a chanceto check it out so hope the food is stillas good as it was (especially shrimp) —good mixed drinks. **VfeHOUSE OF ENG, 53rd and Hyde ParkBlvd. We haven’t had an invitation yet.Mr. Yonkf is a longtime resident ofHyde Park and a student in the college.He is a frequent contributor to theMaroon in the columns of the ClassifiedAds.January 19, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 £tualA Q orclen ^JJair ^^eslynerJcomplete beauty care1620 East 53rd Street BU 8-2900-01-02SERVICEto your satisfactionQUALITY WORKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanicsBody work & paintingTOWINGFree Estimates on ALL Work326-2550ESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerSennce hours:8- 7. Sat. 9-510% Student DiscountOn Repair Order PartsConven ient to a 11 major exp re ss-ways, Lake Shore Drive, iC & ‘L*TAhSAW-YM*CHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESCLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062HYDE PARK THEATRE53rd 8c LAKE PARKstarts Friday Jan. 19thalso“FUNNY IS FUNNY"with Carl Reiner TONIGHT!It's true. A Phi Delt«kh PARTYROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELECUMENICAL SERVICEOFCHRISTIAN UNITYSunday, January 21, 196811 a.m.The Reverend Andrew M. Greeley"THE UNITY WE SEEK” 5625 University9-THE "KNIGHTS OF SOULWILL BE THERE, HOWABOUT YOU?ASK HERMAN »»For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLY -RAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSU1S lL*As Low As $4.95 per Day £(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE) IHYDE PARK CAR WASH f1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 J . . . Why TheMURUNISPHERE®Is The OfficialMicrophone OfHerman’s HermitsOn TourHerman knows his micro¬phone is his link with hisaudience. He wants you tohear his voice and the lyr¬ics, naturally, withouthowling feedback, withoutannoying close-up breath‘‘pop’’, without audiencesounds. Pretty tough testfor a microphone . . . rou¬tine for the incomparableShure Unisphere. Just askthe better groups.Shure Brothers, Inc.222 Hartrey Ave.Evanston, III. 60204The NewBANDERSNATCH hot chocolate 10<hot spiced cider 15{the bandersnatch 69-er sundae 69<THE JEWISHCOMMUNITY CENTERSOF CHICAGOOFFER SUMMER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIESIN SOCIAL WORK ORIENTED AND COUNTRY CAMPSDAYCAMPSlocated throughout the Chicago areaPositions: Counselors - Male OnlySupervisory StaffSpecialistsCAMP CHI located 50 miles Northof Madison and the University ofWisconsinPositions: Counselors - Male 8c FemaleSupervisory StaffSpecialistsDrivers WaterfrontNurses CampcraftCooks Arts 8c CraftsIf you are interested in any of the above, please callST 2-3085, Camp Chi, to make an appointment for aninterview.- Interviews will be held on Tuesday,January 23, 1968, at the Hillel Foundation, 5715 S.Woodlawn. Arrangements can be made for appoint¬ments on other days at our downtown office, 32 W.Randolph. in that wild,mixed-media, all-etotal environment calle■ i iOfc W LAWRlVtf CHICAI,!) IIDANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANOS IN AMERICARip out this ad now and bring it toCheetah this weekend for aSPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGOSTUDENT DISCOUNT—$L00IIBHHBBBBIIIIIIII|I|ITICKETS: J4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: fell Mr. Font L0 1 -8558 to throw • party at Cheetah lor SO to 2000WIDB OPIN FRIDAY, SATURDAY. SUNDAY AT S P.M.SALISBURY PRESENTSBERGMAN S THE SEVENTH SEAL“Mr. Bergman hits you with it right betweenthe eyes” Bosley Crowther, New York TimesSaturday, January 20, Law School Auditorium, 6:30, 8:15, and 10:00 P.M., $1.00WEEKEND MAGAZINE January 19, 1968LettersRevolutionI have recently become awareof a fact that is becoming a com¬monplace in some circles. Theprobable extent of its effect isnot well know, however, or therewould be more discussion on it.The fact is the riot beingplanned for next summer in Chi¬cago. The desired effect of theriot is exemplified by what it iscalled: The Revolution. The goalis to wrest power from those whonow have it. But the course of therevolution is sheer conjecture atthis point; everyone knows some¬thing immense is going to hap¬pen, but no one knows exactlywhat. Certain elements will killhaphazardly. Some will almostassuredly try to paralyze the cityby hitting public utilities and ex¬pressways. Some draft boardsmay go.The revolution will not go un¬planned — the ingenious cross¬fires in Detroit show that. Thereare handbooks on guerrilla tac¬tic. We know that only a handfulof leaders of disaffected crowdsare needed to wrack ruin of acity. As in the past the slums willburn. The white-owned slum es¬tablishments will go. Who cansay about the white neighbor¬hoods?THE REVOLUTIONARIES willbe those sufficiently disenchantedwith American society, largelythe poor Negroes. But certainlythere will be poor whites also.There is the class element aswell as the racist element.The common prediction of thedate is during or just preceedingthe Democratic Convention inAugust. Mayor Daley has prom¬ised no trouble. And enough peo¬ple know about it now so thatthere are sure to be NationalGuardsmen standing by. Whetheror not this will precipitate earlieraction cannot be speculated yet.It is also disturbing to note thatthe War Resistence has focusedon the Democratic Convention asits next major target. Althoughmany of them are also speakingof revolution, they haven’t alarge enough following yet toplan anything. But the angrierones may join. It certainly wouldbe unfortunate if the majority,largely peaceful people, werekilled.NEEDLESS to say, the revolu¬tion will not keep control. OneNegro writer predicts that with¬in five years Negroes will behated with a vehemence thus farunequaled in history.One black power delegate tothe New Politics Convention sug¬gested to a friend that she leaveChicago. She is taking his advice.A welfare worker I know consid¬ers the revolution common know¬ledge. She is leaving. I have re¬liable second-hand knowledge ofa white social worker who planson fighting with them. SNCC ismoving its operations to Chicago.The ghetto news medium, painton buildings, announces “TheBlackstone Rangers have soldout.” The Rangers, a powerfulSouth-side gang, helped stop lastsummer’s uprisings. It is wellknown now that their leaderswere bought off by the Daleymachine. Next summer no onewill listen to them.We know from Detroit how trig¬ger-happy soldiers are; they shotat shadows in windows and upthrough floors. One doesn’t know from which side one may bekilled.There’s another more interest¬ing question—the tonal device ofCharlie’s letter on Tuesdayraises it. For who’s sending upwhom, Charlie mewling or O’¬Connell sitting back cool? Nowthere’s a question.O’Connell did his deadpan;Charlie did his and gave himselfaway—irony is a giveaway.O’Connell drew our boy out intothe open. Charlie’s letter i san immortal shadowbox. Who’slaughing and who’s the sucker?I can but admire Mr. O’Con¬nell for his aplomb, his dignifiedself-acquittal. Marvelous. Thatletter to Vincent House—howdoes he get away with it withhis friends: “a continuing con¬cern for the residents’ academicobjectives”? The Spartan Schol¬ar life. He invokes a grand me¬dieval tradition. Can you see himlaughing?Mr. O’Connell is a gentleman,an irresistable prodigy of wit—sitting there in guffaws. He’s putone over on you wheat jeans. 0the corridors of power.What other issues can youraise to feed them lines? Keepraising them the way you do.KEVIN LEWISDivinity School'Censorship'Goddamn it! Have you beencensoring the classified ads?What was the meaning of the adso implying in the last issue ofThe Maroon? Where do you getthe gall, if you have been dulli-fying the ads, to act like a mem¬ber of the Establishment at yourage? Your ass is still in school,man, you don’t have to sell outyet. For a while your adsgrooved. Now they’re mediocreagain.MICHAEL KAUFMANLaw SchoolThe Business Manager re¬plies:Yes, Mr. Kaufman, I am cen¬soring the classified ads, butyour complaint should bedirected to the Dean of Studentsat whose suggestion this is be¬ing done.JERRY LEVYBusiness ManagerLetters 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. THIS PORTABLETAPE RECORDERNow’s the perfect time to get that portable typewriter you've alwayswanted. For a limited time only, Toad Hall is offering this fabulous,top-rated Craig 212 portable tape recorder FREE with the purchaseof any electric portable typewriter.To get yours, simply visit Toad Hall and examine the various portablesavailable. After you make your selection, the portable tape recorder isyours FREE. It's that simple.The Craig 212 is the perfect companion for the student on the go. Useit for recording lectures, rehearsing speeches, learning drama lines,and studying foreign languages . . . it’s even great forwriting letters the tape-easy way. You'll record andplayback up to 4 hours on each reel!Some of the Craig 212’s special fea¬tures include an automatic volumecontrol to compensate for sound leveldifferences, a 2-speed capstan drivefor voice or music recordings, and a sim¬ple jam-proof l4T” control for simple andquick operation. It’s light-weight, it’s com¬pact, it’s great.See these fine portables today. If you wish, the Craig 212 is availableseparately for $39.95 (AC power adaptor optional). Better yet, get itFREE with the typewriter purchase. It'll be one of the most rewardinginvestments you’ll ever make.And remember Toad Hall’s price guarantee. If anyone offers a subse¬quent sale price (within 30 days) lower than your purchase price, wewill REFUND the difference IN CASH.STORE HOURS:Monday thru Saturday10 A.M. to 10 P.M.Sunday12 Noon to 6 P.M.In Hyde Park - 1444 E. 57th StBU 8-4500 (jfoall Ballthe home op audio eleganceu : -I-—--. \ t j r■ ■■» < ■ ■ .I* .* January ,19, X968 / TflQ CHIGA,GQ MABOON 'I «; < t:* -l.fT. ■ ItLike many other people whohave heard just too much aboutthe coming trouble to doubt itany longer, I am getting out.Sane men are not happy dead.I advise others so dedicated toat least the minimum of health toget out or stay away as the casemay be.PHILLIP W. TEICHWho's Laughing?I live down the hall from Char¬lie Smith, that natural man. Ispeak, I’m sure, for many inBoucher when I say I don’t mindwhether Charlie performs hereat 4 P.M. what our rules denyhim at 4 A.M. We are open-minded.MAROON SPORTSGrapplers Lose to Chicago Circle in Final Round, 23-16By JERRY LAPIDUSStaff WriterChicago’s wrestling squad foughtto the final round before droppinga very close match to the powerfulUniversity of Illinois Chicago Cir¬cle campus team on Tuesday, 23-16.The team opened up with twoquick pins and seemed on the wayto defeat U.I.C.C., one of the top squads in the area, when the homesquad’s power began to showthrough. Losing the next fourmeets, one by forfeit, the Maroonscame back to win the 167 lb. and177 lb. events and come within twopoints of Illinois, 18-16. But fresh¬man George Lane was unable tocontain the experienced U.I.C.C.man and lost by a pin. Victorious for the University wereDave Clark, and Guy Twyman byfalls and Gary Ahrens and JimCasper by decisions. Mike Silver,Steve Biggs, Miles Washington, andLane all lost to Illinois grapplers.BasketballThe basketball squad places it’snearly perfect nine-and-one recordon the line as it faces twin homeCalendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information on Cal¬endar forms available at The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sent orbrought to the Office at least two days be¬fore the date of publication.Friday, January 19LECTURE: "Jewish Power and Black Power:Illusions and Realities," Rabbi Robert J.Marx, Hillel House, 8:30 p.m.ART EXHIBIT: "Old Testament and Post-Biblical Life" continuing to January 30.Hillel House.SWIM MEET: Great Lakes Naval TrainingStation, Bartlett Gym, 3:30 p.m.DOG FILMS: Bizare, Bizare, directed byMichael Carne, Soc Sci 122, 7:15 and 9:15p.m.BASKETBALL: Roosevelt University, FieldHouse, 8:00 p.m.Continued from page 3gram and the -subsequent counsel¬ing project should be organized.Also, a proposal that a letter besent to the U. S. Attorney GeneralRamsey Clark, a graduate of theLaw School, raising first-amend¬ment objections to the recentindictments of Dr. Benjamin Spockand others for allegedly encourag¬ing resistance to the draft, wasdeferred until such a letter couldbe drafted.The Proverbial CatA primary function of the anti¬war group, which is expected tomeet again within the month, is tolocate and publicize what opposi¬tion to the war there is within thelegal profession. Those at Wednes¬day’s meeting surmised that theextent of support among lawyersWOOL SHIRTSCPO Plaid Jac shirtsall reduced to *6.88Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9.30-1:00 CHAMBER MUSIC: Haydn, Quartet in FMinor, Beethoven, Quartet in C Major,Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.PLAY: Mankind, and Play of the Sacrament,Renaissance Players, Cloister Club, IdaNoyes, 8:30 p.m.Saturday, January 20FILM: The Seventh Seal, directed by IngmarBergman, Law School Auditorium. 6:30,8:15, and 10 p.m.PLAY: Mankind and Play of the Sacrament,Cloister Club, 8:30 p.m.BASKETBALL: Lake Forest, Field House,8:00 p.m.TRACK: Fourteenth Chicagoland Open, FieldHouse, 12:30 p.m.POETRY READING: Robert Creeley readinghis poems. Mandel Hall, 8:00 p.m. Tickets$1.00.DANCE: "The knights before," at Delta Up-silon 8:30 p.m.for alternatives to the Administra¬tion’s Vietnam policy is consider¬able, but that “the tongues oflawyers who oppose the war haveapparently been captured by theproverbial Cat.”Professors at the Law Schoolwere not exempted from the latterindictment. Sunday, January 21ECUMENICAL SERVICE OF CHRISTIANUNITY: The Rev. Andrew Greeley, Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel, 11 a.m.LECTURE: "Jewish art in the Christianmiddle ages," by Prof. Herbert Kessler,Hillel House, 7:30 p.m.CONCERT: Collegium Musicum and ChamberOrchestra, Mandel Hall, 3 p.m.CONCERT: UC Concert Band, Lexington Stu¬dio, 3 p.m.FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes, Cloister Club,7:30 p.m.CHESS CLUB: Ida Noyes, Sun Parlor, 3p.m.Monday, January 22PANEL: "Women, What Can You Do AfterCollege?" Nu Pi Sigma, Ida Noyes 8 p.m.SMOKER: Alpha Delta Phi, 5747 University,7:30 p.m.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200:Business, Industry, Government(Call extension 3284 for appts.)January 19 — Inland Steel Company, Chicago,Illinois. Business trainees, chemists, fin¬ance, market research, mathematics, per¬sonnel, physics, purchasing, sales, andsystems and computers.January 22 — Office of Economic Opportu¬nity, Washington, D.C. and nationwide.Staff positions for B.A. and M.A. candidatesin social science.January 22 — General Foods Corporation,Ma|or marketing areas throughout theUnited States. Men for sales work.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER. MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply In person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.Students Drafting Letter to Clarkyou can hear yourself think . , . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . , , luncheon . . . dinner , , . late snacks , * .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933THE CHICAGO MAROON January 19, 1968'.'if', il • i ,t • i' * (■' k V J v a i li-Afi t» i *«■, i contests tonight ard tomorrow atthe field house.In tonight’s contest, the dribblersplay host to Roosevelt Universityat 8 p.m.Tomorrow, Lake Forest will in¬vade the University in what pro¬mises to be one of the biggest“grudge games” of the season.L.F. delt the Maroons their onlyloss early in the season as theycapitalized on an injury to “Wink”Pearson and the disqualificationof leading scorer Marty Cambellon fouls.SwimmingThe swim squad continues itsseason against the Great Lakes Na¬val Training Station at Bartlettgym today at 3:30 p.m. Individual¬ly, the swimmers have all per¬formed very well, although as a team the squad has won only twoof five meets.TrackThe University track squad opensits regular season schedule today,opposing De Pauw and McMasterUniversities at the Field Housestarting at 4 p.m. On Saturday,Chicago will sponsor the 14th An¬nual Chicagoland Open Meet begin¬ning at 12:30 p.m. at the FieldHouse.SKATE FOR FUN AND HEALTHLAKE MEADOWS ICE SKATINGRINK and SKATING SCHOOLPUBLIC SESSIONS DAILYClosed Mondays„ . SPECIAL GROUP RATESPrivate and Class Lessons Available33rd Street and Ellis Ave.PHONE VI 2-7345iSA MATTER Gt... tun Ufa fnouroneo It a aarawafto financial Indapendanca tor ye*aad your family.tot Ufa representative, ■you at your conveniens#?Ralph J. Wood, Jr- CLUNorth LaSalle Straai, Chicago «0*tt(•aetata MIW - 7900470Office Wears 9 to 5 Maedeys.i by*SUM LOT ASSURANCI COMPANY OP CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYgant dress shirtsregularly $7.50 to $9.50$ 5.50 2 for $10The one-and-only Gant button down dress shirtinyourchoice of solids, stripes & checks.Broken sizes.!IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARK• lit! .1Argonne Head Receives AwardDr. Alexander Gottschalk, lastweek named by the U. S. JuniorChamber of Commerce as one ofAmerica’s ten Outstanding YoungMen of 1967, will receive his awardat the St. Paul Hilton tomorrow.Dr. Gottschalk, 35, is associateprofessor of radiology and directorof the Argonne Cancer ResearchHospital here.He studied at Harvard and Wash¬ington University in St. Louis andserved his internship at the Uni¬versity of Illinois Hospital inChicago before doing his residency i n Chicago’s Department o fRadiology.In 1962, Dr. Gottschalk went tothe Donner Laboratory in Berkeleyas a research associate. He con¬ducted research in nuclear medi¬cine, radiobiology, and pituitaryirradiation.Named DirectorHe returned to Chicago in 1964,and in 1966 he became an associateprofessor. He was named direct¬or of Argonne Cancer ResearchHospital last April. YR's TO MEETAlexander GottschalkWage Raise To Hurt Poor—BrozenThe Federal minimum wage,which will rise to $1.60 an hour Feb.1, will decrease the income of thenation’s poorest workers, accord¬ing to Yale Brozen, professor ofbusiness economics at the Grad¬uate School of Business.The minimum wage law has in¬creased rather than decreasedpoverty in America, and is a di¬rect cause of urban riots, saidBrozen in a speech at the ShermanHouse last night. He spoke on“The Untruth of the Obvious” to400 businessmen at a luncheon sponsored by the Graduate Schoolof Business and its Executive Pro¬gram Club.Linking the statutory minimumwage to rioting in slums, Brozencited two trends: (1) The growingincidence of unemployment amongNegro male teen-agers since 1956,when the minimum wage jumpedto $1 an hour; and (2) increasedmigration into Northern city ghet¬tos as the minimum wage reducedemployment in Southern and ruralareas. Brozen pointed out that beforethe Fair Labor Standards Actamendment of 1955 raised theminimum hourly wage to $1 in1956, unemployment among non¬white and white male teen-agerswas roughly the same—between 8per cent and 14 per cent, depend¬ing on the state of the economy. In1956 and since, however, unem¬ployment among non-white teen¬age males has been 50 to 150 percent greater than among whiteteen-age males. Mock Convention HereThe University of Chicago YoungRepublican (YR) Club met Tues¬day to attract delegates to itsmock Republican nominating con¬vention on Saturday, January 27 oncampus.Danny Boggs, a student in theLaw School, said 25 colleges fromKansas to Kentucky are to send atotal of 450 delegates, with about100 expected from the Universityof Chicago. Each delegate will beassigned a state to represent withCalifornia, New York, Pennsylvan¬ia, and Illinois having the largestdelegations.The University of Chicago is as¬signed to fill the California andNew York delegations. Anyone maybecome a delegate — whether he isa member of YR’s or not — by cal¬ling John Turner, ’71, in PierceTower.According to Boggs, the group’smain problem is that Cobb Hall isnot finished. The YR’s are current¬ly negotiating for the Law Schoolor the Field House.The main body of the conventionbegins at 9 a.m. with the adoptionof the platform worked up thenight before by the Platform Com¬mittee, which consists of one repre¬ sentative from each state. Afterlunch is the nomination of thePresidential and Vice-Presidentialcandidates.Booth: FacultySaw SG PlanContinued from Page 1in all but the final part of the de¬bate and the actual vote.Also discussed at the meetingwas the SG petition proposing anadditional alternative. It calls fora student’s choice in each of hiscourses between the A-F gradesand the pass-no credit grades.Booth commented that the facul¬ty had considered the SG proposalbut that was not placed on the listof* alternatives because too muchconflict arose.The faculty, he explained, wantsto have the grade option instead ofleaving it to the students. He saidthat a majority of faculty wouldprobably turn down any option fora no Credit grade, fearing that“standards would be lowered andstudents would not work as hard.”The meeting was held in the Rey¬nolds Club.HMMMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For non-University clientele: 75c per line,60c per line repeat. Count 35 characters andspaces per line.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.two days before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext 3266.RIDERS WANTEDRide to Calif. $25 or less. Leave about Feb.1, Call Ken at <43-6803.APARTMENT WANTEDImmediately cr Spring Quarter: 2 bedroomapartment. Call BU 8-1100, Room 804.BOARDERS WANTEDBoarders wanted at 5714 Woodlawn. CallPL-2-9648.APARTMENT TO SUBLETSublet Mar.-Apr.-May-4 Room apt. Light.Nicly Furn. Near 53rd & Blackstone. CallBU-8-0675.APARTMENTS FOR RENT3'/j Rooms. $125.00/month. Ring Joseph. Fal-tum, 2422 E 74th St. Ready Immediately.Furn. So. Shore apt. avail, approx. March15—Sept. 15. '/j block from I.C. 731-6803.ROOMMATES WANTEDRoommate for large, furnished Apt. to sharewith 3 undergred girls. 6107 S. Kenwood. 667-<551. Call after 5:30.One Man Wanted to share 7 room flat with2 others, at 60th 8, Woodlawn. $47/month.Call 643-8025.Share furnished house near campus with twomale staff members. $90/month plus 1/3 ofexpenses. FA-4-6796.Female Student wanted to share 7Vi Apt. on53rd and Dorchester. Big room. $48/month.Call 288-2832.Own room in Hyde Park, furnished (buy bedtor $10), own telephone, $47. Male graduatestudent preferred or quiet upperclassman.Call 363-8211.Male Student Wanted to share 2 bdrm. Apt.,52nd 8. Dorchester with Male Grad. Student.$62.50/month. Call 288-4887.Two Grad. Women want third for Hyde PerkApt. Own Room. $43. Call 363-1245.Girl to share apt. with three girls in newbuilding at 57th 8, Dorchester. Own Room.Call 667-3531.3 girls need 4th roommate. Own Roomin large Hyde Park Apt. Use of bed/desk/dresser. $50./mo. Call Sue at 684-3915 eves.Young <"-i3le undergrad wants to room orshare apt. with 2 or more male stud. CallArne. 363-0718.VULTURESWANTED: Culture Vulture. HOUSE FOR SALELeaving UniversityMust sell deluxe 14 yr. old, 2 story all-brickheme, 3 spacious bdrms., liv., din., oak-panel den, Mod Oak-cab kitchen, refrig., stv.,dishwesher, garbage disposal washer-dryer,complete air cond., w-w carpeting, drapes,fin. basement. Large fenced yard and patio.Lov. area in South Shore. Nr. 80th 8, Phil¬lips. Convient. Trans, to U.C. Upper 20's.731-5131.SKI TRIPSOne Day SKI BUS TRIPS leaving Hyde ParkEVERY SUNDAY to All Major Ski Areas.For Reservations, Call Lary Leon at FA-4-9890 or 684-2064.TYPING SERVICESTHESIS TYPING 40 cents a page. Pickupon Cempus. Call 568-3056 after 7 P.M.TYPIST AVAILABLE. Electric typewriter.Standard page rates-flexible. Manuscriptspreferred. 90 word/minute. 2321 Rickert,BU-8-6610.PERSONALSIt rained during the night,j You didn't see it.You were asleep,Awake dead m3n-you sleep.ML-What is it? You've got me hanginglMSL1 Join our 6th jaunt to Colorado on March 16where you will get more sun than Florida;j one cf the greatest semester break crowdsanywhere between the Bahamas and Hono¬lulu; the best beginners Ski School in theWcrld (Buttermilk); the extraordinary slopesof Ajax and Snowmass for the expert. Girls:bring your bikinis. See our ad in this paper(page three) or call Dick at 764-6264 or 262-3765.Marc Pokempner — there's a check for youin the M roon Business Office—see Steve.JOHN JACKSON IS COMING!| The only trouble with living in an apt.| is that you've already run away from home.Now What?| IN ^CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYj WEEK—Ecumenical Service—Calvert Housej Friday, January 19, 4:00 P.M.I ''JEWISH POWER AND BLACK POWER:ILLUSIONS AND REALITIES." Lecture byRabbi Robert J. Marx, Chicago Federation,Union of American Hebrew Congregations,Friday, 8:30 P.M. HILLEL.HEAR "THE KNIGHTS BEFORE" AT DUSATURDAY NIGHT— 5714 WOODLAWN.PJ— How can I resist you and Morgenroth?The fates conspire against me. MSL.SPRING VACATION!Vacation in Freeport, Bahamas, March 16-23, 7 nights, 8 days, Jet Air Trans. Trans¬fers, Hotel and extras. $189.00 from SKOKIEVACATIONS. 677-0570.Hindsight is for historians.Be sure to visit Alpha Delta Phi RushSmoker Monday, January 22,7:30—10:00 5747 UniversityTHE SEVENTH SEAL was not filmed at theBronx Zoo!GEORGE ARMSTRONG IS COMING!!!Can't someone stop these people!!! Who arethey?EXHIBIT: "Old Testament and Post-BiblicalI Life." At Hillel until January 30. All prints| for sale.Blues Records at the Fret Shop. j Thank you, Susan and everyone else for the [j wonderful vacuum cleaner. R.Drinks and Entertainment at the Baroque.M:le cat, year old, needs home.Clean, healthy, charming. 684-7927.IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYWEEK Sunday, January 21, 6:00 P.M.* Ecumenical Supper and Address in Swift| Commons. Jerald Brauer, Academic Dean ofDivinity School, will speak on: "Ecumenism,j Now What?" (For Reservations—$1.00—go toI Brent, Bonhoeffer, Calvert or ChapelHouses).The mind boggles —The Bandersnatch 69-er Sundae.Compare Alpha Delt with the rest.We can't be all things to all people;But we are a lot of things to a fewDon't miss our smokers this Monday.Ich habe Winter germ.AFTER THE SIX DAY WARPrcf. N. C. Bassiouni, Law School, De PaulUniversity, Egyptian and American trainedexpert on International Law. In conversationat Hillel. Tuesday, 7:45 P. M.The Catholic Church is the last sanctuary fori intellectuals.Dragging along in a mid-winter slump?SWAP can help you fill in your empty hours.Something nouveau February 17, Baby.IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYj WEEK Ecumenical Service in Rockefeller. ISunday Jan. 21, 11 a.m. Preacher: Father |Andrew Greenley.CONCERTS!! WORKSHOPS!! LECTURES!!j The UC Folk Festival is coming. February2, 3, and 4. Get tickets while they last atMandel Hall Box Office."The psychedelic elbow has something up hissleeve."| MARC P: Thanks for the super photograph.If there is a plurality, things must be just ,j as many as they are, neither mere nor less. ‘Nu Pi Sigma Panell: WOMEN: WHAT CAN IYOU DO AFTER COLLEGE? Details—Seecalendar of events.IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITY ;WEEK: Ecumenical Service. Chapel House.Monday, Jan. 22, 4 p. m.Dodging a term paper? See SWAP for theperfect excuse. Ida Noyes.Alpha Delta Phi RUSH SMOKER. MondayJan. 22. 7:30 to 10. 5747 University.If you can't fly to New York for the week-i end, eat at the BANDERSNATCH. DELAT BLUES, BLUEGREASS R8.B, OLDTIMEY, BAGPIPE, AND BAHAMAN MU¬SIC!!! All at the UC Folk Festival: Feb. 2,3, and 4. Get your tickets now!LIVE BAND SAT NITE 8:30 DELTA UPSI-LON — 5714 WOODLAWN. ERROR — DeltaUpsilon Party on Sat. at 5714 Woodlawn isI epen only to rushees and friends.IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYWEEK— Ecumenical Service in Rockefeller— Thursday, Jan. 25, 4 p.m.— Preacher: Father John Houdros— Pastor of St. Andrew Greek— Orthodox Church, ChicagoWANTED: BLUEGRASS musicians to formband. Call Phil, 324-0277.Like Persona? Ha! See SEVENTH SEAL.I'm gonna be your baby tonight.GALLA: Antique pocket watches. 538 N.Michigan Ave.IN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYWEEK Ecumenical Service at Brent House,Wednesday Jan. 24, 4 p.m.Young female undergred wants to room orshare apt. with 2 or more male studs. CallArne, 363-0718.In spite of the odd name, "Hyde'n Seec", at1621 E. Hyde Park Blvd., this Antique-Giftshop now carries some groovy new items.Beside these mentioned in our ad on page 3,we have:•A couple of super little lamps ,top shelf-Front Room) for lighting incense etc., by. . . this is for those of you who are sick ofwine-bottle candleholders.•For those who aren't, we have huge jugs— perfect for candles.•For anyone interested in the super-camp-frsmed pictures, religious and otherwise,which must be seen to be believed.•For Rocking Chair Connoisseurs-highlypolished and comfortable rocking chairs im¬ported from Iowa.•For grandmothers, a setee.•For anyone hip to seeing and touchingtiny, beautiful objects—an assortment of em¬bossed boxes, a little polished wooden mask,ar.d some odd glass things.•For the Wash Prom (or other?)—oldbeaded purses.Study each object carefully, for one rea¬son or another, whether usefulness, beauty,or pop-art . .. they're all "treasures."Or transform your apartment or dorm roomwith a set of Carnival Glass (used to begiven away for prizes at Country Fairs-noware prized antiques!).After Bonnie and Clyde, ManKynde, SeventhSeal, Robert Creeley ... Before, After, Bet¬ter than Anything!THE BAROQUE COMPASSprovisations and Satire plus music byMARTIN YARBROUGHHarper Theater Coffee House,5238 Harper, Friday and Saturday,9 P. M. — 2 A. M.C'mon Ingmar! Chess is not a matter of lifeor death.Hey, can you spare two hours and a cupfulof Geometry (French, English, etc)? SWAPneeds you.JEWISH ART IN THE CHRISTIAN MIDDLEAGES. A slide illustrated lecture by Prof.HERBERT KESSLER, Art Departmentand the College.Sunday January 21st 7:30 P. M.HILLEL HOUSE 5715 WoodlawnIN CELEBRATION OF CHURCH UNITYWEEK Ecumenical Service at BonhoefferHcuse — Tuesday Jan. 23, 4 p.m.Unclaimed mink, beaver, muskrat, squirrel,some real groovies. James Schultz Cleaners.1363 E. 53rd. Set up a detailed plan and tonight begin.Russian taught by highly experience nativeteacher. Rapid method. Trial lesson — nocharge. Call CE 6-1423 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.j Happiness does not reside in cattle or gold.! The soul is the dwelling place of one's goodor evil genius.TUTOR WANTEDI To teach Italian two evenings a week. Call1 Mrs. E. Snyder. 561-4540 or RA 8-5132.COMING EVENT1968 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION!!! MockRepublican nominating convention, January27. Contact John Turner, 1503 Henderson, FA4-9500 to be a delegate.WANTEDVULTURE, Culture.PHOTOGRAPHERS: The Maroon can use allmanner of photographs, we simply need peo¬ple to take them. Come up to the ThirdFloor of Ida Noyes sometime and talk toPhoto Editor David Travis. Unlimited Ex¬posure.BE A STATISTIC! Volunteers needed for anexperiment on visual and auditory acuity.One hour on interesting tasks. If interestedcall Ext. 4774.NEW DEAN OF STUDENTS. No experiencenecessary.CONCERTYes there is a UC Concert Band. It's evengiving a concert January 28.WORKStudents interested in assuming the respon¬sibilities for the Chemistry and Physics sec-rions of the bookstore should call AllanAbramson, Ext. 8227. Hours flexible.DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER needed, 2mornings per week, days flexible. $1.25/hr.5438 Harper. Please call Ella Zonis. 363-3112.Folk Guitar Teacher for advance (kind of)student. 324-0439.FOR SALEUnclaimed Antique Furs and Fur FabricCoats for Sale. James Schultz. 1363 E. 53rdSt.Sitar $325.00 and Bengal tiger skin rugmounted at $1000,00. CE 6-1122.CAFE EUROPA FOR SALE. 1440 E 57th St.Call 363-4732 After 6 p.m.Double Bed, Exc. Cond. $25. 752-1335.NEVER WARN HEAVY SWEATER HANDMADE IN SPAIN. FIT MALE AND FE¬MALE (med-large). 684-5086.CARS FOR SALE'56 Mercury Two-Door Hardtop,haggle. Call 667-4989 evenings. $150— will1961 Rambler. Good condition. Starts well incold weather, as good heater.392-0970 after 7. $350. CallAustin-Healy Sprite, '66. White$1395. Mike Orloff. CA 7-3203. Exc. Cond.NOTICEThe views in the classified ads, no matterhow conflicting and contradictory, are theviews of the editors.% ■ i'll IJanuary 19, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 710,000 BOOKS GO ON SALE !It's that time again.The Bookstore’s gigantic hexacentennialstock clearance sale begins Tuesday January 23rd.1/2 PRICE !Huge quantities of titles in Medicine, Literature, Mathematics, History, Physics, Political Science,Business, Chemistry, Religion, Biology, Philosophy and Egyptology plus more at xk price.ONE WEEK ONLY !First come, first serve.Sale continues only as long as stock lasts.General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago 5820 S. EllisTHE CHICAGO MAROON Janvxiry 19, 1968i