VOL. 76, NO. 43 FoundedIn 1892CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1968 12 PAGESDr. King's Death Stirs Campus;University Closes for the DayWL PROCESS *? m'n It*The Maroon — BETH GOLDRINGMILITARY IN WOODLAWN: Army troops patrol a Woodlawn business street after scattered incidentsbroke out over the weekend.THREE ARRESTEDMarchers Clash With TroopsBy ROB SKEISTStaff WriterThree hundred demonstrators,mostly white, got a small tasteSaturday afternoon of the violenceand tenseness in Chicago as theymarched to the Chicago Ave. Na¬tional Guard armory with leafletsand were met with bayonets.About 35 University students tookpart in the demonstration and atleast three of them were arrested.The confrontation stemmed froma noon vigil and rally in honor ofthe late Rev. Dr. Martin LutherKing, Jr. in the Civic Center. Whenpolice ordered participants to dis¬perse because they had no permit,the group decided to walk to theArmory, a mile away, and per¬suade National Guardsmen to re¬frain from violence.As the demonstrators reachedthe Armory, about 300 soldiersMISPRINTThe Maroon will next pub¬lish Tuesday, April 15. Dueto a misprint in The Ma¬roon's publication calendar,no advertisements werecontracted for this Fridayand, consequently no pa¬per could appear withoutconsiderable financial loss. emerged and confronted themabout four abreast with fixed bay¬onets, ordering them off the side¬walk. Several demonstrators scat¬tered copies of a “Plea to theTroops,” urging the soldiers not tokill people in the ghettos and to“go home to your families.”Demonstrators FleeThe soldiers, pressing bayonetsagainst the front line of demonstra¬tors, forced them into the streetswhile Chicago police ordered themaway from the Armory.Several demonstrators wereroughed up and a few wereknocked to the ground, beaten, anddragged away. Reports circulatedthat a few demonstrators werehospitalized for bayonet wounds.Soldiers shot off two cannistersof tear gas into the demonstrators,and the use of mace was reported.Twenty-eight demonstrators werearrested and charged with dis¬orderly conduct, obstructing thework of a police officer, and re¬sisting arrest, according to SteveKindred, one of those arrested.Christopher Hobsen, a graduatestudent in political science, andMitch Hilton, ’71, were alsoarrested.The AftermathWhen the demonstrators werecleared off the block, soldiers were placed at arms-length all aroundthe building. Ten soldiers guardedthe entrance to the tennis courts inback of the Armory. About a hun¬dred demonstrators were left inthe area.Some had come to the noon gath¬ering of Students for a DemocraticSociety, Student Mobilization Corn-Turn to Page 4 By JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorThe University will be closed to¬day in honor of the late Rev. Dr.Martin Luther King, who was as¬sassinated Thursday evening inMemphis. All normal Universityfunctions will be suspended, exceptfor the dormitories and hospitalswhich will be open as usual.Among other effects of the as¬sassination and subsequent riots inChicago on the University commu¬nity were:•A Friday night exodus of blackstudents from the dormitories;•A Saturday afternoon memori¬al service in honor of Dr. King;•The cancellation of all Satur¬day evening Liberal Arts Confer¬ence events following the imposi¬tion of a city-wide curfew for peop¬le under 21 years old;•The emigration of a sub¬stantial number of students fromapartments in Woodlawn;•A mass meeting of Woodlawnyouths on the Midway;•The cancellation of all eventsscheduled for Monday evening andTuesday, including the planningmeeting of the Young Democratsand the tuberculosis tests for third-year students; and•Plans to aid the riot victims.But the overall reaction of theUniversity community to the week¬end’s events was fear.One girl in New Dorms put itsimply. “I found it hard to realizethat I’m in a riot area. Here I amfrustrated by being uninvolved andyet very frightened to become in¬volved.”Rumors were rampant through¬out the dormitory system es¬pecially, and few students both¬ered to check out the validity ofthe stories that they heard.Black Student Walk OutAmong the first students to bealaimed by the potential violence The MaroonSLAIN LEADER: Dr. King, speak¬ing in Mandel Hall recently.were black radicals in the dormi¬tories. They met in Ida Noyes Hallearly on Friday and decided thatall black students should at leasttemporarily move outside of thedormitory system if violencereached Hyde Park.Some sources reported that thiswas due to a feeling that theirpresence in the dormitories mightbe detrimental to the black move¬ment. Other sources stated thatthe blacks left because they wereafraid of “genocide” and a whitereaction against them in the dor¬mitories themselves.After the exodus, however, manyof the black students feared mas¬sive retribution by the administra¬tion for their mass exodus fromthe dorms. They were informed byseveral authoritative sources, how¬ever, that there would categor-Turn to Page 3Rangers, Disciples Hold Peace TalksBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorAbout 2000 Blackstone Rangersand East Side Disciples massedon the Midway late Sunday after¬noon and officially buried the hat¬chet. Leaders of the two teen-ageWoodlawn groups agreed to abol¬ish gang warfare and unite towork for the betterment of thecommunity.Sunday’s mass meeting climaxeda four day effort to “keep thingscool” in Woodlawn—an effortwhich was largely successful. “Itwas all their own idea,” accordingto Chuck LaPaglia, a staff workerfor the First Presbyterian Church The Maroon _ laszlo kondorwhich has worked closely with the MASSED ON THE MIDWAY: 2000 Blackstone Rangers and Eastgangs. “They objected to the pres- Side Disciples band together temporarily to aid the communityTurn to Page 3 recovery effort.ioRavin Appointed Biology Division MasterArnold W. Ravin Arnold W. Ravin, 46, has beennamed master of the Biology Col¬legiate Division and associate deanof the College and the Division ofthe Biological Sciences.He also will serve as professorin the Department of Biology. Theappointments are effective inSeptember.Ravin will direct undergraduateeducation in biology and coordinatethe relationship of undergraduateand graduate biology training. Hewill also continue research in bac¬terial genetics and evolution and inDNA-mediated transformations.Ravin, who has been a facultymember of the University of Ro¬ chester since 1953, is a former deanof the University of Rochester Col¬lege of Arts and Science. He isauthor of more than 50 major pub¬lications including The Evolution ofGenetics.Ravin has held a special researchfellowship from the National Can¬cer Institute for study in Belgiumand France. He was recently pre¬sented with the Edward P. CurtisAward for Excellence in Under¬graduate Teaching.‘Important Contributions’Dr. Leon 0. Jacobson, dean ofthe Division of the Biological Sci¬ences and Joseph Regenstein pro¬ fessor of biological and medicalsciences said “Professor Ravin isa distinguished scientist whosecombined knowledge of adminis¬tration, biological research, and ed¬ucation will be an important con¬tribution to the growth of biologi¬cal education at the University.Dean of the College, Wayne C.Booth, said that Ravin “willstrengthen our undergraduate pro¬gram in biology. He will providethe leadership needed in develop¬ing new curricula, strengtheningthe faculty, and improving faculty-student relations. Under his direc¬tion we can continue to provide one of the best college programsin the country.”Ravin holds a B.S. from. CCNYand an M.A. and Ph.D. from Col¬umbia. He served on the facultiesof both institutions and spent twoyears as a research fellow in theLaboratoire de Genetique of theUniversity of Paris before joiningthe faculty of the University of Ro¬chester in 1953.While at Rochester, he alsoserved for three years as chair¬man of the Department of Biology.He recently spent a year as a visit¬ing professor at the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley.Chicago To Observe National Viet Day, April 15Faculty at the University of Chi¬cago have joined colleagues at in¬stitutions across the country inplans to observe next Monday, Ap¬ril 15, as a “National Day of Con¬science” on the Vietnam war.While all scheduled classes willbe held, several faculty members,mostly in the College, reportedlyintend to discuss the war in theirclasses on that day.Dean of the College Wayne C.Booth and the Committee of theCollege Council are informing Col¬lege faculty this week that a Stu¬dent Government request to dis¬miss classes Monday has not beenapproved.However, Booth added a person¬al note that he felt justified in us¬ ing his class time to discuss the re¬lation of his subject, the rhetoricof Aristotle, to the war. He added,however, that he was “not presum¬ing to advise other faculty abouttheir own course,” he told TheMaroon.The day of conscience is beingsponsored nationally by an adultgroup opposing the war and sup¬porting students who decide to re¬sist the draft.Programs at Chicago are beingplanned by several co-operatingfaculty groups, according to Rich¬ard Flacks, assistant professor ofsociology.Special ProgramsSpecial programs planned forMonday include the following:Friday 8:30 P.M. May 3OPERA HOUSE$6.00-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00MAIL ORDER ONLYEnclose Stamped Self-Addressed Envelope.Box Office - 20 N. WackerBox Office Tickets onMon., April 15thExclusively onWarner Bros. Records. IN PERSON-*c?eter, ah uland cfliary •A session with Richard C. Lew-ontin, professor of zoology, and oth¬er faculty members who have hadtraining in draft counselling. Theywill discuss students’ questionsabout the draft, at 10:30 a.m. inQuantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall.• “No More Vietnams,” an openmeeting to discuss United Statesforeign policy on Latin America, at1:30 p.m. in Quantrell Auditorium.Leading the discussion will be Eu¬gene Gendlin, assistant professor of psychology and philosophy; Mar¬lene Dixon, assistant professor ofhuman development and sociology;and Richard Levins, associate pro¬fessor of mathematical biology andzoology, who taught for severalyears at the University of PuertoRico.•“Politics and the Present Cris¬is,” a discussion of appropriatepolitical action on the war, withMarc Galanter, associate profes¬sor of social sciences, and other members of the Soc II staff, at 3p.m. in Quantrell Auditorium.•A memorial service commem¬orating the war dead in Vietnam,conducted by the Rev. E. SpencerParsons, dean of Rockefeller Chap¬el, in the chapel at 8 p.m.•The film “Inside North Viet¬nam,” by Felix Greene, shown byAlice’s Restaurant, at 8 and 10 p.min Quantrell Auditorium. The filmis also being shown Sunday eve¬ning, same hours and place.{Lfcic mmm otftR180SCM Secretarial 250 at this low School Price• Regular list price $250.0000 * • Full 12” carriage with Auto Return• All Repeat Functions . . , ^• Rental Purchase plan available h(f;, in?>.• School Price available to students and Faculty onlyFOR INFORMATION CALL 928-7829* This offer good only through J & R Office Machines,mauthorized distributor office typewriter division.Roger Corman’s THE RAVENPeter Lorre in the title role. With Boris Karloff and Vincent Price. CinemaScope.At 9:00 in Cobb Hall. 754 Tomorrow night. But come early for experimentals,including UN CHIEN ANDALOU. Doc Films. CANOE TRIPSCruise and explore the Quetico-Superior wilderness by way of theOjibway and Voyageur. Fish vir¬gin lakes, relax, and have fun1Only $8.00 per diem, less foegroups of 10 or more. Write: BILLROM, CANOE COUNTRY OUT¬FITTERS. BOX C. ELY. MINN."LARGE PHOTOGRAPHICPOSTERS"From Snapshotsof your dance, graduation, athletic team, school band, etc. Anysmall size document, snapshot, certificate, diploma, etc., can bemade into a large photographic poster. Made by professionalswith true photographic quality at HELIX LIMITED, Chicago Illinois.All snapshots returned with your poster. Satisfaction guaran¬teed or your money back.Send any size snapshot (Black & White or Color) together withyour check or money order for $3.50. (Tax, handling & shippingcharges included).To:HELIX LIMITED321 West Huron Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610First 18 x 24 poster from your snapshot $3.50Each additional poster from the same snapshot 2.50NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE ZIP Send TheMaroonHome!Wild Screen: UN CHIEN ANDALOUBunuel and Dali’s experimental. Also George Kuchar’s CORRUPTION OF THE DAMNED. All at 7:15 tomorrow nieht in Cnhh754. Then stay for THE RAVEN at 9:00. Doc Films. 8 ' t0bb Hall<i c . n :x o: i 4 ! I 50IWM .3:1; c w n^.ioni fTHE CHICAGO MAROONTViY-', f- WYv'Tr/ April 9, 19684f A *' + \ i«* fr tiXptri !A! They Can Burn the Place Down'The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISJACKSON PARK BIVOUAC: Blackstone Rangers' warning sign contrasts with warning symbol ofanother authority — U.S. Army troops airlifted from Fort Hood, Texas.University Shaken by King's MurderContinued from Page 1ically be no disciplinary punish¬ment for students who stayed outof the dormitories over the week¬end.Some thirty students were esti¬mated to have taken part in thewalk-out, with most of them return¬ing by Sunday evening.‘Guilt Feelings’On Saturday morning there was a short memorial for the lateNobel Peace laureate, followinga Liberal Arts Conference speechby Edgar Z. Friedenberg.Friedenberg, a sociology profes¬sor at the Buffalo campus of theNew York State University,blamed much of the fear in HydePark on what he termed the “guiltfeelings” of the white majority.Quaker House Offers AidWest Side FamiliesThe Quaker House at 5615 S.Woodlawn Ave. is set up as a col¬lection center to aid people on theWest Side displaced by the riots.Food, blankets, clothing, medicalsupplies, and money may bebrought there for distribution tovarious relief centers. Checksshould be made out to the Amer¬ican Friends Service Committee, aspokesman said.Students are needed to canvassfor food and to sort food and cloth¬ing. Cars are needed, and blackThe Maroon - LASZLO KONDORCASUALTY: White helps injuredNegro in Saturday disturbance. people are needed to drive them.Many people whose homes weredestroyed need places to stay.Those who have room should callthe Quaker House, 363-1248.The Southern Christian Leader¬ship Conference (SCLC), which theRev. Dr. Martin Luther Kingfounded and headed, is collectingmoney to'bail’out ghetto residentsarrested during the past weekend.The SCLC office, at 5406 S. Dor¬chester Ave., can be reached atDO 3-1348 or DO 3-1485.The Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Conference headquartersat 5200 S. Harper Ave. is also as¬sisting those affected by the riots.Dinner FastArthur Hochberg, 70, a memberof Students for a Democratic So¬ciety, suggested to Dean of Stu¬dents Charles D. O’Connell that aplan be instituted whereby stu¬dents could agree to give up din¬ners, with the money saved in foodcosts being given to the AmericanFriends Service Committee.Hochberg presented the plan onbehalf of an ad hoc group to aidthe ghettoes and to arrange bailfor those unable to pay it them¬selves.The plan has been adopted byO’Connell, who said “I’m delightedwith it. It was a splendid sugges¬tion. I hope students will cooperatewith the idea.” The plan will be ineffect from Monday to Friday ofnext week.Special Vietnam Convocation GroupFaculty Resist, and Alice’s Restaurant PRESENT:Felix Greene’sINSIDE NORTH VIETNAMApril 14 & 15 at 8:00 & 10:00 P.M.U. of Chicago, Cobb Hall, Quantrell Aud,$1.25 Admission, Students 754 Following the Friedenbergspeech there was a period in whichspeakers rose to address the audi¬ence in the Quantrell Auditorium.Their comments varied from As¬sistant Dean of the College KarlBemesderfer’s “I pity America” toa far stronger denunciation ofwhite racism by Steve Kindred, aleader of Students for a Democra¬tic Society.E. Spencer Parsons held a mem¬orial service for King at 4 p.m. Sa¬turday which some 1500 to 2000people attended, the Liberal ArtsConference being rescheduled toaccomodate the service.Curfew Stops ConferenceLate Saturday afternoon MayorRichard J. Daley announced a cur¬few for all people under 21 yearsof age. As a result of this curfew,which extends from 7 p.m. to6 a.m., the program of movies andthe Screwball which werescheduled for Saturday night, wascancelled.According-’ td* Sam Bernstein,president of Doc Films, the filmswill be rescheduled for later in thequarter, as will the Doc Films pre¬sentation scheduled for tonight,and all subsequent nights when thecurfew is in effect.As a result of the curfew mostundergraduates were isolated intheir dormitories for both Saturdayand Sunday nights. Many studentsignored the curfew, going up toEvanston to hear Simon and Gar-funkel, or just wandering aroundHyde Park.Captain Michael Delany, head ofTun to Page 8 Continued from Page 1ence of army troops in their neigh¬borhood, but they objected evenmore to the violence.”The agreement—between JeffFort, leader of the Rangers, andDavid Barkasdale, leader of theDisciples, was designed to demon¬strate that the groups are viable,effective forces in their commun¬ity which will have to be dealtwith by the power structure, ac¬cording to LaPaglia.“There was an implicit threat intheir mass rally in front of the Uni¬versity that if they are notdealt with, they can bum the placedown,” LaPaglia stated.Keeping It CoolLaPaglia stated that there wasvirtually no rioting over the week¬end in the Ranger territory east ofWoodlawn, although there wassome looting east of Woodlawn inDisciple territory. He attributedSERVICEto your satisfactionQUALITY WORKon allforeign and sports carsby trained mechanicsBody work ir paintingTOWINGFree Estimates on ALL Work326-2550.ESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours: Daily 8-7Sat. 9-510% Student Discounton Repair Order Parts.Convenient to all majorexpressways, Lake Shore-Drive. 1C, and “El”. this difference to stronger organ¬ization among the Rangers.LaPaglia said that on Fridayafternoon, students marched outof Hyde Park High School andthreatened to bum Mt. CarmelHigh School down. Ranger leaderFort single-handedly prevented theburning, LaPaglia said, andworked to keep the level of vio¬lence down throughout the. tenseperiod.LaPaglia said that the Ranger-Disciple efforts received only min¬imal cooperation from the police.“They threatened an injunctionagainst the Rangers, and if a localcommander hadn’t stuck his neckout the meeting would never haveoccurred,” he stated.Will the Ranger-Disciple trucelast? “Their intent was to showtheir power in the community,”LaPaglia says. “It’s a gamble thatis totally dependent on whetherthe city agrees to work withthem.”** 'J* * ' * “**\..V * The Maroon — LASZLO KONDORHOLOCAUST ON THE WEST SIDE: Firemen fight flames in a storeon West Madison St. during the second night of riots there.ST. MARGARET’S CHURCHThe Episcopal Church of South Shore2555 E. Seventy-third St. BA 1-5505Palm Sunday8:00 a.m. Low mass9:00 a.m. Procession of Palms; Singing ofthe Passion; Sung Mass with in-. cense11:00 a.m. Choral Eucharist, Singing of thePassionMonday - 7 and 9:30 a.m. CommunionTuesday -7 a.m. and 5:45 p.m. CommunionWednesday - 7 and 9:30 a.m. CommunionThursday - 7 a.m. Low Mass6:15 p.m. - Sung mass and processionthe Altar of Repose followed bydinner in honor of the Last Supper.Watch before the altar until 12:00midnight.Good Friday - 12 noon to 3:00 p.m. - Preaching ofSeven Last Words8:00 p.m. - Liturgy and Venerationof the Cross.Holy Saturday - 6:00 p.m. - Lighting jof PaschalCandle and First Mass of theResurrectionEaster Day8:00 a.m.9:00 a.m.I 1:00 a.m. Low MassSolemn Mass with sermonChoral Eucharist and sermonTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.lO yrs. exp,MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. I Antonioni’s L’AVVENTURAAntonioni called BLOW UP the reverse L’AVVENTURA. One of the Master's most revealing statements aboutalienation in the modern world. Tonight. Mandell Hall, 7:15 and 9:30. $1. Doc Films.dew*—ft——April 9, 1968 ■ .i,- x,—, f >«K »-+—THE CHICAGO MAROON 3Honor King with Action — DavisContinued from Page 1mittee, and Women for Peace.Rennie Davis, a leading whitecommunity organizer and anti-warworker in Chicago, spoke briefly ofKing as “a great American” andasserted that the best way to honorhim was “to launch a campaignfor white Americans to give sup¬port to the cause of self-determina¬tion for black Americans.”Four ActionsDavis proposed four actions:• Gathering food for familiesburnt out during the riots;• Establishing a legal aid com¬mittee for those arrested duringthe riots;• Urging churches and individ¬uals to find space for familiesburnt out; and• Holding a “teach-in for theNational Guard troops, to focus at¬tention on the fact that the re¬sponse to ghetto problems hasbeen violence, and that we do notapprove.” He then suggested thatthe demonstrators go to theArmory.At that point, police interruptedDavis and told him that the grouphad no permit for a rally at theCivic Center and was thus gatheredillegally.Davis announced to the demon¬strators that “our real purpose”was to talk to the National Guards¬men, and the group marched to theArmory.One man who stood out from theconfusion was Staughton Lynd, rad¬ical historian at Chicago State Col¬lege. Lynd walked in the street,about three feet away from a lineof soldiers who stood with theirbayonets raised, and talked tothem.‘Not the Answer’“Guns and bayonets are not theanswer to the problems in the ghet¬to.” he told them, pointing out ofthe poor job opportunities and badliving conditions that ghetto resi¬dents face every day. He said that“most of the people killed in New¬ark and Detroit didn’t have weap-The Maroon — BILL NOWLINARMORY MARCH: Demonstratordisplays bayonet wound.w foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!^ 'foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 ons. They killed because NationalGuardsmen got frightened andfired away.”Bayonets are an inappropriate re¬sponse to leaflets, he added. “Wehaven’t any guns. ... We justcame to talk to you.”Clark Kissinger, a white commu¬ nity organizer, said that he and afew other demonstrators spoke tosoldiers on another side of the.building. Late in the afternoon,Kissinger, Lynd and about a dozenothers made plans to leaflet otherNational Guard armories on a reg¬ular basis.Beadle StatementFollowing is the text of the statement released by PresidentBeadle Sunday afternoon:The University of Chicago will be closed Tuesday, April 9 inobservance of the Reverend Martin Luther King’s funeral. All classesare cancelled for that day, the University libraries will be closed, andall administrative offices will also be closed. The closing of all classesincludes those in the College, the professional schools, the graduatedivisions, the University Extension divisions, and the UniversityLaboratory School. DANCt DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS 1N AMERICATHE LONELY GENERATION ANDTHE SEARCH FOR TRUTHby CARLO PIETZNERDirector Camphill Movement, USA(Sheltered Villages for the Mentally Retarded)Loneliness and alienation are here seen in a new dimension,leading to a western understanding of Reincarnation and a WesternApproach to Meditation.(Reprint of a Lecture)Copies sent at no chargeRUDOLF STEINER INFORMATION CENTER211 W. Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016 Rip out this ad now and bring it toCheetah this weekend for aSPEC'L UNIV. of CHICAGOSTUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR. $3.30 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL* 212 NORTH MICHIGANj croup sales: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Qieetah for 502000WIDE OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 8 P.M.jOur Space DepartmentBig. This year even bigger. Some Chevrolet Tri-Levels are longer. Some wider. Some with morecargo room. Size up Impala. Nothing in its fieldcomes as big. 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Only the leader could make it happen.? ’■ «.M.i :THE CHICAQQ flAROON April 9, f96Q, ■ * • *. >•< • t . « a a a • * « A X » >. ■ W* . .VSUI *. . . * * »WVi M>*Friedenberg Hits University as SanctuaryThe Maroon — BRUCE NORTONEdgar Z. Friedenberg By CAROLINE HECKEditorial AssistantEdgar Z. Friedenberg, professorof social foundations and sociologyat the State University of NewYork at Buffalo, addressed a half-filled Quantrell Auditorium Satur¬day norning on “The BesiegedSanctuary of the University.”Friedenberg opened his remarkswith a quote from “Richard II” anda comment on the death of theRev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.Throughout his speech and the en¬suing commentary by a studentpanel, discussion alternated be¬tween the topic of the universityin general and its relation and re¬ action to the assassination of Dr.King.Friedenberg’s speech centeredabout the statement, “The univer¬sity ought to answer ‘yes’ to thequestion; is it a privileged sanctu¬ary.”Society Hates Us“Society hates and fears the uni¬versity,” Friedenberg said. “Theuniversity is the consequence of so¬ciety’s exclusion of young peoplefrom any full or rewarding parti¬cipation in the economy. The uni¬versity is an open threat to the so¬ciety and to the aspirations ofmany of its members in manyways.”Friedenberg quoted Alexis de-Janowitz Predicts End of Draft SoonBy JUDIE RESELLEditorial AssistantMorris Janowitz, chairman ofthe Department of Sociology, pre¬dicted Friday afternoon that theSelective Service System will beabolished within 16 months.Janowitz’s predition came in aseminar held during the LiberalArts Conference on “The Possibil¬ities of a Military Coup.”Janowitz is a longtime critic ofthe draft and author of severalarticles proposing voluntary mili¬tary service. He suggested that twoyears of compulsary national serv¬ice-including non-military servicemay become an alternative tothe draft.Janowitz said he also anticipatesa future problem of assimilation ofVietnam veterans into the econo¬my and society.“For example,” he said, “oneDean Rates LACWell Attended“I think LAC ‘68 was a goodconference despite the circum¬stances under which it took place,which certainly were depress¬ing. Many seminars were verywell attended and student enthus¬iasm was generally high,” com¬mented Assistant Dean of theCollege Karl Bemesderfer, an or¬ganizer of the four-day event.Compared to last year, addedBemesderfer, attendance was muchbetter, although no events drew asmany students as last year’sspeech by Cal tech physicist Rich¬ard P. Feynman.Despite Chicago’s riots, Satur¬day’s events drew crowds. out of four officers suffers a de¬cline in income when returning.”The sociologist discounted thepossibility of a military coup,pointing to the strong tradition ofcivilian leadership of the Ameri¬can military.“Civilian leadership is explicitlyconcerned with the problem of acoup and hasn’t let the military de¬velop in the same way as, for ex¬ample, the French did,” he said.Janowitz said that the militaryacts rather as a pressure groupwhich influences military policymuch as the American Medical As¬sociation influences medicalpolicy.“The real problem of civiliancontrol is not actually the militarybut the semi-secret and secret mil¬itary operations of the CIA,” hesaid. , - ' , : . .Janowitz said that he does notfeel that U.S. involvement in Viet¬nam is the result of a conspiracyof generals. “We are there becauseof a deficit of civilian politicalleadership in which the military is only one factor.”“The decision to intervene inSouth Vietnam was made by civil¬ians,” Janowitz commented andadded that it was opposed by somemilitary experts as technically un¬feasible.‘Lessons of Europe Overlearned’The root cause of the war, Jano¬witz asserted, was “overlearning”of the consequences of Americanforeign policy in Western Europe.We were successful there and usedthis for a model in SoutheastAsia.” He related SEATO to theidea of NATO and the policy ofcontainment of China in SoutheastAsia to that of containment of Rus¬sia in Western Europe.“Americans have a ‘thing’about China, stupidities in Asia arenothing new,” he said.Janowitz added that a decline inthe power of the Army through the1950’s has led to a strengtheningof the absolutist position, which isless prominent in the army thanin the other branches of themilitary. Tocqueville once to the effect thatAmericans recognize no enclaveswhere the law of the land shouldnot be applied with uniformity.Friedenberg said, “I see the uni¬versity as such an enclave.”Several of Friedenberg’s po¬sitions coincided more with studentviews than with those of Universi¬ty administrators’.Speaking of Dow Chemical re¬cruiters coming to campus Frie¬denberg said, “Dow and militaryrecruiters ought not to be allowedon campus. What Dow recruitersare recruiting for is not consistentwith the humane principles thatunderlie the university.”‘You’re Wrong’Of those who complain that Dowis being denied its civil rights Frie¬denberg said, “I don’t think thatthese people can be answered ex¬cept by saying, ‘No, you’re wrong;we won’t let you.’ Dow thinks—andthey are right—that the universityis subversive of the values forwhich they stand.”Following Friedenberg’s speechwere comments by a student panelconsisting of Jeffrey Blum, ’69, stu¬dent government president;Heather Booth, graduate student ineducation; Jay Lemke, graduatestudent in physics; and MelvinWald, '69. Although the entirepanel agreed with the substance ofFriedenberg’s speech, several ofthe students’ remarks criticized itas being irrelevant.Mrs. Booth said, “Mr. Frieden¬berg spoke of real problems, butthey were not particularly theproblems of the University of Chi¬cago. The University of Chicagohas already recognized itself as asanctuary.”She then brought up a questionraised by Blum, that of the sanc¬tuary-university turning its backon the real problems that surroundit, literally and figuratively. The TeamFour To CompeteIn TV College BowlA team of four students fromthe College will face a team fromImmaculata College of Immacu-lata, Pa., Sunday, on the televisionprogram “College Bowl.”The program will be broadcaston WMAQ, Channel 5 in Chicagoat 5 p.m.The University will be makingits first appearance on the pro¬gram since the 1959-60 season. Atthat time the University team wonits first match but lost its second.Each time a team wins, a $1,500scholarship grant is awarded toits college or university, while los¬ing teams receive a $1,000 scholar¬ship grant.Members of the team are LarryA. Silver (team captain), ’69; Ed¬win C. Douglass, 70; Debora A.McPherson, ’69; and John W. Mos¬cow, ’69. The team’s alternatesare Robert L. Hansen, ’69 andHenry G. Wiemhoff, II, ’68.The coach is Karl J. Bemesder¬fer, assistant dean of the Collegeand a lecturer in the socialsciences.According to high administrativesources, the team has been told“not to come back” if it loses.Moscow, who is news editor ofThe Maroon, predicted that Chi¬cago “should win by 300 points.”The team was selected throughcompetition based on the programsconducted by Bemesderfer.SAMUEL A. BELL‘BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETH«s what you need from a $10 Used 0X12Rug, Jo a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants ft Mill Re’urns at fractionof the Original cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY'piCMc/l 'pried Sdri+H/k-iG oitlon’J** REST AURAN T13 2 1 East 5 7th ST. Antonioni’s L’AVVENTURAAntonioni called BLOW UP the reverse L'AVVENTURA. One of the Master's most revealing statements aboutalienation in the modern world. Tonight. Mandell Hall, 7:15 and 9:30. $1. Doc Films.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THINEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 ^ DO 3-6666EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIllED CONTACT IENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESMONDAY LECTURES8 P.M. LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMApr. 15 Seymour M. LipsetThe Social Context of the WallaceCampaign and the Radical RightApr. 22 Adolph GrunbaumCan an Infinite Number of OperationsBe Performed in a Finite Time?Apr. 29 Edgar Z. FriedenbergSocial Class Factors in Generational ConflictMay 6 Herbert FeiglMind and Its Place in NatureMay 13 Benson GinsburgGenes and Behavior-A New Look at an Old ProblemSERIES TICKET $10. U. of C. students and faculty mayrequest complimentary tickets at Center for ContinuingEducation, Room 121, or at Central Information Desk,Adm. Bldg. We hove thenew Volvo 144.(VOLVO)WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR..INC.1120 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too!April 9, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5ROGER BLACKThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1W1Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor ....Michael SeidmanNews Editor John MoscowPhotographic Editor David Travis Literary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors ....David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergEditor Emeritus David A. SetterSick SocietyToday all of the University — even the official,“non-political” University — pays tribute to a manwho devoted his life to the non-violent pursuit of hiscivil rights cause. Yet this morning, not even five daysafter the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin LutherKing, Jr., the initial shock impact of the violence thatfollowed his death has only begun to subside.The University will re-open its buildings; the blackstudents will return to the dorms and the white stu¬dents who moved there temporarily will return to theirWoodlawn apartments; and, except for occasional di¬gressions such as Monday’s “Day of Conscience,” aca¬demic activities will return to normal. Elsewhere inthe city, the curfew will be lifted and the Army troopswill leave, followed by the National Guard and theextra-duty police; the pattern in other cities will besimilar. In the nation, Congress will probably concedepassage of the open housing legislation it has beforeit; and given the removal of U.S. troops from Vietnam,some funds may even be rechanneled into the anti¬poverty program.But come summer (or perhaps even sooner), andthe city streets will again be busy with looters andarsonists (and perhaps with more organized revolu¬tionaries), because all that will have been done will nothave been enough. Urban experts estimate the cost ofimplementing the recommendations of the Kerner Re¬port at $32 billion, but the money will not be forth¬coming because of the old backlash desire not to “re¬ward the rioters.” And so rebellion will increase andwill be met by increasing suppression in this racist so¬ciety (reports of concentration camps already construct¬ed in the West are already abundant).Yet as columnist Joseph Kraft points out, it isunfair to pardon rioting blacks by citing the behavioralcauses of their strife while at the same time morallycondemning white racists. It is a sick society white andblack, and we shall all be seeing just how sick it isin the all-too-near future.The Grass RootsIt was a remarkable sight on Sunday afternoon.A sea of black faces engulfed the Midway as theRangers and Disciples met to end one of the mostillustrious feuds in recent Chicago history. In the faceof the greater problems which affect them both, thetwo groups elected to work together in an effort toimprove their community.We have no illusions about what the agreementmeans. There will be no end to violence in Woodlawn.There will never be an end to violence there — as else¬where — until people are given some kind of stakein the society they are asked to preserve.Yet Sunday’s dramatic agreement and the eventspreceding it mark something of a turning point none¬theless. The effective control exercised by the Rangersand Disciples throughout the tense weekend demon¬strated once again the value of social organizations inunderprivileged areas and the ability of people in theghettoes to control their own neighborhoods in theirown way if given the opportunity.THE CHICAGO MAROON April 1)71968 W^The Relevant University:^ tL 'But We Are Liberals'It was the day after Martin Lu¬ther King had been shot by awhite madman in Memphis and Iwas walking south on the side¬walk next to the park by theHyde Park-Kenwood Neighbor¬hood Club. Three young black menwere walking through the parkin the other direction, and one ofthem, with some force, threw arock straight at me. It hit the topof the low cyclone fence and flewinto the air. I quickened my step.The spades, without stopping,shouted, “White motherfucker!”A minor and almost unremark¬able incident at a time whenparts of Chicago were in a stateof “insurrection.” And yet it setme to thinking. Here I am, en¬lightened, leftist, student at oneof the best universities in thecountry, concerned about socialproblems, alarmed at racism,shocked and saddened at the as-sasination of Dr. King, proponentof open occupancy, advocate ofblack power. I concede even themost militant argument of themost militant blacks.I REALIZE there are shredsof racism within me not yet ex¬posed and stamped out. I repentmy racism. I repent my South¬ern heritage. I repent my whiteheritage. I repent my ancestorsand the ancestors of my whiteneighbors who brought the blackmen here in chains. I cry out forthe sins of the white man. I cry out for the death of Dr. King. Icry out for the black, bayonneted,maced, shot, burned.I sit here typing my grief withmy school books ranged aroundme. My books for the Universitythat drove the poor black peopleout of Hyde Park. My notebooksfor the University that is drivingback the ghetto to the south. TheUniversity whose bank was partof a consortium to help racistSouth Africa. The University thatignores a black group that istrying to get housing built forthe people the University dis¬places, that shunts off to a backroom the group that is trying totutor black childern, that auto¬matically checks the ID cards ofblack people entering buildingsat night, that shuts the blackcommunity out of the closestthing it has to a community cen¬ter.HOWARD K. Smith gets on theTV and tells us how everythingis really going okay, no need toworry, progress is being made.And the University offers notone course in television. Not one.Bookstands are glutted withracist pornography. And the Uni¬versity offers one course thisquarter in pop culture One.The army is called into Chica¬go. A machine gun is set up onthe Capitol steps in Washington.And the Dean of the College jokes about urban studies in a“liberal arts conference.”And when the great mob ofblacks charges out of Woodlawnacross the Midway this summeror the next summer or fifty sum¬mers from now, when they knockout the leaded windows, andthrow in gasoline bombs, whenthe Dean of the College in Gates-Blake can smell the books burn¬ing in the Classics Library, hewill ask “Why are they attackingus?” The staff of the Humani¬ties Department will look upfrom their desks and say, “Butwe are their best friends.” TheMaster of the Social SciencesCollegiate Division will shout,“But I have always been sympa¬thetic to the black power move¬ment! We are not white mother¬fuckers, we are liberals!”But it will not matter what weask or what we shout, becausethen it will be too late. If Chica¬go is burned down, we will go toRarvard. And if Boston is burneddown, we will go to Berkeley.And if San Francisco—well, thereis always our private research,and the scholarly journals tocatch up on, and the articles onThe Importance of a Liberal Ed¬ucation, and the treatises on TheRelevance of the University inModern Society.Mr. Black, 10, is managingeditor of The Maroon.Letters to the EditorsDirection ChangeEven if massive rioting takesplace we must not allow our¬selves to use this immediate ef¬fect of long term causes, (depri¬vation of and discriminationagainst blacks by most of Amer¬ican society), as an ideology tojustify inaction in attending toour national problems.For if we do use rioting as anexcuse not to remedy the causesof discontent then we condemnourselves to a remorseless cycleof lash and backlash which canend only in the destruction of oursociety.We must stop our head shakingavoidance of reality that leadstelevision stations to play onlyviolence against a visual back¬drop of today’s burning citybuildings. The irony, intended orunintended, mocks Dr. King andavoids the thrust of his argumenton the relation between the fund¬ing of the Vietnam war and thelack of a significant effort fordomestic social improvement.His last message to us,through the medium of the PoorPeoples Campaign, was thatAmerica had one last chance tosave herself by making a placefor the poor in our societythrough acting to remove theroot causes of poverty. It is atribute to Martin Luther King’sfaith in America that he had thepersistence to carry on evenwhen he must have realized theunlikelihood of success for thisattempt.The shock of his death and thenational crisis that his assassin¬ation has brought to a head givesus an opportunity to change thedirection of our society.HENRY ETZKOWITZTeaching Assistant IDA CoupInadvertently The Maroonprinted without by-line the “Gad¬fly” criticizing the reasoning ofthe Goldsmith Committee on IDA,which was written by myself,Steve Rothkrug, and Dan Candee,all members of SDS.Nevertheless, despite the Gold¬smith Committee’s anxiety thatit should not, disaffiliation seemslikely to hurt IDA. A Washingtonperson close to IDA writes tome: “Although I haven’t talkedto anyone about IDA’s top secretmeeting this Spring to reorganize,I was told last fall by an IDAtype that if Chicago and Prince¬ton pulled out, IDA was finished.(I’m not sure if that means com¬pletely, or in its present form.)”This person adds: “Please con¬gratulate everyone on the IDAcoup.” Those who signed the SDSpetition against IDA may takethis to apply to them.CHRISTOPHER Z. HOBSONDepartment of Political ScienceStrike ViewsWe are students at the Univer¬sity of Chicago who have servedas volunteers at Chicago StateHospital during the presentstrike. Some of us are membersof Volunteer Institutional ServiceActivity at the University of Chi¬cago which has been visiting thehospital every Saturday for thepast three years.We, the undersigned, wish tomake clear our views regardingthe present strike of Illinois men¬tal health employees. We supportvery strongly the demands of theAmerican Federation of State,County, and Municipal employees.The conditions in this institution, which we have seen first hand,are a disgrace to the people ofIllinois. Until the citizens awaketo their moral responsibility, theymust all bear the guilt for ignor¬ing the State’s responsibility inmental health.The livesof most of these peo¬ple are without hope and at leastsome of them need not be. In theface of this, the legislature re¬duces the funds available.Although we agree with thestrikers in principle, we volun¬teered because of personal con¬cern for individual patients. Thepeople and the state governmentmust do something to improveconditions here and raising sala¬ries is at least a beginning that isaccepting a responsibility that iseveryone’s. We hope, above all,that the striking employees willrealize that we are on their sideand that our actions, we hope,enable them to strike withoutcausing the patients harm.SUSAN PHILLIPS, ’69And 15 other signersLetters to the editors 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 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 3usof Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800. Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in tneHyde Park neighborhood freO of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Pros Assn., puolishers of Collegiate Press Service.MAROON SPORTSDiamond-Men Open Homeless Season SaturdayBy JERRY LAPDIUSEditorial AssistantChicago’s baseball squad will getits first official crack at the localopposition with a doubleheaderagainst Northeastern Illinois StateCollege. The contest will begin at12:30 p.m. and will be played atthe 5500 N. St. Louis St. field.The squad will be forced to playall games away this year, as thenew Stagg Field Diamond is notyet completed. who played left field during the1967 season.Other returnees are expected toinclude Sam Hossin, outfield, SidUnger, first base, and Gary Le-land, pitching.Two first-year men showing ex¬ceptional promise are Roger Viceon third base and pitcher EricFurtkamp. TrackNorthwestern downed the Un¬iversity trackmen 115 to 68 in ameet held last Saturday at the vic¬tor’s stadium. NU won 15 of 19events and took second in anothernine.Finishing first for Chicago wereKen Thomas in the high hurdles, Ted Terpstra in the low hurdles,Pat Murray in the steeplechase,and Jim Haydon in the javelinthrow. Maroon competitors took allthree spots in both steeplechaseand javelin.The trackmen will compete inthe Wabash relays at Crawfords-ville, Indiana on Saturday. In Other ActionCoach Bill Moyle’s varsity ten¬nis squad will also travel to Craw-fordsville, as the squad faces Wa¬bash College Friday afternoon.The Maroon golf team will openits season Saturday by participat¬ing in the North Central Tourna¬ment at the Maplecrest LakeCounty Country Club.This year’s team, according toCoach Kyle Anderson, “has a nu¬cleus of versatile veterans return¬ing and some potentially fine new¬comers.” He predicts a successfulseason if all players fulfill theirpotential.Last year’s baseball squad wasnine and seven and, thus rackedup the best won-lost mark in 17years. The 1968 Maroons, however,will have to play without the serv¬ices of seven veterans from thatrecord-setting group.Topping the list of returningstars will be shortstop William“Wink” Pearson. Pearson hasbeen team captain for the last twoyears and was named to the 1967Chicagoland College BaseballLeague all-star team. Teaming upon the double-play combinationwill be Tom Zeason, a fine, steadyperformer, on second base.John Ryan and Dennis Cullenwill share the Maroon pitchingchores; both threw extensivelylast year with Ryan winning threegames and Cullen taking creditfor four. Catching will be handledby Jim Stankiewjcz, ajjower hitterIntercultural MeetDraws Unique 100A Creek Indian chief, a Tibetanreligious leader, a Russian diplo¬mat, and a Japanese philosopherare among the more than 100 par¬ticipants in the “Education forMankind” Conference continuingthis week in the Center for Con¬tinuing Education.No more than four participantscome from any single area of theworld, according to Sol Tax, chair¬man of the conference and profes¬sor of anthropology at theUniversity. SATELLITE TRACKING SYSTEMSEARTH STATIONS FOR COMSATRARE EARTH PHOSPHORSVIDEO TELEPHONESMICROWAVE CARRIER SYSTEMSCOLOR TELEVISIONLASER RESEARCHCABLE TELEVISIONELECTRONIC SWITCHING EQUIPMENTFLASHCUBESMISSILE TRACKING SYSTEMSENERGY STORAGEBLACKBOARD BY WIRE TEACHING SYSTEMSINTEGRATED CIRCUITSINCANDESCENT AND FLUORESCENT LAMPSSEMICONDUCTORSELECTROLUMINESCENT DEVICESTELEVISION PICTURE TUBESRECEIVING TUBESELECTRONIC SHIELDSMISSILE LAUNCH CONTROL SYSTEMSINDUSTRIAL CONTROL SYSTEMSDATA TRANSMISSION SYSTEMSAIRPORT LIGHTINGThe Conference started last Fri¬day and will continue throughThursday. It is underwritten by theBridge, a new center organized bysome 300 universities and educat¬ors to promote intercultural under¬standing.Participants range in occupationfrom the Honorable MuhammedZafrulla Khan, Justice of the Inter¬national Court at The Hague, TheNetherlands, and former presidentof the United Nations General As¬sembly, to Ian Dunlop, a cinema¬tographer who has recorded themost complete film record of theAustralian aborigine.Denise Levertovreading her poetryBreasted Hall-Fri.April 12 8:30 pm$1.00 admissionSponsored byThe Chicago ReviewSpeaker Series ■: r11 - And you still call us a phone company?We really don’t mind.After all, it wasn’t that long ago that we were just in the telephone business. Butnow, because we’re involved in so much more, we need bright college graduateswith practically any kind of degree, whether it’s in Engineering or Commerce.Ask your placement director about us. The misunderstood phone company at730 3rd Avenue, N.Y. 10017.General Telephone & ElectronicsSYLVANIA ELECTRIC PRODUCTS • LENKURT ELECTRIC • AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC CO. • TELEPHONE COMPANIESIN 33 STATES • GENERAL TELEPHONE DIRECTORY CO. • GT&E LABORATORIES • GT&E INTERNATIONALAd 46501f-' VI* 11 iff w ■ iApril 9, 196 8 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7YOU VISIT SPACE STATION ONE: The First Step In An Odyssey That Will Take You To The Stars And Beyond.Army Troops Bivouac in Jackson ParkStudents at NUSeek Social StandAbout 325 students demonstratedin front of the administrationbuilding at Northwestern Universi¬ty, yesterday afternoon, demand¬ing that the school take a standon social issues related to the Rev.Dr. Martin Luther King’s assasina-tion last week.Student representatives carriedtheir demands to the university’spresident, J. Roscoe Miller. Theirdemands were:• That Northwestern de-segre-gate its real estate holdings;• That the university supportopen housing in Evanston;Continued from Page 3Campus Security, said the policyof the University was to discour¬age curfew violations by closingdown all points in the Universitythat might attract students.Security Men on OvertimeAll of the University’s securitypolice were on duty during theweekend, working overtime. Chica¬go city police, who normally moon¬light for the University, were allon active duty, but despite the lossof manpower cars were still sentaround the University communitywith double strength teams, Del-any said.The city police were also quitecooperative with campus security,Delany said. When requests weremade for additional police protec¬tion (as when the Disciples and theRangers met on the Midway) therequests were met quickly.There are now some 3000 Armytroops camped out in JacksonPark near 67th St. They are partof the troops airlifted from FortHood, Texas, including elements ofthe Fourth Battalion of the 46th In¬fantry, and the Second Battalion ofthe 52nd Infantry.At the bivouac in the park thereare a large number of personnelcarriers, but no heavy weaponswere in evidence. The troops havehad training in riot-control, andconsist mostly of Vietnam war vet¬erans.Violence on 63rd St.On Saturday, late in the day,there was sporadic violence along63rd St. despite attempts by theB’ackstone Rangers to “keepWoodlawn cool.” Two girls in anapartment at 6106 S. Ellis Ave. al¬ legedly were raped, but while theinformation came from a reliablesource, it remained unconfirmed.Other people in the building werealso threatened. One of them wasrobbed.Three men have been apprehend¬ed and positively identified in con¬nection with the rapes.Stores along 61st St. were alsobroken into. Wonder Food storesuffered heavy damage. The factthat it was hit came as a surpriseto no students of Woodlawn life, asWonder Foods has a long recordof convictions of short-changingand price gouging.Even before the Saturday vio¬lence there had been a few inci¬dents in Hyde Park. There weretwo attempted robberies in a 15-minute period Friday night. A group of five youths attempted totake money from three studentsnear Boucher Hall, and from onenear the Field House, but failedin both instances.Rangers, Disciples MeetBut after the violence on Satur¬day the Rangers, who had metearlier in an attempt to stifle vio¬lence, met with the Disciples in aconfrontation on the Midway,where they decided that the twogangs would neither fight each oth¬er nor riot.Despite that pact more troublearose. A second-year art studentwas raped in her apartment at6033 S. Woodlawn Ave. by a groupof Negro youths. The residents of6106 S. Ellis Ave. (who were ignor¬ant of the alleged rapes there,)called up Bemesderfer and Edward Turkington, director of studenthousing, to report that they felt asthough they were under seige, andto request housing from the Uni¬versity.According to Turkington, sever¬al people were given shelter. Tur¬kington added that there is spaceopen in the dormitory system fora substantial number of students,with room rents varying from $167to $210 for the quarter pro-ratedover the period spent in the dor¬mitories.Those students just seekingemergency shelter from their pre¬vious dwellings will not be charged,Turkington said. He would notcomment on how long they might The Maroon — beth goldringbe permitted to stay without being AFTERMATH: Still smoulderingcharged, however. ruins and Army patrols.An epic drama of adventure and exploration!firir.j'• That it urge Evanston stores toclose today in honor of Dr. King;and• That it donate money to theSouthern Christian LeadershipConference.Speaking to the demonstratorsoutside, Dr. Miller said that itsholdings already were desegrega¬ted. He said that it would send Wil¬liam S. Kerr, a vice-president ofNorthwestern, to the Evanston citycouncil to support open housing.Miller said that the universitycould send money to SCLC.Northwestern is not holding clas¬ses today. MGM PRESENTS A STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION2001: a space odysseySTARRING SCREENPLAY BY PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BYKEIR DULLEA* GARY LOCKWOOD • STANLEY KUBRICK and ARTHUR C. CLARKE • STANLEY KUBRICKSUPER PANAVISION andMETROCOLORPRICE SCALE: MATS. WED , SAT & SUN at 2:00 PM. EVES. MONDAY THRU SAT AT 8:30 P M.RESERVED Orch Mezz. Bale. SUNDAYS AT 8:00 P MWednesday and Saturday . . $2 50 $2.50 $1.80 Sunday thru Thurs Eves. . . $2.90 $2.90 $2.50SEATS ONLY Sundays & Holidays* .... $2.90 $2.90 $2.50 Fri., Sat. & Holiday Eves.* . $3 80 $3 80 $2 90FoodDrinkPeople 180 N,Dearborn St. RESERVED SEATS ATBOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL!311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400J&mcrfc John Ford’s STAGECOACHThe film that broadened the Western genre to a respectable and real art form. With John Wayne, Claire Trevor, JtffiKJarradine, ThomafciMitchell.Tonight at 7:15 p.m. only. 754. Cobb HaM. Followed by SEVEN WOMEN at 9:15. Doc Filmf* • ^ ^April^ 9, M'THt CHICAGO MAROONIncreased Militancy ReflectsBlack Students' ReactionsBy WALTER GRANTCollegiate Press ServiceBlack students on some collegecampuses reacted to last week’sassassination of Dr. Martin LutherKing with violence, but most blackstudents remained peaceful andheld memorial services and sym¬pathy marches.The administrations of mostblack colleges cancelled classesafter Dr. King’s death. Classes al¬so were cancelled at many pre¬dominately white colleges and uni¬versities while memorial serviceswere being held in campuschapels.Most black students who wereinterviewed said Dr. King’s assas¬sination already has contributed tothe growth of the black militantmovement. Students who remainedpeaceful say they did so in respectf o r King’s non-violent principles,but most made it clear they thinknon-violence died with Dr. King.Riots erupted on or near sev¬eral black college campuses short¬ly after the assassination. Studentswere injured in disturbances onsome campuses.In Tallahassee, Fla.t a 19-year-old white youth was killed whenstudents from Florida A&M Uni¬versity fire-bombed a white-ownedgrocery store near the campus. Asmall band of snipers armed withsmall caliber guns and one bowand arrow took pot shots at policefrom the A&M campus, and twotrailers near the campus wereburned. Several persons, includingsome students, were injured.‘Look What Happened’During a memorial service forDr. King on the Florida A&Mcampus, President George W.Gore Jr. pleaded for the studentsto be non-violent. He was shouteddown by students who said, “Dr.King was non-violent and lookwhat happened to him.”About 300 students at Mississip¬pi Valley State Teachers Collegein Itta Bena, Miss, massed on thecampus after hearing of Dr.King’s death and began marchingto downtown Itta Bena. Police ad¬vised the students to stop, andthey refused. Two students wereinjured after police opened fire onthe students. There are conflictingreports about whether or not thestudents fired first.In Jackson, Miss., students a tJackson State College gathered onthe campus after hearing Dr. Kinghad been killed, and police imme¬diately sealed off the area withbarricades. This provoked the stu¬dents, and a disturbance began.Young Negroes overturned andburned one car, and windows werebroken by students throwing rocksand bottles.On most black campuses, how¬ever, students remained peaceful,although they were angry and bit¬ter. In Atlanta, about 1500 stu¬dents from the five black collegesthat compose the Atlanta Universi¬ty complex held a sympathymarch in a drenching rain. Themarch was led by the presidentsof the five colleges.At Hampton Institute in Hamp¬ton, Va., about 2500 students andfaculty held a sympathy march inreaction to the assassination.Lights OffStudents at Fisk University inHOST COMFLETE FHOTCAND HOBBY STOBE OtTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 I, 55 HY J-9255Student Discount* The Maroon — RANDY PRIMMMartin Luther KingNashville, Tenn. became tense af¬ter National Guardsmen werecalled in to put down a small dis¬turbance in Nashville’s Negro sec¬tion. “We were upset because weare scared of the police,” saidGloria Anderson, a Fisk coed. Shesaid female students turned offthe lights in the dormitory roomsand stayed in the halls becausethey thought police would shoot inthe windows if a riot erupted. Thenext day, about 1200 Fisk studentsparticipated in a memorial rally.At Central State University i nWilberforce, Ohio, students sent atelegram to President Johnsonasking that January 15, Dr. King’sbirthday, be set aside as a na¬tional holiday. Several hundredCentral State students, led byPresident Harry Groves, marchedfour miles to the country court¬house in Xenia to show sympathyto Dr. King’s family. ^ ^Black students on some whitecampuses also held demonstra¬tions. At Western Michigan Uni¬versity in Kalamazoo, Mich.,about 100 black students enteredthe Student Center about 6:30 a.m.the day after the assassination,and closed the building. Studentsleft the building only after the Ad¬ministration met a list of six de¬mands, including a promise to re¬examine the “racist currriculum.”‘We Shall Overcome’Students at the University ofMaryland held a rally on campus,and there were calls for racial harmony and more Negro historycourses. The students sang, “W eShall Overcome.”About 3000 students at the Uni¬versity of California at Los Ange¬les listened to a tape recordedspeech by Dr. King. Black studentleader Artie Ivie said, “If MartinLuther King can be shot down, itshows the goals and techniquesthat black people will have touse.”At San Francisco State College,a huge sign was placed in front ofthe school cafeteria. The signread, “He had a dream.” Reddrops symbolizing blood werepainted around the word dream.All campuses of the City Uni¬versity of New York were closed.About 5000 high school and col¬lege students gathered in CentralPark to mourn Dr. King’s death.One speaker, Jarvis Tyner, na¬tional secretary of the W.E.B. Du-Bois Clubs, said, “Give me free¬dom or give me death, becausethat’s what it will take to changeAmerica.” About 300 p o-lice watched the demonstration.Black students at Wayne StateUniversity in Detroit gathered i nthe Student Center under a pictureof black militant H. Rap Brownand were belligerent to white stu¬dents. Also in Detroit, three fireswere started in the Cass Techni¬cal High School building. Half ofthe students at the school areblack.Day of MourningIn Washington, D. C., studentsfrom Georgetown Universitymarched on the White House ask¬ing President Johnson to declare anational day of mourning. The stu¬dents were unaware that thePresident had made such a deci¬sion just as their demonstrationbegan. The Georgetown Universi¬ty Law School had to be closedafter riots erupted in a nearbysection of the city.About 60 students at MississippiState University held a peace vigilaround the statue of ConfederateGeneral Stephen D. Lee, who wasthe first president of MSU. Onestudent leader termed the crowdof 60 “not only surprising but re¬markable.”THE RIGHT OF REVOLUTIONAn impassioned and prophetic declaration ofrevolution that no other white man today couldeven dare to write!$4.95 ($1.45 in paperback)THE TORTURE OF MOTHERSAbout the Harlem Six. "An extraordinary moralachievement” says James Baldwin.$4.95 ($1.75 in paperback)Both by Truman NelsonBEACON PRESS BOSTON 021 OS On Campus(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,“Dobie Gillis” etc.) withMccShulmanMONEY: THE STORY OF AN ENGINEERWe all know, of course, that in this age of technologyevery engineering senior is receiving fabulous offers ofemployment, but do we realize just how fabulous theseoffers are? Do we comprehend just how keenly industryis competing? To illustrate, let me cite the true and typi¬cal case of E. Pluribus Ewbank, a true and typical senior.One day last week while strolling across the M.I.Tcampus, E. Pluribus 'was hailed by a portly and prosper¬ous man who sat in a yellow convertible studded withprecious gem stones. “Hello,” said the portly and pros¬perous man, “I am Portly Prosperous, president ofAmerican Xerographic Data Processing and Birth Con¬trol, Incorporated. Are you a senior?”“Yes, sir,” said E. Pluribus.“Do you like this car?” said Portly.“Yes, sir,” said E. Pluribus.“It’s yours,” said Portly.“Thanks, hey,” said E. Pluribus.“Do you like Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades?”said Portly.“What clean living, clean shaven American does not?”said E. Pluribus.“Here is a pack,” said Portly. “And a new pack willbe delivered to you every twelve minutes as long as youlive.”“Thanks, hey,” said E. Pluribus.“Would your wife like a mink coat?” said Portly.“I feel sure she would,” said E. Pluribus, “but I amnot married.”“Do you want to be?” said Portly.“What clean living, clean shaven American does not?”said E. Pluribus.Portly pressed a button on the dashboard of the con¬vertible and the trunk opened up and out came a nubilemaiden with golden hair, rosy knees, a perfect disposi¬tion, and the appendix already removed. “This is Svet¬lana O’Toole,” said Portly. “Would you like to marry her?”“Is her appendix out?” said E. Pluribus.“Yes,” said Portly.“Okay, hey,” said E. Pluribus.“Congratulations,” said Portly. “And for the happybride, a set of 300 monogrammed prawn forks.”“Thanks, hey,” said Svetlana.“Now then,” said Portly to E. Pluribus, “let us getdown to business. My company will start you at $75,000a year. You will retire at full salary upon reaching theage of 26. We will give you an eleven-story house made oflapis lazuli, each room to be stocked with edible furniture.Your children will receive a pack of Personna SuperStainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as theyshall live. We will keep your teeth in good repair and alsothe teeth of your wife and children unto the third genera¬tion. We will send your dentist a pack of Personna SuperStainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long ashe shall live, and thereafter to his heirs and assigns...Now, son, I want you to think carefully about this offer.Meanwhile here is 50 thousand dollars in small, un¬marked bills which places you under no obligation what¬soever.”“Well, it certainly seems like a fair offer,” said E.Pluribus. “But there is something you should know. I amnot an engineer. In fact I don’t go to M.I.T at all. I justwalked over here to admire the trees. I am at Harvard,majoring in Joyce Kilmer.”“Oh,” said Portly.“I guess I don’t get to keep the money and the con¬vertible and the Personnas and the broad, do I ?” said E.Pluribus.“Of course you do,” said Portly. “And if you’d like thejob, my offer still stands.”* * * © 1968, Max ShulraanSpeaking of wealth, if you want a truly rich, trulyluxurious shave, try Personna Blades, regular or injec¬tor, with Burma-Shave, regular or menthol. There's achampagne shave on a beer budget!.•»f v I SUNDAY/The Beatles/A HARD DAY’S NIGHTSunday april 14, 6:30-8:00-9:30, kent 107, $1, contemporary european films* •> r i JlIjMl* o «»rApril 9, .1 $68, TH&, CHICAGO MAROON: 9SDS Aids StrikeAt the MuseumCafeteria and maintenance work¬ers at the Museum of Science andIndustry are on strike for unionrecognition, while the Museum hasrejected demands for a vote to de¬termine if AFL-CIO Local 321 ofthe Building Service Workers Un¬ion shall represent the workers.A small number of members ofstudents for a Democratic societyat the University have been help¬ing the workers, on strike sinceWednesday, with picketing andleafletting.The wage scale of the employ¬ees is 85 cents to $2.60 per hour.Workers claim they are forced towork long hours with no overtimefor time and a half for workingof the leaflets records fourteen.A time card reproduced on onestraight days of work of betweentwelve and 14 hours per day.According to a union official, theMuseum anticipated the strike byindividually threatening each work¬er with loss of his job if he partic¬ipated in the strike. One workerhas been fired.A spokesman for SDS said thatthe union has requested studentsupport on the picket line. Studentsare needed any tirpe of the day ornight, he said.You won’t have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 sat.iriti'O AListen. It’s called Let's Go—The Student Guide to Europe,written by Harvard students. And it’s full of the real stuff.Like how to pour Spanish cider by holding the jug over yourshoulder and the glass behind your back. And the most successful(fully researched) ways to hitchhike in Germany. Spain. Everywhere.And, of course, places to eat and sleep that only a student could love.Take a peek for yourself. Send one little buck with coupon below.Offer good while stocks last.Oh. By the way. If you dodecide to get a student’s-eye-view of Europe, you’ll fly thereon a U.S. airline, right? Somake it TWA. The airline thatknows Europe like a book.Need further info on travelin U. S. or to Europe? Checkyou r travel agent, or you rnearest TWA office! TWA, Dept. 208, RO. Box 25, Grand Central Station, N Y. 10017Here’s my check to TWA for $1.00. Quick. Send me myLet’s Go—The Student Guide to Europe in a plain brown wrapper.Name.Address.-State. -Zip Code.My travel agent Is-upup andaway jWA•Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.THE CHICAGO MAROON April 9, 1968Co or Events of InterestPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalendar forms available at The Maroon Of¬fice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sentor brought to the Office at least two daysbefore date of publication.Wednesday, April 10INVITATION LECTURE SERIES (GraduateSchool of Business): Austion H. Kiplin-ger, the Kiplinger Washington Editors,"The Social Involvement of Business."Business East 103, 1 p.m.LECTURE (Committee on Social Thought):Marshall H. Stone, Andrew MacLeishUpset Will OpenNew Lecture SeriesSeymour M. Lipset will presentthe first of this spring’s MondayLectures next Monday on the topic“The Social Contest of the WallaceCampaign and the Radical Right.”Lipset, professor in the depart¬ments of government and social re¬lations at Harvard, will give hisaddress in the Law School Auditorium. Tickets for the series of fivelectures are $10.The spring series marks the fifthyear of the Monday Lectures ser¬ies, which have presented lecturesin sociology, philisophy of science,psychology, and biology, as well aspolitical science..Speaking on the topic “Can an In¬finite Number of Operations BePerformed in a Finite Time?” willbe Adolph Grunbaum, professorand director of the Center for Phil¬osophy of Science, at the Universi¬ty of Pittsburgh, April 22.Other lecturers include Edgar Z.Friedenberg on “Social Class Fact¬ors in Generational Conflict;” Her¬bert Feiglon “Mind and Its Placein Nature;” and Benson Ginsburgon “Genes and Behavior —A NewLook at an Old Problem.” distinguished service professor. Depart¬ment of Mathematics, and professor Inthe Committee on Social Thought "Man'sPlace in Nature." Social Science 122,4 p.m.FILM (Doc Films): "Un Chien Andalou" byDali and Bunuel; "Corruption of theDamned" by Kuchar. Both are experi¬mental films. Cobb Auditorium, 7:15 p.m."The Raven" by Roger Cormen withPeter Lorre. 9 p.m.CONCERT: (Musical Society) "ChamberWorks of Hotteterre, Telemann, Handeland Beethoven," Lexington Studios, 3:30p.m.Thursday, April 11LECTURE (Middle Eastern Center): "Con¬flicts and Tensions in Islamic Jurisprud¬ence: Revelation and Reason " N. J.Coulson. Seminar Room D, Law Quad¬rangle, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE (English): "Apollo vs. Dionysius:The Odyssean Heritage of George Seferisand Nikos Kazantzakis," Kimon Friar,translator of Nikos Kazantzakis' "TheOdyssey: A Modern Sequel," co-editorof "Modern Poetry: American andBritish" and former director of NewYork's Modern Poetry Center. Cobb 209,3:30 p.m.LECTURE (Advanced Genetics): "Biochem¬ ical Genetic Studies in Lipid Metabol¬ism," Roy Vagelos, professor and chair¬man, Department of Biochemistry Wash¬ington University, St. Louis. Ricketts,7:14 p.m.FILM: (B-J Cinema): "Ann Apurna." Jud-son Dining Room, 8:30 p.m.MEETING (Special Vietnam ConvocationGroup): Reynolds Club, 7:30 p.m.Friday, April 12LECTURE (Committee on Social Thought):"Man's Place in Nature," Marshall H.Stone, Andrew MacLeish distinguishedservice professor, Department of Mathe¬matics, and professor in the Committeeon Social Thought. Social Science 1224 p.m.LECTURE (Biochemistry): "ComparativeAspects of the Primary Structures ofProteins: A Molecular Illustration ofSome Genetic and Evolutionary Pheno¬mena," Dr. Emanuel Margoliash, profes¬sorial lecurer. Department of Biochem¬istry. Abbott 101, 2 p.m.READING (Chicago Review): Denise Lever-ton, reading her poetry. Breasted Hall,8:30 p.m.GOOD FRIDAY SERVICE: The Rev. JamesJ. Killgallon, pastor of St. AmbroseCatholic Church. Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 12 noon. PASSOVER SEDER: Hillel House. 5715 S.Woodlawn Ave., 7 p.m.FILM (Doc Films): "L'Avventura" byMichelangelo Antonioni. Mande Hall,7:15, 9:15 p.m.Saturday, April 13LECTURE (Biochemistry): See Friday, April12.CONCERT (Episcopal Student Choir): "Notesfor Holy Week" and "Gloria" (Vivaldi),Bond Chapel, 8:30 p.m.Sunday, April 14UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: TheRev. S. Spencer Parsons, RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 11 a.m.FILM (Contemporary European Films): "AHard Day's Night," the Beatles di¬rected by Richard Lester. Kent 107,'6:30,8, 9:30 p.m.FILM (Special Vietnam Convocation Group):"Inside North Vietnam," by FelixGreene, Cobb Hall, 8 and 10 p.m.COLLEGE BOWL: University of Chicago vs.Immaculata College. Channel 5, 5 p.m.Hoopla!Monday, April 15LECTURE: (Committee on Social Thought),"Biological Foundations of Individuality " Hans Jonas, Department of PhilosophyNew School for Social Research, and’visiting professor In the Committee onSocial Thought. Social Sciences 122 ap.m.WRITING EXAMTransfer and second-yearstudents who have nottaken the April 20 writingcompetency exam mustregister to write it in Gates-Blake 212 by Friday, April12. Freshmen are urged totake the exam. First-yearI students who fail are notpenalized, and are allowedJohn Ford’s SEVEN WOMENAn inquiry into the nature of Virtue, set in I930’s China, as a mission is beset by Chinese bandits. With Anne Bancroft At 9*15 tonight75C. But come early for STAGECOACH at 7:15. Cobb Hall. Doc Films. *Pssst.Wanna buy a revealing glimpseof student life in Europe for a buck?Draft Resisters Protest, Turn in 550 CardsBy College Press ServiceApproximately 550 draft cardswere turned in at demonstrationslast week, almost all of them onWednesday, the third national dayof draft resistance held during thisacademic year.This brings the total number ofdraft cards that have been turnedin or burned this year to about1,800, according to the Resistance.More than 1000 were turned in onthe first draft resistance day, Octo¬ber 16, and an additional 150 onDecember 4.The three major demonstrationsWednesday were in Boston, SanFrancisco, and New York.• In Boston about 200 personsturned in draft cards at a demon¬stration on the Boston Common be¬fore a crowd of 12,000. The cardswere sent to Presidential candidateRobert F. Kennedy, rather thanto the Justice Department as isusual. Three persons also turnedin their induction papers. • In San Francisco draft resist¬ers from throughout the Bay Areaturned in 144 draft cards to 92women, 13 clergymen, and 2 vet¬erans who will mail them to theJustice Department, making themliable for aiding draft resisters.About 2,000 people attended the ral¬ly at the federal building in SanFrancisco.• In New York 80 cards wereturned in at a demonstration beforea crowd of 2,500 in Central Park.Another 501 persons signed cardsindicating complicity with the re¬sisters. Four cards were turned inat Manhasset on Long Island andabout 20 cards are expected to beturned in at a demonstration inIthaca, New York on Friday.Other DemonstrationsIn Chicago about 15 personsmailed their draft cards to theJustice Department after a rallyat which about 250 persons heardDr. Benjamin Spock, who is underindictment in Boston for counseling draft resistance. Another six per¬sons turned in their draft cardsduring a service of conscience withseveral local ministers at the Uni¬versity of Illinois. The cards wereleft on a desk at the Champaign-Urbana draft board. •There were demonstrations inthree other major cities with 24cards turned in in Philadelphia,eight in Los Angeles, and 14 inMinneapolis. In Minneapolis onecard was also burned while twoother persons burned army dis¬charge papers. One of the Los An¬geles resisters had three possibledeferments: as a student, a minis¬ter, and a veteran.College towns were the sight ofthe other demonstrations with 30cards turned in at Yale in NewHaven, Conn.; eight at the Univer¬sity of Michigan; three at Prince¬ton Theological Seminary in NewJersey; two at the University ofNorth Carolina; and four at theUniversity of New Mexico. In New Mexico the FBI announced it wasconducting an “appropriate inves¬tigation” and one Air Force en¬listed man who was carrying asign saying “hell, no, I won’t go”was arrested by military police.As expected, there was an in¬crease over the number of cardsturned in in December, probably due primarily to the abolition ofgraduate student deferments,which draft resistance leaders sayhas greatly increased student in¬terest in their efforts. But the num¬ber of cards may have been cutback somewhat by President John¬son’s bombing pause and decisionnot to run for re-election.Drug Raid at American Univ.WASHINGTON (CPS)-Five Fed¬eral Narcotics agents roused stu¬dents out of bed at 5:30 a.m. in amarijuana raid at American Uni¬versity here Thursday.The agents said they arrestedseven students, all allegedly deal¬ers in marijuana. But universityofficials gave various other esti¬mates of the number of arrestswhich ran as high as 17. The cam¬pus newspaper, The Eagle, saidmost campus sources put the num¬ber at 13. The raid had full co-operation ofUniversity officials. Graduate stu¬dent counselors who live in thedorms “were all in coats and ties,”according to one student, who add¬ed that “they got all the dealersin the dorm.”University officials said the ar¬rested students may also face dis-•.iplinary action from the university.This is the second such pre-dawnraid this year. An earlier raid atthe State University of New Yorkat Stony Brook resulted in 34 ar¬rests on marijuana charges.Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat.For non-Unlversity clientele: 75 cents perline, 60 cents per line repeat. Count 35characters and spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212I E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSl FOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI-I DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI-I DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. 10 to 3 daily.! FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Phone| Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.■ No Ads will be taken over the phone.HOUSES FOR SALELocated in South Shore — 8 minutes fromcampus. Spacious, gracious, 8, room house,lot 40 x 125, with garage. First Floor: Liv.Rm, 18 x 26, fireplace Din. Rm, 18 x 16;St. Steel Kitchen, 10 x 16; Three tw«e :b«a-rooms and one medium sized bedroom, sec¬ond floor; air condition-insulated, largemodern bedroom on third floor. Alum. S &S. Gas Heat. Low taxes. $22,000. MU 4-1821.LEAVING UNIVERSITYMust sell 14 yr. old 2 story, all brick home.3 spacious bedrooms, liv., din. oak panelden, mod oak cabinet kitchen, refrig, stove,dishw., disp., wshr., dryer, complete aircond. w.w. cptg., drpe. Fin. Basement.Large fenced yard and patio. Lovely areaIn S. Shore nr. 80th & P hillips. Conv. trans¬portation to U.C. Upper $20's. MU 4-6100,Ext. 5017 or 731-5131.HOUSE FOR SALE AT 95th and CON¬STANCE. Three Bedroom Ranch, Appliances.Air Conditioners, Drapes, Crptg. In exd.cond. RE 4-6236.TRAVEL IN RUSSIAWANTED: 2 to share car on summer camp¬ing trip. Cheapest Way. 684-4999.TRAVELEscape Chicago? Marco Polo Travel, 288-5944.FOR SALECORVAIR-MONZA — 1965, Perfect Condition.Owner leaving Country. Call 288-2595.BATIKS — $5 to $25. Call or come by. ASH¬LEY, 5340 S. Woodlawn, 493-0856.1961 PEUGEOT. $350.00. Will Bargain. 324-7431 or 222-8372.CONCERTMUSICAL SOCIETY — Chamber Works ofTelemann, Handel. Beethoven, Hotteterre.Lexington Studio on Wednesday, April 10.3:30 P.M. FREEROOM FOR RENTROOM for MALE ADULT. Parking available.NO cooking. Laundry facilities, etc. Call after7:00 p.m. 288-1748.APARTMENTS FOR RENTSUMMER SUBLEASE END JUNE — BE¬GINNING SEPT. 7 room apt. in Hyde Park,close to everything. Call 684-1369.3'/j ROOM SUBLET. Available June 15-Sept. 15. $130/month incl. utilities. 5th floorelevator bldg. View of Loop. Call DannyBoggs, 324-6460.7 ROOMS at 5500 Block of Dorchester. 3 or< girls for Fall, 2 must Sublet this summer.643-7107.Attractive, comfortable South Shore Apt.,1 bedroom, Ivg. room dng. room, and bath.$115/month. Call 721-1786, evenings.I'/j ROOM EFFICIENCY APT. 5135 S. Ken¬wood. Furn., sep. bath and kitchen, w. freeutilities. $90/month, from May 15. Call 288-2595. SUMMER SUBLET. 56th 8, University. Com- ipletely furnished apt. with 3 bedrooms, 2baths, available June 1—Sept. 1 with optionfor the Fall. 288-2134.SOUTH SHORETWO BEDROOM MODERN APARTMENTS!on U. C. Busline. Quiet, Residential Area.CERAMIC TILE KITCHEN 8, BATHCarpeted. Free Prvt. Pkg., Ample Closets.Nr. BrynMawr 8. So. Sh. H.S.Available NOW and May 15.For appointmentCall Mrs. Block, NO '7-7630.WANTEDBABYSITTER WANTED: Reliable woman tocare for 2 children; 8:30 to 6, 5 days/week,BU 8-1100. Ext. 301.APARTMENT WANTED — 7 rooms or larg¬er. Call 324-7431.APARTMENT WANTED — 4 or 5 rooms.Starting May of Jun* A. Roberts. MU 4-6160,Ext. 6415 or 288-6122.HOUSE OR CABIN, Anywhere out of CITY.Wanted now thru Summer. Call 643-7273.WOMAN'S BIKE. USED. 666-4899.SPEAKER ON ESP. For Church YouthGroup. April 21. Sm. fee.ROOMMATES (2) to share 6 room Apt. with3rd. Summer Occupancy, option for Fall,54th and Harper. Call evenings at 752-8904.RIDE WANTED TO CALIFORNIA, pref. thisweek, for males. Will share driving and ex¬penses. Call NATE at 373-3608.Need Intelligent people with cars or accessthereto, who, for large sums of money arewilling to be on occasion NEAT, CLEAN,PERSONABLE. Part-time (and possiblysummer) positions are now open to be¬come an area rep. for RESOURCE PUBLI¬CATIONS. It's really a good deal — easywork — choose your hours — make lots ofmoney. If interested, contact Jeff Schnltzerat HY 3-2909.Student to live in attractive room in Ken¬wood home in return for occasional baby¬sitting. Call 624-8363.PERSONALTHIS RACE AND THIS COUNTRY ANDTHIS LIFE PRODUCED ME, AND 1 SHALLEXPRESS MYSELF AS 1 AM.This Weekend's "RIOTS" were brought toyou courtesy of Chicago's Yellow Journalism.Thanks.MARY — What next?!The Blackstone Rangers seem to be one ofthe few people around here with their shitat least half-way together.Bert 8- Bridge at BANDER: Come Play.LBJ will signify his successor by pickinghim up by the ears.PASSOVER MEALS AVAILABLE ATHILLEL. Reservations this week. PL 2-1127.NORTH VIETNAM IS A BEAUTIFULCOUNTRY. NORTH VIETNAMESE ARECOURAGEOUS PEOPLE. But disappearingfast. See INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM onApril 14 and 15 at 8 and 10 p.m. Cobb Hall.The dirty communist hippy drug addict in¬tellectuals of the UNIVERSITY OF CHI¬CAGO vs. Immaculata's VIRGIN FOUR.Saturday, April 13th — WOMEN FORPEACE vigil against the war at Lake 8,Harlem, Oak Park, Illinois, from 12 Noonto 1 P.M. Please Join and Help!Will the real HUGH HEFNER stand up!Playboy Editor-Publisher Hugh Hefner willundergo the unique experience of unveiling"Hugh Hefner" at THE ROYAL LONDONWAX MUSEUM on Tuesday, April 9th, at1419 North Wells.It's a little late, White man.A bracelet of bright hair about the bone. DONATE FOOD, CLOTHING, AND MEDI-|CAL SUPPLIES for the Victims of the WestSide Burnings. Bring them to the HydePark Co-op or call DO 3-1485 for more in¬formation.WOW — Are there any more leaders leftto fall?The Co-op built FORM (Harper Court) in¬stead of charging their customers lowerprices. THAT'S HYDE PARK LIBERALISM.Plaid Power.HORSEBACK RIDING SCHOOLOwned and operated by Hyde Park group forSuperior Instruction. Beginners and Advanced—lumping and dressage. Horses Boarded.Call 643-9866 or 268-6835The object of the artist is the creation of thebeautiful. What the beautiful is is anotherquestion.BLACK is beautiful.I like this thing 'cause it's completely use¬less. MJL.Human beings like to see themselves re¬flected in clouded mirrors.Resistez, Resistez, toujours!See Nature re|oicing has shown us the wayWith innocent revels to welcome the day.SRH — we love you In pieces but isn't ithard to get anything done. The gang.WRITERS WORKSHOP. PL 2-8377.The primal center is the innermost light, ofa translucence, subtiliy, and purity beyondcomprehension.Maybe you hear the beat of a differentdrum Or maybe your drum is cracked. M.She never stumbles, she's got no place tofall.PJM: Gutte Reise. MSL.I mean politics is like like a gift. . .whichis saying, *1 can do this. . .blah, blah, blah. . .and all your kids will be bom naked ifyou don't vote for me', you know.Students and faculty at the University ofChicago this spring are eligible to sign up asmembers of THE MUSEUM OF MODERNART at a special reduced rate of $12.50, asaving of $7.50. College members will alsoreceive 4 free Museum books each yearplus a 50% discount on books, cards, slides,etc. See 4/30 paper.SRH:There is no land that conquest sweetens,Save one, and it is found withinHere, Beside Green Harbor's ShoreIt waits. . . . JH34"To teach thee, I am naked first; why thenWhat needst thou have more covering thana man."Join Chicago's GREATEST ANTI-WAR PA¬RADE on Saturday, April 27—Grant Park at12:30 P.M. March on the Loop starts at 2P.M. For tickets to rally and more Informa¬tion, call 427-1763 or 243-0022.Vietnam Films (new schedule): EYEWIT¬NESS: NORTH VIETNAM; THE SURVIV¬ORS; THE WITNESS. April 21st 7:30 and9:30 P.M. Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.Searching for the real AMERIKA? Try Man-del Hall on May 2, 3, 4.RFucK You McCarthy!U.C. STUDENTS!Trust not the Maroon Classified Staff.They are the personification of the inter¬national Asiatic-JewishMAongolian<apitalist-Pervert-Communist CONSPIRACY.—A Friend2 ActorsNeeded for They ReachedFor His Guna comedy by Paul D’Andreacall x 2764 Yep, stick it in there. M.J.L.More effective than Pavlov's bells— Hearyour number called at the BANDER-SNATCH.How many Rangers were on the Midway?Oh—300? 1500? 3,000 ? 4,000?Get your used books at the STUDENTCO-OP. 10,000 flies can't be wrong.For United Tastes, its AMERIKA May2, 3. 4.ALL YOUR LOVE by the Blues Breakers.See the VIRGIN FOUR triumph over thedepraved aethiests, communists, and JEWSfrom the University of Chicago. THIS COM¬ING SUNDAY! ! 1 1See not one, not two, not three, but FOURGENUINE VIRGINS on nationwide T. V.!This may be your last chance. Paul Harder of 1719 Thompson—please havethe Cap and Gown Advertising Managercall the Maroon Business Office, Ext. 3266.There's an unconfirmed rumor that the tulipsin the QUADRANGLES are coming up: SOULBROTHER—UP IN HEAH!Say what?Well, thas cool (SLF).And hip (SLF).Plus I didn't say all that (SLF).Opiate is the masses of the religion.See Moscow freak out over nationwide T. V.On to Nebraska!"Mother Superior, what's the UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO like?" "Hush, nice girls don'ttalk about things like that!"Why did ABC put on that special programabout Joe McCarthy just now?You mean John Moscow is a.Check Station 88 (approximately) on FM-theU.C. Radio Station. It's the only thing tolisten to on Sundays (except for an occa¬sional Marat/Sade cut). Plus, they play allyour requests. The only problem seems to bethe sophomoric News Casts. An unsolicitedad from the usual source.See the AMERIKAN revolution. May 2 3, 4.A special THANK YOU to both MR. KARLBEMESDERFER AND MR. CHARLESO'CONNELL for their special efforts toallow the Roscoe Mitchell-Joseph JarmanConcert to take place on Friday night!Martin Luther Kingj I ? 1 < F 0 |Ah, you're nothin but a bunch of middleclass white kids—most of you probablycrackers anyway. What can you know aboutthe "Negro Problem" or anyone's problemsbeside your own—and you need a shrinkto solve those anyway. , .livin' off yerparents money. . .always cryln' about badhousing, bad food, rules—shit, your roomdoesn't stink, there aren't rats and bugsand there aren't four other people tryln' touse your bed. . .why don't you just shut upand spend your time making love insteadof talking about it?"Now's the timo to say good-by to all ourcompany,M-l-C-K-E-Y M-O-U-S-E"■ w’Aprti 9,\i968 - .w.w - \ THE CHICAGO MAROONIW .?• UrwA VTy-1 i/Jx IHY nDL Party WartSUP SALEAN EARLY PURCHASE MADE IT POSSIBLE TO OFFER THESE FINE 1966 GERMAN WINESAT VERY EXTRAORDINARY PRICESAll Estate BottledMARCOBRUNNER SPATLESE $3.98 FifthPIESPORTER GOLDTROPFCHEN AUSLESE $3.49 FifthUERZIGER WEURZGARTEN AUSLESE $3.49 FifthJOHANNISBERGER KLAUSER BERG SPATLESE $3.49 FifthBRAUNEBERGER JUFFER SPATLESE $2.98 FifthOCKFENER BOCKSTEIN SPATLESE $2.98 FifthWILTINGER BRAUNFELS SPATLESE $2.98 FifthKREUZNACHER BRUCKES FEINE AUSLESE $2.98 FifthKREUZNACHER MONAU FEINE AUSLESE $2.98 FifthAdded bonus to these already low-prices. SAVE A DOLLAR WHEN YOU BUY 3 of these fine Rhine, Moselle or Nahe wines.LOWEST PRICES EVERChateauneuf du Pape - 1961 VintageCotes de Provence dry rose - 1962 VintageAlsace Gewurtztraminer - 1962 VintageAlsace Sylvaner - 1962 VintageM” fifth3 for $5.00 Liebfraumilch - 1966 Vintage$1.19 Fifth $13.00Per case of 12PortGrenadier Full RubyOld Theophilus Fine TawnyMitre Fine Light$2.98 Fifth 3 for $8.00CHEESE SALE Mix or Match - Half Bottle SaleChateau Latour - 1964 VintageHaut Medoc - 1959 VintageMargaux - 1961 VintageTavel Rose - 1964 VintageSautemes- 1962 Vintage$1.25 Each 3 for $3.00We selected 4 cheeses from our selection of 225 different cheeses, and we are offering them at a sharply reduced price,to make your Easter meals more enjoyable.English StiltonConsidered to be the finest EnglishCheese. Hard, mild, blue-veined cow’smilk cheese. Much milder than Roquefort orGorgonzola. It was first made aboutSI.79 per pound Greek FetaA white, so-called pickled cheese, made bythe shepherds in the mountainous region nearAthens, Greece. This soft cheese is madefrom ewe’s milk, or from goat s milk.$1.59 I pound jar2Yr. old shelf-cured New York HerkimerA fairly dry cheese with a crumbly textureand a sharp flavor.990 per pound French GourmandiseA soft white cheese with a creamy texture.Slightly sweet taste, combined with atouch of cherry or walnut flavor.. Excellentwith English Carawheat Wafers and avintage port. J2.49 ^ poun(iBEER SPECIALMiller’s cans $3.79 CaseDL Party Wart2427 E. 72nd ST. (at EXCHANGE)(take S.Shore I.C. to 72 8; Exchange or take U.C. Campus Bus to 71st & Jeffrey & CTA bus to 71st & Exchange)OPEN Daily 10 AM-11 pm12 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 9, 1968 SUNDAY 12 NOON 9 PM