Univ. of. Chicago LibrarySerial Rec* Dept*Harper M22Chicago,111* 60637 4U. S. POSTAG3PAIDChicago, T'liaoiaPermit Wo. 7931 FoundedIn 1892*o <’VOL. 76, NO. 46 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1968O'Connell ClarifiesDraft Board PolicyDean of Students Charles O’Con¬nell moved over the weekend toclarify his statements on the draft.“We don’t have anything workedout in detail yet except the prin¬ciple,” he stated. “I’m trying toreach an honest decision throughwhich the University’s integrity isnot qestioned, but at the same time the students are helped.”O’Connell made his clarificationsafter he was reported in Friday’sMaroon as having decided to endall University correspondence withthe Selective Service System.Reached at his home Sunday after¬noon, O’Connell did not back awayfrom this position, but he did indi¬SG Releases ListOf '68 CandidatesThe Election and Rules Com¬mittee of Student Government(SG) Saturday released the finallist of candidates for the SGassembly and the National StudentAssociation (NSA) delegation.The following seats and candi¬dates will appear on the ballots onThursday and Friday, April 25 and26:Burton-JudsonOne seat — Scott Bennett (Inde¬pendent).Pierce-BoucherTwo seats — Ivan Handler(Ind.), Alan Lahn (Ind.), Leo Mol-daver (Ind.), Jim Roy (Ind.), A1Shpuntoff (Ind.), and Carl Sun¬shine (Ind.).Snell-HitchcockOne seat — Steve Landsman(Ind.) and Robert W. Stuller (Ind.).Woodward Court-University HouseThree seats — Chelsea Balyor,Carola Burroughs (Student Politi¬cal Action Committee), Neil Cai¬man (Ind.), Bill Phillips (Ind.),and Nancy Wieckowwicz (Ind.). FraternitiesOne seat — Paul Barron (Ind.),Bruce Caswell (Ind.), and Ted Pet¬erson (Ind.).Other CollegeSeven seats — Ray Boguslav| (Ind.), M. Dov. Dublin (Ind.), Ar¬thur Hochberg (SPAC), JeraldKessler (Ind.), Tobey Klassi (SPAC), Michael Kraus (SPAC),Jerry Lipsch (SPAC), Peter L.Ratner (Ind ), Sheldon J. Sacks(Ind.), Rob Skeist (SPAC), Rich¬ard Speiglman (SPAC), Jeff Spurr(SPAC), Jonathan Still (Ind.), Wil¬liam Ware (Ind.), Steven Weston(Ind.), and Margaret Woehrle(Ind.).BiologyTwo seats — No candidates.BusinessThree seats — No candidates.DivinityTwo seats — Loel A. Callahan Jr.(Ind.) and David F. Kohl, Jr.(Ind.).EducationOne seat — Linnea Weiland(SPAC).Turn to Page 6 cate that the specifics of the newpolicy had not yet been worked out.Under the old policy, Chicagoautomatically informed localboards when a student’s defermentexpired. O’Connell has now statedthat he has already notified theRegistrar’s Office to halt this prac¬tice, but that no final decision hadyet been made on a procedure withwhich to replace it.He indicated that a number ofproblems remained to be resolved,most of which center on the word¬ing of the new form which studentswill send to their draft boards.Two FormsO’Connell said that, ideally, hewould favor the abolition of formsentirely, but that for administra¬tive purposes it would be necessaryto have some kind of standardizedstatements which students couldsign. He said that probably Chica¬go would have two forms — onefor students who simply wantedtheir present status certified andanother for those who wanted theirdraft boards to continue being in¬formed. He said that he was stillconsidering what wording could beused so as not to stigmatize thefirst group.In general, both student and fac¬ulty reaction to O’Connell’s an¬nouncement has been favorable. “Iwas very pleased and thankful toMr. O’Connell for admitting a mis¬take in University policy,” saidEd Birnbaum, chairman of theStudent Government Academic Af¬fairs Committee.“I would hope that all of Univer¬sity policy could be settled simi¬larly without hostile confrontationbetween the University and its stu¬dents,” he added.Turn to Page 3 The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISVICTORS AGAIN: Larry Silver and John Moscow as they appearedSunday on nationwide television.Think Team Wins Again,Racks Up 40-point LeadThe somnulent (not to say mori¬bund) hare that is the University’steam on the television program“College Bowl” crept haltingly buthaltingly to an uneasy victory overthe Loyola University at Los An¬geles tortoise, 160-120.The Chicago team astoundedviewers across the country by rack¬ing up 90 points in a row (afterone initial blunder) at the begin¬ning of the game.Apparently overcome with itssuccess, the team then declinedto answer any further questionsuntil the halftime, by which timethe Loyola had gathered 40 points.Chicago continued to drowse af¬ter the halftime break for com¬mercials and home movies. Loyolaproceeded to mount up 80 morepoints, leaving Chicago whimper¬ingly behind, 120-90.Sis Boom BahThis was enough for Chicago.Peter Douglas, 70, leaped into thebreach with the answer to game-breach with the answer to thegame-deciding question: “Withwhat discipline is the Hardy-Weinberg theory associated?”“Population genetics,” Douglasdemurely cried.“He’s right!” the umpire said. And across the land the unani¬mous shout resounded: “Hurray!”In every home of every deanand professor and alumnus, inevery student lounge, in everyHyde Park hovel there was cheer¬ing and embracing and generalsighs of relief.And the team rallied behindDouglas in the final precious min¬utes, and surged ahead once again.When the dust had clea-ed Chica¬go had 160 points, Loyola still but120.Next week “the varsity scholarsfrom the University of Chicago”will meet the challenging teamfrom Brandeis University. The con¬test will be televised live on Chan¬nel 5, Sunday, at 5 p.m.Student KilledA Chicago student was shot andkilled last night not far from hisHyde Park apartment.Roy Gutmann, ’68, was taken toBillings Hospital after the shootingoccurred on 56th St. near KenwoodAve. at about 10 p.m.Campus Security and Chicagopolice were unable to supply addi¬tional immediate information.Class of 72 Brightest;' Aid Probably Most Generous in U.S.ANTHONY T. G. PALLETT'Brightest Ever' By JOHN SIEFERTEditorial AssistantThe Class of 1972 will be thebrightest ever.Although statistics on the meanScholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)scores of the 1262 students admit¬ted are not yet available, Directorof Admissions Anthony T. G. Pal-lett stated this week that “thequality has gone up both in termsof board scores and achievementin high school.”Pallett indicated that there wouldbe a noticeable difference betweenthe board scores of the Class of 71and the Class of 72. The scoresnow stand at 672 for the SATVerbal and 665 for the SATMathematical.Other more immediately notice¬able differences will be apparentin the Class of 72. Of the studentsadmitted, 60 percent are men and40 percent are women. Last year, the freshman classwas 55 percent male and 45 per¬cent female - the most even breakbetween the sexes in recent years.According to Pallett, “The malefemale ratio just happened thatway.” He said the more favorableratio last year was due to chanceas well.Applications DownApplications were down five per¬cent this year, primarily becauseof a shortage of staff in the admis¬sions Office. Pallett is hoping thatabout 720 of the 1262 students willaccept their offer of admission andactually show up on the Quadsnext fall. That would make theClass of 72 approximately thesame size as the Class of 71.To help some of them make uptheir minds, Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell sent invitationsto Chicago area students, to visit the campus Sunday, April 21. Pres¬ident Beadle received the studentsat his home while O’Connell re¬ceived the parents at the ReynoldsClub.Separate tours of the campuswere lead by guides selected bythe Maroon Key Society.The decision to admit the 1262students to the Class of 72 wasmade in the last week of March.Normally, some of those studentswould have been dropped down tothe waiting list before letters ofacceptance were mailed out, butthis year none were.King Assassination“The main reason,” Pallett said,“is that we’re not sure what ourtake will be after the incidentsthat followed Martin Luther King’sdeath.”Pallett said he was not so muchworried about the students as their parents, especially the parents ofwomen.“I’d say 90 percent of the stu¬dents welcome the University’s lo¬cation,” Pallet said. “They comehere because they’re concernedabout the problems of the citiesand the ghetto.”“However,” Pallet added, “manyparents don’t want their sons anddaughters in an area they thinkmight be dangerous.”Since all the Illinois students ac¬cepted are eligible for up to $1100State of Illinois scholarship or| grant aid, Pallet said, one wouldexpect the amount of financial aid! offered by the University to go: down.I But the University has offered$50,000 more in financial aid to theClass of 72 than the Class of 71,making Chicago probably the mostgenerous in scholarship aid in theUnited States.dFIVE-DAY PROTESTColgate Reforms FraternitiesHAMILTON, N. Y. (CPS)-A five-day protest at Colgate Uni¬versity has resulted in the banningof one fraternity, an end to t h e“black ball system’’ of choosingfraternity members and formula¬tion of a new university open hous¬ing policy.The protestors, who includedfaculty members and black andwhite students, held the school’sadministration building for fivedays, their numbers sometimesreaching 600.Colgate President Vincent M.Barnett, Jr., agreed to prohibitPhi Delta Theta fraternity fromparticipation in all campus activi¬ties and issuing a university poli¬cy guaranteeing open housing forall students. Phi Delta Theta hadbeen accused of discriminationagainst Negroes and Jews.The Colgate fraternity systemhad earlier in the protest agreedto end the black ball systems,which allow a single member ofany fraternity to keep out anyonewho wishes to join. Fraternitieswill now choose their members bymajority vote.Two of Five GroupsOK Rights StatementWASHINGTON (CPS) — The lasttwo of the five groups which drewup the Joint Statement on Rightsand Freedoms of Students haveapproved the statement.At meetings in Chicago and Min¬neapolis, respectively, the NationalAssociation of Student PersonnelAdministrators and the NationalAssociation of Women’s Deans and ICounselors both voted over¬whelmingly to approve the state¬ment.The National Student Associa¬tion, the American Association ofColleges, and the council of theAmerican Association of Universi¬ty Professors, the other threegroups who participated in draft¬ing it last summer, approved thestatement earlier this year. Thefull AAUP membership will voteon the statement at its meet¬ing April 26 and 27 in Washington,but it is expected to pass easily.The Joint Statement includessuch guarantees as the right ofstudents to choose campus speak¬ ers, a free student press, due proc¬ess in disciplinary cases, and astudent role in making and enforc¬ing campus social rules.Students Sue Berkeley,Seek Control of FundsBERKELEY, Calif. (CPS)-TheUniversity of California studentgovernment has voted to begin le¬gal action against the Berkeleyadministration in an effort to re¬gain control of student funds.Chancellor Roger Heyns stripped jthe Student Senate of the Associatedstudents, University of Califor- jnia (ASUC) of financial authoritylast fall after a student electionwas held in violation of adminis¬tration rules barring graduate stu¬dents from ASUC elections. TheASUC recognized graduate stu-ents as members of the Associa¬tion and allowed them to vote in acampus election.The ASUC Senate voted to beginlegal proceedings after threemonths of negotiations with theadministration. ASUC PresidentDick Beahrs complained that theadministration, “is not taking ourefforts at negotiation seriously.The law suit will make them takethem seriously.”Administration officials say theyneed more time to study theASUC’s demand that financialauthority be reinstated.Colorado State EditorQuestions CIA LinkFORT COLLINS, Colo. (CPS) -The editor of the student newspap¬er at Colorado State Universityhere has asked six senators andColorado Gov. John Love to inves¬tigate the Central IntelligenceAgency’s relationship to the school.Evan Green, editor of The CSUCollegian, sent lengthy telegramsto Love and the six legislators lastweek after he learned that a mem¬ber of the university faculty whohad been abroad on an Agency ofExpert Typing ServiceFast, Accurate, Hassle-lessJudy 858-2544 International Development (AID)contract was questioned by a CIAagent on his return.Sen. J. William Fulbright (D.Ark.) replied to Green that he hadsent a query to the CIA and AID onthe matter. The two Colorado sen¬ators sent a joint message sayingthat the questioning of Americancitizens who return from abroadis common practice.Readmit Resisters,Suggests ACLUThe American Civil LibertiesUnion called upon universities yes¬terday, to readmit qualified stu¬dents who go to jail “rather thanparticipate in a war they feel ismorally indefensible.”In a statement sent to 630 collegepresidents the Union said to re¬fuse to readmit a student who pre¬fers imprisonment to military ser¬vice because his moral convictionsagainst the war are so deeplyrooted, is to “punish him twice forthe same offense and run counterto the spirit of a basic principle ofAmerican justice embedded in theFifth Amendment safeguardagainst double jeopardy.”The statement, prepared byACLU’s Academic Freedom Com¬mittee, after a review of the civilliberties aspects of the problem,was sent to the college presidentswith a letter signed by John de J.Pemberton, the Union’s executivedirector, and Dr. Samuel Hendel,professor of political science, CityCollege of New York, and chair¬man of the committee.Chicago has announced a policywhich allows it to readmit studentsin good standing who are jailed forpassively resisting the draft.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10Used 9x12 Rug, to a Custom Car¬pet specializing in Remnants &Mill Returns at fraction of theOriginal Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities.Additional 10$ Discount with thisAd.FREE DELIVERY The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISHAPPENINGA recent "happening" brought out the latert creativity in someChicago students. The result: the most decorative sidewalks intown.TEACHINGIN WEST BEND, WIS.(Located 25 miles, northwest of Milwaukeein Wisconsin’s Kettle Moraine Area)■ ’ Ill Ail »" i ■INTERVIEWS will beconducted ON CAMPUSon APRIL 26 . A.M.CONTACT PLACEMENT OFFICEfor appointment andadditional informationDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393 Premiger s iRIVER OF NO RETURNMarilyn Monroe and Robert Mitchum try to escape, with Mitchum’s 10-year old son. In CinemaScope. Tomorrow night in Cobb Hallat 9:00 only. 754- But come early for experimentals at 7:15. Another Doc Films special!SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 Tire SpecialforVW OwnersF°TA s ^eaujc S&r&luereu/e<3FREE TICKETSAvailable at Reynolds ClubDesk for students and faculty. 5.60 x 156.85 x 15 $7.88 + taxper tireWhitewalls $1.50 additionalHyde Park Car Wash1330 E. 53rd St. MI3-1715CANOE TRIPSCruise and explore the Quetico-Superior wilderness by way of theOjibway and Voyageur. Fish vir¬gin lakes, relax, and have fun!Only $8.00 per diem, less forgroups of 10 or more. Write: BILLROM, CANOE COUNTRY OUT¬FITTERS BOX C. ELY, MINN. Wild Screen: FLOWER THIEFExperimentals, including Ron Rice’s FLOWER THIEF and shorts by Me Laren. Starting at 7:15 tomorrow night. 754. Cobb Hall.Then stick around for THE RIVErt OF NO RETURN. Doc Films.CHICAGO MAROON April 23, 1968Committee Lists GrievancesConcerning Discipline PoliciesDemanding “student rights” and“due process,” about 40 studentsmet at great length Friday withStudent Government’s Committeeon Student Rights in the ReynoldsClub.SG President Jeffrey Blum, ‘69,An expert on the legal and eco¬nomic aspects of television Sun¬day night called the new Corpora¬tion for Public Broadcasting “un¬necessary” and “dangerous.”R. H. Coase, a professor in theLaw School and in the GraduateSchool of Business, made thecharge on the television discussionprogram “The University of Chi¬cago Round Table.” Coase saidhe thought pay television was abetter alternative.His views were challenged dur¬ing the discussion by Edward L.Morris, director of programmingat WTTW, Chicago’s public tele¬vision station, and by Donald N.Levine, associate professor of so¬ciology and master of the SocialSciences Collegiate Division.Coase, speaking of the Corpora¬tion for Public Broadcasting, said,“I regard this measure as unnec-cesary and dangerous. It intro¬duces the federal government intoan area where I don’t think thefederal government should be. Ithink politically it is an extreme¬ly dangerous move.”Continued from Page 1 -.Students and faculty on O’Con¬nell’s Faculty-Student Advisory.Committee on Campus Student Lifewere unanimous in favoring an endto direct University contacts withdraft boards, although some facul¬ty members expressed concernthat student deferments might bejeopardized by the new procedure.Although O’Connell has assuredthem that he considers this unlike¬ly, he conceded that Chicago mightlose some of the leverage it hasexercised in the past over localboards. led a discussion centering on aworking outline, a detailed list ofgreviences, which grew out of dis¬content with the recent McCroskeycase and the Kalven Committee’stwo-time refusal to admit studentsto its committee.The Corporation for PublicBroadcasting Act was passed bythe Congress last year. It sets upa board appointed by the Presi¬dent to finance programs for pub¬lic television stations.Morris said, “It is no less appro¬priate to finance something likethis, which is for the commongood, than it is to finance otherpublic welfare or educational pro¬grams.”Levine hailed the Corporation forPublic Broadcasting Act, claimingthat until now “the job is simplynot being done.” He saw publictelevision as performing a continu¬ing educational function. “Thefacts simply are that educationdoes not stop now and cannot stopnow with high school or college.Education is a life-long processeven for the basic minimal requir-ments of participating minimallyin a democratic society.“The University of ChicagoRound Table” is broadcast eachSunday at 5:30 p.m. on Channel 11,Chicago.He has said, for example, thatit might now be more difficult fora fourth-year student to take anextra quarter to get a degree thanit has been in the past.Some DoubtsIn addition, O’Connell said thathe had received some telephonecalls from faculty members not onthe Committee expressing doubtabout the decision. He said thatthe Committee of the Council ofthe University Senate would prob¬ably take the matter up at its nextmeeing. Thomas McCroskey, 71, was ac¬cused of breaking housing rulesand was subsequently forced tomove from Thompson Houseacross the Midway to VincentHouse.Among demands listed in a state¬ment given to The Maroon were:• The right to privacy in one’sroom;• The right to written and spe¬cific charges from the DisciplinaryCommittee;• That no “offical” record ofproceedings be kept;• That University disicpline andcivil proceedings be mutually ex¬clusive;• That the Disciplinary Commit¬tee be composed of an equal num¬ber of stduents and faculty-the de¬fendant choosing to be heard byeither students of faculty alone, orby an equal number of each ;• That a “Code of Rules” bedrawn up with student parti¬cipation, listing maximum penal¬ties, without listing minimum pen¬alties; and• That there should not be aUniversity drug police, unless thejjministration can show thathaving such a policy protects thecommunity from police raids.It was suggested in the meetingthat unfavorable publicity be usedby the group to obtain its demandsfrom the University. Some studentscalled simply for “telling thetruth” about drugs on the campus.The group plans to present theirdemands, in the form of a petition,to the Kalven Committee. Accord¬ing to student sources, if their de¬mands are not met, they intend tohold some form of massive demon¬stration.The Kalven Committee was setup by President Beadle this yearto make a study of the Disciplin¬ary Committee. It is chaired byProfessor of Law Harry Kalven,Jr.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.Chicago Expert CriticizesPublic Broadcasting Corp.Drawbacks in Draft Tie Cut? The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISCARILLON RECITALIT'S SPRING: Students relax on the grass and enjoy both thespring weather and a carillon concert from Rockefeller.Petition Asks No Women's HoursRuth Hazzard, 71, Friday pre¬sented Dean of Students CharlesO’Connell with a petition signed byabout 190 students demanding thatwomen’s curfew be abolished forthe rest of spring quarter.Miss Hazzard made the presen¬tation at a regular meeting of theFaculty-Student Advisory Commit¬tee on Campus Student Life. Mari¬lyn McCormack, assistant directorof student housing, provided ananswer to the petition by outliningchanges in women’s hours sincethe 1965 Mentschikoff report wasreleased. The Mentschikoff report recommended sweeping changesin University social policy.New University policy on rela¬tions with the Selective Servicewas also discussed at the meeting.Both students and faculty mem¬bers expressed their support formoves to disentangle Chicago fromthe draft.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'P’ichcA "pried Shri*Hfi<±G oUlcn<iRESTAURANT132 1 East 57th ST.UNIVERSITY | PIZZA lBARBERSHOP | PLATTER |1453 E. 57th ST. ^ Pizza, Fried Chicken, JVFIVE BARBERS f Italian Foods «WORKING STEADY $ Compare the Price! ftFLOYD C. ARNOLD ( 1480 E. 53rd Street |proprietor > Ml 3-2800 JjThe University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueMAY 5SUNDAY AFTERNOON at 3.30BUDAVARI TE DEUMlZoltan KodalyMASS IN F MINORAnton Bruckner(First Chicago Performance)RICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRwith 50 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRAEDWARD MONDEL LO.organistPeggy Smith, sopranoPhyllis Unosawa,contraltoRobert Bowker, tenorHenri Noel, baritoneTickets: $2.50 for students of allcolleges and universities$3.00 UC Faculty/Staff$3.50 General Admission$4.50 Reserved SeatsOn Sale at: U. of C. Bookstore,5802 Ellis AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore,1311 E. 57th StreetCooley’s Candles,521 I Harper AvenueTicket Central at 212 N. Michiganandatall Montgomery Ward Stores John Ford’s THE WINGS OF EAGLESFord and Wayne pay homage to their close friend “Spig * Wead, a naval aviation pioneer whose career was cut short by aparalyzing injury. Tonight at 9:30 only. 754. Cobb Hallo But come early for THE QUIET MAN at 7:15- Doc Films.John Ford’s THE QUIET MANJohn Wayne returns to Ireland to live in the place of his birth, but is treated as an outsider by boozy, belligerent VictorMcLaglen. With the marathon cross-country barroom brawl. Tonight. 7:15 only. Cobb Hall. 754. Then stay for WINGS OFEAGLES at 9:30- Doc Films.^ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!“Y 'foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 Now you can afford the finestThe new 2-2 UHER Stereo 7000. More than just a tape recorder.Exciting music system for your home.ONLY $149.95Photo DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. EllisApril 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3GADFLYThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1192 SPAC: 'Best Possible Job'...Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerNext Year's SGThe annual Student Government (SG) electionsare here again, and apathy threatens to win as usual.There are some 50 seats in the SG Assembly, but afifth of those are not being sought by any candidate,while in several other constituencies there are no morecandidates than there are positions open.For Chicago needs a Student Government, al¬though it can certainly be more efficient and represen¬tative than it has been this year. Chicago needs an SGto provide student services, including the inestimableone of focusing student political discomfort. It needsan SG to originate issues, and to crystalize studentopinion on those issues, such as housing or the demo¬cratization of the University, on which administrationaction during the past few years has been unimagina¬tive or sloppy.To do all this will require the concerted action ofa large number of hard-working, intelligent students,willing to work rather than talk. And that will requirea change from the procedure this year, in which asmall group of dedicated students sporadically workedfor student goals, but in which the Assembly was sorecalcitrant that it convened only three times duringthe year.Over the past year SPAC has dominated the As¬sembly, but has not lived up to its campaign promises.That is acceptable to a point, but SPAC has gone be¬yond that point with its failure to meet regularly andwith its failure to hold the open caucuses which lastspring promised to make a truly effective and demo¬cratic Student Government at Chicago. At the sametime, most of the interested and qualified students forSG are representing SPAC.Student Government will not improve by beingignored, or by being abandoned to less competent stu¬dents in the University. If the students at Chicagowould rather not bother with student Governmentthen SG should be abolished, and the idea of studentsbanding together to work more effectively than theycan individually should also be abandoned.Class Today?No one’s taking any bets on it yet, but rumor hasit that Pol Sci 261 may indeed meet at its usual timetoday. This course — Hans Morgenthau’s famous one-man exhibition of erudition, wisdom, and sly, continen¬tal humor — has met only once so far this quarter andhas been a source of constant frustration for the scoresof students registered for it.Our industrious reporter was unable to find theaffable but elusive professor yesterday afternoon, butreports have reached us that he is fully recovered fromhis indisposition and on the go again. Even Mrs. Mor-genthau, however, could not tell us definitely that herhusband would be available again this afternoon todazzle his eager protoges.But with still another disappointment yet in view,then, we must confess to a temptation to give vent tofrustrated editorial wrath. But remembering Mr. Mor¬genthau’s own famous dictum that you don’t attackgnats with a submachine gun, it is perhaps only properto keep our cool and remain thankful that we have atleast enjoyed a glimpse of this extraordinary scholar. By ED BIRNBAUMThe annual complaint about theStudent Government is that it hasdone nothing, but this complaintis unfair when the facts of thematter are considered: SG has nopower and little money withwhich to accomplish anythingsubstantial in the areas wherestudents have the greatest needs.The area over which SG hasthe closest effective control isthe “services,” which the StudentPolitical Action Committee(SPAC) felt that SG should notdirectly administer because SGofficers usually had little interestor competence in business mat¬ters, and when they did, theywould take their competence andexperience with them after achange in administration. SPACdid not “get rid of” the services,but rather obtained satisfactorymanagement for them. A businessstudent was hired, after manyapplicants were interviewed, toadminister the charter flightsprogram, and a committee of stu¬dents, faculty, administrators,and University employees, repre¬senting the groups who use theprogram, was set up to makepolicy. As a consequence, the pro¬gram is sounder than ever andhas offered more advantages thisyear than ever before.THE LOAN fund, is now ad¬ministered by the Student Co-opin Reynonds Club. Whereas in the past it was plagued by theftand was only loosely controlledby SG officers, it is now theresponsibility of an organizationwhose primary concern is finan¬cial and which must be carefulin order to maintain itself.Two of last year’s services hadto be curtailed this year, mainlybecause of restricted funds. SPACdid offer to help support a speak¬er’s program more limited thanthat subsidized by 75th Anniver¬sary funds if interested individualstudents and student organiza¬tions would get together to recom¬mend one, but although an openmeeting for this purpose washeavily advertised, almost no in¬terest was shown either then orlater. (A member of SG in oppo¬sition to SPAC and on a platformof strengthening the services,Bill Phillips, ’70, was made chair¬man of the speakers program lastquarter. He made no recommen¬dations or arrangements forspeakers).ALSO, THE housing file hasbeen reduced to a bulletin boardoutside the Student Co-op becausethe money formerly provided bythe administration to hire a sec¬retary to investigate availablehousing was not forthcoming thisyear.Meetings are necessary only topass resolutions. This year SGhad few meetings but passed thepenultimate resolutions, summingup the views of all previous Stu¬ dent Governments, adding a fewnew twists, and putting them allin a neatly organized package foreasy reference. It certainly wouldnot have made a single student’slife one iota brighter to havemore Assembly meetings.On the other hand, there werenegotiations, open meetings, ne¬gotiations, and literature in abun¬dance in support of the programsauthorized in the resolutions. Apetition was widely circulated forgrade reform, an open meetingwas publicized for students atwhich a policy was decided, andrepresentatives from this meet¬ing were permitted to attend therelevant faculty meeting at SG’srequest—the first time this hadhappened, but there was no re¬form because the faculty couldnot be persuaded to pass it.IT IS still worthwhile to workfor some decision-making powerfor students. Indeed, in no otherway can students get better hous¬ing, protection from foolish andarbitrary rules, etc. So long asthere is an SG, it ought to beworking for these ends whilemaintaining useful services.SPAC did the best possible jobunder the circumstances andhopes to have more student sup¬port next year to obtain solidachievements.Mr. Birnbaum, ’68, is chair¬man of Student Government’sUndergraduate Academic Af¬fairs Committee.GADFLY...Or 'Highly Inadequate?'By BILL PHILLIPSMr. Birnbaum’s analysis ofSPAC’s administration is highlymisleading. It gives the impres¬sion that SPAC’s desire has beento serve the students of the Uni¬versity, that SPAC has done allanyone could expect it to do, andthat its failures were due to alack of “power” or funds ormeans of overcoming the admin-i s t r a t i o n-faculty establish¬ment. His Gadfly is without in¬trospection; it fails to considerwhether SPAC itself is largely toblame for its own failures.Last April, one could forseethat the new Student Governmentwould not be serving the studentbody. The platform of the StudentPolitical Action Committee wasclearly oriented toward non-cam¬pus affairs. For example, it ad¬vocated the legalization of mari¬juana and abortion, but made nomention of student services.“SPAC in Student Government,”it read, “will support anti-(Viet-nam) war programs with ourname, facilities, and supplies.”Underlying SPAC’s campaignwas a desire to use SG for itsown private concerns and notthose of the student body. In thewords of SPAC’s chairman, “wefelt that it would be very usefulto have the student government’sresources and pseudo-legitimacybehind efforts to build a viablestudent movement.”NEVERTHELESS, SPAC didoffer some promising by-productsfrom its “radical movement ofstudents.” The platform pledgedto investigate tuition rates, roomand board costs, the Bookstore,and student wages. It urged thatwomen’s hours and residency re¬quirements be abolished, and thata student union be built. How¬ ever, SPAC has made no head¬way in these areas, not becauseof administration opposition, butbecause SPAC failed to produceany legislation or action on theseissues.The Assembly passed one billconcerning the Bookstore; it wasproposed by an independent as¬semblyman and ignored bySPAC. Thus, SPAC’s efforts werehighly inadequate with regard towhat they could have done andwhat they promised to do.As Mr. Birnbaum has pointedout, SPAC did take action onseveral campus issues. However,he explains SPAC’s failures byciting an impossibility of over¬coming the “intransigence” ofthe faculty or the “impaccabil-ity” of an administrator. Rather,it was an unwillingness to pro¬ceed in the proper manner whichdoomed SPAC’s efforts. His apol¬ogia speaks of a lack of “power.”ONE WAY of gaining power isthrough financial independencefrom the University. Yet SPACabandoned all of SG’s income-producing services. One way ofgaining power is by acquiring theconfidence of the administration.And yet the leaders of SPAC andSG exhibited an uncompromisingcontempt for the administration,partly through arrogant legisla¬tion and irresponsible publicstatements. One way of gainingpower is by acheiving the respectof the student. And yet SPACconsistently mispresented and re¬fused to serve them.Perhaps the greatest exampleof SG’s “power,” and the lastfacet of SG still retaining therespect of the community is theCommittee on Recognized Stu¬dent Organizations. CORSO dis¬tributes over $30,000 each year to qni Troon dc < '-on'"student activities. And yet, SPAChas proposed to separate thatcommittee from SG by allowingnon-assemblymen to serve on it.With regard to an alleged lackof SG funds, Student Governmentwas appropriated $4370 this year.Managed efficiently, such a sumcould easily have produced usefulprograms.SPAC HAS failed for other rea¬sons as well. It has repeatedlydefied the constitution and by¬laws of Student Government. Bysponsering the Dow demonstra¬tion without the approval of theAssembly, by holding one Assem¬bly meeting in the last sixmonths, by ignoring the rules ofparliamentary procedure, SPAChas, in effect, nullified the au¬thority as well as the regulationsof candidates willing to fullfilltheir duties, SPAC has made itnearly - impossible to raise aquorum at Assembly meetings.Lastly, by involving itself withnon-campus issues, SPAC haddiluted any effect it it might havehad in campus affairs.SPAC is offering to continue onas before. SPAC has not learnedits lesson; let us hope the votershave.Mr. Phillips, ’70, is a mem¬ber of Student Governmentrepresenting Woodward Court.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 34)800. Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood tree of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Charterof U.S. Student Press Assn., pub-member4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 23, 1968Maroon Endorsements for Student GovernmentFollowing is a list of candidates for Student Govern¬ment and the National Student Association delegationabout whom The Maroon feels qualified to write, eitherfavorably or not. As is often the case, however, theeditors are not familiar with many of the students whoare running.Other CollegeIn the “Other College” category there are sevenseats available. Arthur Hochberg, Michael Krauss, andRob Skeist, all members of the Student Political ActionCommittee (SPAC) have proved their competence invarious fields during the past year, and all deserve tobe elected. Jerry Kessler and Jonathan Still, bothindependents, are well-qualified, quiet, and well-qualifiedto work for constitutional, constituency-oriented studentgovernment.Jerry Lipsch, presently SG vice-president and chair¬man of SPAC, is the most imposing and prestigiousfigure running in the College. The Maroon has reserva¬tions, however, about SG’s performance this past yearand hopes that if elected he will make use of pastexperience and new opportunities.Of the other candidates running, Peter Ratner is themost notorious, having made a nuisance of himself inSG and in the Inter-House Council for three years, andit would be appropriate if the College were to vote forconstructive action rather than negative obstructionism.Woodward CourtIn Woodward Court there are three seats and fivecandidates. Of those Bill Phillips and Chelsea Baylor are competent incumbents who should be re-elected.The third incumbent is Nancy Wieckowicz, who hasproved that she lacks even that breadth of visionexpected of an SG representative in certain spitefuldealings within Woodward.Pierce-BoucherIn Pierce-Boucher there are two seats open. AlanLahn has been fairly active in promoting student causes.Most of the other candidates are freshmen; of these,Carl Sunshine is qualified.Hitchcock-SnellIn Hitchcock-Snell Steve Landsman has been a fairlygood representative this year and should be re-elected.That is rather more than can be said about Ted Petersonin the Fraternities. Either of the other two candidatesis to be preferred to him.Burton-JudsonA write-in candidate is badly needed in Burton-Judson.Physical SciencesIn the graduate schools the Physical Sciences Divisionwill be best served. With four seats available there arefive candidates, of whom Stuart Newman, Hugh Wilson,and Joe Wolfson are the best. Wilson and Wolfson servedon the Committee on Recognized Student Organizationsthis year and did a hard-working job.HumanitiesThere are only three candidates for five seats in theHumanities Division, of whom two are well qualified.Bruce Kaplan has a strong interest in some aspects ofstudent life and does effective work with them. Jeff Schnitzer, the associate editor of the Chicago LiteraryReview, is one of the more articulate, sensible left-oriented liberals in the University.'Social SciencesThe Social Sciences Collegiate Division has ninecandidates — all members of SPAC —running for nineseats —all candidates being members of SPAC. Of thecandidates listed, only Mike Goldfield and Chris Hobsonhave shown the competence and imagination desirablefor the post. They are both members of Students for aDemocratic Society, and this year have spent moretime working with the organization than with SG.Should they choose to work with SG, however, theycould be valuable members.Divinity SchoolIn the Divinity School there are two candidates forthe two seats. David Kohl, presently manager of theBandersnatch, is one of them.NSAFor the National Student Association there arefifteen candidates for the ten spots — five delegates andfive alternates. Five of the candidates — Bemie Grof-man, John Moscow, Jonathan Still, David Friedman,and Bill Phillips (all members of the NSA ReformParty) — have been at NSA conventions and have madesubstantial contributions either to the Chicago campusor to the NSA itself.Of the other five NSA Reform candidates, all are in¬tellectually able, representing all shades of politicalopinion, with competence their only unifying character¬istic.Letters to the Editors of The MaroonMoscow ColumnI was dismayed by John Mos¬cow’s column on the DisciplinaryCommittee in the April 19 issueof The Maroon.I can appreciate Mr. Moscow’swish to set the record straight:it is indeed the case that recentbroadsides about the DisciplinaryCommittee have contained vari¬ous errors and misinterpretationsboth about the facts of particu¬lar cases and about the Commit¬tee and its operation. On theother hand, I cannot believe thatthe well-being either of individualstudents or of the student bodyin general is well served by suchan article, especially since thearticle itself contained errors.I do not know who the mysteri¬ous “administration sources”mentioned in the column maybe; but since I myself had oc¬casion recently to serve as act¬ing chairman of the DisciplinaryCommittee, I think I can safelyspeak authoritatively in thematter.JAMES W. VICEAssistant Dean of StudentsMr. Moscow replies:Mr. Vice’s letter is typical ofmuch of the reaction to the col¬umn. Members of Student Gov¬ernment and of the administra¬tion have both criticized it onfactual grounds, without bother¬ing to relate in what way thecolumn was inaccurate. I cannothelp regarding their criticism asinvalid so long as they hide be¬hind the shield of “judicalsilence.”It has been said by peopleother than Mr. Vice that the col¬umn should not have mentionedthe name of the student involvedin the transgressions. But once astudent releases his name foruse on a misleading politicalhandbill, he must be willing tohave the relevant facts exam¬ined — even if those facts arepartially shielded by a combina¬tion of SG and administrationsources.ChristianityI am pleased to call attentionto the revival of religion on theChicago campus, particularly among the radicals. Perhaps theevangelized do not realize this atall, but to a Catholic the ritualsare very familiar although thedoctrines and atmosphere havechanged.Perhaps the new aspirantswould deny all this, but thatwould, only be in character; forthose who would scoff at the con¬cept of Original Sin will claimthat the sins of the plantationowners and the segregationistsare visited upon all white peoplefrom the moment of birth. Andthose who look upon Baptism assuperstitious symbolism will tryto cleanse their souls of racismwith money and marching. Radi¬cals can be credited with the re¬vival of an early Church ritual,public confession, wherein whitestake turns searching their soulsfor that last little bit of racism,and find relief in both their guiltand repentance, figurativelycloaking themselves in sackclothand smearing their faces withashes, ashamed of their whiteskin. The Maroon recently print¬ed such a confession.RACISTS ARE the infidels and“Now is the time to mobilize(crusade) against racism,” andour will must never flag or falter.“We cannot let the sun go down”while there are still racists inAmerica, and God (who is black,of course) helps those who allowthemselves to become “indiffer¬ent.”Well, now that the rads gotreligion, maybe they will departbriefly from their usual attitudesof intolerance of different philo¬sophies.Normally, I would be the lastone to thwart ecumenism, but Iregretfully admit that I cannotextend my religious beliefs to in¬clude the current radical rhetoric.My belief that the color of aman’s skin makes no differencein my consideration of him ex¬tends also to men without color.The fact that I was born whiteconnects me in no way worthyof consideration with any otherwhite person, and I feel no re¬sponsibility for the wrongs thathave been committed by otherhuman beings.To label generally all or mostwhite people as racist and in¬different people as racist is a serious departure from logic andwould normally be ignored wereit not such a popular tenet offaith in the radical community.As a human being, I can livecomfortably with anyone who re¬spects my right to live the wayI choose, and as a free man, Ireserve the right to be indifferent.W. YAKES-RENO, 70Legal AidI am writing you to express tothe University community my ap¬preciation for the work done bystudent volunteers in connectionwith the mass arrests resultingfrom the recent civil disorder.As director of the Law SchoolMandel Legal Aid Clinic, may Isay that the interviewing in theCook County Jail and House ofCorrections and the telephoningto the families of those incarcer¬ated were a tremendous assist¬ance. There were volunteers notonly from the Law School butfrom the School of Social ServiceAdministration and other depart¬ments. In many cases, the rela¬tives of those arrested wouldhave had no knowledge of thecircumstances of the defendentswere it not for the efforts of thevolunteers.In addition, the convening ofthe special bond reduction courtsduring the Easter weekend wasin part due to the expression ofinterest and concern shown bythe members of the community.PHILLIP H. GINSBERGEqual in EvilSome white people today re¬peat the slave owner’s practiceof infantilizing Negroes. They dothis unintentionally by implicat¬ing that Negroes are not adultsresponsible for their own actions.Some people may say that Ne¬groes should not be blamed fortheir sins while whites should beblamed for theirs. However, thedoctrine of equality requires thatevery individual be judged by thecontent of his character, not thecolor of his skin. Everyone mustbe held individually accountablefor his individual behavior, re¬gardless of his race.The cause of equality deservesimmediate radical action. How¬ever, sympathy for Negroes doesnot require us to “feel sorry” in a condescending way. Manywhites in the academic commun¬ity erroneously consider the Ne¬gro to be an innocent child whois not responsible and who is in¬capable of evil on his ownaccount.SOME PEOPLE say that the“white power structure” controlssociety. In reality, the course ofhistory was not planned at secretmeetings in Mayor Daley’s of¬fice. When talking about “the Es¬tablishment” it is important todistinguish between the power ofsocial forces and the power ofliving people. . I doubt verystrongly that leading politiciansand businessmen have the optionof reversing social forces which,in fact, make them look likedwarves. There is, fortunately, areasonable way of making prog¬ress against racism by a super¬intensive educational campaigndesigned to reach the true Es¬tablishment: the hearts andminds of men.There is a historical, sociologi¬cal and psychological basis forNegro rioting as well as for whiteracism. All men face such forces.All men have psyches. A certainimage of the Negro has been in¬grained in the minds of whiteracists by one hundred and fiftyyears of slavery and one hun¬dred years of discrimination, andis not easily changed. Neverthe¬less, whites and Negroes mustboth be held morally responsiblefor individual behavior. Althoughwe can understand the reasonsbehind an act, we cannot con¬done it if it is wrong.Men of different races have anequal propensity toward evil byvirtue of their common human¬ity. The time has come to stopinfantilizing Negroes and to be¬gin treating them as men andas individuals. To paraphraseMark Twain, “Negroes too aremembers of the human race, andworse I can say of no man.”MARCUS K. FELSON, ’69Fortress PoliticsThe University of Chicago, ex¬isting as an enclave in the pover¬ty ridden black ghetto which isthe south side of Chicago, playsfortress politics in an effort to..defend its turf by pushing thepoor as far away as possible.April 23, 1968 The events of the past weekshave brought to light the bank¬ruptcy of this policy.For 15 years and $20 millionthe University has torn down andrebuilt housing, closed off streetsand hired its own police in aneffort to gain security for itsfaculty and students.Yet in the past weeks no onefelt safe.Evening lectures were can¬celled; students were confined totheir dormitories under curfew;troops were in Jackson Park andon 63rd st. Now the troops aregone, curfew ended, lectures re¬sumed and it seems that the Uni¬versity will go on as usual.YET WE ALL should knowthat unless the root causes ofpoverty and deprivation are dealtwith riots can break out at anytime. How many times will thetroops be called back, with stu¬dents afraid to come and facultyafraid to stay, before the Univer¬sity changes the direction of itspolicy to the ghetto,Many academics (includingstudents as well as their teach¬ers) believe that a universityshould exist only as an indepen¬dent center of thought, with itssole responsibility to society be¬ing the production of scholarshipand scholars. While this concep¬tion of the university as an intel¬lectual island may be possiblefor some universities, it does nothold and is not possible for thisuniversity which must develop anew relationship to the area inwhich it exists in order tosurvive.A scholarly rationale for thischange may be found in the workof Albion Small, founder of Chi¬cago’s Sociology Department. Hesaid that, “scholars might exaltboth their scholarship and theircitizenship by claiming an activeshare in the work of preparingand applying plans and devicesfor social improvement andamelioration.”Thus far, the one response tothe crisis has been a teach-in.Out of a Saturday workshop anew ad-hoc group has formed. Ithas developed the beginnings ofa program for a new directionfor the University which havebeen presented.HENRY ETZKOWITZTeaching AssistantTHE CHICAGO MARQON 5The Maroon BulletinCALENDAR items should be typed onforms available in The Msroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyGENERAL NOTICES should be submittedin typewritten form two days beforepublication. They may appear a maximumof twice on request.RECRUITING VISITS are scheduled bythe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, with repre¬sentatives of recruiting firms at thatlocation.NEWS BRIEFS are composed by TheMaroon Staff.CALENDAR OF EVENTSTuesday, April 23RALLY: Students for a Political Alternativesponsoring Dustin Hoffman, "The Grad¬uate," and Sam Brown at McCarthy Rallyin Cobb Hall Quantrell Auditorium, 11:30a.m. , . ,LECTURE: (Center for Urban Studies), LeonH. Keyserling, Consulting Economist, Pres¬ident, Conference on -Economic Progress,"Beneficiaries of Public Programs,"Breasted Hall, 1 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: College Council, SwiftCommons Room, 3:40 p.m.DOC FILMS: "The Quiet Man," "The Wingsof Eagles," and "The Man Who Shot Lib¬erty Valance," by John Ford, Cobb Hall,7:15 and 9:30 p.m.CHICAGO SCIENCE FICTION SOCIETY:Regular meeting, Ida Noyes Sun parlor,7:30 p.m.SPEBSQSA: The Society for the Preservationand Encouragement of Barber Shop QuartetSinging in America. Woodlawn Residence,5544 S. Woodlawn Ave., 7:30 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Interna¬tional House, 8 p.m.SVCG: Special Vietnam Convocation Groupto discuss canvassing and establishmentof Hyde Park Draft Union, Ida NoyesLounge, 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, April 24LECTURE: Albert Bush-Brown, president ofRhode Island School of Design, will givefourth lecture of "Bright New City" seriesat 11:30 a.m. Admission $2.50, ChicagoDowntown Center, 65 E. South Water St.FILM: David Schoenbrun's film of NorthVietnam and a film from the State De¬partment, sponsored by Students for aSocial Action Committee of the School ofSocial Service, SSA Lounge, noon.INVITATION LECTURE SERIES: (BusinessSchool), Julian H. Levi, professor of urbanstudies. Division of Social Sciences, Busi¬ness East 103, 1 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), Yechezkiel Stein,Rockefeller University, "Biochemical andMorphological Aspects of IntracellularTransport of Lipids in Mammalian Cells,"Abbot 201, 4 p.m.VISA: Organizing to help change mentalhealth legislation in Illinois, Reynolds ClubSouth, 4 p.m.PRE MED CLUB: Nominations for nextyear's officers, all members should attend.B.ilings E-110, 7 p.m.»VCG: Special Vietnam Convocation Groupto sponsor Ralph Austen, History Depart¬ment, "U.S. Imperialism." Blue Gargoyle,8 p.m.LECTURE: (Undergraduate Math Club),Professor Robert Ashenhurst, Committee onInformation Sciences, "Bits and Strings."Eckhart 206, 8 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia. Ida NoyesDance Room, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Music), Amnon Shiloah, profes¬sor at University of Jerusalem, "The In¬fluence of Arabic Music and MusicalThought on Western Music in the MiddleAges." Lexington Studios, 8:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Archeological Institute ofAmerica), Ronald B. Stroud, Universityof California, "The Sanctuary of Demeter at Corinth." Breasted Hall, 8:30 p.m.DOC FILMS: "The Flower Thief" by RonRice and Experimental Films by MormanMcLaren, Cobb, 7:15 p.m. "River of NoReturn" by Otto Preminger with MarilynMonroe and Robert Mitchum, Cobb, 9p.m.Thursday, April 25LECTURE: (Middle Eastern Center), N. J.Coulson, professor, "Conflicts and Tensionsin Islamic Jurisprudence: Unity and Di¬versity." Law Quadrangle, Room D, 3:30p.m.LECTURE: (Advanced Genetics), WilliamD. Kaplan, Biology, City of Hope MedicalCenter, Duarte, California, "A Case ofNeurological Mutants in Srosophila." Ric¬ketts, 4 p.m.SEMINAR: (Medicine), Sir George Picker¬ing, Oxford University, "The Pathology ofCerebral and Cardiac Infraction." BillingsB-604, 5 p.m.REHEARSAL OF U.C. CONCERT BAND:Lab School, Belfield 244, 5 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Instruction andrequests. Hillel House, 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Art), Howard Burns, King'sCollege, "Ligorio's Reconstruction of An¬cient Rome," Classics 10, 8 p.m.LECTURE AND DISCUSSION: Special Viet¬nam Convocation Group sponsoring DaveGilbert, New York SDS, "Prospects ofthe New Left." Ida Noyes Library, 8 p.m.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "John GabrielBorkman," by Ibsen, directed by D. A.Shojai, Reynolds Club Theatre, 8:30 p.m.BURTON-JUDSON CINEMA: "Shakespeare,The Soul of An Age." Judson Dining Room,8:30 p.m.GENERAL NOTICESTHE NEW COLLEGIATE DIVISION is hold¬ing a series of informal meetings forfreshmen who are interested in learningabout the several NCD Programs, in pre¬paration for entrance next year. Eachmeeting will be conducted by the chairmanand students in the program, and will bedevoted to answering questions freshmenhave about the programs and the Division.The Program of History and Philosophyof Science, led by Dudley Shapere, willmeet Tuesday, April 23, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.,in Cobb 103, Philosophical Psychology, ledby Eugene Gendlin will meet Wednesday,April 24, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m., in Cobb 302;Civilization Studies, led by Milton Singerand Reuben Smithy will meet Wednesday,April 24, 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. in Foster 408;Ideas and Methods, led by Charles Wege¬ner, will meet Thursday, April 25, 4 p.m.to 5 p.m. in Cobb 103; History of Phil¬osophy and Religion, led by Herman Si-naiko and Henry Rago, will meet Thurs¬day, May 2, 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. inCobb 103. Applications are due May 1.THE STUDENTS OF THE HUMANITIESCOLLEGIATE DIVISION are presenting aninformal coffee hour on Thursday evening,April 25, at 7:30 in Cobb Lounge. JeromeTaylor and Alan Nelson, Professors ofEnglish, will speak to students about thedraft and related issues. Nelson and Tay¬lor have both participated in draft-coun¬seling programs.STEP is holding a "Blues Benefit" withChicago's Terry Colleir, Clint and Bill,Angela Lee and Thee Mahogany Hall BluesBand. It will be held Sunday, April 28,Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 4 p.m. $1.00donation is requested. RECRUITING VISITSTeaching(For appointments, call Ext. 3279.)APRIL 25: Steger Public Schools, Steger,Illinois. Elemental^: 1-6. Junior High:science, mathematics, language arts, so¬cial studies, art consultant, humanities,EMH. Elementary and Junior High Guid¬ance Counselors. Interested only in qual¬ified candidates who are eligible for teachercertification.APRIL 25: International Schools Services,The Hague, Netherlands. Elementary: Alllevels. Junior High: history anthropology.Junior High and Senior High: English,mathematics, biology & chemistry, French,counselors, librarians, reading consultants.Teachers must have at least a B.A. andpreferably two years of experience. Teach¬ers must hold teacher certification.NEWS BRIEFSDR. ROBERT S. DANIELS has been namedassociate dean from Community and SocialMedicine in the Biological Sciences Divi¬sion. An associate professor of psychiatry.Dr. Daniels will also serve as associatedirector of the Center for Health Admin¬istration Studies. He joined the Universityfaculty in 1957.DR. LEON O. JACOBSON, dean of the Divi¬sion of the Biological Sciences and JosephRegenstein professor of biological andmedical sciences, has been named amaster of the American College of Phys¬icians. This is the highest honor the 53year-old organization can bestow. Thereare only 32 masters in its total member¬ship of 13,637 physicians.Anti-War MarchThe Parade Commitee for theApril 27 anti-war march wilil spon¬sor a demonstration in front of theConrad Hilton at 6 p.m. on Wed¬nesday against President Johnson,who is expected to speak at theHilton at 6:30 p.m. for a Dem¬ocratic fund raising dinner.A spokesman from Mayor Rich¬ard Daley’s office declined to con¬firm Johnson’s acceptance of theinvitation.New Left leaders of the ParadeCommittee announced that this willbe the “largest demonstrationever.” Several hundred peoplefrom the Chicago area campusesand radical groups are expected toattend the demonstration, he said. 'Choice '68' Is ComingBallot boxes will be open to Uni- “Choice ’68,” which is financedversity of Chicago students thisThursday and Friday in “Choice’68,” the nationwide college presi¬dential primary.All students, including part-timeones, are entitled to vote for first,second, and third choice presiden¬tial candidates and to expresstheir opinions on Vietnam and the“urban crisis” in three referen¬dum questions. by Time Incorporated, will involveabout 1000 colleges with en¬rollments totalling over five millionstudents.Though most colleges across thenation will vote Wednesday,“Choice ’68” will be held here con¬currently with Chicago’s StudentGovernment elections on the twofollowing days. The balloting forthe two elections, however, will beseparate.Students Vie for NSA, SG PostsContinued from Page 1HumanitiesFive seats — Bruce Kaplan(SPAC), Alan Mendelson (SPAC),and Jeff Schnitzer (SPAC).LawThree seats — Jonathan Dean(Law Students Liberation Front),Jane R. Levine (LSLF), and Rich¬ard S. McMillan (LSLF).LibraryOne seat — No candidates.MedicalTwo seats — Kenneth Bridbord(Ind.) and John Vogel (Ind.).Physical ScenecesFour seats — Paul Evanson(Ind.), Stuart Newman (SPAC),Joel Swartz (SPAC), Hugh Wilson(SPAC), and Joe Wolfson (SPAC).Social SciencesNine seats —■ Dan Candea(SPAC), Ann Cordilia (SPAC),Mike Goldfield (SPAC), Jeff Good¬man (SPAC), Lenny Handelsman(SPAC), Chris Hobson (SPAC), BillKornich (SPAC), Mary Nelson(SPAC), and Bill Nowlin (SPAC).Social Services AdministrationTwo seats — No candidates.The candidates for the NSA dele¬gation are: Chelsea Baylor (Ind.),Roger Black (NSA Reform Party),Alan Bloom (Ind.), Joe MichaelCobb (NSARP), M. Dov Dublin(NSARP), John Duslack (Ind.),David Friedman (NSARP), Bernie Grofman (NSARP), Jim McDaniel(NSARP), John Moscow (NSARP),Bill Phillips (NSARP), John Sie-fert (NSARP), Jonathan Still(NSARP), Nancy Wieckowicz(Ind.), and Leonard Alan Zax(NSARP). The first five winnerswill be delegates and the secondfive will be alternates.Voting for SG and NSA and forthe “Choice ’68” college presiden¬tial preference primary will takeplace on Thursday, April 25, at thefollowing places: Woodward Court,Burton-Judson Courts, and PierceTower, from 7:30 a.m. to 9:00a.m.; Law School Lobby, SocialSciences Lobby, and Eckhart-Ryer-son Lobby, from 9:00 a.m. to 11:00a.m.; Mandel Hall corridor, PierceTower, Woodward Court, and Bur¬ton-Judson Courts, from 11:30 a.m.to 1:30 p.m.; Mandel Hall corridor,Bookstore, and Cobb Hall, from1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.; Snell-Hitch-cock, from 3:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.;Pierce Tower, Woodward Court,and Burton-Judson Courts, from5:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.The schedule for Friday will beexactly the same except that, fromJ 9:00 to 11:00 a.m., Kent will'eplace the Eckhart-Ryerson Lobby.Students may go to any pollingplace to yote-(or, the candidates, oftheir constituencies.Coming Sunday: TOM JONESSunday, April 28. 7:00 & 9:30/ Cobb Hall/ $1 / Contemporary European FilmsTHE 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. 10016MONDAY LECTURES8 P.M. LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMApr. 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.For Information, call Extension 3137. SALE,MONO LP Sreg. 4.79 NOW 1.59lOO’s in StockTop ArtistsTop LabelsSTORE HOURS:Monday thru Saturday10 A.M. to 10 P.M.Sunday12 Noon to 6 P.M. ffihaft BallIn Hyde Park — 1444 E. 57th St home 0f audio eleaanceBU 8-4500 ' °These records can be played on stereo equipment.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 23, 1968MAROON SPORTSFlint I Wins IM Soccer; Netters Take 5thBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantFlint I defeated Henderson Southyesterday afternoon to win theCollege division of the IntramuralSoccer (Socim) tournament.Woodward Court won the gameon corner kicks. A special IM ruleawards the game to the team withthe most corner kicks if the scoreis tied at the end of regulationplay and a six-minute overtime.This was the case, and Flintnotched six such kicks to three forHenderson.Playing for the Flint team inthis championship game were A1Brimmer, Gary Yudkoff, BozidarYovovich, Bill Lee, CharlesFuhrer, A1 Lerper, Steve Zimo,Ted Fathauer, Arthur Schwart,and Jerry Lapidus, captain.Flint reached the finals by de¬feating University House by a for¬feit and Tufts and ThompsonSouth by twin 1-0 shutouts to winthe College house green division.The team then pulled a stuning 1-0 upset over fraternity champ PsiUpsilon to reach the final contest.Henderson had a bye and a for¬feit for their opening victories, butscored big 3-0 and 2-0 victoriesover Vincent and Tufts North toget the chance to face Flint. In thefrat division, Psi Upsilon defeatedPhi Delta 1-0, nipped Alpha Deltaon corner kicks, and smashed PhiSigma 5-1.TennisThe Maroon tennis squad scoredits fifth victory in a row by blank¬ing Illinois Institute of Technology9-0 yesterday.Playing at home, the netterscompletely dominated the courtsand grabbed six of the ninematches in only two sets.Tom McCroskey, the team’s firstyear standout, continued his ex¬cellent first singles work with a6-3, 1-6, 6-1 victory. He was fol¬lowed in order by Dick Pozen, 6-3,6-1; Jim Griffin, 6-1, 6-1; MikeKoch-Weser, 6-4, 6-4; Don Mars,6-2, 6-2; and Bruce Simmons, 6-8,6-1, 6-3. In doubles McCrosky and Grif-fen went three sets to take a 4-6,6-4, 7-5 win, while the teams ofMars and Koch-Weser and Pozenand Simmons won handily 8-6, 6-3and 8-4 in a shortened set.Coach Moyle’s squad will go fornumbers six and seven this week,facing Wheaton at Wheaton todayand hosting Marquette at 1:30 p.m.Friday.In action last Thursday, the ten¬nis team swept to its third straightvictory by crushing George Wil¬liams College, 8-1. The Maroonnetters took all six singlesmatches and lost only the firstdoubles competition.Tom McCroskey at first singleswas the only Maroon to have anydifficulty with his G.W. opponent—McCroskey took the match inthree sets, 7-5, 1-6, 6-1. Chicagoplayers easily took the remainingindividual matches: Dick Pozen,6-3, 6-2; Jim Griffin, 6-0, 6-0; MikeKoch-Weser, 6-1, 6-0; Don Mars,6-3, 6-0; and, in an exhibitionmatch, Bruce Simmons, 6-2, 6-2. The doubles team of McCroskeyand Griffin suffered the squad’sonly defeat, as George Williamssalavaged a 7-5, 6-1 victory. Marsand Koch-Weser, second doubles,and Dave Koss and Pozen, thirddoubles, despatched the opposition6-3, 6-3 and 6-0, 6-2 respectively.BaseballChicago’s baseball squad cameup with its second double-headersplit in as many such matches Sat¬urday at Galesburg, Ill. The squadupended Knox College 8-1 in thefirst contest but were plagued byerrors in the second game and lostby a one-run 9-8 margin.Five-hit pitching by Dennis Cul¬len and fine hitting by the entiresquad combined for the first gamevictory. Cullen went the entiregame and fanned six while givingup only three walks—he had ashutout until the last inning. Theteam scored on quick outbursts inthe first and third innings, openingthe game with three runs and add¬ing four in the third and one morein the fifth. Leadoff ManHeading the attack from hisleadoff position was veteran“Wink” Pearson, who went threefor four including a double and 2RBIs. Roger Vice nearly matchedthe feat by slashing a triple and asingle and also driving in two runsKnox scored early against Chi¬cago hurler Eric Furtkamp in thesecond contest and racked up fourruns in the first two innings; re¬liever John Ryan was himself un¬able to stem the tide. By the topof the seventh, the Maroons weredown by three, 8-5.Vice opened the final inning byreaching first on a Knox error,and Jim Stankiewitz followed witha double. A sacrifice by Furtkampand a fielder’s choice on Cullen ac¬counted for one run, and a walk byTom Zeason and a single by GaryLeland tied the game up. ButKnox scored the winning run inthe bottom half of the inning on atough throwing error.Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per line re¬peat. Count 35 characters and spacesper line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago. III. 60637.No Ads will be taken over the phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO 3FOR fSrSfHER INFORMATION: PhdneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.BLUESYou can do the JAMES BROWN—Lou can do the JAMES BROWN—Friday, April 26, Ida Noyes Hall withTHE MAHOGANY HALL BLUES BANDAn S. V. C. G. BenefitLOSTZENITH HEARING AID. Behind the eartype. Reward. DO 3-4300, Ext. 67.Brown Leather Bag and Keys. Reward. Noquestions asked. Call MO 4-7100, Ext. 313,ask for Monica—Form 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.ANNOUNCINGThis is S. V. C. G. Week.APARTMENTS TO SHARELarge 4 ROOM FURNISHED APT. Own bedroom. 51st 8, Harper. $65/mo. Avail. 6/1 to9/25 or 9/25 to 6/69. Call Richard at 493-5750.Need FEMALE ROOMMATE NOW! with op¬tion for summer and/or Fall. SAFE, 3minutes from Quad, own room, $45/month.643-6803 after 5 p.m. Keep trying.1 or 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES FOR SUM¬MER and/or next year to share 6 room apt.Own bedroom(s). Kimbark 8. 54th. 363-7682.ROOMS FOR RENTSUMMER ROOMS, Singles 8. Doubles, $150.From June 15 to Sept. 15. $25 Deposit im¬mediately. Prime Location. Call Mark at643-4352 between 5:45 and 6:45 P.M.APARTMENTS TO RENTFOUR ROOM APT. Lease begins June 1,$120/month. On campus. Call 752-8282 at6 P.M.6900 S. CRANDON AVENUE. Deluxe HighRise. One bedroom Apts, from $120. Parquetfloor. See Mrs. Haley. Office of Building.Security Guard. MU 4-7964.FOUR ROOM APT. 54th PI. & Blackstone.Light and clean, well-serviced. $130/monthincl. utils. Available May 1, 324-7583, eves.FOR PROFESSIONAL PEOPLE7129-43 South Euclid AvenueFormer CO-OP BuildingThese extraordinary apartments feature un¬usually large rooms, loads of closet space,cabinet kitchens, and 2 door refrigerators.Immaculate grounds and public space.Garage included in Rental.4 Rooms $1505 Rooms $1756 Rooms $185Shown by Appointment only.Call TR 3-3226 weekdaysTR 3-7250, Saturdays and Sundays.SACK REALTY COMPANY6549 S. Halsted Street SUBLET6 ROOMS, 6106 Ingleside. Sunporch, leaseuntil December, renewable. 667-7384, May1. Reasonable.SUBLET June-Sept. 5423 Dorchester, 4 rooms,Furnished, includes queen-sized bed, $225.Refrigerator. Call 955-0672.! 6'/j ROOMS, 2 baths, Fall option; $195. South1 Shore. 363-4615, evenings.SOUTH SHORE—one bedroom; furnished,view of lake; on U.C. busline, for summer.$140/month. 955-7563.3 room ENGLISH BASEMENT. Sublet tilSept. Only $81.50/month. 67th 8, Paxton.Exc. transportation. Take the Campus Bus8. See! 324-6259.SUMMER SUBLET, large, 1 bedroom, apart¬ment, lakeview, furnished, store and laundryin Building. Call 684-7884.Spacious, 3 bedroom Hyde Park Apt. forSublet, June 15 to Oct. 1, Call 288-2561.SUBLET. Fully furnished 6 room apt. porch,tree. 1 block campus. June 10-Sept. 15.Reasonable. 684-3839.SUMMER SUBLET. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.$120/month. Grnwd. nr. 52nd. 752-7669.TRADEWILL TRADE my beat-up old golf clubs foryour beat-up old bike. 752-0282, evenings.MONEYJ $50 BONUS for Hyde Park apt. 5 or /horerooms. Start now or summer. 3 male grad,students. References. 684-8480.FOR SALESUPER BIG AND COMFORTABLESealy EXTRA-FIRM Queen-sized mattress,spring/box, and frame. No buttons-quilted.Only six months old. New $250.00. Movingto California so will sacrifice for $150.00.Call 324-5751, between 7 and 8 P.M.BELL STEREO CTGE., TAPE RECORDERand GARRARD STEREO CHGR.—$75. ES5-9532.1 VW LUGGAGE RACK. $15. DESK 40x18,6 drawers, $15, SMITH-CORONA PORTABLE$40. 752-3339, evenings.NIKKORMAT FTn with 1.4 lens. Perfectcondition. 5 months old. $200. 324-5751, be¬tween 7 8, 8 P.M.1964 VW SEDAN. 41,000 miles. Call 643-3429.EXOTIC ABYSINNIAN KITTENS, male andfemale. Reasonable. 684-7838.Call for INFORMATION about USED andNEW HI-FI EQUIPMENT FOR SALE. 256-4785 after 7 p.m.1965 HONDA. 50 cc. Exc. condition. 643-4881.CHEVY 1966 Bel Air, V-8, auto trans, pwr.steering, good cond., clean. 955-1832.MOBILE HOME, 48' x 10'. 1 bedroom, com¬pletely furnished. $2500. Call 219-931-8950 inHammond. 17 minutes from U. of C.26" BOYS BIKE. Old but sturdy. $12. Call924-9213.Air conditioner $50, buffet, cot, mirror $10each. Bookcase, rocker $5 each. Call 493-3153.YOGAYogi Sri Nerode conducts individual YOGAINSTRUCTION in Hyde Park in bodily re¬laxation and tranquility. Classical breathing,and higher meditation. Anyone interestedmay call DO 3-0155. FREE KITTENS AND CATSPUSSIES GALORE! Tabbies, 4 weeks old,Hi I.Q. Cute. 643-3627, evenings.Animals with a real personality. Affectionate,lovely female CATS. Matured, mellow. Call324-5751, between 7 and 8 P.M.DRAFT RESISTANCE“Canvas and Contribute" S. V. C. G. In¬formation Table. Mandel Hall Corridor, M-F,11:30 to 1:30.DANCEBEAUX ARTS MASQUERADE BALLMay 3 at 8:30 P.M. Ida NoyesMAHOGANY HALL BLUES BANDFREE TICKETS available at ReynoldsClub Desk for Students and Faculty.APARTMENT WANTEDOne-person apt. in Hyde Park for May occ.Call Dan, BU 8-2292, before noon or aftermidnt.Want summer sublet. Furn. 2Vi or up inHyde Park. Call Paul at 924-9213 after 5.Leave message.WANTEDUSED JEEP. Call 684-7838.Male student exp. w. kids desires room w.kitchen priv. in exch. for baby sitting and/orgarden or other work. Pref. May 1 occu¬pancy. 288-2221.HOUSE OR APT. TO MAINTAIN. To finishMS in peace 8, quiet. U. C. Prof, will take-care of it now to August. Call ext. 4038.CAMPAIGNERS for KENNEDY in Indiana.Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129.Men's BIKE and Ladie's BIKE. X4743. JudyDo CREATIVE STUDENTS exist at U.C.?Prove it—Enter your work in FOTA'S ARTCONTESTS (leave with Mary Collins at Stu¬dent Activities Office, INH) and maybewin $25.TRAVELSPLIT with Marco Polo Travel. 288-5944.WORKADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT to Directorof Community Relations in Hyde Park Socialagency. Top secretarial skills and abilityto keep simple fund-raising records accurate¬ly. Must be warm, out-going personality withvolunteers and staff. Job has executivegrowth potential for career-minded woman.Age no special factor. New opening at com¬petitive salary level. Must be willing to takeresponsibility and initiative. Call Ml 3-7077.J & J PUBLICATIONS, INC., Downtown AdAgency, will be on Campus April 30 inter¬viewing students for SUMMER AD SPACESALES JOBS (Established Accounts). Jobspay salary plus commission plus expenses.Sign up now at REYNOLDS CLUB PLACE¬MENT OFFICE—ROOM 220 (If you want to).PERSONALS"The lights dimmed and Johnny prancedout in goggles flickering Northern Lightswearing a jockstrap of undifferentiated tissuethat must be in constant movement to avoidcrystallization."G-LOVE-JMIKE: You have missed a lot in the sexworld, but now that you're 20, you'll never,never catch up. " WHO OWNS TONY VARGAS?Why do we have an Abortion Conferencehere at the same time that the LEAGUEOF WOMEN VOTERS holds its nationalconvention?MANDALA is a symbol.Granny Tubbs sends love 8, kisses to theBANDERSNATCH.ED—Remember when Christine thought thatthe perineum was the area arund theHeart?—The StarKeep your eye on THE MAN IN A VANHEUSEN—He's probably the Man.Thanks, BILL, for the SUPER COGNAC! I ITHE MAGICIANAre you sure she didn't say "THE HARD?"MANDALA is a happening.Life is iust a bowl of cherry yogurt.Made ya lookMade ya lookMade ya buy a penny book.ADULT YELLOW PAGESTHE DIRECTORY OF UNUSUALOver 1000 descriptions—thousands of items.Everything one can imagine. Whatever youare looking for—it's listed. Use our intro¬ductory offer; 35c. Refund if unsatisfied.(State age)Alfa-One, Box 506-A3-4,Rivera, Calif. 90660Foreign Car Hospital is here to service yourlittle car or sell you one. Call for appoint¬ment. Ml 3-3113.If DALEY shoots all the looters, who willpatrol the streets?Even Jeffery reads the Classified ads beforethe rest of the paper. Maybe he REALLYdoes have a sense of humor! ! ! ! ?"Pressure upon this spot sends him on anecstatic whirl."SERGEI SERGEYEVITCH PROKOFIEV(April 23, 1891-March 5, 1953)Voting the JOHNSON-McKENNEDY TICKETfor Cold War? Try Peace and Freedomorganizing Meeting for New Politics, IdaNoyes, Wed., 7:30.DAVID SCHOENBRUNTHANK YOU CHUCK! ! ! !Building Bridges is tiresome.EAT at Hutch Commons, 10,000 flies. . . .Chicago Science Fiction Society will meetTuesday, April 23, at 7:30 p.m. in Ida NoyesSun Parlor.CAMPAIGN FOR KENNEDY in INDIANA!Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129.PEACE ON EARTH PEACE MARCH . . .Rally at the Bandshell in Grant Park at12:00 noon—march thru Loop to Civic Centerto hear Sammy Rayner, Jr. speak. Tickets$1—Send your money to WOMEN FORPEACE now—Make plans to bring everyoneopposed to the WAR! ! !The BLACK STUDENTS ALLIANCE willconvene this Saturday, April 20, 1968 atWoodward Court, 5824 South Kimbark Ave¬nue at 7:30 P.M. Slides which were takenon the WEST SIDE will be shown.Burning Bridges is risky."East is East and West is WestAnd Never the Twain Shall Meet."—Allen Ginsberg Who owns Tony Vargas?The MagicianDavid Schoenbrun on VietnamTHE BLUE GARGOYLEMay 1 8. a: 8 and 9:15 P.M.Admission 75c. Profit to CADRE.Playing bridge is something else.If you want to be happy for the rest ofyour life, Just make a pretty woman yourwife.MANDALA is a new coffee shop in thebasement of Cobb. Tea, coffee, pastries,love. Open 9 to 5 daily and evenings forDoc Films. Happen at Mandala."The pathology of the New Testament ismainly demonic and many of the miraclesof healing are exorcisms."CO-OP CONSIGNMENTS held over 1 yearare subject to Vi price cut, over 2 years,Ihey become the property of the CO-OP.Keep democracy alive in South Vietnam—SMOKE OPIUMThere is one reality, at least, which we allseize from within, by intuition and not bysimple analysis. It is our own personality Inits flowing through time—our self whichendures. Bergson.STICK NO BILLS.FILT-R-ITE are the best FILTERS in theWORLD.Very nice indeed — but how in hell doesone transcend one's senses?Why has the KITTY chosen the DivinitySchool?Get a real choice on the Illinois Ballot —PEACE AND FREEDOM PARTY,Ida Noyes, Wednesday at 7:30.Interested in Sr. Seminar using Lai Read¬ings next year? Dave, 684-8480.DADA! BY GARBANZO!MAY 4! IDA NOYES!FOTANo scientist cares to reconstruct reality.SLF.Two serious amateur photographers needfemale models for figure studies.Call CARLISLE at SO 8-4884 or MICHAELat 324-9257."To a sensitive eye, physical forms thatare not perfect have their interest."HIRE THE HIP"Ignorance is a delicate Blossom. Touch itand the Bloom is gone." Oscar Wilde. "TheImportance of Being Earnest." May 3, 4, 5.Reynolds Club."The most charismatic leaders are somehownot of the people whom they lead."FOR SALE: Gibbon Ape. 3 years. House-broken. Area Code 213-463-3976.Free CO-OP SERVICES - Babysitting, jobs,rides ... love?WRITERS WORKSHOP at PL 2-8377.Lay your cards on the table at the BAN¬DERSNATCH.From the SMITH: "Evergreen Review isthe penis of Grove Press."Remember the good old days when knowingthe meaning of a single word transfixedthe entire HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVIL¬IZATION and made the difference betweenand A and an F. And the word WATER¬SHED.STOP WATER POLLUTION — Eat Shit!■» e s. * i s. *■*»* .■ n * •*» » HMe-u.April 23, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm'closed SundaysParty facilities to 400 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIUED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESMOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OFTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 MY 3-925VStudent DiscountsDEADLINEfor EXTENDEDFOTA Art Conteststo April 26.All items should oedisplayable or hangable.• Photograpny• Sculpture• Painting and Collage• Ceramics, etc.Bring to Student Activities Office,Ida Noyes, second floor. "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 LIMITEDI 321 West Huron Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610! F J First 18x24 poster from your snapshot $3.50| QJ Each additional poster from the same snapshot 2.50NAMEADDRESSCITY STATE ZIP FOTA Presents SPRING SONGThurman Barker, Charles Clark, Joseph Jarmanin concert Thursday April 25Ida Noyes Hall 8:00 p.m. 50<tSEE AMERIKA FIRSTU of C Blackfriars Presentsa Musical Adaptation ofFRANZ KAFKA’SAMERIKAMondel Hall Thur., Fri., Sat.May 2, 3, 4, 8:30 pmTickets: $2.50, $2.00 with $.50 student discountspecial group rates availableMandel Hall Box Office opens April 15for information call Ml 3*0800FEsYIvAL OF THE ARTS ’6& PRESENTS A COnSeR^T^^^MADRIGALS AND ROUNDSDi Easso-Morley-Gibbons-PurcellSwift Patio-12 noon—Tuesday, April 23—Thursday April 25try to revolutionize tomorrow.CAMPAIGN IN INDIANA FORROBERT KENNEDYEvery day to May 1 Bu 8-6610 ext 3129Friday May 3 IN PERSONcTatar. vhuland ciliary8:30 P.M.OPERA HOUSE$6.00-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00Tickets on Sale at theOPERA HOUSE BOX OFE1CE20 N. WackerEnclose Stamped-Self-AddressedEnvelope for mail orders.Exclusively on Warner Bros.RecordsWe have thenew Volvo 144,(VOLVO)WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SUES & SERVICE CTR..INC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1*3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too! The Musical That SOCKS IT TO YOU!8 SHOWS WEEKLY - TUES. thru THURS.GALA OPENING APRIL 23LIMITED ENGAGEMENT THRU MAY 19 ONLYBOX OFFICE OPEN NOW DAILY 10-9 PMSUN - 12-7:30MAIL ORDERS ALSO-PLEASE GIVE 3 ALTERNATE DATESSchedule and prices for all performances April 18 thru Hay 19 (no performances Mondays)lues., Wed., Thurs. 8:30 pmand Sunday 7:00 pm •Tioxei &Main Floo'r lower Balcony ' UpperBalcony Gallery$7.50 $7.50-6.50-6.00 $5.00 $3.00Friday, 8:30 pm 8.50 8.50-7.50-7.00 5.00 3.00Saturday, 8:30 pm 9.00 9.00-8.00-7.00 •5.00: • 3.00Wed. A Sat. Matinees 2 pm 6.00 6.00-5.50-5.00 4.00 3.00Make check payable & mail to: Golden Boy, Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. CongressChicago 60605. Be sure to enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope.AUDITORIUM THEATRE • CONGRESS AT WABASH 922-6634* The opening preview has been delayed from April 16 to April 18 because rehearsalswere canceled in tribute to f' ■'mery at the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Benefitpatrons holding tickets for 16 and 17 will be Informed directly abent laterdates by their benefit organic is. Benefit tickets cannot be exchanged at the Audi¬torium Theatre box office.8 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 23, 1968