Harper LibraryW 61 Archives Univ. of Chgo*Chicago, Ill* 606?7ClllC&gOj lilt PUop lThe ChicagoOVOL. 76, NO. 55 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, MAYJUchWS& oon FoundedIn 189216 PAGES, 2 SECTIONSThe Maroon DAVID TRAVISHONORS ASSEMBLYChicago's answer to the Academy Awards was presented onThursday afternoon in Ida Noyes with Wayne C. Booth playingBob Hope. Awards were given to students for academic achieve¬ment and participation in extracurricular activities. Chicago Will LoseSeveral ProfessorsBy WENDY GLOCKNEREditorial AssistantSeveral noted professors areleaving the university this year toaccept positions at other universi¬ties throughout the country.Among them are Hugh McLean,Harold Mayer, Nathan Keyfitz,and David Douglass.McLean, a professor of Slaviclanguages and literature, will a-cept a position at Berkeley. Mc¬Lean said he is leaving primarilyMany New Courses Scheduled for Next YearBy iUDIE RESELLEditorial AssistantCollege course offerings for nextyear include some major changesin the common year programs ofLAST MAROONThis is the last Maroon ofthe quarter. The advertisingdeadline for next Tues- |day's special issue, "The ||University and Its Commu-| nity" is 3 p.m. today forboth classified and displayads. the divisions as well as the addi¬tion of new courses in most depart¬ments.Social SciencesTwo completely new variantswill be available to satisfy the SocII requirement, and the 121-22-23sequence has again been changed.Social Sciences 131-32-33, “Stabil¬ity and Conflict in Modern Socie¬ty,” will focus on an examinationof four crises—the French Revolu¬tion, the American Civil War, the Russian Revolution, and the col¬lapse of the Weimar Republic—during the first quarter.The second quarter will providea developmental perspective on thesubject and the third will be de¬voted to an analysis of two or threespecific problems of stability andconflict in modern society. Thecourse will contain sections on thestatus of Afro-Americans both dur¬ing the Civil War and in contem-proary American society. because of “living conditions whichsurround the University.” Althoughhe likes the University itself, hefeels that the Hyde Park area isan undesireable place to raise hisfamily.Three other resigning professorsare going to Berkeley. They in¬clude Professor of MathematicsIchiro Satake and Associate Pro¬fessor of Mathematics Wu-yiHsiang. Dean of the PhysicalScience Division, Adrian Albertsaid: “We regard them as majorlosses. We will miss them sorely.”Keyfitz to BerkeleyThe third, Professor of SociologyNathan Keyfitz, regrets leavingChicago; however, he finds Berke¬ley’s offer “irresistible from theviewpoint of material conditions.”Mayer, a professor of geography,will become a university professorat Kent State University in Ohio.His reasons are “not adverse asfar as Chicago goes; however,there are many advantages offer¬ed by Kent.”Six members of the Departmentof History are leaving. They areRichard Storr, James Farnell, Pe¬ter Stearns, Jesse Lemisch, Rich¬ard Ellis, and Frederick Jaher.None could be reached for com¬ment, but The Maroon learned that James Farnell has accepted a pos¬ition at NYU and Peter Sterns atRutgers University.Douglass, a professor of physics,is going to the University of Roch¬ester. Also leaving the PhysicalSciences Division are Alexander K.Brownlee, associate professor ofstatistics, and MacLane, Max Ma¬son distinguished service professorin mathemathics.Bemesderfer a StudentTwo administrators are also leav¬ing the University. Mark Haller,associate dean of undergraduatestudents and associate professor ofhistory, is accepting a position atTemple University. Karl Bemesder¬fer, assistant dean of the College,will do research on the legal as¬pects of student protests on a FordFoundation grant while taking anadvanced degree at Chicago.Wilma Ebbitt and Viola Mander-feld, both of the Humanities Col¬legiate division, are also resigning.Two faculty in the Social SciencesDivision will be on leave for oneyear. They are: Professor of Psy¬chology, David Bakan, wno is go¬ing to York University in Canada,and Assistant Professor of History,Peter Novick.Robert Langridge, a professor ofJ)io-physics, has resigned to accepta post at Princeton.Housing Issue May Come to Crisis in Tenth WeekHOUSING RALLYCALLED MONDAYA rally to discuss the Univer-ty’s housing policy and to buildsupport for possible action next fallis planned for Monday afternoonat 3:30 p.m. in front of the Ad¬ministration Building.Two new proposals for Univer¬sity action in Hyde Park-Woodlawnare to be presented today to Deanof Students Charles D. O’Connellby Steve Kindred and Peter Rabin-owitz. of the Ad Hoc Committee onHousing, the new group sponsoringth* rally.The two proposals are:• That no more buildings be¬tween 60th and 61st Sts. should bedemolished, and those remainingshould be maintained according tobuilding code standards, until anequal number of housing units inthe same price range have been built in the South Campus area,and• That the University shouldcommit itself to provide adequatelow-cost apartments and dormito¬ries in Hyde Park so that studentscould be free to choose the hous¬ing without having to move toSouth Shore.In addition, the group is suggest¬ing that the Universtiy hire a stu¬dent researcher, to be appointedby Student Government, to studyhousing patterns and land use inHyde Park so that University poli¬cy can be worked out from thedata.According to a spokesman forthe group, the Ad Hoc Committeegrew up out of the meeting lastFriday, at which proposals for astudent strike were defeated. It iscomposed of students from theCommittee for a Responsible Uni¬versity, the Students for a Demo¬cratic Society, and old-line radicalson campus. PROPOSED DORMIN TROUBLE?Major changes have been madein plans for the Student Village,the residence complex to rise inthe new North Quadrangle.The Norh Quadrangle, whichwill occupy the area between 55thand 56th sts. and Greenwood toCottage Grove Aves., will also in¬clude a Center for the Arts and anew athletic complex.Most of the double rooms stu¬dents found objectionable havebeen removed from the Villageplans and proposals are being dis¬cussed to add a large number ofapartments to the Village complex.The Faculty-Student Committeeon Campus Student Life, the groupformed in response to the lastyear’s Page Committee report, isnow engaged in a review of theVillage plans. Their report will besent Fall Quarter to the Council ofthe Faculty Senate, which will then recommend to the Board of Trus¬tees whether they should proceedwith efforts to raise the $14,580,000needed for the complex.If the Committee’s report is un¬favorable the plans for the village,already in serious difficulty, maybe scrapped.According to reliable sources,the Trustees are now looking for an excuse not to raise the $14 mil¬lion needed. Fund-raising for stu¬dent residences and facilities isalways difficult.Chicago has already spent ap¬proximately $500,000 on the BarnesPlan. The North Quadrangle, de¬signed by Edward LarabeeBarnes, is the result of a four-yearplanning effort by the University.Demonstrations Break Uneasy Calm at ColumbiaSpecial to the MaroonNEW YORK - Columbia Uni¬versity, after the occurrence Tues¬day night of what is already calledthe Second Battle of Columbia, isagain in 3 state of paralysis in theconflict between the students andthe administration.President Grayson Kirk said ina news conference Wednesday thathe would use “all measures neces¬sary to restore peace’’to the cam¬pus. “I think it is important for meto state that if disciplinary proba¬tion, suspension, or even perman¬ent expulsion must be dealt to anynumber of students, this action willbe taken,” he said.About 1500 students rallied hereWednesday to talk over the mostrecent violence, to condemn theadministration and the police, andto reiterate their demands, whichinitially centered around the con¬troversial Columbia-CommunityGymnasium planned for the publicMomingside Park, which separatesColumbia from Harlem, but whichhave been extended to a completerestructuring of the university, } with increased power given to thestudents. Construction on the gymwas halted after the first of theprotests a month ago.Faculty Groups SilentVirtually all faculty voices havebeen silenced in the wake of the“second battle.” A group of about30 radical Faculty members signeda pledge Wednesday supporting thestudent demonstrators, but moder¬ate groups, such as the Ad HocFaculty Group and the IndependentFaculty Group, have dissolved, re¬ducing the conflict to a confronta¬tion between the students and theadministration.The “battle” began Tuesdayevening after four student leadersrefused to report to the assistantdean of the college’s office to facediscipline charges. They had beenwarned that if they did not appearby 5 p.m. Tuesday they would beexpelled.Several hundred students, alongwith parents and lawyers of thestudent leaders, had gathered inHamilton Hall, which houses the deans’ offices, to see what wouldhappen.Students waited in the buildingfor an announcement on the sus¬pension decision, apparently withno intention of sitting-in, but at7:30 p.m. they were abruptly or¬dered out. If they did not leave,university officials said, they wouldbe arrested.Police Move InAt about 2:20 a.m. Wednesday,police moved into Hamiltonthrough connecting tunnels and ar¬rested about 130 of the some 250students who had sat in. Amongthose arrested was Mark Rudd, thechairman of Columbia Students fora Democratic Society and a leaderof the Strike Co-ordinating Com¬mittee, the most radical of thedissident student groups here.The arrests were not ac¬companied by any violence, butfires, apparently arson-caused,broke out in several Columbiabuildings, when more than 700somewhat restless students beganto mill about the campus. KirkWisconsin Awaits Regents' DecisionSpecial to the MaroonMADISON — University of Wis¬consin at Madison was calm aftera rally Monday attended by 600students and faculty to protest theboard of regents’ refusal to sellthe university’s investment in theChase Manhattan Bank. The pro¬testors feel that the universityshould disassociate itself from thebank, which makes loans to thewhite regime in South Africa.Bob Cohen, expelled after lastfall’s Dow demonstrations, re¬turned to campus to speak in favorof broading the protest to in-The Faculty Senate of RooseveltUniversity recommended amnestyTuesday for the 61 students who re¬ceived suspensions or expulsionsfor their part in the recent studentsit-ins at Roosevelt. The decisionon whether to grant amnesty willbe made by Dean of Students Law¬rence Silverman.The Faculty Senate also ap- clude “student power” and radical¬izing the university, instead of onlythe Chase issue and black repre¬sentation on the Doyle program.The Doyle program, a university— and student government-fundedorganization which gives assis¬tance to ghetto schools and com¬munity projects, is now completelyrun by whites. The protestors feelthat a black should be given avoice in the distribution of funds.ConcessionUniversity President Fred Har¬rington agreed that Chase is in-proved a motion upholding Presi¬dent Rolf A. Weil’s actions in deal¬ing with students. This has nothingto do with the Staughton Lynd con¬troversy, however.An investigation of the sit-in andconsequent administrative actionsis being planned by the AmericanAssociation of University Profes¬sors (AAUP). volved with racist policies of SouthAfrica, but that it is up to theboard of regents to pull the univer¬sity’s funds out of Chase. It is ex¬pected that the Regents will takeup discussion at the next meeting.The rally followed a weekend ofdiscussions which came after lastFriday’s sit-in in which 300-400 stu¬dents participated. The sit-in wasin protest of the tabling of discus¬sion of the university’s $241,000 in¬vestment in Chase by the board ofregents.Over the weekend, a split ap¬peared in the ranks of the protes¬tors when a black caucus divideditself from the main group. Theywanted the steering committee tolimit its demands to the univer¬sity dissociation from Chase and ablack appointment to the Doyleprogram, instead of broadeningthem as Bob Cohen and others sug¬gested.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856ALL 100% HUMAN HAIRWiglets $ 7.90Cascades $16.50Falls $29.60ALL COLORS AT THESE PRICESDowntown/120 E. WaltonBerwyn/7116 W. CermakRosemont Shopping Plaza9500 Higgins Road, near O'Hare FieldEvergreen Pwk/10121 S. Western Ava.Skokie/3456 W. DempsterWhy The SHUR UNISPHERE®Is The Official MicrophoneOf The Association On TourThey know their microphones are their link with their audience.They want you to hear their voices and the lyrics, naturally,without howling feedback, without annoying close-up breath"pop”, without audience sounds. Pretty tough test for a micro¬phone . . . routine for the incomparable Shure Unisphere. Justask the better groups.Shure Brothers, Inc., 222 Hartrey Ave., Evanston, Ill. 60204RU Senate Asks Student Amnesty called for police to clear the cam¬pus of people who would not leaveor return to their dormitories.At about 4:30 a.m. more than 500helmeted police, some of them car¬rying pistols, chased studentsacross the central quadrangle ofthe campus. Students were clubbedand kicked by police. There werenumerous reports that policekicked students after they hadslumped to the ground.Students shouted “Cops mustgo.” The police shouted “Get ’em.”Sixty-two persons were injured,including 17 policemen. Forty morestudents were arrested, bringingthe arrest total to just under 1000since April 30, the date of the firstbattle, when students were clearedfrom five university buildings.Earlier last week, more than 100students, including Rudd, joined aHarlem action group in taking over a tenement building Saturday. Thedemonstrators occupied the build¬ing, which is owned by Columbia,as a way of protesting the univer¬sity’s tactics in acquiring new pro¬perty in Harlem. The communitydemonstrators went inside thebuilding, while most of the studentsremained outside in order to keepthe police from entering. When thepolice arrived, about 120 studentsand Harlem residents were ar¬rested.Late last week at Columbia, thestrike effort suffered a small set¬back when some of the more mod¬erate members left the Strike Co¬ordinating Committee to form theirown group. The departing students,among them all the representativesfrom the student council, includedabout 20 of the 70 representativeson the coordinating committee.LIBRARY HELP WANTEDstudents and student wives,tel. 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove AvenueFor The Convenience And Needs §Of The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAs Low As $6.95 per Day - All 1968 Models(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715JUUUWe have thenew Volvo 144.WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR..INC.7120 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too!'.LVrtV.tt. 'J J A' v.V ' 2 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 24, 1968Orientation Seminars Planned for Glass of 1972Jerry Lipsch, ’69, Student Gov¬ernment (SG) President and mem¬ber of the Orientation Committee,announced today that the Orienta¬tion program this fall will includethe wide use of small groups.One innovation will be the organ¬ ization of more than 70 “Orienta¬tion Seminars,” each consisting ofone or two orientation aids and tento 15 entering students. Lipsch saidthat “The purpose of these groupswould be to provide a legitimateplace for entering students to ex¬ press and clarify for themselvesand others their apprehensions, ex¬pectations, and concerns.”The groups would meet two orthree times during the Orientationperiod. Although some rough guidequestions will be provided to stim-ADMINISTRATORS INACTIVENarcotics Agents Pose College ThreatBy PHIL SEMASCollege Press ServiceWASHINGTON — College admin¬istrators seem extremely concernedabout the impact of the new druglaws on the independence of theirinstitutions. But they don’t seem tobe doing much about it.The thing that worries head ad¬ministrators most is the presenceof narcotics agents, who often poseas students. In a CPS survey of 39colleges, 14 campus editors weresure there were narcotics agentson their campuses, nine didn’tknow, and only six were sure thatthere weren’t. Most of the on-cam¬pus busts, including those at StonyBrook, Bard, and American, cameafter investigation by under coveragents on the campus. A Vassarcollege professor recently attackedthe use of narcotics agents on thatcampus.The other big problem adminis¬trators face is whether to co-oper¬ate with narcotics agents whenthey are contacted for informationor assistance. Most of them havedecided to cooperate, and manyhave gone so far as to help policepose as students.Most administrations have noFaculty Contributes$850,000 in FundsMembers of the University fa¬culty have contributed more than$850,000 to the Campaign for Chi¬cago. A faculty committee has seta goal of $1 million for the 22-month campaign, which will endin October.Professor of law Walter J. Blum,chairman of the faculty campaigncommittee, said.“The faculty’s con¬tribution to the campaign is one ofthe most significant gifts that theUniversity will receive. . . It signi¬fies that the faculty is deeply in¬volved in the overall Campaign.”By the end of March, there werefour faculty gifts larger than$50,000. There were seven gifts ofbetween $25,000 and $50,000, withnine from $15-25.Thirty-three faculty membersgave between $5000 and $15,000 andsome 85 have contributed between$1000 to $5000.FINAL WEEK SALEBrand Name Merchandiseat Drastic ReductionsCome in and ask to seethese specialsSpotcoats — $10.00Shirts from $1.98Sta>press dress shirts $2.98Sta«press pants $5.98Sandals from $2.98Boys Suits $5.00JOHN’S MENS STORE1459 East 53rd StreetWe give a lot morefor a lot less qualms about what to do if a stu¬dent is arrested or found usingmarijuana; he is kicked out. AtBrigham Young University, for ex¬ample, any student who is arrestedis automatically suspended fromthe university even if he is lateraquitted. Such supposedly liberalinstitutions as Haverford Collegein Pennsylvania will suspend a stu¬dent for drug use. Some ExceptionsThere are a few campuses, how¬ever, where the university will takeno action against a student who isconvicted in civil courts. On somecampuses the student goes throughan established judicial procedure.But these are exceptions, accord¬ing to Chuck Hollander, director ofTurn to Page 8March Throws Out RangersThe Blackstone Rangers wereexpelled this week from Resurrec¬tion City in Washington D. C.Several black contingents,among them the Rangers, weresent back to Detroit, Chicago, andother cities after members of thePoor People’s March accused themof harassing the white people.Students from universities acrossthe nation have set up a Poor Peo¬ple’s University in Washington.The initial plans call for the es¬tablishment of workshops designedto educate those who have neverreceived formal education.Topics to be discussed are “Cap¬ italism and Poverty,” “Psychologyof Racism,” and “The Draft andMinorities.”The formation of the Poor Peo¬ple’s University is a result of therequest of Rev. Ralph Abernathy,leader of the Southern ChristianLeadership Alliance, for studentparticipation in the campaign.Organizing for students from theUniversity of Chicago to partici¬pate in the Poor People’s Marchbegan toward the end of April. TheChicago campaign has been aimedtoward getting students to contrib¬ute money to the march and to goto Washington.Cohn A Sternahum $c (EamuuBShopTHE SMASHING NEHRU JACKETOur new Nehru in cotton/Vycron stay-pressed fabric.Available in gold or french blue. Metal blazer buttons,tie print lining. $20Under the jacket... a cotton turtle-neck. Long sleeve orshort in 6 new colors, from $3. Other turtles in lisle,wool, BanLon to $14. .Around the neck... heraldic pendant from a gold chain.Your choice of dizens of designs from $2.50 to $10 ulate discussion, the groups willactually determine the direction oftheir own conversation.Small group discussions will alsobe used, according to Lipsch, aspart of a political-educational pro¬gram sponsored by SG during Or¬ientation Week. Although the pro¬gram has not been organized yet,it is expected to be similar to lastFall’s panel discussion on the“Black Ghetto.”“Floating Around”The idea for the OrientationSeminars, according to Lipsch,“has been floating around foryears.” Lipsch said that for a longtime the faculty members on theOrientation Committee were skep¬tical of any program that lackedcarefully structured content. “Forsome reason, however, this yearthe committee was receptive to theidea,” Lipsch said.Lipsch indicated that there are 25 to 30 openings for non-residentOrientation Aids for the fall. Stu¬dents who wish to be OrientationAids and participate in the smallgroup programs should pick up ap¬plication forms from Jerry Lipsch,SG Office in Ida Noyes. Forms arealso available from Mary Collinsin the Student Activities Office,and from Keith Keeling, Orienta¬tion Director, in Gates-Blake 120.The forms should be returned bythe end of next week to any of thelocations from which they areavailable.Orientation Aids are College stu¬dents who return for OrientationWeek to assist in ushering in theentering class. They are providedmeals in the dormitories, and thosewho are regular dorm residentsare also given housing for the Or¬ientation period. Lipsch urgeddorm-residents who wish to be Or¬ientation Aids to see their residentheads immediately.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARK 1. Planning a trip?Dabbling in real estate.There’s some choiceacreage for sale. 2. But that’s just swampland.I’ll call it B»gHarbor.3. What’ll you do withthe alligators?How about one freewith every acre? 4. Have you checked fortsetse flies?You sure look onthe dark side.5. I hate to see you throwyour dough away.Listen, I’m doing thisso my wife and kids willhave something to fallback on if somethinghappens to me. 6. Then why don’t you put somemoney into Living Insurancefrom Equitable. That way,you’ll all be on solid ground.Living Insurance gives topprotection while your kidsare growing up. And whenyou retire, it can give you alifetime income.I never couldread road maps.For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: James L. Morice, Manager, College Employment.The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, N.Y., N.Y. 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F © Equitable 1968■HO May 24. 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3TV ^ ::" $-r T> :^^kw-^ *4" f*«s." .**"«•>*»* ***Final Examination ScheduleFollowing is a list of times and places of Spring Quarter | ^final examinations, released Wednesday in its final form.Saturday—June 1Monday—June 3Tuesday—June 4Anat 286—Zool 286Anthro 212Anthro 216Art 207—Hum 222Art 212Art 233—Hum 213, Music 264Art 250—Hum 223Art 260— Hum 224, FE L8.C 251Biol 107, Sec. 01, 11, 14, 15Biol 107, Sec. 02Biol 107, Sec. 03, 16Biol 107, Sec. 04Biol 107, Sec. 06, 07Biol 107, Sec. 10Biol 107, Sec. 12, 13Biol 107, Sec. 17, 18Biol 200Biol 202Biol 213Biol 216Biol 218Biol 221Biol 250Botany 212Chem 107 ,.Chem 133Chem 222Chem 263Greek 103Greek 206Greek 218Greek 220 /Latin 103Latin 206Latin 212Latin 221Latin 245Classics 291—Hum 275Econ 200—Public Affairs 212Econ 203Econ 260Econ 270Econ 290Eng 225Eng 239Eng 261 —Hum 265Eng 262—Hum 266Eng 264Eng 274Eng 276Eng 299Chin 116Chin 203—Soc Sci 212Chin 216Chin 244-Hist 288Japan 113Japan 203—Soc Sci 217Japan 213FE L8.C 251—Art 260, Hum 224French 101, Sec. 01,02,03,04,05,06,08,09,10,12French 101, Sec. 07French 101 for graduating seniorsFrench 201French 201 for graduating seniorsFrench 202, Sec. 01French 202, Sec. 02, 03, 04French 202 for graduating seniorsFrench 205French 209French 217French 271—Hum 278Geog 202Geog 226Geog 256Geo Sci 133Geo Sci 229Geo Sci 274German 102 8. 103German 106German 203German 232German 29ft Hum 273Hist 131-2-3 Var. A 8. BHist 131-2-3 all oother sectionsCheck wiith Examiner'sOffice for Test MaterialHist 131-2-3, graduaating seniorsHist 207—Soc Sci 227Hist 213Hist 223Hist 233Hist 239Hist 250—HPS 250Hist 253—HPS 219, Philos 219Hist 263Hist 263 for graduaating seniorsHist 273Hist 283—Soc Sci 242Hist 288—Chin 244Hum 105Hum 106Hum 109 8. 209Hum 213—Art 233, Music 264Hum 222—Art 207Hum 223—Art 250Hum 224—Art 260Hum 23ft—Music 101Hum 233—Music 283Hum 236—Music 286Hum 238—Music 282Hum 242 (01)Hum 256—Philos 233Hum 265—Eng 261Hum 266—Eng 262Hum 271Hum 273—German 290Hum 275—Classics 291Hum 278—French 271Hum 285—Music 285I 8. M 203—NCD 215I 8. M 216I & M 253Italian 205Math 103 (11)Math 103 (41)Math 151 (51)Math 152 (12)Math 152(21)Math 152 (32)Math 153 (12)Math 153 (21)Math 153 (30)Math 153 (31)Math 153 (32)Math 153 (41)Math 153 (42)Math 153 (51)Math 153 (53)Math 153 (61)Math 154 (51)Math 203Math 204Math 205 ( 41)Math 205 ( 51)Math 243Math 250Math 252Math 253 ( 31)Math 253 (42)Math 26) Wednesday—June 5Thuursday—June 6Friday—June 74-6 Monday Z 148-10 Wednesday Ro 271:30-3:30 Wednesday Ro 2710:30-12:30 Thursday C 4038-10 Tuesday C 4301:30-3:30 Monday C 4251:30-3:30 Friday C 20910:30-12:30 Wednesday C 20910:30-12:30 Tuesday C 20910:30-12:30 Tuesday Ab 10110:30-12:30 Tuesday K 10710:30-12:30 Tuesday Ro 2710:30-12:30 Tuesday E 20610:30-12:30 Tuesday Ro 2610:30-12:30 Tuesday RO 210:30-12:30 Tuesday S 1068:30-9:30 Thuursday B 10610:30-12:30 Tuesday, 5/21 A 1041:30-3:30 Monday C 3021-2:30 Monday, 5/27 Ro 288-10 Thursday C 241:30-3:30 Wednesday, 5/29 RKS 181:30-3:30 Monday C 3(410:30-12:30 Thursday B 20510:30-12:30 Monday K 1078-10 Monday K 1038-10 Thursday K 1038-10 Wednesday K 10310:30-12:30 Wednedsay SS 1078-10 Wednesday C 10410:30-12:30 Tuesday C 10410:30-12:30 . Wednesday . . . C 10410:30-12:30 Friday Cl 2010:30-12:30 Friday C 10210:30-12:30 Monday C 1021:30-3:30 Monday C 10410:30-12:30 Tuesday C 1C210:30-12:30 Friday S 10610-1:00 Saturday SS 3028-10 Wednesday S 1 u1-2:30 Tuesday, 5/28 SS 10711:30-1:30 Wednesday, 5/29 SS 10510:30-12:30 Wednesday, 5/29 B 1068-10 Wednesday Cl 2010:30-12:30 Wednesday Cl 201:30-3 30 Wednesday WB 10310:30-12:30 Thursday Cl 201:30-3:30 Monday C 3194-6 Wednesday Be 101:30-3:30 Thursday S 1061:30-3:30 Monday Cl 188-10 Monday Cl 111:30-3:30 Monday Cl 1010:30-12:30 Wednesday Or 20810:30-12:30 Monday c no10:30-12:30 Wednesday Be 241:30-3:30 Wednesday F 3088-10 Wednesday Be 1010:30-12:30 Wednesday C 2099-12 Saturday C 2099-11 Sataurday C 1023:30-6:30 Monday, 5/27 Ro 29-11 Satuurday C 1032:30-5:30 Monday, 5/27 Cl 119-11 Satuurday C 1069-12 Saturday Cl 102:30-5:30 Monday, 5/27 Cl 111:30-3:30 Wednesday Cl 2010:30-12:30 Fridiy Wb 1021:30-3:30 Monday Wb 2024-6 Wednesday Wb 1021:30-3:30 Wednesday Ro 2u8-10 Monday Ro 278-10 Thuursday Ro 281:30-3:30 Tuesday Ro 2610:30-12:30 Monday Ro 338-10 Friday Ro 271-4 Saturday LMH8-10 Thursday WB 20210:30-12:30 Friday Ro 210:30-12:30 Wednesday Wb 1024-6 Tuesday S 1068-1 i* Monday C 2098-11* Monday LMH1:30-4:30 Friday, 5/24 C 2091:30-3:30 Monday B 1061:30-3:30 Tuesday SS 10510:30-12:30 Monday C 1074-6 Wednesday Ro 210:30-12:30 Wednesday Ro 24-6 Tuesday C 1011:30-3:30 Thursday Cl 208-10 Wednesday SS 1069:30-11:30 Tuesday, 5/28 SS 1061:30-3:30 Monday Ro 210:30-12:30 Thurusday Ro 210:30-12:30 Monday C 1101:30-3.30 Tuesday E 1331:30-3:30 Tuesday K 1071:30-3:30 Tuesday LMH1:30-3:30 Monday C 42510:30-12:30 Thursday C 4031:30-3:30 Friday C 20910:30-12:30 Wednesday C 20910:30-12:30 Thursday Lx 410:30-12:30 Wednesday C 4024-6 Thursday Lx 48-10 Thursday C 4291:30-3:30 Thursday C 4038-10 Thursday Cl 101:30-3:30 Wednesday Wb 10310:30-12:30 Thursday Cl 2010:30-12:30 Wednesday C 4034-6 Tuesday S 10610:30-12:30 Friday S 1064-6 Wednesday Wb 1021:30-3:30 Wednesday C 4028-10 Thursday C 30110:30-12:30 Monday C 10110:30-12:30 Thurusday C 10410:30-12:30 Monday Wb 2024-6 Monday Cl 104-6 Monday C 2094-6 Monday C 2094-6 Monday E 2064-6 Monday E 1334-6 Monday E 2064-6 Monday E 2024-6 Monday E 2074-6 Monday E 1334-6 Monday C 1074-6 Monday C 1154-6 Monday E 2074-6 Monday E 2024-6 Monday Ro 24-6 Monday E 3054-6 Monday Ro 24-6 Monday Cl 114-6 Tuesday E 2064-6 Tuesday E 2074-6 Monday E 3124-6 Monday E 3088-10 Tuesday E 3051:30-3:30 Wednesday E 2064-6 Tuesday E 30510:30-12:30 Wednesday E 3064-6 Tuesday E 3088-10 Thuursday E 206 MathMusicMusicMusicMusicMusicMusicMusicMusic 280 (11)280 ( 21)285101—Hum 230153223264—Art 233, Hum 213282—Hum 238283-Hum 233285—Hum 285286— Hum 236Norwegian 103OHNCDNCDNCDCIVCIVHPRHPRHPRHPRHPSHPSPPPPPhilosPhilosPhilosPhy SciPhy Sc'Phy SciPhysicsPhysicsPhysicsPhysics 217Physics 227Physics 237Pol Sci 258Pol SciPsychoPsychoPsychoPsychoPsychoPsychoPsycho 203113215—1 8. M 203216222253211215220221219—Philos 219, Hist 25325ft-Hist 250210223219—Hist 253, HPS 219233—Hum 256262107110117113123133Soc Sc I 258261201213214220—Sociol 202231232273Pub Affairs 212—Econ 200Pub Affairs 290Russian 103Russian 153Russian 203Russian 259Russian 271So Slavic 203Soc Sci 125Soc Sci 212—Chin 203Soc Sci 217—Japan 203Soc Sci 227—Hist 207Soc Sci 232Soc Sci 242—Hist 283Soc Sci 258—Pol Sci 258Soc Sci 268Sociol 202—Psycho 220Sociol 218Socioi 230Span 101Span 101 for graduating seniorsSpan 104Span 201Span 202Span 202 for graduating seniorsSpan 208Stat 200Swed 103Zool 203Zool 286—Anat 286 4-610:30-12:308-1010:30-12:30'i: 30-3:308-101:30-3:308-1010:30-12:301:30-3:304-610:30-1-2:308-101:30-3:308-104-610:30-12:304-64-61:30-3:308-108-101:30-3:304-68-101:30-3:301:30-3:308-101:30-3:308-108-108-1010:30-12:301:30-3:308-1010:30-12:308-1010:30-12:304-64-61:30-3:3010:30-12:301:30-3:308-108-101:30-3:304-610-1:008-101:30-3:308-1010:30-12:301:30-3:304-710:30-12:308-101:30-3:301:30-3:301:30-3:301:30-3:3010:30-12:304-61:30-3:308-1010:30-12:301:30-3:309-122:30-5:309-129-119-122:30-5:3010:30-12:301:30-3:308-1010:30-12:304-6 TuesdayWednesdayTuesdayThursdayThursdayThursdayMondayThursdayWednesdayWednesdayThursdayWednesdayFridayWednesdayThursdayWednesdayTuesdayThursdayThursdayWednesdayMondayMondayThursdayTuesdayMondayTuesdayThursdayThurusdayWednesdayTuesdayTuesdayTuesdayTuesdayMondayWednesdayWednesdayWednesdayMondayWednesdayFridayThursdayWednesdayTuesdayWednesdayWednesdayTuesdayWednesdaySaturdayThursdayMondayWednesdayWednesdayMondayMondayTuesdayFridayMondayWednesdayMondayFridayThursdayWednesdayWednesdayWednesdayWednesdayWednesdaySaturdayMonday, 5/27SaturdaySaturdaySaturdayMonday, 5/27MondayMondayMondayFridayMonday E 312E 206E 207Lx 4Lx 7Lx 2C 425 8.C 402C 429C 402C 402Lx 4Wb 202Or 208C 201C 301C 101C 116C 102S 400C 214SS 302Ab 133Cl 20C 101S 106c noCl 20Cl 10Cl 18C 209Ro 2E 133E 133E 133E 133E 133Ry 251E 133Ry 251C 209K 107SS 305B 102Ro 2PsyB 101PsyB 308Ro 26SS 302RO 26C 209C 203C 102C 214C 101Wb 102C 209Cl 10F 308B 106Ro 2Ro 2Ry 251Cl 11Ro 2Ro 27SS 105Cl 11Cl 11Cl 11C 110C 107Cl 11C 106K 107Wb 103Z 14Z 14excellent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant201? E. 71st ST.Students who cannot take scheduled examination for religious reasons, may take theearlier examination with the graduating seniors. FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400Winter's _ _ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!* foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 (Yippi Circus BustedBy Chicago PoliceChicago police busted a Yippiebenefit dance at the Electric The¬ater, 4812 N. Clark, at which theMahogany Hall Blues Band con¬taining several Chicago studentshad been performing. The Yippiesare a hippy political movement.Cadet Shannon, at the 20th Pre¬cinct police station, said that therehad been 18 arrests. Sources atthe theater counted 26. All wereout on bail by Tuesday night.Shannon said that the policewere doing a routine check forviolators of the state curfew law,which requires people 17 and un¬der to be home or in the custodyof a “responsible adult” after mid¬night. The raid was made about10:30 p.m.As police checked I.D’s andfound juveniles present they no¬ticed fire hazards and called firemarshalls. When they orderedpeople to come with them, theywere met with an angry crowd anda disturbance.Arrests were made for violationsof the state curfew law, disorderlyconduct, keeping a disorderlyhouse, and reckless driving.Police ChargedAbraham Peck, editor of TheSeed, an underground newspaper,said police manufactured the firehazards by strewing garbage andremoving a light bulb from a fireexit. He said that when theaterowner Aaron Russo tried to speakto the crowd and urge them to co¬operate with police he wasdragged away.Peck alleged that a great dealof damage was done to soundequipment and denied that theraid resulted from a routine check.He said that he counted 17 patrolcars, six paddy wagons, and onefire truck with siren blaring.Two people were hospitalizedand one was maced, he said.IF YOU ARE 2! OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 24, 1968Additional Variants Created For Gen Ed CoursesContinued from Page 1The first quarter of SocialScience 121-22-23, “Self, Cultureand Society,” will deal with con¬tributions in social theory on thesubject. Winter quarter will focuson the family and the community,and a series of individual variantswill be offered in the spring.The Soc I sequence is essentiallyunchanged.Division Master Donald Levinereports that the number of grouptutorials has increased and that 23will be offered next year on vari¬ous topics. -As an alternative for Statistics200, students may take Statistics205 to fulfill the divisional require¬ment. Stat 205 will move fasterand devote more time to a study ofthe methodology of correlation, re¬gression, cross-classification andan analysis of variance.New courses in the various de¬partments in the Division includean “Interpersonal Dynamics Prac-ticum” to be offered each quarter.Levine described the course as“attempting to communicate theintricacies of group processes anddynamic through the medium ofthe students’ own experiences asCycle RegistrationCampaign StartsCampus Security is launching abicycle registration campaign to¬day aimed at reducing the loss ofbicyces through theft.Students, faculty, and employes |of the University may participatein the program, under which Cam¬pus Security assumes the responsi¬bility of notifying city police incase a bicycle is lost or stolen.Record of registration is also filedwith the city police.The bicycle owner receives asticker with a registration number,linking the bicycle with the nameof its owner.Forms have been distributed inthe Administration Building in¬formation booth, the ReynoldsClub, and the Ida Noyes Hallcheckroom. They may also be ob¬tained from the Security office inthe rear of University Press.TAKCAM-YMiCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESCLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO t P M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P M.Orders To Take OutHit EAST 43rd ST. MU 4-104225Cartoonsdance numbersSurprisesFREEballons with each754 admission.Cobb Hall next FridayDoc Films a member of a group.”The Sociology Department is of¬fering two new courses in socialresearch and a two-course se¬quence, “Social Change in Amer¬ica,” taught by several membersof the staff.The Politcal Science Depart¬ment has introduced an honorsprogram with senior honors pa¬pers. Lloyd I. Rudolph, associateprofessor in the Department, re¬ports that a colloquium managedby a student-faculty committeemay be organized to discuss prob¬lems in politics and to invite speak¬ers to the campus.BiologyThe common year biology se¬quence, 105-06-07, will also be dif¬ferent next year.The first two quarters will betaught in two large sections ofabout 300 students. Two teams ofthree teachers will lecture and willalso be present in the laboratorywith the lab instructors. The labgroups will be small.In the spring, the same structureas this year—small lecture groupsand small lab groups—will be usedrather than the large lecture-smalllab arrangement. There will be 18-24 sections of thirty students withsenior staff members in the spring.Acting Division Master JamesM. Moulder described the changesas “the best way to teach biologywith the resources we have.” Headded that the new lab building,where all common year and most200 level labs will be given, is aconsiderable improvement overStagg Field.The Biology Collegiate Division will also offer new courses in be-haviorial pharmacology, vertebratebiology, and mammalian biology.HumanitiesBoth Hum I and Hum II are of¬fered again in basically the sameform, and a new course sequencecan also be used to fulfill the HumII requirement.Richard McKeon, Grey distin¬guished service professor of phil¬osophy and Greek, is course chair¬man for Humanities 243-44-45,“The Disicplines of the Human¬ities.” The first quarter wil dealwith philosophy, history and poet¬ry, the second with philosophy andmusic, and the third with philoso¬phy in the arts. Although thecourses are related, any of thethree can be taken independently.New senior seminars in the hu¬manities will be offered in “Bibli¬cal Themes in Modern Literature,”“The Classical Formal Tradition,”and “Melodrama and the Melodra¬matic.” In addition, several newcourses have been added in the var¬ious departments.Physical SciencesA new variant of the commonyear sequence in physical sciencesis now available.Physical Sciences 101-02-03, “Ele¬ments of the Physical Sciences,” isopen to about 50 entering freshmanwhose performance on the place¬ment test and high school back¬ground indicate that they may havedifficulty with the regular 105-06-07sequence. 101-2-3 will include someintroductory work in the mathemat¬ics necessary for the physical sci¬ence material.The number of students enrolledJESSELS0N’SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdBE PRACTICALBUY UTILITY CLOTHESComplete Selection ofSweatshirts, rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equipment,wash pants, sport shirts,pajamas, hiking shoes,sweat pants, etc., etc., etc.,THE UNIVERSAL ARMYSTORE1364 E. 63rd. PL-2-4744* iVs PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,ItaliAn FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 jThe Department of MusicpresentsTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAJEAN MARTIN ON ... ConductorEsther Glazer ... violinJacob Lateiner ... pianoVariazioni per Orchestra DallapiccolaInvocation - Concerto for violin & orchestra Shapey(conducted by the composer)Piano Concerto CarterFRIDAY ... MAY 24 SATURDAY ... MAY 25MANDEL HALL ... 8:30 P.M.Adm.: $2-50 (UC faculty, $2-00); $1.00 students.Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 University: or at MandelHall on evenings of concerts. in Physical Science 105-06-07 will besubstantially decreased.A new course designed to makethe use of electronic computers ac¬cessible to all College students,“Introduction to Computer Pro¬gramming,” will be offered everyquarter of next year.A new three-course sequence inastronomy is open for seniors inchemistry, the geophysical sci¬ences, or physics. Astronomy 381-82-83, “Introduction Astrophysics,”is designed to provide a broad in¬troduction to the methods and stateof modern astronomy.New Collegiate DivisionDivision Master James Redfieldreports that‘there have been nosweeping changes in the New Col¬legiate Division for next year. Themany courses that were new thisyear will be offered for the secondtime in 1968-69.Because the Civilizational Stud¬ ies Program will have a largeenough group of seniors for thefirst time, a senior seminar will beoffered. It will provide a forum forthe presentation of the work ofeach of the fourth-year students fortheir B.A.S.A new course, “Comparative Ep¬ic,” will involve several facultymembers. Epics of India, Persia,Homer and “Beowulf” will bestudied.Students in the CivilizationalStudies program have organized aseminar in dramatic readings.Works will be read aloud and thendiscussed.The Civ Studies programmay also include a lecture seriesnext year, chiefly incvolving lect¬urers from other universities.Topics such as pop culture, Ameri¬can culture in general, and theidea of Negro culture in Americamight be dealt with in the lectures.SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSApplications now being accepted for summer jobs withmajor corporation. Students 18 yrs. of age &• over wantedto learn marketing, sales promotion, and brand identi¬fication techniques during summer period. High levelexecutive management training courses given to qualifiedapplicants. Earn $115 per wk. for first 3 wks, $145 perwk. plus bonuses starting 4th week. Wo have officeslocated in most cities however please contact districtoffices listed below for an appointment:Chicago Mr. Vass (312) 346-7037Grand Rapids. . . . Mr. Schmitt. . . (616) 459-5079Minneapolis. .... Mr. Hartmann. . (612) 333-5647Don’t sit around the campusagain this weekend, wishing you weresome place else. Be there ... and back,fast with Ozark.And if you’re under 22, you qualify for Ozark’sYouth Fare. Y5ur Identification Card, goodfor one year from date of issue, costs only $10and you save V& on confirmed reserva¬tions. Call your travel agent or Ozark.go-getters goOZARKMa 24, 1968.V; ™K MAROON* T 4 14'tt W fc *!»***B3Tfl|- * * * * iB V.* ♦ > 'finufsThe Chicago Maroon H f; i - - v IIFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editor ....Michael SeidmanNews Editor John Moscow Photographic Editor David TravisAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel Hertzberg Boorstin Condemns Dissent:Is He Condemning Our Rights?Editorial Assistants: Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck, Barbara Hurst, Timothy S.Kelley, Jerry Lapidus, Mary Sue Leighton, John Recht, Judie Resell, Paula Szewczyk,John Siefert.Weekend and Literary Associates: Todd Capp, T. C. Fox, Mary Sue Leighton, Jeffer-ey Holden Schnitzer III, Jessica Siegel, Michael Sorkin.Staff: Ed Birnbaum, Carolyn Daffron, Richard Kimmel, Slade Lander, Bruce Norton,Bill Nowlin, Rob Skeist, Harvey Wasserman.June ElectionsFifth Ward voters wil have a chance on June 11to pick their delegates to the Democratic National Con¬vention, their candidates for Congress, and their Re¬publican Ward Committeeman if they are registeredRepublicans. ,The most important race is: That, between JohnLeonard (Bunny) East and Stanley Stewart for com¬mitteeman. East has been running the Fifth Ward foryears, but has been cooperating with the Democraticmachine most of that time. Although the Democratshave been running better people than the Republicansduring this period, the two-party system requires thateach party be independent of the other.But there are good reasons to support Stewart inhis own right. He is bright, young, articulate, and active—the kind of Republican needed to challenge the mori¬bund Democratic leadership in Chicago.Another way to challenge the moribund leadershiphere, of course, is to endorse machine candidatesworthy of electing, and Abner Mikva certainly warrantsthe support of the electorate in the Second Congres¬sional District. Mikva is anti-war, strongly pro-“civilrights,” and much more likely to be an effective Con¬gressman than are any of the other candidates for thepost.In the race for delegates to the Democratic Nation¬al Convention there are two slates in the district. One,composed of William Cousins and Quentin Young, hastaken a loyalty oath to the candidacy of Eugene Mc¬Carthy. The other, composed of Claude Holman andLeslie Beck, is oriented towards the candidacy of Ro¬bert Kennedy.This newspaper has previously announced its sup¬port of the Minnesota Senator, and as Cousins andYoung are supporting him, we urge all registeredDemocrats to go to the polls June 11 to support thispeace slate.Let Us Continue?Columbia Vice-President David Truman remarkedthis week that if the violence on his campus did notstop, he doubted if Columbia could continue to exist.Truman was right, if not in the way he meant.Neither Columbia nor any university can continue un¬less students, who are the largest group in the univer¬sities and the one with the smallest effective voice intheir operation, are granted more power.Student demonstrators are not demanding a changein the traditional teacher-student relationship, but inthe traditional administration-student relationship.They arc not asking for complete control of their uni¬versities, but control of their own affairs. They are notseeking to disrupt the university process except tomake it accountable and responsible to society andtheir more immediate communities.The vice presidents and deans may want their uni¬versities to continue in their old direction, but we praythat the students won’t let them. By HEATHER BOOTHHaving just finished readingDaniel Boorstin’s article in t h eMarch University of ChicagoMagazine, I feel some responsemust be made to it. At first Ithought that reprinting it herewould be its own condemnationand criticism of the University’smagazine for choosing to print it.But since, from the article, it isclear that any such subtle expo¬sure escapes Mr. Boorstin, I willcomment on what he wrote.Mr. Boorstin sets his tone withthe statement, “It seems to methat dissent is the great problemof America today. It over¬shadows all others. It’s a symp-ton, an expression, a conse¬quence and a cause of all oth¬ers.” Mr. Boorstein, how is dis¬sent the cause of poverty? theVietnam war? racism? True,dissent may be a response tosuch conditions, but if that is so,how can you criticize it out ofproportion to the problems whichcreated it?PERHAPS he believes that heclarifies things when he says“Disagreers ask, what about thewar in Vietnam? Dissenters ask,what about me? Disagreers seeksolutions to common problems,dissenters seek power for them¬selves.”Those personally affected by aninjustice (e.g., being drafted tofight a war he does not believein, or not allowed to eat at a cer¬tain place because of his skin col¬or, or not allowed full participa¬tion because of his class) hadbetter ask “What about me?”.No one else, least of all collegeprofessors, are asking thesequestions. Or is it the sanctity of being middle class and liberalwhich allows us to be concerned,disagree, about other people’sproblems, and not give othersthe right to be concerned abouttheir own?HE CONTINUES, “The spiritof dissent stalks our land. Itseeks the dignity and privilegeof disagreement, but it is en¬titled to neither.” After seeingthis monster dissent stalking theland (even Frankenstein bore thename of the one who createdhim, but this scholar considersdissent without even mentioningits causes.)Mr. Boorstin implies he wantsto deny it the privilege of exist¬ing. Privilege? It is so easy forthose with the privileges, thosewho bestow it on others, to wishto deny to others what is notprivilege but right.MR. BOORSTIN should under¬stand that it is irrelevant that hecalls disagreement a privilegeand would not allow dissent atall. Those people who are nowpowerless, who dissent throughthe only means they have re¬maining to them, will try to (andmay actually) seize power. So, inone way, it does not matter thathe sits and calls class riots inarti¬culate or irrational (I recentlyheard a professor call the bomb¬ing of an ROTC center incohe¬rent violence). By the time hewill have figured out the mean¬ing, rationale, coherence of theseacts, he may find the protectivedefense of cloistered quarters inflamed, by people who knowexactly what they are angryabout.This article was probably evoked by the fact that this historian is personally frightened bythis prospect and offended by theway he has been attacked inwriting as a consensus historianThis means that he writes history that denies there are problems in America now or ever,tries to present a picture of har¬mony, dismisses those who pro¬test injustice as rabble-rousers(such as the Quakers he criti¬cizes). He justifies his history bycalling social protest as irration¬al as he believes is the protestagainst his work.THUS he writes, “Dissent,then has tended to become theconformity of our most educatedclasses. In many circles to bean outspoken conformist, that is,to say that the prevailing waysof the community are not “evil”requires more courage than torun with the dissent pack.”Oh, we are to hail him, and ourtonsensus President, and thosewho say we have no race problems, and Mayor Daley whodenied there were ghettoes inChicago in 1965. He tells us theseare the courageous ones. Some¬how, it is difficult for me to callcourageous those who bestowprivilege and have in their pow¬er the beginning of solutions tomany of the problems they denyexist.People used to red-bait. Nowthe role of the scholar is to dis¬sent-bait. I dissent and hope tospread dissention against such areactionary and totalitari¬an view.Mrs. Booth is graduate stu¬dent in the Department of Edu¬cation.Letters to the EditorsAAAT CadresIn response to your article“Teacher Cadres program AidsInner-City Schools” (The Maroon,May 23), we, Black students ofKenwood High School, would liketo make our position known.First, we know for a fact thatthere will be no Black MATteachers coming into /KenwoodHigh. Why? How well qualifiedare the MATs you are sending usto meet the needs of Black Stu¬dents? When, if at all, will com¬munity members and students ofthe receiving schools participatein the planning of the programif it is to begin in autumn? It’sgetting late.As a whole, your programsounds interesting, but withoutbare essentials such as BlackMATs and experienced Blackteachers to prepare them, itwould be ridiculous to even im¬agine that it would work.CONCERNED BLACKSTUDENTS OF KENWOODBoucher CommentAs a white student living atBoucher Hall, I would like topledge my full support to Chi¬cago’s black students in theirfight against this white racistUniversity and white racistAmerican society. I believe thatBoucher should go to the blackstudents if they want it. The ad¬vantages of this dormitory arenumerous: Invigorating showers. The wa¬ter is either scalding hot or icecold. The latter is often the caseafter 11 p.m., since the Univer¬sity has decided to cut down onits fuel costs by turning off thehot water at night.A built-in alarm clock. All stu¬dents living on the east side ofthe dorm are awakened prompt¬ly at 8:30 a.m. by the childrenat the Kozminske School.The pleasure of living in oneof the architectual gems of thecity. The building’s style canbest be described as early Grau-man’s Chinese Theater.Let the black students haveBoucher Hall if they want it!PUBLIUS BOUCHER, ’70White MeddlingI must take a stand against theCRU’s attitude and poor timingas displayed throughout develop¬ment of the black students’demonstration. This was theblacks’ thing, and they shouldhave been allowed to make theirown stand, win their own points,gain their own bargaining posi¬tion, and even, possibly, maketheir own mistakes without thepatronizing “support” of thewhite campus radicals who seem¬ingly cannot relinquish the centerspotlight during campus distur¬bances.If there is one thing the blackstudents do not need, it is theCRU taking over this so-called opportunity for communicationwith the administration. Theblacks considered this their pro¬test, at least in that they werevery secretive about their plansfor it. And one thing no studenton campus needs now is a schismwithin the student body regard¬ing its relations with the ad¬ministration.This is not a situation whichwhites should exploit for the pur¬poses of student power. I believethat the MOST we, as white stu¬dents in the College, can do islend our silent support to theblacks and give active supportand help only if and when asked.CHRISTINE L. SHIELDS, ’68Letters to the editor must hesigned, although names may hewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must he sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded In 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800. Ext.1265. Distributed on campus and In thaHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON May 24, 1968DETECTIVE STORYAS POPULAR ARTMay 24, 1968 The Chicago Maroon of Culture, Satire, and Dissent Section TwoBy Norman SiegelTHERE IS a currently popular literarymyth running that Edgar Allan Poe in¬vented the detective story in 1841. Such,of course, is not the case. Poe merelyadapted a form as old as literature to suithis conceptions of the modern short story.The detective novel cannot be traced toa single year or a single author. Like allspecies of popular art, its beginnings liein folklore and popular mythology. Cer¬tain tales in the Old Testament (such asDaniel’s cross-examination of the eldersin the story of Susanna) have been pointedas predecessors of the genre. Persian,Turkish and Sanskirt sources are rich instories that might be drawn into the de-tectival category. The Arabian epic, AThousand Nights and A Night presents anumber of exhibits of criminological fic¬tion. Herodotus, in 500 B.C. recounted theancient Greek tale of King Rhampsinitus’s treasure house, which may be consideredthe first written tale employing the deviceof the hermetically sealed room. Ifantiquity were familiar with poetry andmusic, so too was it familiar with all man¬ner of tales and legends that may be ac-cademically regarded as the antecedentsof the modern detective story. Certainlythe detective story forms a basic and im¬portant part of the Western cultural her¬itage.In contemporary literature, this part hasbecome more important as poetry and thenovel have become more obscure. Therehas been no public to sing and recite thepoems of T.S. Eliot as there has been onefor the ballads of Herrick. With the com¬ing of Eliot to poetry and Joyce to thenovel, the mystery story remains one ofthe few literary genres simple enough fora public of non-scholars.It is not simply the mystery story’stechnical simplicity, however, which se¬ cures its place in the forefront of popularart. Another factor is its technical rigid¬ity. The mystery story forms variations onits theme, “Crime doesn’t pay”, as med¬ieval masques formed variations on theirbiblical themes, and as popular musicplaces new melodies on old harmonies. Ifthe detective story is enjoyably simple, itis innovatively repititious.Another factor securing its place in pop¬ular art, is its implied dare to solve thepuzzle first. Challenging the reader, theaudience participation that characterizedearly art forms is achieved. Just as alllisteners are urged to join in the singingof the folk song, so is the redaer invitedto cast himself as the detective.Another factor is the literary sleuth. Acharacteristic of primitive epics such asthe Spanish El Cid, the German Nibelungand the Anglo-Saxon Beowulf is the heroof almost super-human physical prowess.If in our more complex age this hero’s ex¬ traordinary physical prowess has been re¬placed by great mental facility, it is yet instriking contrast to the helplessness ofmany literary characters in this Age ofthe Anti-Hero.The final feature of the detective storymaking it popular art is the prevalence ofthe “happy ending”. By this it is meantthat the detective discovers the culprit andthrough his or the state’s devices, pun¬ishes him. This again is a characteristicof the primitive folk epic: the ritualisticmeting out of justice by the god-hero, vi¬cariously purging spectators of their ownsins.The detective story occupies a uniqueplace in Western literature. Half ritual,half lark, it has the simplicity of Lovelace,and the adventure of Homer. Long may itrepeat itself!This is part IV of the series “PopCulture in America” Mr. Siegel willbe a freshman at Harvard next fall.This should prove to be an especially* ' *fine weekend for music. The Chicago S\phony and Jean Martinon will present' a? aconcert in Mandel Hall tonight and Surday night (tickets are available at the , %Reynolds Club desk at 8:30. On the pigram: Dallapiccola’s Varioazioni per*Or-,chestra; Chicago’s Shapey’s Invocationand Carter’s Piano Concerto. This should5 j§be an excellent concert some of the b(music currently being written. 'The Chamber Orchestra and the Collegia ;urn Musicum Chorum will be giving a jiconcert Sunday, May 26, in Lexington at3:30 P.M. They will be doing the Bach Can¬tata Wachet Auf as well as Brandenburg,.,and the chorus will sing a motet by Scarlatti, Exultate Deo. ^ LPopRecommended: The Dandelion WineRhythm and Jive Band, Ida Noyes CloisSClub, 9 p.m. to midnight tonight. This peop¬le are beginning to move.from SDS’ ultra-successful last week of ' The Old Wives Tale, by George Peele, aquarter Disney showing this past winter)!: contemporary of Shakespeare, is a lgbut very persistent Vulture efforts have spirited, romantic play which presents afailed to discover whether or not this is typical fairy-tale complete with an evil{rue ' sorcerer and an enchanted young maiden.The play will be directed by Annette Fern,This ieaves only one film left on campus ' ; and will involve such actors as Kenneththis year: Contemporary European Films’ Northcott, Jean Bamberger and dog,showing of John Schlesinger’s Darling. As Thomas Busch and Caroline Heck,everyone must know, this is the JulieChristie as English model,film which de- Late fifteenth-century French secularfined a genre and had enormous popular- mus‘c will predominate in the brief con-. ity three years ago when Xit was first * cert- which will be performed by the Uni-released. The showing here is Friday in vers ity s Collegium Musicum. The ensem-Cobb Hall ble of voices and medieval instrumentswill be directed by Howard Brown. . -4Meanwhile the Clark demonstrates once Performance time is 8:30. Tickets. $2. $1again its incredible knack for showing all f . , . , , ,. .7■ i” . .. . „ ., for students, may be purchased at thethe right movies at all the wrong times. , . ’ .u , . ,, if door, or at Reynolds Club desk, 57th andHaving been closed all this week for re- I7 . .. „. -r-g .. , , .. University. For information call MI 3-4355,,; modeling, it, will start a festival of the „ . ___9Jfilms of Jean-Luc Godard on June 2nd. x 'Those whose exams finish early can’t go Two plays by William Butler. Yeats, Onwrong by going down there. The rest of us Baile’s Strand and Only Jealousy of Emerlet’s just hope Mr. Trinz decides to show will be presented Friday night at 8 p.m. insome of them (including Contempt, Vivre Reynold’s Club. The productions diSa Vie, Band a Part, and Alphaville) again rected by Fairinda West will try to re-crewhen most of the university audience can ate the original conditions of production o!make it the original Abbey Theater, in Duplin (mi All of this will be in Quantrell Auditor¬ium (the one in Cobb), Saturday at 8 p.m.The $1 admission will go to Midwest Ar¬tists for Peace.Speculative FictionTwo nationally known speculative fictionwriters will discuss modem science fictionJune 26 in SUMMER: ;,,vThe Student Revolution- jjReports from Chicago, New York,and Paris - .JtSAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”.SINCE 1926 - 'PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICEJulie Christie DARLING1 R]I) VS . MAN ... 1 7 en-'i in i (MUl MAI INO EXTRA CHARGE FORJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE. : 1 four seat belt*back-up lights :! sliding sunroof4 4-spwd synchronised transmission:• 5. power brakes, disc front6 - *all-towall carpetingwindshield washerH two-speed heater/ddroater9 fully adjustable, reclining front seats,in stainless steel exterior trim 11. electric dock12. trip mileage counter13. front and rear center armreata14. bumper guards, rubber Inserts15. tool kit16. Mlcheltn X (radial-ply) tires17. carpeted trunk18: fresh air ventilating system19. extra thick body steelWHAT ELSE DO YOUWANT FOR $2699?PEUGEOT mcome in■ mmdrive the Mall NEW ’68NOW! JIHHHNEWMOODSiiHTiisc 1111r11rr-. Mait\rxcil ing I r.iirr.tm'is.i'Aromat ic. long-lasting.mil .fllmiml.Imported frum Africa.Mexico ami India..Iih-ciim* fromBurners, from LESLY IMPORTS INC.PEUGEOT SALES WINNER for CHICAGO oil MIDWEST2235 S. MICHIGAN 325-2550CULTURE VULTURETHE VULTURE is going north for thesummer, we don’t know about you. Ver¬mont, perhaps. Or Canada. Chicago wouldfreak us out this summer Everyone shout¬ing, running, screaming, burning: “Jive!Violence! Violence! Violence!” The cops,the yippies, Robert F. Kennedy & family,Richard J. Daley, Mayor. Shooting, the oth¬erworldly inhuman whoop whoop of the si¬rens, scared to walk down your own streel.scared to leave your hole at night. Maybewe’ll find love in Vermont. Is there love inCanada'.’ TheaterThe Renaissance Players will presenta twelfth-century liturgical play, Peele’sOld Wives Tale, and a concert of fifteenth-century music Friday, Saturday, and Sun¬day nights in the sanctuary of the FirstUnitarian Church, at 57th and Woodlawn.The liturgical play, called the VisitationSepulchri, is taken from the Fleury Play-book, a manuscript which originally be¬longed to the monastery of St. Benoit-sur-Loire in Fleury, France. The play belongsto the same dramatic tradition as the Playof Daniel, though it was written for monksrather than for students. It will be sungand staged by members of the Choir of theChurch of the Ascension, directed by Ben¬jamin Hadley nus Yeats himself). Emer is an Irish Nohplay, depending primarily on gestures,dance and music combined with poetry forits effect. On Baile’s Strand is a more tra¬ditional poetic tragedy.Multicultural Event in a meeting Tuesday sponsored by;%c -Science Fiction Society. " r\Present will be Fred Saberhagen, author .of the Berserker series of short stories «andAlgis Budrys. The meeting will be held f© ?Ida Noyes Hall at 7:30 Tuesday night.On Saturday night there will occur whatis without a doubt the most unlikely var¬iety show ever assembled on the face ofthe earth. It is sponsored, improbably, byThe Chicago Review, and includes a poetryreading (by Yiddish-American poet SelwynSchartz, a dramatic skit (“Mme. CIA” byWisconsin poet and English professor Mor¬gan Gibson performed by his group the De-Militarized Zone Mime Troupe), an exper¬imental film (“The Wheel,” the most re¬cent work by Chicago filmmaker JeffChouinard), music (the Gabriel Faure’sSonata in A Major, played by Elaine Skor-odin on a 1729 Stradivarius violin with RuthGreen on the piano), and (last but notleast!) the Terry Collier Folk Band. MusicPreparation & Delivery Not IncludedWEEKEND MAGAZINE May 24,1968' * ” • k " ":1I iS* * > * 4 *FILMS •>>.>*>•>* i>*■ ** “ r » *■•> •».«Siegel’s Madigan: Brutal Reality in Visual SymbolsTHE TROUBLE with being a student re¬viewer is that it isn’t your job. There isalways the thing you’re doing besides thepaper, the erratic distribution of presstickets, and the schoolwork that somehowmust be done that keep you from seeingeverything. Therefore you become selec¬tive about what you go to see in the firstplace. You try to hit those films whichseem destined to be peculiarly of interestto your readers; you depend upon yourprevious knowledge of directors, and youtry to use tips of people you respect.Sometimes you miss the most importantmovies around; at the same time thisfilm could be the least advertised andMADIGANDirection: Donald SiegelScreenplay: Henri Simoun and Abraham Po¬lonski. Photography: Russell Me tty (title back¬grounds by Graeme Ferguson); Cast: RichardWidmark, Henry Fonda, Ingrid Stevens, HarryGiordlno, James Whitmore, Michael Dunn, DonStroud. owe vour audience an apology for notgenerally reviewed. At such times youhaving brought the film to their atten¬tion before it closed. The best you canhope for is that it shall be revived at aplace like the Clark, or that it shall havea neighborhood run of some length.All this consists of my very guiltythoughts after seeing Don Siegel’s Madi¬gan, which closed this week downtown.Madigan comes as close to being a greatfilm as any I have seen this year. It isnearly impossible to review it after onlyone viewing, but I will do my best. Mean¬while, I advise everyone to watch for itTHEATER when they get out after exams. It justmight be around the comer from you.When Madigan was filmed on locationin New York this summer, the New YorkTimes ran a Sunday feature story aboutHenry Fonda, whom they thought wasthe film’s star. Among other things, thearticle mentioned the complaints of theNew York police public relations man as¬signed to the film. Here, he said, was afilm that had him around so that it wouldbe “realistic,” yet when they asked himwhat kind of car the Police Commissionerdrove and were told a Chevrolet, they putFonda in a chauffeured Lincoln Continen-‘Madigan comes very closeto perfect Greek tragedyWhose Gun Wm Reached For And By Whom?THEY REACHED for His Gun interposesno compelling action, theme, or characterbetween us and its several good lines andfunny moments. Despite its conventionaldramatic structure, that is, the play isessentially vaudeville. The plot is that ofa stock comedy, but deliberately trivial¬ized: a guilt-ridden American City Plan¬ner falls off a train into the French townof Sisteron, (which, it seems, had beenhis destination) and his presence there ex¬cites in the local gentry wild fantasiesabout guilt, crime, America, and wheeling-and-dealing. While trying, always unsuc¬cessfully, to get somebody to listen to hisconfession of dreadful crimes, he servesas the Planner of Sisteron. Finally the con¬ductor of the train from which he fell ap¬pears and reveals himself (reversal) asthe former Planner of Sisteron, the twoPanners compare guilts, the Americanis allowed to confess (recognition) hiscrime (he planned Boston), and all whocan, pair off. The insistent triviality of theplot suggests that something else, namelya portentious MEANING, must be waitingin the wings; moreover, everyone in Sis¬teron speaks of guilt and crime and notmuch else (someone says of metaphysicalevil, “I’m glad it’s being noticed and dealtwith.”), and the play usually seems to beUniversity Theater PresentsTHEY REACHED FOR HIS GUNBy Paul D'AndreaDirected by Paul D'AndreaAssociate Director: Roger DoddsCASTWilbur Tilbury Larry HillConductorInspector Jogot Michael SorkinClarence SerrondeMadame Igrec Mimi BaileyGiselle IgrecCorinne Serronde ... Laura DolinerMatilde Carpentier Garelh Mann SitzHerbert Carpentier ... Richard WhiteFireman .... Gary AhrensEngineer .. Dennis HannonStenographer Egle JurondralkisFurtive Figure .. Alan StradlongLighting by Tony Peak. Stage Design byRobert Kelly and Gary Ahrens. moving toward statement. But theme isas much of a teaser here as plot, nor isthe fact that all this means nothing itselfa gripping one, as it might be in a play byBeckett. What is left in the way of dramais a path of least resistance leading tosome very funny lines and business. Itseems worth asking why the dramaticframe, since so much has been done tomake it unobtrusively lightweight, shouldhave been considered necessary at all. Imyself would have been happier to seesome of Mr. D’Andrea’s best turnsbrought together as a loosely related ser¬ies of skits, as something nearer the purevaudeville in which his play seems to berooted.FINIAN’S RAINBOW, the Music Theatreof Hyde Park’s latest production, is beyonddoubt one of the best amateur musi¬cals I’ve seen in several years.The bright stars of the production werethe singing leads, Julie Amato as SharonMcLonergan and Brian Dunlap as WoodyMahoney. Miss Amato was flawless in herportrayal of the winsome Irish lass, andher singing was of top professional quality.In general, she put on one of the best mu¬sical comedy performances in the Chicagoarea, professional theater included.Despite a slight tendency to overplay therole, Dunlap proved a most effective lead¬ing man. He dominated the stage whenev¬er present, whether charming a lady withhis smooth “Misitucky” accent or croon¬ing a Lane-Harburg ballad. This rolemarks the second triumph in as manyweeks for Brian, who stole the show asRobinson in Blackfriar’s prdouction ofAmerika.Slightly disappointing in difficult roles Characterization, along with plot andtheme, is only intermittently of any im¬portance in the play, but Mr. D’Andrea’scast, which was generally a good one, dis¬tinguished itself by the fine pace and tim¬ing with which they delivered the lines andenacted the rather complicated ensemblebusiness. I especially enjoyed Laura Do-liner and Gareth Mann Sitz as two randyold French biddies, and Michael Sorkin asInspector Jogot, the “conscience of Eu¬rope” who shouts “I accuse!” at every¬one and means it. Jogot, the detective whobelieves that all men are a priori crimin¬als and whose work consequently neverends, is sometimes very funny.JOHN TAYLORThe Music Theatre of Hyde Park, PresentsFINIAN'S RAINBOWA musical comedy with music by BurtonLane and lyrics by E. Y. Harburg. Book byE. Y. Harburg and Fred Saidy. Directed byJanice Roberts with musical direction byArthur Roberts. Choreography by Dolores Bell.CASTBuzz Collins Patrick BillingsleySheriffHenry1st SharecropperSusan MahoneyFinian McLonergan . William VuletichSharon McLonerganWoody MahoneyOg (Aleprechaum) ... Avon KirklandHoward .Ronald ArringtonSenator Billboard RawkinsGeologistsWalter MasseyMaude Linda HandelmanMr. RobustMr. SparePassion Pilcrim Gospeieers ...Walter MasseyTom MerriweatherLarry Carrollwere William Vuletich as Finian McLoner¬gan, Sharon’s father, and Avon Kirkland asOg, a leprechaun. Vulevich was simply un¬able to produce the necessary accent andpersonality and was at times hard to un¬derstand. Kirkland’s problem, however,was unique — he was too human. For thefirst half of the show, he was simply notelfish enough, not other-worldly enough. Asthe show progressed and Og became moreand more human, however, Kirkland great¬ly improved in the role.WEEKENDFinian’s: Artistic, Technical ExcellenceThe Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Dissent, and SatireRoger Black, EditorJessica Siegel, Drama EditorT. C. Fox, Film EditorTodd Capp, Pop Music EditorRobert Factor, Robert Hardman, Special Correspondents All other aspects of the production werecompetent, if not excellent. The orchestraand chorus were sprightly and in tune; theset was simple but imaginative and inter¬esting. Costuming was good. Direction, byformer University of Rochester directorJanice Roberts, was very effective andutilized all possible angles to improve theproduction.Staff Writers: David Bensman, Barbara Bernstein, Maurice Farge, Howard Fish¬man, Wendy Glockner, Stephen Goodman, Larry Greenberg, Jerry Lapidus,Stephen Piper, Michael Young.Staff Photographers: Marc Pokempner, Randy Primm, David Travis. Productions like this one are, unfor¬tunately, the standard of quality for ama¬teur theater. Here, all necessary factorswere present and the show came off. Insuch theater, this is indeed rare.JERRY LAPIDUS tal marked PCI. Hollywood, both the manand the article implied, remained Holly¬wood, wherever it was.I wonder what that public relations manthinks now. The reason is that Madiganis unquestionably one of the most brutallyrealistic films made in America, and thefact of its realism is greatly dependenton the ability of Donald Siegel to usevisual symbols such as the Lincoln to getto the meaning beneath. The realism ofMadigan exists on a deep level not seenoften in the American cinema since thedays when Fritz Lang did the main bodyof his work. It is a reality that upon show¬ing society as a brutal and meaninglessassociation and that depicts its charactersas men who must search for a moralorder that will give their lives meaningand who must die without fulfilling thatsearch. Like a good deal of the work ofLang, Madigan comes very close to per- 'feet Greek tragedy.A great deal of Madigan’s success isthat Siegel (and his scriptwriters HenriSimoun and Abraham Polonski) are ableto set up what seem to be simple andobvious dialectics and then destroy themwith human truth. Police CommissionerHenry Fonda lives by the book and dis¬likes Dan Madigan (Richard Widmark)for playing hero and “forgetting” to fol¬low the rules. Madigan is always goingfor superficial values and forces his wifeinto adultery, while both his partner andFonda have a real grasp on their re¬spective life styles and have good rela¬tions with their wives. But Fonda’s bookturns out to be just as rotten as Madi¬gan’s brutality, and Madigan’s partner(played by Harry Guardino) takes out thedullness of his home life on his suspectsby being even more brutal than Madigan.Meanwhile Fonda’s wife isn’t his wife, butrather a married woman who misses bothhusband and children while she carries onher affair, and Madigan’s wife (played byInger Stevens) loves him too much tocommit adultry, even though she thinksshe wants to. This last scene is perhapsthe most real, and thus at the same timethe most beautiful and excrutiating oneof the entire film.Meanwhile, around these people is thecity of New York, presented as a city:a place that exists, that is brutal, andthat is indifferent to any single individualexcept in the moment of crisis and death.For the most part Siegel has refrainedfrom overusing his locations as so manyHollywood directors tend to do when final¬ly given a chance to shoot in New York.The result, beginning with the title foot¬age by Graeme Ferguson and continuingthroughout the film, is the most convinc¬ing portrayal of my city I have ever seen.The film is in Panavision and color, butthis too is underplayed, so that it is muchtoo easy to overlook Siegel’s mastery ofboth. Most impressive is his use of thesubjective in the opening sequence. Madi¬gan and his partner have busted in on asuspect who is discovered in bed with agirl. The man uses the girl and a decoyto make his escape. Siegel’s shot is a longshot, showing all four characters. Osten¬sibly it is objective. Yet the audience,like the detectives, cannot refrain fromfocusing attention on the nude girl. Onewould like to condemn Madigan for“watching the broad” and letting the sus¬pect escape, but Siegel doesn’t let you.You were watching her too.None of the characters are very appeal¬ing. Fonda is dehumanized and in a verytrue way is a murderer. Madigan is avicious cop. His wife refuses to accepthim as he is. Like the dialogue they areso real that at times they are simply em-barrasing. At the same time, they are soreal that they cannot be denied.Madigan is a film that is brutal to itsaudience because it poses no solution andcontains no conclusion. It is at once thestory of one man and the story of us all,and I for one can’t think of a more basicrequirement for great art.T. C. FOXMay 24, 1968 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 3Transient Rooms AvailableFor The Graduation WeekFor Visiting ParentsShoreland HotelPlease Call PL2-10005454 South Shore DriveToad Hall Div.—Ad #A-132—May 24, 1968NEWfromSONY TOUCH**' playeveryone.ONLYNow at Toad Hall... SONY’S deluxe Touch N’ i®*/ $21.95Play desk-top radio. This fashionable unit features con¬temporary walnut styling in a slim and compact case. A lighttouch on the brushed chrome face opens and turns the set on.The TR-1839 contains 6 transistors, 1 diode, and 1 thermistor and op¬erates from four small AA penlight batteries. A NAME PLATE is supplied for apersonalized engraving. It’s the perfect set for those important desk tops orfor special gift-giving occasions.Contemporary styling and advanced engineering areyours in this hand-held AM/FM radio. Controls mount¬ed on one edge for single-finger control. Features in¬clude 8 transistors, telescopic whip antenna; comeswith earphone, carrying strap, batteries. ONLY $24.95.Push a switch and automatically select one of four pre¬set stations. This super Sony portable comes with aspecial pre-set key that allows you to set up to fourof your favorite AM stations. Of course, there’s alwaysmanual tuning too. The unit contains 8 transistors andboasts 200 mw of output. ONLY $25.95.STORE HOURS:Monday thru Saturday10 A M. to 10 P.MSunday12 Noon to 6 P.MIn Hyde Park - 1444 E. 57th StBU 8-4500 (foaft fjallthe home of audio eLerjancethe perfectdesk-topradiofor students,businessmen,Meet the biggest little radio ever. This pocket AMweighs only 6.6 ounces—but what a sound! It’spowered by two small penlight batteries, has 6transistors and 1 diode, a 2'A " PM dynamic speak-er and a built-in ferrite bar antenna. ONLY $9.95.2R-26And remember our price policy. If anyone in the Chicagoland areaoffers (within 30 days of your purchase) a lower price than you paidat Toad Hall, we will REFUND the difference to you IN CASH.How’s this for a unique design? It’s a 3'A " cube witha walnut wood grain finish. A powerful 2%" PMdynamic speaker means loud and clear sound.It even has a special slot for wall mounting.The TR-1819 uses three size AA penlight bat¬teries and is ideal for students and business¬men alike. ONLY $17.95. DANCE. 00 YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICAB Rip out this ad now and bring it toB Cheetah this weekend for a *j SPEC L UNIV. of CHICAGO •; STUDENT DISCOUNT—$3.00 :?■■■■■■■■■■■■!■■*■■■■■■TICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR. $3.SO IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT T ICKET CENTRAL 212 NORTH MICHIGAN |GROUP SALES: (..ill Mi. T'ox .il 1.0 1-8558 to throw .i parly at ( Ju dah foi 50-20001WIDE OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AT 8 P.M.U of C Students are Invited to ApplySUMMER HOUSINGIn the Following Fraternity Houses:ALPHA DELTA PHI5747 University Ave.PL2-9718 $10 - $12/weekDELTA UPSILOH5714 Woodland Ave.PL2-9S47 $40/monthPHI DELTA THETA56 25 University Ave.FA4-9723 $150 /summerPHI GAMMA DELTA5615 University Ave.PL2-9874 $125/summerPHI KAPPA PSI5555 Woodlawn Ave.PL2-9709 $125 - $150/summerPSI UPSILON5639 University Ave.BU8-9876 $150/sununer, $5Q/monthZETA BETA TAU5472 Ellis Ave.684-9658 $100/summerAll rates include kitchen privileges/and apply from June inuntil late September.IDEAL LOCATIONS LOWEST RENTSWEEKEND MAGAZINE May 24, 1968MAROON SPORTSWell, We Did Better Than Last Year!By JERRY LAPIDUSKtfHiriil A ill slantIn this, our last regular issue,we will complete the spring sportssummaries begun in the last issueand take a general look at intra¬murals over the entire year.Chicago’s golf squad finished itsyear Monday by taking fourth spotin the nine-team Chicago Intercol¬legiate Championship tournament.High man for the Maroons wasMike Nemeroff with rounds of 76-79-155. Nemeroff finished fifth inindividual standings.Over the season, the team wonseven matches while losing nineand tying one. Highlights of theyear were an 18-6 victory over Ro¬osevelt, a 19-5 defeat of NorthEastern Illinois, and a 23,/z-1/,* de¬feat of Illinois Institute of Techno¬logy.Individually, Mark Carpenter ledthe team with an overall averageof 82; following him were JimPeterson at 83V.!, Pete Munday at84 5/7, Paul Chambers at 84 7/10,and Mike Nemeroff at 8614. Cham¬bers and Mundy scored the bestindividual records, winning twelveand ten and losing five and threerespectively.Chambers also led in pointscored with 44 '4, followed by Mun¬day with 37 Vz and Carpenter with33 *4.TrackVeteran John Beal won the trackteam’s Bond medal for total pointsfor an unprecedented fourth timethis season. Beal, who has wonfour major “C” track awards, scored a total of 212 1/3 pointsthis year, bringing his lifetimescore to 1035 7/12 points.A total of 16 trackmen wereawarded Major C letters for com¬petition this year. Six men wonOld English C awards and nineathletes were awarded first-yearnumerals.In the Bond medal competition,Ken Thomas finished right behindBeal with a total of 184 5/6 points.Jim Haydon with 148 points andTed Terpstra with 134 points alsoscored over 100.Over the entire winter-springtrack season, the Chicago teamwon nine dual and triangularmeets and lost eight. Track powersNorthwestern and Valparaiso ac¬counted for four Maroon loses,while the team scored significantvictories over Wheaton, Lewis, andMcMaster. In the Chicago-Midwestconference tournament, the Uni¬versity finished second to CarletonCollege in a ten-team field.Although regular competition isfinished for the year, a few out¬standing trackmen will be compet¬ing in further tournaments. ScottFerry, Rich, Jockman, and TedTerpstra will travel to the MideastNCAA College Division trackchampionships next weekend; theywill also compete in the Nationaltournament June 7 and 8.BaseballChicago had very poor luck onthe baseball diamond this year.Forced to play all games on theroad, the Maroons dropped numer¬ous close decisions on foregin fields. Top hitters for the 1968 teamwere three-time Captain “Wink”Pearson, .320, Dennis Cullen, .300,and Jim Stankiewitz, .286. Pearsonalso led in runs scored with nineand runs batted in with twelve.Cullen was the. team’s top pitcherwith two victories; he was alsosecond to Pearson in RBIs withnine.In total offense, a unique Chica¬go system figuring all aspects ofoffensive performance, Pearsonscored 208 points to lead the squad.Cullen followed with 136 points,while Stankiewitz finished with 131.IntramuralsThe Henderson Houses, Southand North, finished one-two re¬spectively in the final standings ofthe 1967-68 intramural season.South totaled 2025 points for theyear, while North had 1921. Twohundred points back in third spotwas Tufts North; Thompson Northand Tufts South were fourth andfifth.In the fraternity standings, PsiUpsilon continued its dominationby taking a hundred-point victoryover Phi Gamma Delta. AlphaDelta Phi was close behind themwith 1971 points.Last action of the spring seasonsaw the Eagles defeat Alpha Del¬ta Phi for the All-University Soft-ball Championship 9-3.Champions for spring sportswere: volleyball, Henderson Southand Psi Upsilon; socim, Flint Iand Psi Upsilon; horseshoes, Hen¬derson South team-Flint I indivi¬dual and Phi Gamma team-Delta Upsilon individual; softball, TuftsSouth and Alpha Delta Phi; tabletennis, Henderson South and AlphaDelta Phi; golf, University Houseand Psi Upsilon; and bowling,Tufts South and Psi Upsilon.ScholarshipsThree students have been namedStagg Scholarship winners for theClass of 1972.This award, presented to out¬standing student-athletes and car¬rying a minimum of four years’tuition, has been given to FrankN. Drobot, an Ohio tennis andcross country star, Ronald Kein-igs, a Florida swimming and gym¬nastics ace, and Scott D. Kieffer,an Ohio basketball and trackstandout.ChessIn somewhat sports-related ac¬tion, the University Chess Teamscored a smashing victory over allrivals in the Chicago Intercolle¬giate Championship held at theUniversity of Illinois (CircleCampus) this month.Top players for Chicago includedEmmett Balogun, who won theBoard 4 prize, master RichardVerber, and Kate Sillars, one ofthe top women chess players inthe United States.In. previous competition, thechess champs defeated UIC andIndiana in a dual meet and wonthe Midwest Regional tournamentheld in Lincoln, Nebraska.Locally, the team sponsored anintramural chess tournament wonby Boucher House. 'PrcHdi 'fried S6ri*ttfi4QoUlori JR Er»T AURAN T1321 East 57th ST.Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393»Y>E park:THEATRE53rjJLLELLStarts Friday, May 24thAlbert Finney <.’Charlie Bubbles’THE STAUGHTON LYND CASE AGAIN: AN APPEAL TO THE ACADEMIC PROFESSIONPresident Roll Weil of Roosevelt University has rejected the unanimous re com¬mend.it ion (d the department of history that S laugh ton Lynd he appointed to alull-lime position at the university.President Weil argues that his rejection of l.ynd is based not on politicalgrounds, as the circumstances surrounding the decision suggest, but on “adhoiniiiein" grounds. I.ven if this were the case, we would still question tire wis¬dom and justice of his action, unless it could be shown that Lynd’s character insome way interfered with his teaching and scholarship. But President Weil hasnever questioned l.ynd*s credentials as a teacher and scholar.Since the President has, in fact, refused to state his objections to Lynd, it isdifficult to avoid the conclusion that the allegedly personal issues in this caseturn out to be political after all.On May Hi, we met as a delegation with President Weil, along with representa¬tives of the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Association ofUniversity Professors. We wished to express our concern for the principles ofacademic freedom which the President’s decision seemed to us to violate. Onthe strength of our two-hours’ conversation with President Weil, and on thestrength of certain earlier statements by the President, both public and private,we conclude that his objections to L.ynd are based, not on some confidential in¬formation about Lynd’s character, but for the most part on the public record ofLynd’s controversies with other universities, where he has also been refusedappointment for what many people believe are political reasons.We hold that the principles of academic freedom are designed precisely to pro¬tect teachers from this confusion of personal and political issues.One of the principles of academic freedom is that “faculty status and relatedmatters are primarily a faculty responsibility; this area includes appointments,reappointments, decisions not to reappoint, promotions, the granting of tenure,and dismissal.’’ I bis 1966 Statement on Governance of Colleges and Universitiesappears in the official handbook of the American Association of University Pro¬fessors (Academic Freedom and Tenure, ed. Louis Joughin, Madison, 1967.p. qi)) and has been endorsed by the American Council on Education and by theAssociation of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges.lhe AAUP statement goes on to say; “The governing board and presidentshould, on questions of factiltv status, as in other matters where the faculty hasprimarv esponsibililv, concur with the faculty judgment except in rare instancesand for compelling reasons 'which should he stated in detail/’President Weil now takes the position—notwithstanding his earlier innuendoesagainst Lynd—that he “need give no reasons for non-appointment.” This posi¬tion, in our opinion, directly contravenes one of the basic tenets of academicfreedom. The requirement that administrators give detailed reasons in suchcases was designed to prevent the verv thing that has happened at Roosevelt:the attempt to conceal essentially political decisions under the cloak of per¬sonal unfitness.If President Weil’s practice were to become general, academic freedom wouldbecome a mere form. Anv controversial professor could at any time be refusedappointment on “personal” grounds which for reasons of delicacv (as PresidentWeil now argues in the Lynd case) could not be revealed. We hope that President Weil’s ill-considered decision will be promptly reversed.Until it is, we urge our colleagues and graduate students neither to seek nor toaccept appointment at Roosevelt University.We recognize that an individual’s personal circumstances may limit his freedomof action. But we think it necessary to point out that in the present situationaccepting a position at Roosevelt can only confirm the University in its presentcourse, while the refusal of appointments offers one of the most effective waysof changing that course.Christopher Lasch, Professor of History, Northwestern Univer¬sity*; Co-C.hairman, Committee for Academic Freedom in IllinoisAlfred F. Young, Professor of History/ Northern Illinois Univer¬sity*; Co-Chairman, Committee for Academic Freedom in IllinoisHenry Patin, Chairman, Department of Education, Chicago StateCollege*; Vice-President, Cook County College Teachers Union ofthe American Federation of Teachers (AFL-CIO)Rabbi Arnold J. W'olf, Temple Sold, Highland Park*; Vice-Chair¬man, Chicago Committee to Defend the Bill of Rights.Journet Kahn, Professor of Psychology, St. Xavier College*; Ex¬ecutive Committee, Committee for Academic Freedom in IllinoisPeter Novick, Assistant Professor of History, University ofChicago*; Committee for Academic Freedom in Illinois♦Institutional affiliations listed for purposes of identification onlyCOUPON[7 ] I wish to signify my agreement with the foregoing statement on theLynd case at Roosevelt.| | I enclose $ to help defray the cost of this advertisement andfurther to publicize the case.NAMEADDRESSINSTITUTIONAND Coupons should be mailed and checks should be made out to:Christopher Lasch, 1583* Ashland Ave., Evanston, III. 60201May 24, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONNU Sociologist Asks Drug EducationContinued from Page 3drug studies for the U.S. NationalStudent Association. “The drugissue underlines the differences be¬tween how universities’ relation¬ships with the police make themchange what they say are theiraims,” he says.Despite its importance to educa¬tion and especially to students,most groups have shied away fromthe drug issue, including most maj¬or education associations and mostNew Left groups, such as Studentsfor a Democratic Society. Still,some efforts are being made tocounter the effects o f the trendtoward stricter laws and enforce¬ment.NSA’s drug program is probablythe largest effort to help studentsdeal with the new situation. Insome cases where administrationshave acted arbitrarily to suspend' students for use of drugs, NSA hasthreatened to sue the school. NSAhas also held a series of confer-MOVING? Manteno State Hos¬pital’s Ward for Woodlawnresidents can make good useof some things you mightwant to donate. Rugs, chairs,small tables, potted plantsand framed pictures will bewelcomed, as well as sets ofcheckers and magazines.Call 288*8970.(Ofizabetli Cjordoaair 2bediyner41620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award Winner“CLOSELYWATCHED TRAINS”“A girl telegrapher whoseseduction is surely one ofthe great comic erotic se¬quences in film history”“Best movie I have seenthis year.”Life Life Mag.Students $1.50 with I.D. CardsGood every day but Sat.FRANKENSTEINand 125 other Ilf e-like,life size wax figuresin 40 beautiful scenesSlip Suyal CondonHax fHuflPum(Old Sotun1419 No. Wells Phone 337-7786Group rates with guided toursOpen daily noon to midnight ences at which students hear,among other things, an explanationof the laws and the procedures ofthose who enforce them.Mixed ResultsThere have been a few isolatedefforts on individual campuses todeal with the problem in new ways,most of which are having mixedresults. For example, the Univers¬ity of Vermont has made specialarrangements with the police in or¬der to conduct a study with studentdrug users. But the campus news-oaper later revealed the presenceof a narcotics agent on the Ver¬mont campus.Despite the “reign of terror” inlegislative investigations and criti¬cism of the administration that hasfollowed the Stony Brook bust, thecommunity criticism that has fal¬len on schools like Bard and Fran¬conia Colleges, and the widespreadfear of more busts at schools thathave already had some, adminis¬trators don’t seem to be taking anyaction. Part of the problem is that theydon’t know what to do. Most ofthem feel obligated to co-operatewith the authorities, yet they wantto avoid the bad publicity and ac¬companying problems of a bust ontheir campuses.One possible answer to their dil-ema was proposed in the April is¬sue of Trans-Action magazine byNSAs’ drug program is probablyHoward Becker. Becker proposesthat university administrations tryto educate students to avoid gettingcaught. He says:“If an educaional program ofthis kind.. .were started on a cam¬pus, and if students took their les¬sons seriously, many fewer mightengage in those actions likely toprovoke arrest or detection. Therewould be fewer incidents to makepublicity about, fewer incidents forthe administration to respond to.The administration no doubt wouldstill be aware that students wereusing drugs on campus, but itwould not be required to respond.”PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONEYE EXAMINATION?FASHION EYEWEAR MKI9CONTACT LENSES semmtamDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist CUSTOM QUALITY53 Kimbark Plaza CLEANING1200 East 53rd Plaza. 10% Student DiscountHYde Park 3-8372 1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933SEAWAY CYCLE CO."Seaway for Service"monoaTRIUMPHbultaco• SERVICEPARTS • SALES 2812 East 79th StreetSA 1-9129 SA 1-8999 GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food '10% Student DiscountDaily 3:30 - 10:00CLOSED WEDNESDAYHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPER10% student discount on table service5% student discount on take-out serviceHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out Ordersstudent co-op bookstoresummer plansopen interims and summer10-6 weekdays12-6 Saturdaysservices:• used books bought & sold• summer jobs• housing list• rides and ridersreynolds clubcome undergroundATTENTION:TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1968 will be the LAST TIME that you can order the 1968 CAP & GOWN at the specialPRE-PUBLICATION PRICE of five dollars.FILL OUT the coupon below. Take it with your payment to the BURSAR’S OFFICE, or to the CAP & GOWNOFFICE in 306 Ida Noyes between 3:30 p.m. and 5 p.m., Monday thru Friday. (Call ext. 359E between3:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. for information.)CAP AND GOWNTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO YEARBOOKORDER NOW! TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE $5.00PRE-PUBLICATION PRICE! (Regular Price $6.00)CAP AND GOWN is the only pictorial record of the year at the U. of C.It is yours at this advance price if you make your payment now.Please fill out both portions of this card and return itwith your payment to the bursar.You will be notified in the Spring when your copy is ready.ttm• Last name, First nameAcademic Unit. (Name)(Campus Address)(Academic Unit)(Date)THE CHICAGO MAROON'*>.I "vI- uV'> IFI May 24, 1968' -I H \x. 1-• mmm wmm m *The Maroon Bulletin‘-v nun^ n.». zi\JlvMmmm wmmmm vv . '.i i ^ } & , *»t A. W , w* V ^CALENDAR items should be typed onforms available in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyGENERAL NOTICES should be submit¬ted in typewritten form two days beforepublication. They may appear a mixi-mum of twice on request.RECRUITING VISITS are scheduled bythe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, with rep¬resentatives of recruiting firms at thatlocation.NEWS BRIEFS are composed by TheMaroon Staff.CALENDAR OF EVENTSFriday, May 24LECTURE: (Committee on InformationSciences), "From the First ElectronicComputer to Von Neumann's Theory ofSelf reproducing Automata, Part II," Ar¬thur W. Burks, University of Michigan.Research Institutes 480 , 2 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "ComparativeAspects of the Primary Structures of Pro¬teins: A Molecular Illustration of SomeGenetic and Evolutionary Phenomena," Dr.Emanuel Margoliash. Abbott 101, 2 p.m.LECTURE: (Microbiology Club), "Develop¬ment of the Secondary Response in Hiber¬nating Ground Squirrel," Bernard N. Jaro-slow, Argonne National Laboratory. Rick¬etts North 1, 4 p m.FILM: (Contemporary European Films),"Darling," with Julie Christie. Cobb Hall,7 and 9 p mMEETING: (Intervarsity Christian Fellow¬ship). Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 p.m.CONCERT AND DRAMA: (RenaissancePlayers and Collegium Musicum), playsand music of the fifteenth and sixteenthcenturies. First Unitarian Church, 5650Woodlawn, 8:30 p m.CONCERT: (Chicago Symphony Orchestra),Dallapiccola, Variazioni per Orchestra.Shapey, Invocation: Concerto for Violinand Orchestra; Carter, Piano Concerto;Jean Martinon, conductor. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.PLAYS: "On Bailes Stand" and "The OnlyJealousy of Emer," by Yeats, directed byFairinda West. Reynolds Club Theater, 8p.m.MEETING: (SDS), Meeting of students withblue collar and low level white collar jobswho are interested in participating in theSummer Work-In. Ida Noyes Lounge, 3 p.m.DANCE-CONCERT: (Hitchcock House), Dan¬delion Wine Rhythm and Jive Band. IdaNoyes Cloister Club, 9 p.m. to midnight.MEETING: (Office of Career Counseling andPlacement), students who have appoint¬ments as government interns in Washing¬ton this ‘summer. Reynolds Club 200, 3p.m.LECTURE: (Hillel Foundation), "Contem¬porary Problems in Ethics from a JewishPerspective," Professor Hans Jonas, Com¬mittee on Social Thought. Hillel House,8:30 p.m.Saturday, May 2SLECTURE: (Biochemistry), "ComparativeAspects of the Primary Structures OfProteins: A Molecular Illustration of SomeGenetic and Evolutionary Phenomena,"Dr. Emanuel Margoliash, Abbott 101, 10a.m.TELEVISION SERIES: "Charlando," aSpanish-language program. WGN-TV, Chan¬nel 9, 11:30 p.m.CONCERT: (Chicago Symphony Orchestra),see Friday's listing.CONCERT AND DRAMA: (RenaissancePlayers and Collegium Musicum), see Fri¬day's listing.MEETING: (Students for a Political Alterna¬tive), Meet some Real People. Canvassfor Cousins and Young for McCarthy. 5810Woodlawn, 12 noon.SHOW: (Chicago Review) A Program ofMidwest Artists for Peace, poetry, music,mime, film, light show. Quantrell Hall, 8p.m.Sunday, May 26STUDY BREAK: (Students for a PoliticalAlternative), Take a break Canvass forCousins and Young for Peace and Justice.Come to 5810 South Woodlawn, 12 noon.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES: TheReverend John B. Thompson, CaliforniaState College at Hayward, Berkeley, form¬ er Dean of Rockefeller Chapel. RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 11 a.m.CONCERT AND DRAMA: (RenaissancePlayers and Collegium Musicum), see Fri¬day's listing.CONCERT: (University Chamber Orchestraand Collegium Musicum Chorus), Bach,Brandenburg Concerto I and Wachet Auf;Vivaldi, Concerto Grosso in A; Scarlatti,Exultate Deo; Benjamin Hadley, director.Lexingron Studio, 3:30 p.m.Monday, May 27LECTURE: (Committee on Social Thought),"Radical Politics in the Poetry of WilliamBlake," Melvyn A. Hill. Social Science 107,4 p.m.SPEBSQSA: (The Society for the Preserva¬tion and encouragement of BarbershopQuartet Singing in America. 5544 S. Wood¬lawn, 7:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 29LECTURE: (Committee on InformationSciences), "From the First ElectronicComputer to Von Neumann's Theory ofSelf-reproducing Automata, Part III," Ar¬thur W. Burks, University of Michigan.Research Institutes 480, 4 p.m.MEETING: (VISA), "Changing MentalHealth Legislation in Illinois," interestedpersons invited to attend. Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge, 4:30 p.m.FILM: (Doc Films), Cartoons, Dance Num¬bers, Surprises, and Sunday Cobb Hall,7:15.Saturday, June 1FILM: (Doc Films), "The Adventures ofRobin Hood," 7:15 p.m.. "Captain Blood,"9:15 p.m. Cobb Hall.Friday, June 7CONVOCATION: (Special Vietnam Convo¬cation Group), Special Vietnam Convoca¬tion, "An Expression of Crisis: The Studentand the Draft," guest speakers: NoamChomsky (RESIST), and E. Spencer Par¬sons (Dean of Rockefeller Chapel.) Rocke¬feller Chapel, 7:30 p.m.Saturday, June 8BARBECUE: (Hyde Park-Kenwood Resist),at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Riss-man, 1031 E. 50 St. 5 p.m. Donation $5to benefit CADRE. Postponed to followingSaturday (June 15) in case of rain.STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDSAMMMMFTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-751 I1540 E. 55th St.10% Student Discount AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-91M-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED-FREE TECHNICAL ADVICESales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’sTape Recorders-Phonos-AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges-Tubes-Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards Smokie Robinson& The MiraclesFri. May 24McGaw Hall 7.00pm.Northwestern UniversityTickets s250 at the doorTHE RENAISSANCE PLAYERS PRESENTThe'Flcury VisitatwSefutchfi'Veele's OldWtvesTale-*A concert by the Collegium Musicum8:30 PMMay Friday Saturday Sunday2i, 25, 26The First Unitarian Church - 57th and Woodlawn AvenueTickets: $2.00 (Students, $1.00) on sale at theReynolds Club Desk and At The Door MI-3-0800, ext. 3572MH.OI l> >i; BAZAARMay 20 , 2:00 P.M.7t» 1.. (a-daiIts-ami lul Ml II .III (. 1 <»111 -iny* ami / III I'iik ceilslot tin* k. | lllll U III 1 111(0. ,.. big selections in stocknow for thebike riding season !RALE/CZ//SPORTSIICHTWIICHT M?.URobin Hood Lightweight CBMade by Raleigh$3795• SturmeyArclier j speed hubwith trigger control• Brooks leather saddle• Dunlop Amberwall Tires• Front and rear caliper brake*• All steel tubing construction• Three point chain guardanchorage• Shock stop grips• Boy s and girl's modelsavailable• Double rear mudguard staySee the DL22 today.You'll know quality whenyou see it. BUY NOW ON CEASY TERMS 47 95Only g Raleigh is really a & RaleighART'SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST.>710 E. 07th ST. 363-7524SA 1-5883 The Schwinn Racer is an ideal tour¬ing model at a low budget price,lightweight styling, Schwinn tubu¬lar rims, sports touring tires andfoam cushioned saddle. Schwinnquality throughout.ART’SCycle &Hobby Shops1636 E. 55th ST.1710 E. 87th ST. 363-7524SA 1-5883 STUDENT FARESWITHOUTSTUDENT STAND-BY.Braniff International’s new YouthFare lets anyone under 22 fly for off.At any time of the day, night,or yeanBut instead of having to hangaround the airport hoping there’ll bea seat, you’ll have a confirmedreservation.Providing you have a Youth Card.Which is easy enough.Present any proof of age, $3.00, andyourself at the Braniff Ticket Counterbefore you board the plane.Then, fly.BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL.•No departures on Fridays between 12:00 PM and 9:00 PM.May 24, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 9* ♦ '# % %v | ^ % ?,*s4 it in. ., . h T'rMaroon 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.i TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay-j ment to The Chicago Maroon Business| Office, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 12121 E. 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 3: P M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Phone. Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.DANCE CONCERTDance to the AMAZING MUSIC ofTHE DANDELION WINE RHYTHM *JIVE BAND"Anyone who can't dance to the true bluesHas got a hole in his soul ..—OlatunjiSponsored by Hitchcock HouseFriday, May 24th, 9-12 P.M.Ida Noise Cloister ClubTHANKSThe U. of C. Girls Softball Team would liketo thank the Pierce Tower Cheering Squadfor their cheer.TRAVELFemale U.C. Grad seeks adventurous FemaleTravelling campanion for summer in Eu¬rope. 761 4522.Escape U.C. & H P. — Marco Polo Travel,288 5944International House Association's Weekendvisit to Shakespearean Festival Theatre,Stratford, Canada, by chartered bus. Friday,July 19 (6 p m.) — Sunday, July 21. MID¬SUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, ROMEO 8.JULIET, concert (Vivaldi, Bach). Alterna¬tives available. Tickets from $2.50. Fare$20 Lodging, $4 per night. Inquire at Int.Hse. Assn. 1414 E. 59th Street, FA 4-8200,evenings. Sat. afternoon.FILMSPRE-FINALS MIND-BENDER at Blue Gar¬goyle Inc. — W. C. Fields, The Barbershop,and The Great Chase, Birney Oldfield'sRace (or Lite, and COMEDY OF TERRORS!See the female answer to ALFIEJULIE CHRISTIE in DARLINGFriday / 7:00 & 9:30 / Cobb HallBATTLE OF ALGIERSPontccorvo prize-winning-film, opens May 29at CHICAGO'S NEW 3 PENNY CINEMA.2424 N. LINCOLN.Special Student Group rates. Call 733-4613.Don't miss BATTLE of ALGIERS even thoit's a trip uptown—it had super reviews inRAMPARTS, LIFE and THE SUN TIMES.Don't miss DOC FILMS SpecialFeature Films:25 CARTOONS next Friday!!and CAPTAIN BLOOD and ROBIN HOODnext Saturday!!APARTMENTS WANTED34 ROOM Apt. H. Pk. 7/68—6/69 by 2responsible f. grad. std. $165-furn., $140-unfurn. BU 8 1100, Ext. 1006.Two male grad, students need 1 or 2 bed¬room apt. starting now or Sept. Call 667-7597.2 Male grad students seek apt. for fall.Bill at BU 8-1100, Ext. 212.Female Grad, seeks roommates & apt. forOctober. Call OR 5-2617 after 6:30.Male 27 yr. Vet. U. of C. student seeksapt. to share. Call mornings at 337-1174.WORKChallenging! ... Interesting! ... Part-timework! The Woodlawn Business Men's As¬sociation is looking for a male executivesecretary, for about 20 hours per week(flexible), $2.25/hour. Call DO 3-5362.AGAINST RACISM?Kenwood Study Center Needs TUTORS.Even one hour a week after 3 p.m. ...First Baptist Church, 50th east of Drexel.Ask for Mr. Rimsky . . . tell him yourconscience sent you!!!TYPINGSuper fast, good & accurate typing of allkinds. Call Judy at 858 2544.TENNIS LESSONSTennis Instruction. Reasonable rate. Startin mid-June. Call Dan at 288-7060.SUBLETSUBLET: 5-Vi rm. apartment, June—Oct.or less, furnished or unfurnished, 5342 S.Kimba.«k, $45/month, Call 493-0156 after11:00 P.M.SUBLET: 5-’/j Rm. Apartment, garage, back¬yard. June—Oct. or less, furnished or un¬furnished, 53rd & So. Kimbark, call 955-1495 after 10.COOL SUMMERTwo blocks away from The Point, a half¬block from the Co-op and the 1C, in themidst of the litfle-old-Jewish-lady ghetto,well-insulated from Woodlawn Rent one bed¬room of three in this large, completely furn¬ished and newly painted apartment fromearly June through late September, give ortake a week or two. Asking $66 67 per monthbut will go down depending on highest bidCall 493 6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!Four rooms 8. bath. $80.00 per month. JuneAugust 24. Married students only. Call 4-Vj Rms—Spacious, fully furn. Campus busat corner. 6753 Chappel. HY 3-8404.Sublet 6 room, 4 bedrm, furnished, air-cond.apt. to female students or family. 57th 8>Dorchester, $220 a month util, inch 324-2864.7 rooms. 54th & University. June—Sept.$138.00/mo. Call 363-3768.Hyde Park. 3-Va rooms to sublet July 1st.Option to sign lease in Fall. 684-6996.S-Vi room furn. apt. with yard, sunporch,8. study to sublet June 15—September 1.57th 8. Maryland. 643-4082.Sublet Sept, with option to renew Oct. 1.Efficiency in E. Hyde Park. $95/mo. Inchutil. Call 667-7678 betw. 5 8. 7 evenings.FURN. 6 rm. APT. 57th 8. Dorchester, Air-cond. June 15 to August 31, 324-7294.2-Vi room furn. sublet. June 10, 55th 8.Blackstone. $120/mo„ inch util. 955-1933.Beautiful CLEAN 3-4 bedroom apartmentplus LARGE living room. 2 bathrooms.Available early June—mid September. $185/mo, but WILL BARGAIN FOR LESS. CallNancy 684-0579 or BU 8-6610, Ext. 3409.To sublet for summer: Two rooms (pluskitchen). $40 each per month. One blockfrom Campus. 288-4631.LGE. APT. for 3 or 4 roommates. 2 blks.fr. Campus. Porch, swing, backyard 8. 2bathrooms! Available mid-June, 324-4867.Really fine apt., spacious, lovely, 4 bedrms,2 baths, sunporch. 363-0140.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.Summer Sublet, l-'/j rooms, very reas.. Fallopt., cool in summer, nr. Lake. HY 3-3802,eves.Large, furn. apt. 1900 sq. ft. 7 rooms, 2baths, air conditioning. Washer, dryer, dish¬washer. Exc. HI-FI. T.V. Blackstone be¬tween 57th 8. 58th. Available June 1-Dec. 23.Call 493-6535 after 6:00 P. M.Summer Sublet (possible option for Fall).Furn, 6 rooms, 53rd 8. Woodlawn. 643-6669.Sublet 5 rooms, 3 bedrm, June — Sept.,$105/mo. 57th 8. Drexel, 288-3728.PIANO, AIR-COND. Fully furn. 4 rm. Idealfor 2 (Starving Musicians?). CHEAP. June8-Sept. 15. Call evenings, 493-0196.Attractive summer sublet. Modern furnishedsingle apartment, 57th 8, Blackstone. $94/month. 667 8813.SPACIOUS STUDIO APT., 50th at Lake,21st floor, magnificent view, $100/month.Phone 324-1460.2'/2 furn. rooms at 57th & Blackstone.Close to stores, campus, I.C. Perfect for acouple. Sublet June 15-Sept. Will negotiate.Ml 3-0800, Ext. 260. Bill Lamb. Leave mes¬sage.Female roommate wanted: Anytime June 5-Sept. 30. Large. Aircond. Furnished apt.57th 8. Dorchester. $65/mo. 684-8527.Well-furnished apartment, 3 bedrooms, 2baths. Only 1 block f. campus at 56th 8.University. Avail. June 15-Sept. 2—3 girls.Rent negotiable. Call 924-9213 after 5.Mid-June-mid-Sept.: share house one block f.campus, half-block Law School. $90/monthplus util. FA 4 6796.Own room. East Hyde Park. June-Sept. Call493-3471.Sublet 2'/j apartment, furnished, June 17-Sept. 1 or 30. $75/month, Blackstone near54th. Call 288-6496, after 6 p.m.SUMMER SUBLET: 6 room faculty apart¬ment, furnished, close to campus, availablefrom mid-June to September 1. Will rent toresponsible students. $163.00 per month, plusutilities. For further details, write: JulietMcGrath, c/o Meiss, 43 Maxwell Lane,Princeton, New Jersey—08540.COOL SUMMERTwo blocks away from The Point, a half¬block from the Co-op and the 1C, in themidst of the little-old-Jewish-lady ghetto,well-insulated from Woodlawn (how aboutHyde Park?). Rent one bedroom of threein this large, completely furnished and new¬ly painted apartment from early Junethrough late September, give or take aweek or two. Asking $66.67 per month butwill go down depending on highest bid. Call493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!!MORE SUBLETSBeg. June 1, option to rent in fall, 5-Vj largerms. furn. 54th 8. Harper. $175 or best offer.363-5607.53rd 8. Harper. 2-’ 2 rms., furnished. From6/10 to 10/1. $80 mo. 324-5128. After 8 p.m.1 Furnished Room in 7 room apt. to sharewith 3 other people. $50/mo. Call Suzanneat 684-3915.Fall Option if you sublet 2-’ i large rms.in safe E. Hyde Park. 684-4480.4-''2 Ige, sunny rms. Furnished. 55th St. 3blocks from campus. 493-6831 any hour.1 or 2 fern, roomate(s) wanted. Mid-Juneto mid-Sept. w/option for Fall. Large, lovely,safe apt. 57th 8, Drexel. $34 to $45/month.Call Now; 643-6803. After 4 p.m.5-> 2 Rms. $100, mid-June—Oct. 643-5060.Compl. furn. 4-’ 2 rm apt. 2 bdrm. 5302 Univ.$110/mon. Stays cool. Please, Please, Please,Please, Please call 684-1187.Comp. furn. 4 rm. apt. 2 bdrm. 5302 Uni¬versity. $110/month. Please , Please call684-1187.Nice summer sublet. 53rd 8, Greenwood. 3-5persons. CHEAP. Call 363-6961, eves.GOOD 8> CHEAP. 4 rms. $95/mo. Comp.Furn. June—Oct. 1517 54th Street, Near Co¬op, I.C. Smedley's, etc. 493-3410.May 24. 1968 10 ROOM HOUSE. 5606 Maryland. 3 bed¬rooms still available. $33/mo. June—Sept.684-0560.RENTSTUDIO APT. for sum. 8. opt. In fall. 52nd8. Kenwood, $105. 324-6078.2 Large Bedrms, 2 Baths, Parking Lot, Air-Conditioning, Dishwasher, Carpeting, NearLake, Sublease June 15—Sept. 30, Option toRonew. $185. Call 324-5636 or 275-8730.8 rms. overlooking Harper Court. $150/mo.It's yours if you buy my furniture. BestOffer. HY 3-1171.4 ROOM APARTMENT available for fallquarter. Partially furnished. $97.50 permonth. South Shore. 7516 S. Colfax Avenue.Call 374-7590 evenings or weekend.Lge. l-Vi rm. basemt. apt., furn. or unfurn.,$75/mo. unfurn. Avail. June 15. 5437 Wood¬lawn, 324-0969.2-V2 RM. APT. NEW FURNITURE. Over¬looks garden. Married students only. $124util. incl. July 288-7047. Male roommate wanted to share 7 room,furnished, air-conditioned, Northside apt.with 2 other students. $50 a month forsummer. Call evenings at 935-8469.Need one or two female roommates to shareapartment at 53rd 8. Harper. Summer 81next year. $50. 955-3395.Wanted: Person to share Apartment duringsummer on 57th 8, Kenwood. $50/mo. Con¬tact or leave message New Dorms 1221.1-2 females to share Ig. furn. 7 rm. apt.near 57th & Kimbk. own rm. $35.50. June-Sept. 288-4910 after 5.1-2 men to share airy 6 rm, 2 bath apt.nr. campus, summer. $50/mo. 363-1949.2 female grads needed from June 17 toSept. 17. Apt. fully furnished. Air cond. $33.per mo. per person. Stereo 8« TV. Call 363-1245.GIRL to share 1-Vi Apt. 57th 8, Blackstone,June 15 to Oct. 1. BU 8-6610. Room 2308.South Shore Town House, 2 bedrooms, car¬peted, yard 8, lawn, garage. $135 a month.Available July 1st. Call 626-1388.4-V2 RMS. $112, with opt. for Oct. 752-8026.SOUTH SHORE. 8 rm apt., 4 bdrm., 3bath, Sunroom, near Lake 8< 1C, 10 min. toCampus. Avail. July 1, 667-6172, evenings.Sublet for Summer, Option to renew, 4 rms.in Hyde Park. Call 684-4204 or 324 8012.Spacious 6 room apartment. South Shore.Includes garage, basement, storage, appli¬ances, 2 large bedrooms 8. study area.Available July 1st. $167.50. 731-5667.APT. to Sublet, June 1—Sept. 30 with opt.for lease. 4 rms., free furn. $100/mo. 7600S. Colfax, South Shore. Call Sasha, NO 7-4700, Ext. 8195, Day 8. after 7:30, F. 5 to7:30, 374-2820. SUMMER: Person wanted to share com¬fortable, clean, friendly apartment in HydePark with comfortable, clean friendly Ma¬roon Editor. T.V., many magazines. Pos¬sibly air-conditioning. CHEAP! Call Roger,Ext. 3269 or 955-5240.Female students wanted to share 6 roomfurnished apt. for summer. Own room, air-conditioned. $55 a month, util. incl. 324-2864.Spacious, light, quiet, commune apt. Avail,for summer, own bedroom, kitchen. $50/mo.Near Campus. Call 684-5336.E. Hyde Park, close to all trans. goodsunbathing facilities. Share with female gradstudent thru 9/15. $75/mo. 643-1048.Summer 8> option for 2 in 3 man 7 rm.apt. nr. campus. 684-6870.Fern, student needed. June 10 - August 31.Own room, furn., air cond. 363-5267.2 male rmts. for sum. 8. next year. Largeapt. Close to campus. 643-9894.FURN. 3-Vj rooms, close to all trans., mod.kitchen, E. Hyde Park, $150/mo. thru 9/15.643-1048.Summer Sublet. Fall Option. Carpeted, furn¬ished, 4 room apartment. $130/mo. 6900Crandon. Call 684-7457.CARS FOR SALEGoing to CALIFORNIA???A VW is excellent for a dune buggy asthat learned journal TIME states. Here's aperfect '56 bug with '64 engine. Good stu¬dent car too. Call Larry 324-7152. Fern, rmmte. for summer. Spacious furn.apt. 53rd Priv. rm 81 bath. CHBAP! Phone363-3636.White '64 Sprite. New Engine. $950. OR 2-8691.'63 DODGE V-8, Power st. Air cond. Excel¬lent Mech. Condition. Some body work. $395or offer. 684-7787.1962 SUNBEAM ALPINE. Hard 8. soft tops.Wire wheels. Radio 8r heater. Must sell,leaving country. Call after 6. DO 3-7500,Ext. 307.'62 CORVAIR. Auto, trans. Reas. cond. Mustsell. $175. Will bargain. 288-4910 after 5.1966 V.W. Sedan. Best offer. NO 7-4700. Ext.8326, weekdays. 9 to 5.VW-'64 Sedan. Sunroof. Many extras incl.radio, leather int. Best offer. 955-9039.'65 CORVAIR MONZA. Univ. Ext. 3543 aft.7 p.m.1960 VW. Sun roof. Runs good. Only $85.Call: 324-5128. After 8 p.m. Rutherford.'59 RAMBLER. $65. Runs Well. 375-6345.'62 VW. 66 ENGINE. $450. 667-7911. Susan.CURRENT EVENTSDMZ Mime Troupe with Mme. CIA Sat. eve.8< more artists for peace at Quantrell.Burlesque? Lights? 8. Long-hair music?Some artists for peace—May 25.CAR WASHSAT. 10 to 4. $1.00. 5639 UniversityBIG BUDDIES 8, PSI U.WORK WANTEDWORK AS HOSPITAL ORDERLY. Call 2855438 or 624-1262. Leave message for Nate.Young Irishman (A. B. Econ.) offers as¬sorted services—intellectual, physical, emo¬tional—to anyone creative enough to enablehim to live in the States from early Julyto mid—Sept. Contact. 288-7454.HOUSE FOR RENT COOL SUMMERTwo blocks away from The Point, a half¬block from the Co-op and the 1C, in themidst of the little-old-Jewish-lady ghetto,well-insulated from Woodlawn. Rent one bed¬room of three in this large, completely fur¬nished and newly painted apartment fromearly June through late September, give ortake a week or two. Asking $66.67 per monthbut will go down depending on highest bid.Call 493-6698 or Ext. 3265 and ask for Jeff.Take advantage of this extraordinary offer!!!Airy, attractive moderately priced two-bed-room apartment to share with male graduatestudent. Location excellent (on Kimbark near53rd). If interested, contact Neil Komesarat Ext. 2423, ST 2-5400 or Ml 3-3579.APARTMENTS TO SHAREOne person wanted to share South Side Apt.with three male graduate students. Summerand/or next year. $48.75/100/month. Call 324-2671.Roommate wanted for summer/next year,4 bedroom apt., 3 blocks from campus. $48/month each. Graduate students. Call Mikeat 684-7449.Male roommate to share luxury 5 rm. S.Shore apt. for summer. Complete with photodarkroom. Call Sandy after 9 P.M. 667-2740. FURNITURE SALE: Table 8. chairs, beddesk, bookcase, wardrobe, T.V., curtain*dresser, 8< more. 684-7927.Own your own sex symbol, '65 HONDAS90, and discover fun, thrill, 8, excitementPrice negotiable. 493-3136.Double Bed, Table 8. chairs, bookcase, deskdresser, 8< end tables. 752-3373 after 3. 'Great Portable Typewriter. $39. 324-1113Must sell student furniture: beds, dresserstables, chairs, desk, sofa. Desperate once*'493-3136.1966 HONDA S-90. 6200 mi. Exc. cond., $225or offer. Ml 3-6000. Rm. 551. NOW.Dining room set, hlde-a-bed, desk, dressers& rugs. HY 3-1171.Honda 305. Superhawk. Black 8. BeautifulOnly 1,100 miles. Exc. condition. $500 CallBU 8-6610, Ext. 3225X. If no answer,' leavemessage.AM-FM Pocket-sized SONY TRANSISTORNice for walks. Call 721-2397, nights.Din. table, occas. table, asst, chairs, desk,2 chests, double mattress, bookcase, lampMust sell soon. Cheap. Call 752-2542.Double bed $20. Coffee table $8. 643-6909Old Fender Deluxe Amp. Exc. Cond. $75.Call Swan at 73114164.Large desk S, dresser, 493-1548.2 Dunlop Fort TENNIS RACKETS. $15 each.Blues, rock, r 8. b albums 8< sing., old &recent. Call Swan at 731-4164.2.3 cu. ft. refrigerator. 6 months old $50288-6610, Ext. 3202.Couch, tables, double bed, dressers, desks,etc. Call 684-4204 or 324-8012.Westinghouse Record Player at $15 andClock Radio at $10. Don't Hesitate I Phone667-8128.Electric Guitar. New. Solid Body. $35 4934103.Groovy BELGIAN RUG, 9 x 12, $15. (needscleaning). 667-7459.6.50 x 13, Full 4 ply Atlas Plycron WhiteWall Tire with wheel. Never used (sparetire capacity). Cost $40, will sell for $25 orbest offer. 324-5751.Coffee Table, Lamps, Elec. Heater. 752 8282Large 3 speed Fan. 624-3320. No 36 S.TV-$25, dbl. bed-$20, couch, 2 desks, lamps,kitchen equip., etc. Call 324-3854.Double bed, pots. etc. 667-6683.MONSTER METAL DESK. $10 to anyonewho will dismantle and take away. 324-5751Perfect for students with long arms-WANTEDStudent seeks FEMALE COMPANION fordrive to California in Mid-June. 375-9034Need 1 hour of U-HAUL time. 684-7927Roommates for summer. 6 room furn. apt.with fantastic 22 story view at 51st 8,Lake. $60/mo. Negotiable. 324-1113.Roommates needed for summer. Own room.52nd & Kenwood. $55 or less. Furn, free.Not a mere- apt., but bottom of realHOUSE. Call Alan at 75'’ 2811.Male ROOM-MATE WANTED for apartmenton 6106 Ellis, r-rom June through all ofnext year. $35/month. Own bedroom. CallX3565, Room 423. MOVING? Have an old PIANO you wan! toget rid of? Call Judy BU 8-6610, Ext. 1220Driver wanted to N.Y.C. Lv. 6/2. Std. shiftShare expenses. 493-8863.Wanted: Person ot talent, with, persever¬ance, good nature, and dedication to takeover job of Managing Editor of the Chi¬cago Literary Review. Endless opportunitiesto meet new people (even non-UC types),some travel. Must be able to deal withauthoritarian-deluded editors in an essentiallynon-authoritarian hierarchy. Duties involvemostly office and personnel management,editing and layout as desired. Possibility oftoken remuneration (to be arranged) andassurance of infinite appreciation. Come toIda Noyes 305, or speak with Mary SueLeighton, Jeff Schnitzer, or Rick Hack. AnEqual Opportunity Employer. (?)Female roommate for summer and/or next 1 ^*de wanted to New York City June 2'year. Own bedroom. 6 rm. apt. w porch I or 3 (must catch 8 P,ane ,eavin9 NYC earlyDO 3-7682. 1 evenina of 3rd). Will share driving and ex¬evening of 3rd). Will share drivingpenses. 324-7813.2 males and/or liberal female(s) to shareapt. for summer at 54th 8> Dorchester. Own j Need Charter Flight ticket to Europe. Callroom. $45/mo. Call Steve at 493-2922. ! Maxine 761-4522.1 girl to room w. 3 others. 8 rm. apt. Own 1 p®rson(s) to drive our car to Los Angeles,rm. $46.50/mo. 52nd 8, Greenwood Lease ' Leav® about June 15. You pay for gas, etc.begins Sept. BU 8-6610, Room 2415 or 1319 1 285-5999.FOR SALEFOR SALEMan's BIKE. 3 speed shift. 324-1032. EAST COAST TRIP. ca. 2nd week of June.Male student desires travel companion, sharedriving. FREE. Ml 2-8266.MORE CLASSIFIEDS ON PAGE 11June 15—Sept. 15. Air cond. townhse. nearU.C. 3 BR. 2-Vj Bath, Mod. Kit., laund.,piano, yard, priv. pkg. Family or 2 couples.Reasonable. 288-7030.ROOMS FOR RENTWOMEN STUDENTS: 2 rooms in apartmentat 5435 Woodlawn for rent June 10 to Oct. 1.Kitchen privileges, $55 a month each. CallBU 8-8213 or contact E. Johnson by mail.Starting in June. Option for lease for nextyear (Autumn, Winter, Spring Quarters).Large room, much storage space, largewindows. Plenty of air, two very large book¬cases. Near 1C, Lake 8. Shopping. Call Richat 493-6698.INEXPENSIVE ROOMS FOR SUMMER!Complete Kitchen FacilitiesDirectly Across from the Quadrangle5747 University, PL 2-9718APARTMENTS TO SHAREMale roommate for summer. Share 5 roomapt. Furnished. W/air cond. 8, T.V. on 57th8. Drexel. Call 288-7060 or 288-6775.Female Roommates wanted for summer.I Air cond. apt. with piano. 684-6883. Tuesday: A SpecialIssue on'TheUniversity andIts Community!'■ ■■ '■ * IWv?£ir. -^3:s**!? :/?;*•*,10 THE CHICAGO MAROONr':'1:1MORE CLASSIFIEDS ON PAGE 10 AMore Maroon Classified AdsDesired—2 large trunks (as big as Laurie's).Phone now 667-8128.Tent & sleeping bags. 624-3320. No. 36 S.Will pay up to $500 for old VW. Bob at NO7-5611.Need large truck for large stash. See Steveat 6020 Woodlawn.GUITAR FOR SALE. NYLON STRINGS.Goya G-10 with hard shell case. *100. Jo¬anna. 493-6761.CAMPING EQUIPMENT RENTALCamping Equipment Rental: Tents, Sleep¬ing Bags, Stoves, Lanterns, Contact HickoryExt. 2381 or 324-1499.CATERERSHaving a Party?—or feel tired of cooking?Let Mary Lou do it for you. Hors d'oeuvres,menus, buffet and family dinners. MaryLou Catering, Ml 3-3545. Try our originalleberkase.LOST AND FOUNDFOUND—4 KEYS Found—Two marked '206'.Call J. Vogel at 288-9459 & leave message.LOST LATE LAST WEEK: Brown Ski Jack¬et, Skitique Label. Great Sentimental Value.Please contact Steve at 363-9431.DOMESTIC MAID SERVICENEED YOUR HOUSE or APT. cleaned bytrustworthy servants? Let Fanny do it!FANNY MAID SERVICE. Ml 3-3543.NEW YORK CITY SUBLETSublet June 1—Sept. 1. N.Y.C. 111th &Amsterdam, 2 min. walk from Columbia.6V2 rm., 4 bedrooms, About $200/mo. Call288-3576.PERSONALSThe most traumatic problem at the Uni¬versity of Chicago is NOT the angry, re¬bellious students, Black or White, and it isNOT the Communistic, atheistic faculty; itis the CAMPUS TELEPHONE OPERATORS! Want to know what you've missed?Read the CAP & GOWN.53rd .Street is a Summer Festival.100% Legal Religious Experience. An in-finit visual Vision. Flex your mind with anINFINITY TUNNEL—Send $1 to: Taico, POB6499 Chicago, Illinois 60680.It is most definitely the SEASON OF THEWOLF in America today."America's face is smiling. A new bloodquickens her step; her mills and foundriesare pouring out black smoke in a frenzy ofexultation—but do not be deceived: it is thefalse, painted bloom on the face of a corpse;America does a crazy jig-step behind thescreeching bands and the banners proudlycarried by the moronic schoolboys uponwhom she depends—but her breasts swingflabbily and are without milk—great red-handed whore filling the air with fightingplanes, aid the sea with destroyers: yourstruggle is useless, already the death rat¬tle can be heard in your throat.You have crippled and destroyed; youhave burnt and pillaged; you have defiledand degraded every decent impulse of mypeople; you have butchered and laid waste toman's very soul."—ALBION MOONLIGHTWANTEDOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOA Part time worker for the United Synagogue Youth De¬partment. Preferably a graduate student with some ex¬perience with Youth Groups and adequate Jewish educa¬tional background.If interested please contact Mrs, Ruth A. Bonder at:GREATER CHICAGO REGION 72 EAST NTH STREETUNITED SYNAGOGUE OF AMERICA CHICAGO, ILL. 60605DEPARTMENT OF YOUTH ACTIVITIES WEBSTER 9-2353HUMOR US!WRITE SOMETHING HUMOROUSBLACKFRIARSannounces theCOMPETITIONFor original scripts for its 1969Musical comedy production.Authors in search of composers andvice versa should contact us.A completed act and a synopsis mustbe submitted at the beginning of theAutumn, 1969, quarter.For further information, call:Alan Rudnick MI-3-8679Steve Goodman X 3545"1 made a deal" . . giggle . . .There are no Black teachers at U-Highbecause the pay stinks.Charley Isaacs is the cleanest looking hip¬pie 1 have ever met.Baby, you ain't never met Plato Jones.The Sherrif of Nottingham is a tyrant.Steve Word—come back and fake out thegarbage. 1 miss you.—OpheliaSo have if your way—the BS 69-er.Sounds like a preffy strange sandwich . . .As it were . . .Change your life with HOLIDAY MAGICCOSMETICS and a summer in Houston!There are no Black teachers at U-Highbecause the professors' kids are neuroticand the Black man has his own bag.HE CERTAINLY DOES.Next week: Cram Special — the Gallery.Let's get Negro (sic) history out of theinner city school and put it in the Lily-white schools where it belongs.Who Maid Marion?NEED HELP MOVING FURNITURE?People wanted to share cost of small U-HaulTruck for 1 day at end of quarter. 955-0672or leave message in Room 336, B.J.Last day to avoid the rush!Shapiro items due Monday, May 27th.Have your portrait done by Ivan Albright."A WAR WHICH IS NOT DEFENSIBLEEVEN IN MILITARY TERMS ... IS A WARWHICH IS MORALLY WRONG."—McCarthy.McCarthy would never support Hubert Hum¬phrey—he is morally wrong.Look for the Happy Wandering.Marty, Margie, we'll miss you(sob) Happy Graduation.Corso is a bummer.| The x to the nth will be playing at theHutch Gallery tonight, 8-11.THANK YOU TO THE MAN WHO TYPESON YELLOW PAPER . . . YOU SAVED METHIS WEEK. Business Secretary.I i l l I I i i i i i i i i i i i i i i I I i lThe x to the nth will be playing at theHUTCH GALLERY tonight! 8—11 p.m.Who are the HAPPY WANDERING?But more important, why?Want to know what you've seen?Read the CAP 8. GOWN.Frankly, NO.No wonder there's a pollution problem . . .So many people eat so much shitAnd it all comes out of their mouths.Beyond the Melting Pot—Friday night dinnerat the BANDERSNATCH!!! Guerilla Chief needs new recruitsfo harass local constabdlary.Contact F. Tuck at Ext. 2898.Congratulations to the Building & Groundsmen' who Infiltrated the CRU meeting lastweek and voted against a strike!Comm. Med 315 will not only SURVIVE,it shall PREVAIL! CHEBend your mind at the BLUE GARGOYLE,Cramped Mind? Unwind."Mother's Day in France, which was to havebeen observed Sunday, May 26, has beenpostponed to June 16 because of the strikecrisis. June 16 also is Father's Day. Thedecision was announced by the NationalCouncil of Commerce." Sure hope next year's First Year Students You have to admit that U-High is bettercan write better Personals than those from | than Southern Illinois Universitythe last four years . .. whew ... T'NEXT WEEK: Cram Special—THE GAL¬LERY.HELP BIG BUDDIES! Car Wash Saturday.What decent teacher would WANTU-HIGH? Mr. Kohl couldn't loose it.What's Olivia de Haveland doing onCaptain Blood's ship?HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO THE NEW17 YEAR OLD PRESIDENTCONGRATULATIONS DENNIS 0'C**TOM GO TO HELL.If you think you can buy my '66 VW forless than $1350. However, if you'd like totry—call me at NO 7-4700, Ext. 8326, 9 to 5weekdays.O MOITA VEM Al AGUARDEM.Only 3 days to goBring back your Shapiro.Bobby Kennedy taps phones: Governor Bra-nigan taps kegs.Interested in one-week bike (10 speed) triparound Lake Mich.? Call DO 3-7548. PLEASE REMEMBER THAT THE ADDEADLINE FOR Tuesday's paper—thelast paper of the quarter—is 3 P.M. today,this Friday, May 24th in the year ofhate, nineteen hundred & sixty-eight.SALIS —remem—ORIAL DAY—BERYThis is B.K.T.N. WEEK. (Be Kind of Nella)Black activists are smarter than white ones.You wouldn't be so smart either with theBusiness School bugging your tail.The x to the nth will bo playing atTHE HUTCH GALLERYtonight!8-1 lpmAre Teplick, Sher, Ewart, Cooper, and Cappreally HAPPY! Then why are they wander¬ing?GIANT CHICKEN BARBEQUE to benefitCADRE. Saturday, June 8, from 5 p.m.Home of Rissman. 1031 E. 50th Street.Donation 5 DOLLARS!Nancy from Wittenberg reads the CAP 8,GOWN.Is Robin Hood the idol of SDS?The Weekend BANDERSNATCH providesfringe benefits.The yolk's on Schnitzer.Dean Booth keeps a bull horn in his base¬ment.PLEASE! Desperately need someone to carefor my 2 cats this summer. Will pay up¬keep. Rebecca. 288-2561."The various Great Society proposals raisedthe hopes of many. But funds and resourcesare not forthcoming . . . These promises havebecome just empty words." E. McCarthy.Chicago Science Fiction Society presentsALGIS BUDRYS and FRED SABERHAGENon SCIENCE FICTION! Ida Noyes Theatre,May 28, 7:30. D, D, and D: Give my best to Marianneand Jose, Charlie and the Gang, and Maa-tha's set. Love, Moses G.The x to the n th will be playing atTHE HUTCH GALLERY, tonight, 8-11.The MAD HATTER, Hyde Park's super-new and super—fine restaurant at 53rd &Hyde Park Blvd. is only open til 10 P.M.,so get there early for the daily SPECIALDINNER (includes dish of Valas super-icecream) or for dessert—not only FLAMINGCREPE SUZETTE, but an ALICE'S DREAMBANANA SPLIT! Brilliant, captivating, unmarried Adoniswishes to cohabit. Call 752-6909 andask for "THE DUDE."Run, run — Pant! Pant!Return your Shapiro to Skip Landt.Errol Flynn IS Captain Blood.This Saturday night THE JARMAN COM¬PANY will be playing at I IT. This is prob¬ably your last chance to see them this year.In two weeks. You won't remember yourEXAMS, but you will remember THE JARMAN COMPANY. Don't miss it (them?)!!!Check around Hyde Park for posters givingexact time etc. There's one at the BookCenter in Harper Court.Buy 1968 CAP 8, GOWN.The Happy Wondering?I don't really know about all the others-but is Todd Capp REALLY HAPPY??You thought Roscoe Mitchell was the endof the musical world?—man, the real end—the man who started it all—Joseph Jarman—he's the man to see—even if you haveto miss your Phy Sci Exam . . .Entire U. of C. welcomes Woodstock MayorFrancis Kuhn 8. delegation: Dusak, Shaw,Gathman, 8. Miller.Read the Maroon? Find the truth In theCap 8, Gown.Well, thas cool . . . The Maroon wouldrather hear Joseph Jarman than find thetruth, for beauty is truth and truth beauty.BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL.Original Salisbury Studs!May 30 is our Birthday.Let's have presents, presence.See the Merry Band of Men swish throughthe forest.Was that an ad for Smedley's or anotherAnger Flick? ? ?Escape TONIGHT to Madison to hear theSEBASTIAN MOON.P. J. M. Studieren Sie gut, bitte.When Are You Coming Shutkin???CAP 8, GOWN reads you. Return the favor. PHIL: Congrats on upcomingAnnouncement. Ex-con-to-be."AMERICA is not a poor country.We have the means to build a society inwhich there is hope rather than fear,optimism rather than frustration."—Eugene McCarthy If you EAT, EAT at Ahmad's—eggs expresso,shish-kabob, egg-plant etc ... 1440 E. 57th.EAT there before you go to the JARMANCONCERT.Errol Flynn, Olivia de Haveland, ClaudeRains, and Basil Rathbone—All in ONEmovie?No, in two movies, and both by the di¬rector of CASABLANCA.Hear Prof. Hans Jonas (Visiting Professorfrom Committee on Social Thought) atHILLEL, Friday, 8:30. Topic: "CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS IN ETHICS FROMA JEWISH PERSPECTIVE."Writers' Workshop PL 2-8377.YOGA—Exercises, concentration, and medi¬tation lifts consciousness beyond existentialhope and despair to tranquility and ecstasyYogi Sri Nerode. DO 3 0155.We're still paying 10c for May 3rd copiesof the Maroon. Room 304. INH.The x to the nth will be playing at theHutch Gallery tonight, 8-11.Folk dancing at Hillel, Thursday nights.Backyard.DRUMMER—wants to play with Jazz orRock group; summer quarter, for fun orprofit, Call Phil at FA 4-9500, Room 1705Anne: I love you. The Kid.Ghouls, warlocks, witches—see COMEDY OFTERRORS. Thrills 8. Horrors: Panic at theBLUE GARGOYLE.Mr. Keene couldn't find the Bandersnatch. Read the CHUANG TZE (FUNG YU LANTRANS.)Ich Liebe dich!Alderman William Cousins Dr. Quentin YoungCousins & Youngask you to:**CANVASS THIS WEEKEND in thesouthern part of the district.Come to Chapel House at 12 nooneither Saturday or Sunday.**LEAFLET ANY DAY (call the HarperCourt office: 955-2200)** APPLY FOR AN ABSENTEE BALLOT(Send a post card to the Boardof Election Commissioners,City Hall.)**STAY AFTER EXAMS THRU JUNE I Ito canvass and poll watch. (FREEfood and housing for volunteers.) ALDERMANBILL COUSINS andDR. QUENTIN YOUNG,Independent candidates fordelegate to the DemocraticNational Convention - pledged tohelp get the nomination forSenator Eugene McCarthyOLGA WOODMAN andIRV KING are runningas alternate delegates,COUSINSYOUNGUNIVERSITY OFFICEChapel House5810 S. Woodlawnx35792nd CONGRESSIONALDISTRICT OFFICE521 I Harper Court955-2200HELP TO BUILD AN INDEPENDENT, ANTI-DALEY POLITICALMOVEMENT HERE IN CHICAGOMay 24, 1968 11THE ChllCAqO MAROON,Does The Party Mart Sell Cheese?Of Course, Only the Best225 Kinds And From 17 CountriesFront France?a semi-soft surface ripened cheesefresh, fragrant and delicatelightly touched with Kirsch or flavored with walnutsa pungent and sharp tasting creamy bluelike no other cream cheese in the world — with fine herbs or withoutmade of ewe’s milk sharp and saltyBuche LoraineBrieGourmandisePipo-cremeBoursinRouquefortFront Enyland?Stilton king of the blue cheeses of the world — we sell prime quality onlyDouble Gloucester so delicate you can taste the buttermilkFront Italy?RomanoTalfino GalbaniGorgonsola a hard cheese for hand eating — made in the Sicilian mountainsand aged 3 yearssharp and semi-soft -- creamy white and deliciouspungent sharp and creamy — this finest quality is aged 2 yearsFront Hermany?KochkaeseAlpenjoyBianco a crumbly type of cheese -- cooked with caraway seedseven in this smoked cheese the Germans add sausagewhite, semi-soft, very lightly aromaticFront lire err?Feta preserved in brine to retain its freshness — used in salads or by itself $1.19 ea$3.39 lb$2.89 lb$3.19 lb$1.59 ea$2.79 lb$1.99 lb$1.39 lb$2.79 lb$2.29 lb$2.15 lb$0.95 14 oz$1.49 lb$1.95 lb$1.59 lbFront Note York?Herkimer white or yellow shelf-cured - sharp $129 eaFront Aortray?Tilsiter smooth, delicate semi-soft $1.15 lbFront Scotland?Dunlop semi-sott - buttery with a slight bite $1-39 lbFront Canada?Cheddar shelf cured, sharp, semi-hard $1.99 lbFront Switzerland?Emmenthalar no hard crusts, only nutty flavored center cutsGruyere smaller holes, sharper and firmer textureFront Denmark?Cream Blue taste this mild creamed blue for salads or hors d’oeuvresHavarti springy but firmer than port-salut -- yellow with tiny holesFront Holland?Gouda made of whole milk to increase the flavor -- perfect with red wineand a ham sandwichEdam made of skimmed milk -- a light delicious flavor - to be eaten freshwith crackers or crisp bread^Jlie Party Ylfjart $2.29 lb$2.19 lb$1.59 lb$1.45 lb$1.39 lb$1.45 lb2427 E. 72nd ST. (at EXCHANGE)OPEN Daily 10 AM-11 pm , SUNDAY 12 NOON 9 PMTHE CHICAGO MAROON2 May 24. 1968