Univ. of Chicago LibrarySerial Rec* Dept*Harper M22Chicago,III. 60637 Non-Profit OrgU. 3, POSTAGEPAIDChicago, IllinoisPermit No. 7931The Chicago Maroon FoundedIn 18921VOL. 76, NO. 52 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1968Teach-In PoihlBreak-Upof System. The Maroon — PHIL LATHROPFRIDAY SPEAKER: Art Waskow tells teach-in audience on Rocke¬feller Chapel lawn of "strains on the system."— —Lipsch Is SelectedAt a SPAC CaucusBy JOHN MOSCOWNews EditorThe Student Political ActionCommittee (SPAC) has chosen itscandidates for Student Govern¬ment (SG) offices at a secret caucus held May 5, The Maroonlearned yesterday. Among the can¬didates chosen were Jerry Lipsch,’69, for president and Arthur Hoch-berg, 70, for vice-president.Lipsch, when asked yesterdayfor comment about the reportedcaucus, denied that it had anymeaning. “The decisions of thatcacus were only temporary and arenot binding. Nothing was decided,and nothing is clear,” Lipschstated.He went on to say, however, thatthere would be a caucus of SPACmembers elected to the Assemblyat 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the IdaNoyes Library and an Assemblymeeting at 8 p.m. in the Lounge.Notices to that meeting had notLate RegisterWill Cost $25The fee for late registration willgo up from $5 to $25 as of AutumnQuarter 1968, according to Dean ofStudents Charles D. O’Connell, to“encourage students to register atthe normal registration time.”“Because we start very late inthe year,” O’Connell said, “allkinds of accomodations have to bemade that require very promptknowledge of what our enrollmentis. The most important of these, ofcourse, is certification for the Se¬lective Service.“In the past, we have sent no¬tices directly to the Selective Serv¬ice Boards. We had form lettersand this was a very quick process.Now we have to prepare docu¬ments for students. If the draftboards don’t get quick notification,they start re-classifying.”Other institutions require earlyevidence of registration status aswell, he said. been sent out, however; at thetime he spoke.Last year SPAC ran on a plat¬form including the holding of opencaucuses This year, under Lipsch,only SPAC assemblymen are beingtold about the location of the cau¬cus and are being invited to it. Al¬though Lipsch told The Maroonthat the SG secretary would re¬lease the location of both the cau¬cus and the meeting for publica¬tion, his original written instruc¬tions to her did not mention re¬leasing the caucus location toothers than SPAC assemblymen.Victory ExpectedCandidates slated by SPAC areexpected to win election in the SGAssembly since through the vic¬tory SPAC scored in the April 25-26 elections. A clear majority ofthe 49-seat Assembly are eithermembers of SPAC or are affiliatedwith it.In addition, it was learned thatDavid Kohl, manager of the Ban-dersnatch and third-year studentin the divinity school, was pickedfor secretary but consented onlyunder the condition that he nothave to take the minutes at morethan half the meetings. It was fur¬ther learned that Jefferson HoldenSchnitzer IV, a graduate studentin the humanities, was slated fortreasurer.Schnitzer, who is also associateeditor of The Chicago Literary Re¬view, will probably serve on theCommittee on Recognized StudentOrganizations (CORSO) as well.Serving with him will be Joe Wolf-son and Scott Bennett.Wolfson, a graduate student inphysics, served on CORSO thisyear and will probably be chair¬man. Bennett, 70, a member ofthe Student-Faculty-AdministrationCourt, will have to forego hismembership in that organization.Also picked at the May 5 caucuswas Steve Landsman, ’69, aschairman of the Election andRules Committee. By HARVEY WASSERMANStaff WriterThe Students for a DemocraticSociety conference on electoralpolitics took its place Friday after¬noon on the Rockefeller Chapellawn as the first major nationalteach-in on the electoral process.Officially titled “Can Americabe Salvaged?” the conference be¬gan with Art Waskow of the Insti¬tute for Policy Studies and a Ken¬edy-pledged delegate to theChicago Democratic Conventionfrom Washington, D.C.Waskow told a crowd that fluc¬tuated between 100 and 300 listen¬ers that “the system that socialscientists were telling us threeyears ago was the most stable inthe world is now cracking over theuse of the military to hold theempire.“The McCarthy-Kennedy cam¬paigns reflect the strain the mil¬itary has placed on the system,and the break-up of the old NewDeal coalition of blacks, ‘newclass’ educated men, organized la¬bor and the rulers of the south,”Waskow said.“It is not yet clear whether theywill be able to deal with the break¬up, but the two campaigns haveoffset each other by clearly illus¬trating that McCarthy does notmean the end of racism and thatBobby does not mean the end toempire.”Machine DisruptionWaskow said six or seven of the44-man D.C. delegation waspledged to making such radical de¬mands on the party as the seatingof the black Mississippi FreedomDelegation, the unseating of May¬or Daley for “inciting to murder,”the limiting of single campaigncontributions to $100, and the nom¬ ination of delegates at neighbor¬hood conventions — all aimed atbreaking machine control of theparty.“We will show there are mil¬lions prepared to organize inde¬pendent of the party, that it mustbecome democratic or die,” hesaid.Waskow was followed by a rep¬ resentative of the California Peaceand Freedom Party who told thecrowd of the party’s success ingetting on the Presidential ballotand of its inability as an indepen¬dent party to draw its own plat¬form, including demands for im¬mediate withdrawal from Vietnamand black self-determination.Turn to Page 3Funds Needed To RescueLegal Services to YouthBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorLegal Services to Youth (LSY) isdying.The program—a University ex¬perimental effort to bring legal aidto young ghetto residents—will ex¬pire by the end of this month if itdoes not receive a quick and mas¬sive transfusion of funds. Accordingto Henry W. McGee, legal directorof LSY, all efforts to find a sourceof funds has so far netted only a$1000 grant from the Kate Mare-mont Foundation which will pro¬vide rent for the LSY storefront of¬fice for four months.The program, an “action-research project” has beenfinanced for the past year and ahalf by the Ford Foundation alongwith a similar project run out ofCook County Jail. It was designedto show that a legal need existedwhich was not being fulfilled by anyexisting local or national agency.“I would say that we demon¬strated a howling need,” says HansW. Mattick, associate director ofthe Center for Studies in CriminalJustice, “but that doesn’t meanthat somebody will pick it up.”Meager ShowingSo far, LSY has contacted a wide variety of foundations, businesses,and community groups includingthe Cook County Bar Association,Lawyers Defence Association, andCommunity Response with only thesole $1000 grant to show for theirefforts.The poor response is not verysurprising, according to McGee.Most of the community groups arethemselves starved for funds andare thus in no position to take onan added burden.“What our failure reflects,” M'cGee adds ruefully, “is the fact thatwe have no viable institutional wayof meeting the needs of the peoplein the black communities. The peo¬ple in black communities do nothave control of their own commun¬ity programs, and as a result thiskind of thing happens. What theyneed ideally is a tax base of theirown.”LSY officials emphasize that it isthe responsibility of some govern¬ment agency rather than the Uni¬versity to fund the project. “TheUniversity doesn’t go around spon¬soring law offices,” McGee stated.“Its main job is educational. Youjust can’t expect the University tomake up for the failures of theTurn to Page 3SCORE 380-155Brandeis Trounces Bowl TeamThe Chicago College Bowl teamwas mercilessly trounced Sundayafternoon by its Brandeis counter¬parts, 380-155.Chicago had previously been castas the lazy hare to Immaculata’sand Loyola (Los Angeles) Univer¬sity’s equally lazy tortoise on theweekly television program.But Brandeis’ tortoise, to para¬phrase Severn Darden’s old Sec¬ond City routine, was a bullet¬shaped tortoise, with long, sinewylegs about four feet long, and itcould run like crazy!The opening minutes of the con¬test appeared mpre a guessing game than a maten of intellectualwits. Asked about the body’s so¬cially ungraceful means of expel¬ling excess carbon dioxide, Bran¬dies guessed “sneeze,” Chicagotried “hiccup,” but the right an¬swer was “yawn.”For the next question, a part ofStrauss’ “Die Fledermaus” wasplayed and the varsity scholarswere asked what mammal themusic was about. Brandeisattempted “donkey,” Chicagolurched forward with “monkey,”but the correct reply was “bat.”Brandeis SurgesAfter that initial hesitation, which left both teams 10 points inthe hole, Brandeis took hold of thegame and by halftime had rackedup 155 points to Chicago’s 60.With four minutes to go in thefinal half Brandeis had 225 to Chi¬cago’s 90. At four minutes thescore was 290-155, at three minutes320-155, at one minute 300-155. Andthe rest is history.The only remark from the Chica¬go team which takes home $9000 inscholarships, was “Thank God welost before the tenth week.”And Coach - Carl Bemesderferdidn’t get to wear his Nehrujacket.House Denies Aid to Some Disruptive ProtestorsWASHINGTON (CPS)-In an ef¬fort to crack down on the recenttrend in student demonstrations,the House wants to deny federalfinancial assistance to studentswho take part in any type of dis¬ruptive action of college campuses.The House voted last week infavor of an amendment to that ef¬fect to a bill extending the fourmajor student financial aid pro¬grams for two years. The amend¬ment was passed 306-54, and theentire bill later was approved 348-5.There is considerable disagree¬ment, however, over whether thecontroversial amendment, aspassed, applies only to the Nation¬al Defense Education Act studentloan program, or to all four of themajor student aid programs ex¬tended by the bill.The amendment was offered byRep. Louis Wyman (R-N.H.) as asubstitute to an amendment which was specifically related to theNDEA program. An aide to Rep.Wyman, nevertheless, said it wasintended to apply to all of the pro¬grams in the bill, including the Ed¬ucational Opportunity Grants pro¬gram, the guaranteed student loanprogram, and the college work-study program.But some education officials, in¬cluding John F. Morse, director ofthe Commission on Federal Rela¬tions of the American Council onEducation, claim the House-passedamendment applies only to theNDEA program.Technicalities UnimportantRegardless of these conflictinginterpretations, most observersagree that members of the Houseintended for the amendment to ap¬ply to all of the programs. Thetechnicalities can be worked outbefore the bill becomes law, theysay, and even if they are not Con¬gressional intent will be considered in determining how 'Che amend¬ment will be applied.Rep. Wyman said he proposedthe amendment as a direct reac¬tion to recent demonstration^ oncampuses throughout the countryin which students have occifriedadministration buildings, forcingthe administrators out, and insome cases forcing the closing ofthe institutions.The amendment says funds can¬not be given to an individual who“willfully refuses to obey a lawfulregulation or order of the univer¬sity or college which he is attend¬ing or at which he is employedwhen such willful refusal is certi¬fied by the appropriate universityor college authority to have beenof a serious nature and contributedto the disruption of the universityor college administration.”Although Wyman said theamendment should apply to a “ser¬ious infraction disrupting the uni-TEN MORE ARRESTSAgitation Continues at RooseveltTen more students at RooseveltUniversity were arrested yester¬day afternoon as they entered theoffice of the president’s secretaryto attempt another sit-in.Meawhile, a 16-member facultygroup has set up a “free univer¬sity” to teach the 16 students whowere exeplled Friday for seizing the university’s development officeThursday night.The group, called Faculty forAcademic Freedom, is led byblack sociologist St. Clair Drake.Students demonstrated Wednes¬day, Thursday, and Friday nightslast week to protest RooseveltPresident Rolf A. Weil’s veto ofNU Trustees To Meet,Consider Action on Sit-InSpecial to The MaroonEVANSTON—A special meetingof the board of trustees of North¬western University was expected tobe called today to discuss therecommendations of a trustee’ sub¬committee which met Friday.The subcommittee recommendedthat the board endorse the admini-stratiions response to a 38-hour sit-in two weeks ago by black students.The Northwestern administrationagreed to all the demands of thedemonstrators, including seperatedormitories for black students.There is reported to be some dis¬sent among the trustees to endors¬ing the administration. A Sun-Times article credits John G.Searle, president of the board, withsaying that the subcommitteepraised the administration foragreeing to a higher Negro enroll¬ment, but condemned officials for referring to Northwestern as“racist.”In the agreement acceding tostudent demands, administratorssaid the Northwestern has beenguilty of “the racist attitudes thathave prevailed historically in thissociety.”Along with an increased blackenrollment, the administrationagreed to demands for an increasein financial aid for Negro studentsand segregated housing for thoseblack students who desire it.according to Searle, also statesthat trustees will hold the admini¬stration responsible for any furtherproperty seizure or damage result¬ing from student demonstrations.A move to block implementationby the administration of the stu¬dents’ demands wsa reported lastweek, but trustees are declining tocomment about this.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWorlc from garage near home or school. the History Department’s appoint¬ment of radical historian Staugh-ton Lynd for “ad hominem” rea¬sons. Lynd is now teaching a parttime at Roosevelt.A total of 58 students have beenarrested for the demonstrations onthe charge of trespassing.No action has been taken by theuniversity on the demonstrationFriday night, in which eleven stu¬dents refused to leave an outer of-five in President Weil’s suite at5 p.m., when the office closed.The students were arrested byChicago police and it is expectedthat they will be suspended by theunievrsity.Twenty-four Roosevelt studentswere suspended for participatingin the demonstration on the eighthfloor of the Roosevelt buildingWednesday night, a spokesmansaid. versity,” some Congressman ar¬gued that it is too vague. Rep.Frank Thompson Jr. (D-N.J.) saidhe attended a small Baptist collegein North Carolina which “wouldrstll today by its standards consid¬er it to be a serious disruption ofthe aims and objectives of the uni¬versity if students were to becaught playing cards or dancing.”Possible ImpactRep. Carl Perkins (D-Ky.),chairman of the House Committeeon Education and Labor, arguedthat the amendment should not bepassed “without full considerationof the possible impact of our ac¬tions.” Perkins said his committeeplans to hold hearings to investi-g a t e the recent studentdisturbances.Most of the Congressmen, how¬ever, were persuaded by those whoargued that the federal govern¬ment cannot offer financial assist¬ance to all students who need it,and that the taxpayers should nothave to support the education of“students who try to take over.”In addition to the Wymanamendment, the House passed twoother amendments to the studentaid bill which clearly apply to allfour programs. The first one, of¬fered by Rep. Neal Smith (D-Iowa), bans federal financial aid tostudents convicted in court ofcrimes related to the seizure ortrespass of school property whichprevents students or administra-or pursuing their study.”Smith said if a student is con¬victed of such an offense by a col¬lege or university body, such as astudent court, the decision on thefuture of his financial aid would beleft to university officials. He saidstudents will be ineligible for fed¬eral and “as of the time they areconvicted in the lower courts.”Riot ResponseThe second amendment, offeredby Rep. William J. Scherle (R-Iowa), bars payments to studentsconvicted of participating in riots.Similar amendments have beentacked on to most appropriationsbills passed by Congress since therecent civil disorders in urban ar¬ eas. Both the Smith and Scherleamendments passed by a voicevote with little dissent.Most education officials wereopenly disturbed and upset by theamendments to the student aidbills. An official at the AmericanCouncil on Education called theamendments “serious and disturb¬ing.” But he added that “the over¬whelming vote in the House seemsto reflect the mood of thecountry.”More than 1.4 million student^-about one-fourth of all college stu¬dents—participate in at least oneof the four programs affected bythe House bill. The House alreadyhas voted similar restrictions onNational Science Foundation fel¬lowships.The four student aid programswhich were extended by the Houseare due to expire June 30. The stu¬dent aid bill has not been reportedout of committee in the Senate.Total authorizations for the fourprograms in the House-passed billamount to about $1 billion for thetwo-year period.UNIVERSITY THEATREPRESENTSBY LORD BYRONROCKEFELLER CHAPELTHURSDAY thru SUNDAYMAY 16, 17,18,19 at 8:30ALL TICKETS $1.50AT THE REYNOLDSCLUB DESKfr\ISPECIAL REPEATPERFORMANCENO EXTRA CHARGE FOR:1. four seat belts2. back-up lights3. sliding sunroof4. 4-spwl synchronized transmission5. power brakes, disc front6 wall-to-wall carpeting7. windshield washer8 two-speed heater/defroster9 fully adjustable, reclining front seats10 stainless steel exterior trim 11. electric dock1 2. trip mileage counter13. front and rear center armrests14. bumper guards, rubber Inserts1 5. tool kit16 Mlchelln X (radial-ply) tires17. carpeted trunk18 fresh adr ventilating system19. extra thick body steelWHAT ELSE DO YOUWANT FOR $2699?PEUGEOTcome indrive theall NEW '68NOW!LESLY IMPORTS INC.PEUGEOT SALES WINNER for CHICAGO and MIDWE*235 S. MICHIGAN 326-2550 All g ATPreparation & Delivery Not Included2 TH^ .CHICAGO MAROON May 14, mpKissinger/Cohn Debate on McCarthyContinued from Page 1In addition to a Presidentialslate, the CPFP is running Con¬gressional and other candidates,including one for district attorneyignoring the marijuana laws.Gus Savage, black Second Dis¬trict candidate for Congress, toldthe audience: “Think of the edu¬cation it would be for those peoplein my district who have been fight¬ing busing to wake up one morn¬ing and find they have a blackCongressman,” and he challengedthe crowd to help his campaign.The evening session began insidethe Chapel with Abby Hoffman ofthe Youth International Party(YIP). “I saw Dwight McDonaldon TV telling some guy the Penta¬gon wasn’t a bunch of kids pissingon the parking lot and smokinggrass,” he said; “it was a bunchof notables registering their com¬plaint.“I couldn’t believe it — for himit might have been a bunch ofnotables, but for us it was a lotdifferent.“The revolution is finding andtaking care of your own needs,engaging in the politics of ecstacy.To do this we need a lot of land,which is why kids are going outwest and to Canada, and which iswhy we took Columbia,” he ex¬plained. “After a while Columbia was ourhome. We had our own overn-ments and everything. Part of mydefense at the trial will be that thecops broke in without a searchwarrant.”In the middle of Hoffman’sspeech, four leaf-clad studentswalked down the aisle with fife,drum, and an American flag whiletwo girls with black pajamas andsampan hats made their pitch forthe Special Vietnam ConvocationGroup.“I don’t mind,” Hoffman com¬mented.The DebateClark Kissinger, a radical Chica¬go organizer, followed Hoffmanwith the opening speech of a de¬bate between himself and SteveCohn, press aide for Senator Eu¬gene McCarthy.“I am appalled,” Kissinger be¬gan, “by the number of jacketsthat carry both Resist and Mc¬Carthy buttons. You people arestill under the illusion that youcan ‘sneak’ a good man into pow¬er, that knowing electoral politicsis a farce you can still say ‘butthis one is different.’“We know that a guy might startout OK and make this deal andthat deal to get ‘where he can dosomething,’ and then by the timehe gets to the top, assuming heFinances Needed To Save LSYContinued from Page 1larger society. If there is a failureof the University, it is a failure totry to influence city officials to ac¬cept their burden.”Different from WoodlawnMcGee also emphasized that theLSY program is basically differentfrom the services which the Uni¬versity runs in the Woodlawn area.LSY operates west of Woodlawn inthe area including the Robert Tay¬lor Homes where the Universityhas no immediate interest as it hasin its own immediate neighborhoodand was run by the University pri¬marily as a research project withservice as a subsiderary goal. LSYhas not requested funding rfom theUniversity.In the past, LSY has been distin¬guished by its experimentation in using non-legal help—some of whomare ex-convicts—in order to keep intouch with the community. It oper¬ates in an area where 40 percent ofthe residents are under 21 andwhich has the second highest delin¬quency rate in the city.DARKROOMIn the interest of cleanliness| the Cap and Gown-Maroondarkroom in Ida Noyes Hallis being rid of all negatives,prints, boxes, etc. Anyonewho wishes to claim any-thing after all these years| should contact Lawrence E.Steinberg, 42 Hitchcock, ori David Travis, 1402 Pierce,> before May 21. still is a good guy, he finds he hasno power because he has no con¬stituency.”‘Not for an End’Cohn replied: “McCarthy is theonly candidate to publicly endorsethe riot commission report. It canbe established that calling for im¬mediate withdrawal has negativeconnotations—McCarthy has calledthe war morally indefensible.“If he will not change the qual¬ity of American life, he is still nota traditional liberal, and his in¬tegrity and low-key conception ofthe Presidency will help commun¬ity organizing,” he said.The debate was followed by HalDraper, author of “The BerkeleyStudent Revolt,” speaking on “TheNecessity for Socialism.”Draper recalled a debate he hadhad which centered on the qualityof life and said: “what is the firstthing people talk about when theydiscuss the low quality of lifehere? — television. And why istelevision so bad? Because it isrun for profit, to sell things. Cap¬italist man is the only animalwhich systematically destroys hisown ecology. And why? For prof¬it, for a system that builds on theworst acquisitive facets of man’spersonality.”The evening ended by candle¬light with a debate between organ¬izer Paul Booth and Associate Pro¬fessor of Sociology Jerome Schol-nick centering on Eugene McCar¬thy, Ford Foundation relations withthe Blackstone Rangers, and poli-tice in pre-Nazi Germany.Mario Savio, state senate candi¬date in California on the Peace andFreedom Party ticket, took sickand was unable to appear at theteach-in. DORETHEA FREASIERMUSEUM STRIKEStriking workers at the Museum of Science and Industry andChicago students talk with Aid. Leon Despres (5th) about workingconditions at Sunday rally. The strike has been on for fiveweeks.'No More Viets'Tomorrow at CobbA meeting will be held in CobbAuditorium at noon tomorrow todiscuss “No More Vietnams.”Participating in the meeting willbe Students for a Democratic So¬ciety veteran Tom Hayden; Assis¬tant Professor of Philosophy Eu¬gene Gendlin; Steve Perkins, agraduate student in psychology, ofCousins and Young for McCarthy;John Beal, ’68, of Students for Ken¬nedy; and Marvin Zonis, an assis¬tant professor of political science,of the Student-Faculty Committeefor Kennedy.Gendlin will be the chairman ofthe meeting, and there will be audi¬ence discussion, a spokesman said. Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.CASTING STILL OPENRolf Hochhuth’s"THE DEPUTY”Call 955-8050THE PLAYERSat the Shore I andWe have thenew Volvo 144.(VOLVO)wWE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO.SALES & SERVICE CTR..INC.7720 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too! How to survive the facultysfinal attack.It’s not like the faculty is out to get you. They’d just like to know what you’ve got.So if you want to show them, you’d better be alert —not just the nightbefore, but during the exam itself.The answer? Take NoDoz.R It’s got the strongest stimulantyou can buy without a prescription.It helps you hang in there at night. It helps restore your recall,your perception, and your ability to solve problems the nextmorning. And it’s not habit forming.NoDoz. Don’t make Finals Week your final week.May 14, 1968 Trite 'CHICAGO MAROONThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiejJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerMore on HousingAmerica is famous for mobility. Each year mil¬lions of Americans change their addresses to followjobs, join or escape family, or find a generally moresatisfactory place to live. A far less numerous, but anespecially significant number of families move for noneof these reasons — they are forced out by highwayconstruction, private redevelopment, urban renewal,and university expansion.Moving allowances, though based on typical mov¬ing costs in the city, are minute compared to theamount of money families must actually spend to move.Owners, though compensated for the “fair market va¬lue” of their home, are never compensated for theexorbitant interest rates they are forced to pay on mort¬gages or for the sentimental value of the one home theywill ever be able to own. The fair market value of thesehomes is so low and the owners are so old that theywill once again be forced into the rental market. Rent¬ers are compensated for their loss and inconvenienceto an even lesser degree.All this might be acceptable if these people werehelped into the decent, suitable housing the act whichestablished urban renewal was supposed to find forevery American family. But the problem which mustbe squarely faced by a university which is displacinghuge numbers of people is that such housing does notexist in Chicago for these people at rents which theycan afford to pay.The University, as we have pointed out, shouldnot be forced into bankruptcy to pay for services thefederal government should be providing. What is need¬ed, though, is Chicago’s recognition that it cannotrightly force those far less capable of bearing theburden into bankruptcy either.If the University discovers it is displacing morepeople than can be housed in available standard hous¬ing in nearby areas of the city at the low prices thepeople it displaces can pay, then it is its duty to cutback on its program to the point where all those dis¬placed can be adequately housed.Late RegistrationThe just-announced increase in the late registra¬tion fee is exhorbitant and will strike heavily and un¬justly upon students whom Chicago ought not penalize.It is not so simple for students who cannot affordtime to spend several consecutive hours between 9 a.m.and 3 p.m. on each of one, two, or three days. In thepast many of these students have chosen to wait untilregistration is over so that they could register withsome promptness. They have been willing to pay theextra fee assessed, figuring perhaps that it helped paythe extra administrative costs.The new sum, $25, has been instituted to stop stu¬dents from doing this. The figure is extremely high andseems to have been advanced by the Office of the Deanof Students as a prohibitive measure. Instead of regis¬tering late, a student must register on time or sufferfinancial disaster.O’Connell should let students take their chanceswith all of the various agencies requiring early regis¬tration and keep the $5 late registration fee, not as apunishment, but as a reasonable fund-raising deviceto meet extra costs. Latest Technological AdvanceKlhAMtUiLetters to the EditorsNo VietnamsLet us not only react againstheadlines. By that time a war ison. The Vietnam war was led upto during a very long period ofposition to American policy andyears. There was little or no op-involvement there over thoseyears. The anti-war movementshould not now dissolve and waituntil after the next blow-up. Bythat time our troops are there.Latin America is now in thephase of the build-up towardwars of U. S. intervention. Nomore Vietnams! means protest¬ing this current U.S. policy.U.S. policy is basically madeup of two elements: (1) leave economics to the direction of the fewcorporations who take money outof these countries; (2) build mil¬itary force in these countries toput down any effort to widen con¬trol now held by a small numberof export-participating families.The big fact most Americansdon’t know is that wealth is flow¬ing from the poor countries tothe rich ones. If this fact alonowere known, much else would be¬come clear to Americans alongwith this fact. The internationalscene would seem less baffling,less a matter of “age-old pov¬erty” and “problems no one real¬ly understands.” Gunnar Myrdalis one internationally known econ¬omist who has constantly empha¬sized that in current interactionwith the developed countries, theunderdeveloped countries exportcapital to the developed ones.Let us extend the opposition tothe present war into a no moreon two facts: the money is beingtaken out, and American-advisedrepression is increasing.* Most Americans don’t like anddon’t understand “why we’ve got¬ten to be the bad guys every¬place,” and they do not wantmore Vietnam wars developing.The present narrow policy profitsonly some few corporations, cer¬tainly not the whole country.These corporations fix high priceswithin the United States, no mat¬ter how little they pay in thesecountries and no matter howmuch they draw out of there.EUGENE GENDLINAssistant Professor ofPsychologyRationalityI am no longer mystified byDean Booth’s fervent committ¬ment to rationality in rhetoric.The gadfly by Edward Phillipsin your issue of April 26 is anexcellent example of the conven¬tional innuendo that is perpe¬trated under the guise of jour¬nalism.As I see it, Mr. Phillips pre¬pares his onslaught from threepoints. One is my concept ofChristianity. I have re-read myletter of April 23 many times,and I have concluded that any¬one who claims to know anythingabout my concept of Christianityor the application of my religiousbeliefs upon reading that letteris either lying or is a clairvoyant.BUT WHILE a clairvoyant canbe excused for getting his signalscrossed, a journalist cannot beexcused for a blatant misuse ofthe language. I have never foundit necessary to include in mywriting a glossary of commonEnglish terms; but Mr. Phillipshas changed all that since theother two parts of his attack arefocused on two words: indiffer¬ ence and responsibility. Mr. Phil¬lips says: “It is obvious that ‘in¬difference’ by its tacit accept¬ance and support of the system,accepts and supports a structurethat is racist, and is thus ineffect, itself racist.” But indif¬ferent implies neutrality of atti¬tude. Does Mr. Phillips still be¬lieve that I support and acceptthe racist system if I am indif¬ferent?The gadfly also quarrels withmy statement that I do not feelresponsible for the wrongs com¬mitted by others. After readingthat Mr. Phillips then presumesthat I have abrogated ail respon¬sibility. Now I will be glad tobear responsibility ofr my ac¬tions if Mr. Phillips will be re¬sponsible for his. But don’t youthink it’s a bit unfair to ask aperson to shoulder the burdenof the rest of humanity, sincewe all have trouble enough withour own selves?W. YAKES-RENO, ’70Letters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago Maroon». « •Founded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throt/gito* the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800. Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pubUshers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON . May 14, 1968GADFLYSome New Proposals for Better University-Community RelationsBy HENRY ETZKOWITZMany people have asked meand Mr. Weiss has written (TheMaroon, April 30) that since Iproposed a change in the direc¬tion of the University’s policy tothe ghetto: (1) What did I thinkwas wrong with what the Uni¬versity was doing? and (2) Whatspecifically did I have in mind asan alternative?My answer is that the majoraim of this University should al¬ways be to continue as the re¬search institution envisioned byPresident Harper. However, thisUniversity must also include asone of its aims the resolving ofthe ghetto crisis. For, only whenthe ghetto sees the University asan ally, and not as an antagonist,will the University be safe forher scholars.To this end we must breakthrough the shibboleth of neces¬sarily expecting ideas to comefrom poor people to solve theproblems of their poverty. As so¬cial scientists we must proposeand/or develop new and uniqueinstitutional solutions to the sit¬uations people are in for there isno guarantee that poor peoplealone can find the answers. Wecannot necessarily derive pro¬grams for social change from thevery people who are victimizedand desire change. They are of¬ten limited in both knowledgeand experience. Ideas and pro¬grams should be presented to therelevant groups in the ghetto:welfare mothers, gang members,parents, etc. If they like the planand see that it can be accom¬plished quickly they will join withyou to establish it. It is a delu¬sion to expect the solutions tothe ghetto crisis to necesarilycome from those who suffer in it.IT ALSO TAKES a rare com¬bination of chutzpah and falseconsciousness to believe that wein the University community donot live in an enclave. Any fe¬male entering student who is un¬der such an illusion from the un¬dergraduate catalogue is dis¬abused of it during OrientationWaek when she is told quite ex¬plicitly where she should andshould not walk.Former Chancellor Kimptonbest illustrated the fortress as¬pect of the University’s relationto the ghetto in his annual meet¬ing with students in a Burton-Judson lounge in 1959. He toldof the University’s effort to havea depressed expressway built on61st St. as a moat between theUniversity and Woodlawn. Thisparticular effort failed to mater¬ialize. However, the urban renew¬al program that was carried outhas only temporarily stabilizedthe upper-middle-class commun¬ity in the immediate vicinity ofthe University while antagonizingthe surrounding ghetto.Several of the more recent ef¬forts of the University to relateto the ghetto are more worth¬while as efforts. But they arestill inadequate to meet the ghet¬to crisis which this Universitymust help solve or else risk dis-2JC £ i appearance as some future riotwashes over the south side.THE WORK OF Rev. Pitcherand students in Operation Bread¬basket is an effort to encouragepatronage of Negro business.However, as the late Abram Har¬ris, economist, noted almost 40years ago, the enrichment of afew in business is of little helpto the vast majority of ghettoresidents. Even so, it would beof some good if Residence Hallsand Commons would purchaseJoe Louis milk and flavor itsswiss steak with Mumbo barbe¬cue sauce. A more significant ec¬onomic aid to the ghetto wouldbe for the University to maintainlarge accounts in Negro banks.The Legal Services to YouthProject has been one of the Uni¬versity’s proudest claims of ser¬vice in the ghetto. It was begunby Law School’s Center for Crim¬inal Justice to find out if provid¬ing lawyers for youths who havebeen arrested would lower theconviction rate. It has indeedfound this to be the case and isshortly scheduled to go out ofexistence now that its sole re¬search aim has been fulfilled.Yet could not the continuation ofa University-ghetto law office bea locus for both research andpractical action about the myriadother legal problems facing ghet¬to residents?THE SOCIAL SERVICES Cen¬ter on 61st St. thus far exists asa set of architectural plans onexhibit in the lobby of the SSAbuilding. If it is built accordingto these plans the top two floorswill consist entirely of cubicles,dozens of them, on the model ofthe large scale welfare office,where presumably neophyte caseworkers will learn to deal withclients. A further extension of thewelfare system, even for re¬search and teaching purposes, isno answer to the ghetto crisis.However, the -first floor isplanned to include actual activi¬ties: a medical clinic and a childcare center. The entire projsctwould be a far more useful un¬dertaking if most of the officeswere eliminated and the spaceused for a large scale infant andchild care center, taking care ofseveral hundred children insteadof the eighty or so now plannedfor. Instead of employing a com¬pletely professionalized and cer¬tified staff, neighborhood menand women should be given thejobs under the supervision of asmall core of certified staff. Thiswould at one stroke help meettwo of the ghettos eying needs:for jobs and child care facilities.Since the time factor is critical,instead of waiting for the financ¬ing for a conventional buildingto come from the government,something which is unlikely tohappen soon given the impendingcuts in the domestic budget, thenew 100 x 200-ft. inflatable, fire¬proof structures, which can beheated in the winter, should beused. The City of New York hasrecently put one up, in a fewdays time, to be used as a sports center in Bedford-Stuyvesant.The recent announcementof a drive to increase the enroll¬ment of black students is a be¬ginning. I f implemented vigor¬ously it will bring Chicago up tothe level of what several of theIvy League schools have beendoing for several years. However,if the University is seriouslycommitting itself to recruitingthe brightest talent from theghetto it should not look only tothe schools but to the gangs. Typ¬ically, ghetto high schools are sorigid, stultifying and bad thatmost everyone of intelligence andspunk drops out. Of course,bringing gang guys into the Col¬lege would have to mean a com¬mitment to a more extensive pro¬gram of preparation than aSummer Institute, tutoring anda buddy system.Yet Chicago is uniquely situat¬ed for this effort. How manyplaces can a gang member go tocollege and still keep in touch?Amherst, which has thus far tak¬en the lead in recruiting gangleaders from Harlem, presents aproblem for the new student inthe complete break from theghetto which it requires out ofgeographical necessity.TUTORING PROGRAMS andeven sending guidance counsel¬ors to Woodlawn schools aremere palliatives when most ghet¬to schools are so terrible that theonly realistic way to get goodschools is to start all over again. A step in this direction would beto introduce some Milton Fried¬man style competition by estab¬lishing a new school.Rather than wait for the re¬ceipt of government funds andthe construction of the proposed61st street school I would suggestthe doubling of the size of thelaboratory schools by addingchildren from the surroundingghetto. Since there is probablynot sufficient space in BlaineHall, surely other space could befound in a University which hasmore classroom space per stu¬dent than any other school ofcomparable enrollment. If not,more inflatable structures. Addi¬tional teachers should not bedifficult to find at a time whenmany college graduates, espe¬cially males, are eager for suchjobs. An imaginative effort tomake schooling relevant to ghet¬to children today should b2 asrelevant to the purposes of thisUniversity as it was for JohnDewey to have originally foundedthe lab school in the 1890’s.FINALLY, not just job trainingbut a massive WPA or PWA pro¬gram providing on-the-job train¬ing for Negroes in the ghetto isthe obvious number one nationalpriority. Massive renovation andrehabilitation programs with lo¬cal Negro apprentices is the mostimportant job program practic¬able right now in the ghetto. Thislast is perhaps beyond the scope of what a university could under¬take, as is the expansion of theabove mentioned programs to thescale where they would meet theneed for them.Thus, I would propose that Chi¬cago take the leadership and im¬plement The Maroon’s proposalto form a coalition of urban andjoin with other groups to pres¬sure the government to put itsresources ino solving the ghettocrisis.Initial financing for these pro¬posals as well as others thathave been presented, includingthe rationalization o f medicalcare in the ghetto and the devel¬opment of self generating Com¬munity Development Centers,would have to come from endow¬ment if they are to be given un¬derway swiftly. However, on alonger term basis foundationscould surely be found to partici¬pate in a major university’s ef¬fort in this area.Even Columbia recently ob¬tained more than one million dol¬lars from the Ford Foundationto do something in connectionwith Harlem. Tragically, Colum¬bia could not think of anythingbetter to do than its ill fated at¬tempt to build a segregatedgymnasium in Morningside Park.It is my hope that Chicago cando better in its relation to theghetto than this or its own urbanrenewal programs of the past.Mr. Etzkowitz is a teachingassistant in the social sciences.,.in,DR,,. AARON ZIMBLER, Optometristi bnh .>Y6t>£9uT no ct-- loorlo’ nclupoi or?0rit New HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIUEO . . CONTACT LENSES", NEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES’ •*,] ' ‘A v'-j'D i ii! ■■ t* .' -k . w Kubrick provides the viewer with theclosest equivalent to psychedelic experiencethis side of hallucinogens • Magazine "A fan¬tastic movie about man's future! Anunprecedented psychedelic roller coaster ofan experience I Magazine ’’Kubrick's 2001' isthe ultimate trip ! MonitorMGM PRESENTS A STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION2001: a space odysseySUPER PANAVISION Oil METR0C0L0RSTARRINGKEIR DULLEA GARY LOCKWOOD SCREENPLAY BYSTANLEY KUBRICK and ARTHUR C. CLARKE PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BYSTANLEY KUBRICKSCHEDULE OF PRICES AND PERFORMANCESPRICE SCALE: RESERVED SEATS ONLYMATS WED . SAT A SUN at 2:00 P MOrch. Men BaleWednesday and Saturday $2 50 $2 50 $1 80Sundays S. Holidays* $2 90 $2 90 $2 50EVES MONDAY THRU SAT AT 8 30 P MSUNDAYS AT 8 00 P MSunday thru Thurs Eves $2 90 $2 90 $2 50Fri . Set & Holiday Eves * $3 80 $3 80 $2 90Special attention will be given to theatre parties and groups.For information call Lillian Carlin at 372-1643.■> — — " 1 ■ 11 i■ ■ ■ TICKETS AT BOX OFFICE/MAILOR DIAL Tl-C-K-E-T-SA TRANS BEACON THEATRECOAST TO COAST180 N. Dearborn St., PH 782-8230May 14, 1968 THE* CHICAGO MAROON V,, 5MAROON SPORTSChicago Sweeps Intercollegiate Tennis MeetBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantFine clutch playing and greatteam depth gave the Universitytennis t:am the Chicago Intercolle¬giate Tennis tournament’s teamtitle in competition last Friday andSaturday.Chicago totalled 34 points to de¬feat defending champion Univer¬sity of Illinois (Circle Campus) bynine points. Other schools in thecompetition were Illinois Instituteof Technology, Northeastern Illi¬nois State, Roosevelt College, andGeorge Williams College.In winning, University nettersmade the finals of all but one ofthe nine divisions and scored fivevictories. The Maroons won thesecond, third, and fifth singlestitles and also swept second andthird doubles.Taking singles matches were:Mike Koch-Weser, second singles,6-2, 8-10, 6-4 against Roosevelt;Dick Pozen, third singles, 6-4, 6-3against UIC; nad Don Mars, fifthsingles, 6-0, 7-5 over NortheasternIllinois. The teams of Mars andKoch Weser and Pozen and BruceSimmons defeated IIT opponents 16-2, 6-2 and 7-5, 6-2 respectively in'second and third doubles matches.Tom McCroskey suffered his sec¬ond loss to UIC (including a regu¬lar-season match) in losing firstsingles, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. Jim Griffinsuffered the Maroons othersingles loss by dropping a 7-5, 9-7match to UIC. In doubles, McCros¬key and Griffin lost first doubles6-1, 6-3.GolfChicago’s golf team got back onthe winning path last week by tak¬ing three out of four late matchesThe team scored victories overLoyola, Northeastern Illinois, andWheaton Thursday while losing toValparaiso on Friday.Number-one man Mark Carpen-1ter provided the punch for thetriple victories by scoring a best-round-of-the-day 76. Pete Mundy,number five man, shot a 77, whilenumber four man Paul Chambersturned in an 81. Mike Nemeroffhad an 82 from the third man po¬sition, and Jim Peterson at num¬ ber two scored an 84.In total scoring, Chicago beatLoyola IOV2AV2, Northeastern Illi¬nois 19-5, and Wheaton 15V2-8.Friday at Valparaiso the golferswere overwhelmed by a far super¬ior team. Playing on their ownhome course, Valparaise shut outthe Maroons 15-0. Carpenter wasthe top Chicago scorer with a 76,while all men on the home squadscored below 80.At this point, the team has anoverall 6-8-1 dual match record.The squad will finish dual actionthis afternoon with matchesagainst Wheaton and Roosevelt.BaseballThe University baseball teamdropped a double-header to Wa¬bash Saturday in a continuation ofa long slump.Chicago lost the first contest 5-2as Wabash managed to capitalizeon University mistakes and score.Dennis Cullen pitched well, givingup only five hits, and the Maroondefense presented what Coach KyleAnderson called “one of our bestperformances this year.” The second hard-luck contestwent nine innings before the Uni¬versity suffered a 5-4 loss. In thisgame “Wink” Pearson threw afive-hitter for nine innings but wasvery wild and walked ten batters.Chicago scored in the first andthird innings on strong perform¬ances by Jim Bartlett, Roger Vice,Jim Stankiwitz, Pearson, and Cul¬len, but gave up a run in the bot¬tom half of the second extra inningfor the loss.IntramuralsSteve Henikoff and Fred Wigkey,playing for Flint I, won the CollegeHouse Division of the intramuralhorseshoe championships by de¬feating John Wasserstrass andRickie Hay from Henderson South. The finals in the fraternity divi¬sion will see Delta Upsilon match¬ing throws with Phi Gamma Deltathis afternoon.League and division champion¬ships have also been decided in thesoftball league-tournament.College House winners are:green division, Tufts South: bluedivision, Salisbury; red division,Henderson South. Alpha Delta Phiis the fraternity champion, whilethe Med School, the O.K. Ends,and the Eagles hold titles in thedivisional red, blue, and greenleague. The Humanities Giants andthe Offenders share the title in thedivisional orange league.Competition in the IM bowlingtournament will begin this evening.Class of '72 Will Have SistersA “Big Sister” program hasbeen instituted for next year’s en¬tering class. In the program, wom¬en students write to entering fe¬male students advising them aboutaspects of student life here not dis¬cussed by the administration.The “big sisters” also intend tohelp freshmen when they arrive bytelling them about shopping, invit¬ing them to dinner, and so on.The program, called in loco so-roris by its founders, the Women’sHouse Presidents’ Committee,needs a large number of womenvolunteers. Students interested inhelping may sign up on signs in the dormitories, or call 228-2333,according to Rochelle Waldman,’68.Repeat of Cain'A new series of performances of“Cain,” a play by Lord Byron, willbe presented by the University The¬ater at 8:30 p.m. Thursday throughSunday in Rockefeller Chapel.The cast, nearly the same as forthe performances in January, in¬cludes Nicholas Rudall as Lucifer,Arthur Morey as Cain, Rob Allenas Adah, Director James O’Reil¬ly as Adam, Judith Pownall asEve, and James Miller as Abel. ^ ^ .^foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-311 3,new! new!foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 NEWDESIGNS for RINGLEADERSRings to put on!Huge and petite ringsto wear single or by the/ twos and threes. Exoticharem rings, princess rings,Taxco silver bands. Many excitingdesigns in abalone and preciousstones carefully handcrafted in gold andsterling silver and imported for youfrom Africa. Asia and LatinAmerica. Many one of a kind.Come in today!Popular Prices from7.50 to 99.50asA SkatesInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324-7600Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. dail.v; Noon to 5 p.m. SundayMOST COMPLETE PHOTCAND HOBBY STORE OtTHE SOUTH SIDE |MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-925*1Student Discounts Expert Typing ServiceFast, Accurate, Hasste-lessJudy 858-2544SEAWAY CYCLE CO."Seaway for Service"• Honda• TRIUMPH• BULTACO• SERVICEPARTS • SALES 2812 East 79th StreetSA 1-9129 SA 1-8999 EUROPE THIS SUMMERSTUDENTS - FACULTY - EMPLOYEESStudent Government Charter Flight Program has a limited number of seats available onthe following Jet-Flight to Europe.68-B June 25 Chicago - ParisSept. 4 London - Chicago $310Call Shirley Xt: 3272/4 1:00 p.m. — 5:00 p.m. or visit her on 2nd FloorIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.UNIVERSITY THEATER PRESENTSTHEY REACHED FOR HIS GUNa comedy by Paul D’AndreaMay 17, 18, and 19 at 8:30Reynolds Club Theatre (57th and University)Tickets $2, $1 for students at Reynolds Club Desk and at the door.Ml - 3-0800 Ext. 3572 THE ISRAELI STUDENT ORGANIZATION ANNOUNCES A GRAND CELEBRATIONISRAEL’S 20th ANNIVERSARYFeaturing:The Honorable Consul General of Israel, MR. A. AVIDARIsrael's Most Popular Singer YAFFA YARK0NIIsraeli Dance GroupCommunity Singing & HoraSUNDAY, MAY 19th 8:30 p.m.SINAI TEMPLE, 5350 South Shore Dr. TICKETS: AT HILLEL HOUSE NOW $1.50B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION AT DOOR S2.505115 W00DLAWNTHE ertiCAGO MAROON May 14*, 196&The Maroon BulletinCALENDAR items should be typed onforms available in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyonce.GENERAL 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, May 14FACULTY MEETING: Council of UniversitySenate, Business East 106, 3:40 p.m.LECTURE: (Mathematical Biology andMathematics), "Dynamical Theory forMorphogenesis," Rene Thom, Institute forHigher Studies. Eckhart 206, 4 p.m.LECTURE: (Committee on Social Thought),"Life's Irreducible Structure," MichaelPolanyi, Oxford University. Social Science122, 8 p.m.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS:Bach, "Sonata in G Minor for Unaccom¬panied Violin"; Joseph Olive, "ABC forUnaccompanied Violin"; Beethoven, "So¬nata in G Major"; Webern, "Vier Stucke,"Opus 7; Shoenberg, "Phantasy," Opus 47;Daniel Touslin, violin, James Kidd, piano.Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.$50,000 from JewelThe Jewel Foundation has pre¬sented the first installment of a$50,000 donation to Chicago for con¬structing and improving education¬al facilities, President Beadle an¬nounced.The Jewel Foundation was estab¬lished to enable the firm to con¬tribute substantially to local char¬itable, civic, educational, andhealth and welfare organizationsover and above contributions paidat the store level. The gift is partof the Campaign for Chicago.Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393 FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Interna¬tional House, 8 p.m.RADIO SERIES: (From the Midway), "Jung,Phantasy, and the Problem of Distance,"Peter Homans, Divinity School. "The Various Viewpoints of Psychoanalysis," GeorgePollock, Director of Research at the Insti¬tute for Psychoanalysis in Chicago. WEBH93.9, midnight.MEETING: (Collegiate Division of Biology),general meeting for all students interestedin the biological sciences. Ida NoyesLounge, 7-9 p.m.SPEBSQSA: (The Society for the Preserva¬tion and Encouragement of BarbershopQuartet Sit.ging in America. 5544 S. Wood-lawn Ave., 7:30 p.m.SEMINAR: (Chemistry), "Tracer Fluxes andInteractions in and Ionic Membrane," Dr.Patrick A. Meares, University of Aberdeen,Scotland. Abbott Hall 133, 1 p.m.Wednesday, May 15FILM: (Sights and Sounds of India), "Tan¬ners of Jharanta." Rosewald 2, 12:30 p.m.DRAMA: "Cain," by Lord Byron. Rockefel¬ler Memorial Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia. Ida NoyesDance Room, 8:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Divinity School), "Blake's Mil-ton," Paul W. Pruyser, Menninger Foun¬dation. Swift Common Room, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Music), "Chopin Restored: AView of the Autographs," Thomas Hig¬gins, professor, Northeast Missouri StateCollege. Lexington Studio, 4:30 p.m.SEMINAR: (Biochemistry and Chemistry),"Studies on Bacterial Cytochrome c,"Martin D. Kamen, visiting professor ofchemistry. Kent 103, 1:15 p.m.MEETING: (VISA), "Changing MentalHealth Legislation in Illinois," interestedpersons invited to attend. Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge, 4:30 p.m.MEETING: (Peace and Freedom Party),organizational meeting with members ofCalifornia PFP. Ida Noyes Hall, 8 p.m.MEETING: (NSA Committee), discussion ofplans for conference, open to all inter¬ested students. Ida Noyes Hall, 8 p.m.Thursday, May 16LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Absorption andOptical Activity as a Prove for the Struc¬ture of Biological Macromolecules," DanW. Urry. Abbott, 324, 3 p.m.LECTURE: (Middle Eastern Center), "Con¬flicts and Tensions in Islamic Jurisprud¬ence: Idealism and Realism," N.J. Coul-son. Law School, Seminar Room D, 3:30p.m.LECTURE: (Advanced Genetics), "New As¬pects in the Chemistry of Nerve GrowthFactor," Isaac Schenkein, associate pro¬fessor of biochemistry, NYU School ofDentistry. Ricketts 7, 4 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (Physics), "The Comprehen-CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a SI0 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants t Mill Re'urns at fractionot the Or gmai cost.Decoratn/e Colors and Qualifies. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYSiMpc!COME OVER!toand see itsMAD, MADFASHIONSHOWWtd. - 12:00 afternoonCOURT HOUSERESTAURANTWed. - 8:00at PLUS SHOP5225 S. Harper Ave.Inharper Court324-6800 eveningthe one withthe MAD MAD LMK sion Gap: Theory versus Experiment mthe Transition Metal Oxides," David Al¬der, M.l.T. Eckhart 133, 4:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: (UC Concert Band), LabSchool, Belfield 244, 5 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Instruction andrequests. Hillel House, 7:30 p.m.FILMS: (B-J Cinema), "Memorandum."Judson Dining Room, 8:30 p.m.DRAMA: "Cain," by Lord Byron. See Wed¬nesday listing.RHYTHM AND BLUES FESTIVAL: (Folk¬lore Society), with L.V. Johnson, J.B.Hutto, Johnny Shines, and "Big Walter"Horton. Mandel Hall, 8:15 p.m.MEETING: (Society of the Sigma Xi), "Be¬ginnings of Food Production on South¬western Asia," Robert J. Braidwood.Eckhard 133, 8:15 p.m.GENERAL NOTICESTHERE WILL be a meeting on Friday, May24, at 3 p.m. in the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement, Reynolds Club,for University of Chicago students whohave appointments as government internsin Washington this summer. Former stu¬dent interns and Harold Richman, formerWhite House Fellow, will be present toanswer any questions that interns mayhave. Plans for summer seminars willalso be discussed. Interns who are unableto attend this meeting should call theOffice of Career Counseling and Place¬ment, Ext. 3282.MEETING: There will be a general meet¬ing for all students interested in the bio¬logical sciences in Ida Noyes Lounge at7 p.m. on Tuesday, May 14. ProfessorJames W. Moulder, master of the Divi¬sion, and other faculty members will bepresent to answer questions about theprograms and requirements. First-yearstudents are urged to attend.FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone; 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400J&ntcrb LIBRARY HELP WANTEDstudents and student wives,tel. 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenuesure we’re a used bookstore!adding over 100 titles a day.part-time jobs, apts., loans, babysitting,rides & riders: just added services,so maybe you can’t read, still we mightbe able to help out.every day and night over 200 studentssee it that way.co-op reynolds club 9-10Does it hurtto chill beer twice?Not that you’d want to. Some¬times it just happens . . . likeafter a picnic, or when youbring home a couple of cold6-paks and forget to put ’emin the refrigerator. Does re¬chilling goof up the taste orflatten the flavor?Relax. You don’t haveto worry.A reallygood beer likeBudweiser is justas good when you chill ittwice. We’re mighty glad aboutthat. We’d hate to think of allour effort going down the drain just because the temperaturehas its ups and downs.You can understand whywhen you consider all the extratrouble and extra expense thatgo into brewing Bud®. For in¬stance, Budweiser is the onlybeer in America that’s Beech-wood Aged.So ... it’s absolutely okayto chill beer twice.Enough said. (Ofcourse, we havea lot more to sayabout Budweiser. But we’llkeep it on ice for now.)Budweiser.KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC • ST LOUIS • NEWARK . LOS ANGELES . TAMPA . HOUSTONSAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park_ J£3-5200 Coming Saturday: THE LEAGUE OF GENTLEMANOne of the great British robbery comedies_starringJack Hawkins, jaturday. May 18j- 7-15> 9^30- Cobb Hall• StudentsMay 14. 1968 THE CHICAGO > MAROON 7Maroon 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: Gome 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 3P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.FOR SALEBICYCLE: Beat up English. Will run butneeds fixing 8. cleaning. $10 or best offer.Call BU 8-6610, room 3127.Couch, exec, desk w/chair, curtains, kitchenstuff—all for sale. Call 288-2134.HI-FI SYSTEM: AR turntable, 1 Jensenspeaker (TF-3), Ello-Stereo amplifier, approx.$80.00. Call Bruce Carter at 643-4628 (earlymorns, or very late evenings).GERA/VAN SHEPHERD DOG. Male. 1 year.A.K.C. Phone 312—276-2068.New 3 speed large ELECTRIC FAN. 924-9213 after 5.Fine Port TYPEWRITER. $45. 324-1113.GIBSON F-50 GUITAR & hard shell case.$175? Sony 4-track TAPE RECORDER, $115?After 6, wkdys. 667-2036.VW 1964. AM-FM. SUNROOF. Excellent con¬dition. 324-3639.1960 CORVAIR. 50,000 miles. Good. 684-2331.Typewriter. $25 or much less. Ext. 3260.MOTORCYCLE. Yamaha 80. 1966. Good con¬dition. $175. 684-5722.SUPER QUEEN-SIZE BED. Now $150 . 324-5751YOGAExercises, concentration, and meditation liftsconsciousness beyond existential hope anddespair to tranquility and ecstasy. YogiNerode. DO 3-0155.WORK WANTEDWork wanted as orderly at U. C. Hospital.Leave message at 285-5438 or 624-1262.IN YOUR TIMEA successful community, based on WALDENII (Macmillan 1948) will start its 2nd yr.Write to Dr. M. Israel, Assoc, for SocialDesign, 52 Morningside Dr., Arlington, Mass.02174.EAT PERSIANEvery afternoon, AHAAAD waits at 1440 E.57th Street to prepare fine Persian delica¬cies and super expresso beverages to satisfyyou.WANTEDRespectable working college student needssummer residence near U.C. Imm. occu¬pancy. Call Edith at 734-0953 after 5.Share U-HAUL to Washington, D.C., leaveJune 7 or 8. Car needed, but 3 or 4 couldHertz it. Bert Foer, Mi 3-6000, Room 634.Used VW or VOLVO, '62-'64. Call 363-7114.After 6 p.m.ESCAPE CHICAGO NOW!Split w. the help of M. Polo Travel. 288-5944.APARTMENTS TO SHARE1 or 2 girls wanted to share Ig. apt. with 2others. 58th 8. Kenwood. $50/month. CallNancy at HY 3-2250.Roommate to share 5 rm. apt. with 2 grad,males. Available now 8< forever. 955-0177.WANTED for summer and/or next year, mor f room with 2 tolerant girls. Own fur¬nished room. $45. 53rd 8< Dorchester. Call493-6761.GIRL needed to share apartment, June thruSeptember. Block from campus. Own room.$35.00 per month. BU 8-6610. Room 2321 or3407.Want 1 girl to share apt. for summer. Ownlarge room. Air cond. Beautifully furnished.T.V. 57th 8. Dorchester. $55/month. 642-3348.FEMALE STUDENT NEEDED. June 10-Aug.31. Own room, furnished, air cond. Call 363-5267.Three roommates needed for Psychedelic 4bedroom apt. for summer and option fornext year. $45/month. 53rd 8. Woodlawn. CallJohn at 667-4667.Need 2 groovy roommates for summer/optionfor lease in Fall. Nr. Law School. Call667-4667, Mr. K.Girl roommate. Own room. $50/month. 1block from Campus. June 7-Sept. 7.Female roommate wanted. $45/month. 2blks. from campus. 643-1407, after 5 p.m.Male std. wanted to share apt. with 2 grads,for summer. Own bdrm. fur. 54th 8< Wood-lawn, $ 57/mo. 363-5748 after 6 p.m.Male roommate from June 1 to share 1 brm.,4-'/j rm. apt. near campus. Steve. 288-1971.Wanted: Person to share Apartment duringsummer on 57th 8< Kenwood. $50/mo. Con¬tact or leave message New Dorms 1221.ANOTHER APT. TO SHARE2 female grads, wanted to share large flatin Hyde Park. Near Lake. Own room. $50/month. June and/or October. Call 363-6446. GOODBYA formal goodby and thank you for allthose great whiskey sours to Bob Rosenbach(TANK) and his brother Rich! I ! HydePark will never forget you and the BAR¬OQUE will never be the same.FELINESFoster parent wanted for female calico cat.Call 667-7675.LOST FELINECharcoal grey female cat. Lost May 2, near53rd & Dorchester. Reward offered! 667-1029.TRADECLARINET FOR SOPRANO OR ALTO SAX.363-3111.APARTMENT FOR SALECONDOMINIUMHyde Park & 55th Street6 8. 7 rooms, 2 bathsPrice $20,500 8. UP. DO 3-6842.HOUSES FOR SALEDELUXE CORNER RANCHCreiger & 87th Place. Fabulous 7'/2 rooms,3 bedrms., den, lVi ceramic baths, attachedgarage, central air-cond., large living room,formal dining room, carpeting, drapes, ap¬pliances, low $40's. Private. BA 1-7723 orSA 1-5478.7255 OGLESBY. 6 De Luxe Rooms, 2 VitroliteBaths, W/W Carpeting, Drapes, Appliances,FABULOUS Rec. Room-Bar. Air Conditioning.$30's. By owner. FA 4-5281.HOUSE FOR SALESouth Shore deluxe Georgian 7 rooms,3 bdrms., formal dining room, paneled den 8.rec room, IV2 ceramic baths, cent, air cond.,2 wd-burning fireplaces, w/w carpet, drapes,appliances, 2 car brick garage. Near 81stand Crandon. Upper 20'.s Private. Call375-7209APARTMENTS FOR RENTSummer apt. 2V4 furnished rooms. 54th 8.Ellis. $80/month. Call 324-3905.UNUSUALLY elegant 1 BR, w. Lake View/pool etc. 5500 So. Shore Drive, June 1. $200.PL 2-3800. Apt. 510.Apartment with 5 rooms available for thesummer months (or one room); furnishedroom in elevator building one block fromthe U. of Chicago for academic year. Refer¬ences necessary. Call 324-7104, after 5:00 p.m.Two to share 3-man Apt. in Hyde Park.50/month. Summer opt. for Fall. Evenings,684-3644.Newly furnished 2Vi rm. apt. Av. June 1.Hyde Park. Sun., carpets, fresh paint—$115/month. Call 288-5470.Furnished 5 rm. apt. available for summermonths. Elevator Bldg. 1 block from Campusin International House. References necessary.Call between 5-8 P.M. 324-7104.Ultra modern 1 bedrm. w/w carpet. 2 yr.old, elevator bldg. Private parking. $150.538-2182, after 6 p.m.UNUSUALLY elegant 1 BR apt. w/Parkview, pool, etc. 5500 South Shore Drive,June 1, $200. PL 2-3800, Apt. 510. 6 rooms in So. Shore. June-Sept., furnished,1 block f. I.C., Lake. $110/mo. Garver 221-4756.To sublet: 6/8-9/30. lVi rooms. Furn. $75.Util.included. Blackstone near 54th. 2ndfloor. Cool, trees outside windows. Call 493-9796, evenings.June 1-Sept. 30. 4 room unfurn. apt. 76th 8.Yates. $110. 6 blks. to Rainbow Beach, 3 toI.C. Campus bus route. "S" 221-9469 after5 p.m.Sublet MADISON PARK APT. June 14-Sept.20. Furn. 1 bdrm. 536-3237.Spacious, beautifully, furn. Hi-Rise apt., lake-view, 2 bdrms, 2 baths, Hyde Park. June 9to Sept. 20. 667-4284.Completely Furn. 2 bdrm. 4 room apt. Sum¬mer Sublet. Please, please call 684-1187.4 bedroom apt. 2 baths. Sunporch. $185/month. 363-0140.Great Apt. 57th 8, Maryland, 6 rms, 4 bed¬rooms, June-Oct. 5 min. from Campus.$165/mo. 288-4303.Large, furn. Apt. 1900 sq. ft. 7 rooms, 2baths, air conditioning. Washer, dryer, dish¬washer. Exc. Hi-Fi, T.V., Blackstone btwn.57th 8, 58th. Avail. June 1 - Dec. 23. Call493-6535 after 6:00 p.m.7 room furn. apt. 54th 8. University. June-Sept. $138. 363-3768.5-’/2 MAGNIFICENT ROOMS. June-Sept.$108/MO. IDEAL!!! 324-9056. BOB.2 Bedrm. Univ. Owned. 1401 Hyde Park.7th fl. Elev.-laundry. Lakeview. Fully furn.6/8 to 9/3. $145 — negotiable. 324-2561.NEAR LAKE, Co-op. I.C., other GOODTHINGS! Cool rooms for summer. $40/mo.684-5722. Check it out.Apt. to sublet. June 10-Sept. 10: 3 bdrms.,living rm, din. rm., 2 baths, spacious kit¬chen. Furn., convenient to Campus. $150/mo.Call 643-1559 or 643-9462.Really big 8> beautiful 4 bedroom apt. June15-Sept. 15. $180/month. Furn. 667-8928.2 bdrm. fur. apt. to sublet on I IT Campus.June 1 to Sept. 1. 842-3587.Will sublet 1 bdrm. apt. to U. employee667-5026 after 5, $124/month.2'/2 rms. for Summer Sublet. Option to takelease in Fall. Unfurnished. 667-3363.Sublet June 15-Sept. 5110 Kenwood. Furn.1 brm. $115.50 or bargain. 643-6226.Large, cool, neat Basement Apt. 3Vi rm. c.6/15-9/15. $85/mo. 5138 Kimbark. 643-3518.2 female roommates wanted to sublet withoption for fall. 6 rm. apartment. $46.25—493-6147.2-3 GIRLS Well-furnished 3 bedroom apart¬ment at 56th 8. University. 924-9213 after 5.SUMMER ROOMMATEUnusually nice apt. Own room, dbl. bed.Good location, near everything. Live withtwo other girls. For more information, call324-0740.Apartment for four girls to sublet for thesummer. Call 324-7637.Sublet House (Own Room) with washer 8>dryer. 5450 S. Dorchester, $40/month. Call493-5419.WORK 3 rooms, near 55th 8< Ellis, Available June$97/month. Phone 684-6908.Former University student leaving job forGrad school. Good job open as secretary-girlFriday in architect's office. Student withlight class load possible. Call Naomi at427-5410.TEACHER WANTED: Math 8. Science—B.A.Jr. High Level—Private School. Excellentworking conditions. 12:30-4:00 daily. Call493-8880.Part-time work at hospital in area. T.V.Service Attendant. Placing Charges Only.Mr. Eastman. 375-7544. ROOM FOR RENTLarge, Furn. Front Room. Porch. ClosetCooking in Quiet Building. Gd. transp. CouplePL 2-5827. 6418 S. Maryland Avenue.PERSONALSMOE RADINSKY '70 died of cancer 01March 20, 1968. His friends are contributimto youth work at the Bakka Settlement Housiin Jerusalem. Contributions can be made aHillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn.THE CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW isoffering a desk near the window . in anoffice with a delightful old English atmos¬phere, undying affection, and a HANDSOMECOMMISSION to an enterprising and res¬ponsible student (preferably, but not neces¬sarily, in the Business School) in exchangefor his services as Business Manager. Fringebenefits include access to volumes of thefinest contemporary literature, congenialassociates, a chance to make potentiallyuseful personal contacts in the fields ofadvertising and publishing. Hours flexible,relations between editorial and business staffexcellent. Guaranteed annual income. Inter¬ested persons please come to Ida Noyes 305or call x3276 between noon and three week¬days. Or speak with Wayne Meyer (BusinessSchool), David Aiken, Jeff Schnitzer, orMary Sue Leighton.PRIAAARY TEACHER in American Alps!!See National Geographic, May 1968. FreeHousing! Resume to Chas. A Timblin, BoardClerk, Newhalem-Rockport, Washington 98283. The greatest criticism which should bebrought against T.W.O. is NOT that it hassold out to the University but that it hassold out to the Middle Class. For the Mid-Class is what T.W.O. represents inWoodlawn. Do the lower class people trustT.W.O.? And what do the people who shouldbe the objects of most of the physical effortsand money think of the organization? Justask these problem people what has beendone for them—the gang leaders and thegang members in Woodlawn—ask them whatthey think of T.W.O.For instance, why isn't someone explainingto them that when they kill each other off,that s iust fine with Whitey—less of themfor him to worry about or shoot this sum¬mer. They should realize that the survivalof their Black Brothers—whether Disciples,Rangers, or non-gang members is the mostimportant thing. Where will they be in 10years if Whitey has killed or jailed alltheir best leaders?SUBLET2 female grads needed from June 17 toSept 17. Apt. fully furnished. Air cond. $43/mo. per person. Call 363-1245.Sublet with option to renew Oct. 1. Onegigantic room in basement. Complete kitch¬en. Available June 15. $75/mo. In SouthShore W. nearby campus bus (! ! !) stop.MU 4-5949, evenings.Large, bright, 3 bedroom apt. 2 baths. Fur¬nished, 51st 8. Dorchester. Sublet June-Sept.324-9095. for massive demonstrations in D.C MayStudents wanted to help. Sign up next vat the Bookstore or call 363-7682. JAhPIZZA jPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 ii The difference between Nicky's and Uno'sPizzas is the difference between a crackerand a loaf of french bread.O.K., Mr. T.W.O., here's Example No. One—What did T.W.O. do to support the POORPEOPLE'S CAMPAIGN? ? ? ? ? ?YAFFA YARKONI IN CHICAGOMay 19th. Tickets at Hillel.THE BLUE GARGOYLE57th 8. University.EUROPES SUPEREGO SPEAKSMay 17, 18, 19 Reynolds Club To Gus Mahler —Don't feel bad about not coming to themeeting. Why spoil a perfect copy? e—The Bored BoardHUTCH COMMONS GALLERY .7-1L30 p.m., Mon^be^fWay,0 now openMale grad seeks female* tJp&s8nger f0r inday trip to San Francisco. Leave June r.o363-9292, Apt. 421.buy a Volvo.WHY ARE THERE still NO BLACKTEACHERS AT U-HIGH.Why travel all the way to 71st Street to theParty Mart to buy cheese and wine whenyou can get it in Hyde Park ? ? ? QUALI¬TY, that's the best reason . . . and SELEC¬TION. . . .Picasso, Roualt, Lasansky, we love you,Please come home. Walter.To all my friends and relatives: During thepast year, I have at some point asked eachof you to store something for me ... ifanyone knows where a small wooden book¬case with front-opening doors is now located,I would appreciate the information as soonas possible. . . it contains the instructionsfor using my kiln. Thank you. Marianne.GERSTEIN: I have just come from Poland—from Belzec and Treblinka,northeast of Warsaw, Your Ex¬cellency, daily, every single dayin those places, ten thousandJews, more than ten thousand,are being murdered, put todeath with gasNUNCIO: For God's Sake, hold yourtongue! Tell that to Herr Hitler,not to me.—THE DEPUTYSTUDENT SPECIAL:SANDALS—SANDALS—SANDALS—SANDALSMADE TO ORDER: OVER 55 STYLES!1 week to 10 days delivery. Old ones re¬paired and restrung. Also handbags, totebags, coats, skirts 8. paunchos.AD LIB STUDIO. Now at 5225 HARPERCOURT — C7. Phone: 752-3945. 5% StudentDiscount until May 24.THEY REACHED FOR HIS GUN.Who reached for whose gun?RAVI SHANKAR at the BLUE GARGOYLE.Do you want to learn about the sex life oftermites? Come to Biology Collegiate Divi¬sion open meeting 7:00 p.m. Ida UoyesLounge.the Hutch Gallery7:00 to 11:30 p.m.Monday — FridayReplace Chagall with Blue Gargoyle orPeanuts before May 27th — Shapiros comehome — SUE.THE MUSICAL GARGOYLEFolk Singing Wednesdays, 9:30 P. M.Blue Gargoyle Coffee House.Israel's 20th Anniversary Celebration.Israeli Students' Organization sponsorsYAFFA YARKONI, singing, dancing,May 19th.Tickets at HILLEL.What kind of a town uses balloons formoney? See May 17-18-19. Reynolds ClubTheatre.KULCHURPoetry and Play Readings — 9:00 P.M.Thursdays at the Blue Gargoyle.D.L.S. — tell you doctor to put the job onthe germs.Writers' Workshop (PL 2-8377)BLUE GARGOYLE: APU TRILOGYwith RAVI SHANKAR, Friday 8. Saturday,8 P.M.Mr. T. Shutkin, You're Needed, NOW!If you'd buy more books, we'd buybigger ads. SUPPORT THE MAROON!— THE BOOK CENTER.Support Johnson 8, Johnson Products —make your children play on the sidewalksinstead of the nice, soft, cool, green grass.The University of Chicago Vs. Eric Wexler.India's greatest film, Satyajit Ray's APUTRILOGY, Friday 8< Saturday'at 8 P.M.50c. Sound Track by RAVI SHANKAR.WHAT KIND OF A TOWN USES REDBALOONS FOR MONEY??? — See — May17, 18, 19. Reynolds Club Theatre. 8:30 P.M.Peter R. bounced a check at Wright Laundry.Israeli Folk Dancing. Hillel's Backyard.Thursday evenings."I'VE BEEN TO THE TOP OF THE MOUN¬TAIN"—A liturgical happening following an Ecu¬menical Supper on the vigil of The Ascension.—Wednesday, May 22, 6:30 P.M.—Hyde Park Union Church (5600 S Wood¬lawn).Tickets only $1.00. Must be purchased byMonday, May 20, from either Calvert orChapel House.THE BLUE GARGOYLE SHOW9:30 - 10:00 P.M. Wednesdays on WHPKBAMA!!! (esp. Al. D.) L 8. K, PA 8.^LYou 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> MUSICAL BENEFIT FOR POOR PEOPLE'SCAMPAIGN: "Finian's Rainbow" will beperformed on Sunday, May 19th at 7-30 inSt. Thomas the Apostle Auditorium, 55th &Woodlawn. All proceeds go to SCLC to sun.port the Poor Peoples' Campaign in Wash¬ington D.C. Ticket information is availableat FA 4-2626. Do your part to help it Voucan't make it to D.C.Blue Gargoyle: Monday nights the BESTin Avant-garde cinema.SUPPORT 1984!! U—Do not write or callMayor Daley to protest the use of deadly(’)Mace or the shooting of poor people!"I hate war. And if the day ever comeswhen my vote must be cast to send yourboy to the trenches, that day Lyndon John¬son will leave his senate seat to go withhim."—Chairman LBJIn a way, he never went back on his wordthere was never a vote cast . ..Why doesn't U.C. work with the TeacherCorps so that teachers here could get somereal experience teaching slum kids, notseminars at the Lab School ... ?THEY REACHED FOR HIS GUN.May 17-18-19. Reynolds Club Theatre8:30 P.M. Tickets $2-$l/w. I.D.FREE BOWLING — 7 nights a week at IDANOYES.Chicago Science Fiction Society — TheaterParty to "2001". Leaves 55th 1C Station at7:30 p.m. tonight. For information. Call Apt3127, BU 8-6610.FROM "MY REVIEW OF BOOKS":UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE DIRECTORPrivate Midwestern university seeks Book¬store Director (manager) who will bringcurrent book facility up to high academicstandard and will participate in planningof and assume operating responsibility forlarge new facility now being designed Ex¬perience as manager or assistant managerof university or university-type store neces¬sary; in addition, a wide acquaintance withbooks, a high degree of personal develop¬ment, an inquiring mind, and the desire tojoin an academic community as a valuedcolleague should be present. A rare oppor¬tunity for the bibliophile/businessman. Writefully in first letter, providing references,and a complete record of education andachievement. An equal opportunity employerBox G.S., New York Review.Female Grad students in Humanities: JeffSchnitzer is ready, able, and waiting tofulfill his campaign promises — Rates maybe arranged by the hour, day, week ormonth.DYNAMIC ART FORM: motion as portrayedin free-flowing people 8, food. On displaynightly at the BANDERSNATCH.500 FREE FLOWERS.Thomas Shutkin, You're Needed NOW!!!Friday, May 17th. An Evening of Folk¬singing. Hillel House, 8:30 p.m.Go to the Western Chicago Suburbs — it'sas if Mary Quant, Bonnie 8. Clyde, thehippies, Rudy Guernich, Peace, Love, &Civil Rights had never happened — 6 inchbouffant hair, curlers everywhere, tightcapri pants, red lipstick, spiked heels, menwearing sleeveless white tee-shirts, longgreasy hair, squeeling wheels, horse teeth,and white, white, white everywhere — ex¬cept cleaning off restaurant tables.ARTIST! — The Chicago Literary Reviewneeds people to illustrate reviews for ourscholarly 8. illustrious mag. Excellent op¬portunity for instant fame (our circulationis now 85,000 and we reach 17 campuses —rumor has it that my prowess has beenreached a NORTHWESTERN co-ed!) andfor grooving with our staff. See me in theCLR office in INH or call 752-5383-bobgriess."2001" THEATRE PARTY—Chicago ScienceFiction Society. Leaves 55th 1C Station to¬night, 7:20. For information, call Room 3127,BU 8-6610."There, but for the grace of God, go I""There, but for Fortune, go you and I"IGNORANCEISSLAVERY!JlHLBE *t!’t Mu IsThe Illinois Democratic Primarycoming up in June is NOT apresidential preference primary.Rather, its purpose is to directlyelect delegates, representingPresidential hopefuls to theConvention in August.It is therefore imperative thatyou know whom each delegateis supporting.If elected as delegates, COUS¬INS & YOUNG WILL SUPPORTEUGENE MC CARTHY.8 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 14, 1968