Vol 77, No. 2 The Chicago Maroon, July 11, 1968 News on Page 3Roger Black Looks at Paper Threats to Democratic ConventionIn ChicagoAugust 2o ?THAT IS A good question. It may be, ofcourse, that nothing will happen. If IllinoisBell’s strike is not brought to an end soon,tomorrow, for example, the Democratsmay very well go to Miami.But in the meantime a number of peopleare churning around, talking about bring¬ing great numbers of people to the Demo¬cratic Convention. The card-carryingDemocrats are, of course, planning onbringing about 20,000. The McCarthy andHumphrey campaign staffs will number inthe thousands. A1 Lowenstein, the Coalitionman, talks about bringing a million forsome kind of super rally, perhaps theSunday before the convention.Renny Davis, Chicago co-ordinator forthe Mobilization, says they hope to bring100,000 people. Marcus Raskin, the man inthe Spock trial who was acquitted, isstarting a fourth party and is now intend¬ing to hold a convention in the AuditoriumTheater simultaneously with the Demo¬crats in the Amphitheater.The Yippies (Youth International Party),who almost folded after Johnson quit aresitting back, in their way, and letting peo¬ple come to them. They are trying torent out Navy Pier for the week of theconvention to place rock bands like CountryJoe and the Fish there and have a general“Festival of Life.”The problem with these million and someodd people is that they are all (with theexception of the Democrats themselves)paper. A1 Lowenstein and his staff areflying about the country contacting every¬one they know to see how many peoplethey can bring. Renny Davis and hisfriends sit in their very pleasant office onDearborn with the El running by at the Symbol of Lowenstein’s grouplevel of their windows and issue “calls.”(“We believe the Convention is a time tounite our movements and our organ¬izations, a time to say Americans will notbe silenced or unrepresented in 1968, atime to tell the politicians and the worldthat we will stay in the streets of Americauntil every soldier is brought home andevery suffering is heard”) Marc Raskingoes to New York to talk to Lindsay, totalk to McGovern. There is talk about aMcCarthy-Rockefeller ticket, a Rockefeller-McCarthy ticket, a Mansfield-McGovemticket, a McCarthy-Lindsay ticket. The Yip¬ pies sit happily in their office in New Yorkand grind out buttons and posters.But no one has set up a housing office.No one really knows how those millionpeople are going to get to Chicago or whatthey are going to do when they get there.Daley is ready, no doubt, to shoot to maim.The Chicago police are ready for anything.Nixon and Wallace are ready.The Mobilization people plan to have onehuge march on Thursday. Davis hasvisions of a fairly elaborately choreo¬graphed procession in which the forcesmass during the nominations, marchduring the roll call, and when, as they areconvinced will occur, Humphrey is nom¬inated, appear outside the Amphitheater,thundering their protest.For the first days of the convention, theMobilization plans to let people do prettymuch what they want, as a form of par¬ticipatory democracy. They are planningfor the first days a number of workshops,programs, small rallies, and meetings.Somehow they will get word around wherethese things are and how to get to them.The Mobilization, however, considers theDemocratic Convention a cut and dried af¬fair. They are coming to Chicago not toinfluence the nominating process, but toprotest it, to protest Humphrey (and henceJohnson), the war, the system. Raskin andthe fourth party people are doing muchthe same thing. They are choosing the“democratic” process, but they have givenup hope it will work under the currentconditions. The Yippies, of course haveaborted altogether.The people who don’t think that Hum¬phrey’s nomination is inevitable are the lib¬erals, the McCarthy people and the Coali-Continued on Page Seven *»*truv.ofChgo•LibraryPeriodicalRecordHarper14-22Chgo.,lli,60637Hemisfair and San Antonio: Will We Accept the Challenge?San AntonioHouse Kills Intern ProgramSan AntonioSAN ANTONIO is a beautiful city, a cityplanner’s dream. If you ignore the 400,000poor, as it seems most San Antonians do,there is probably no more ideal a city inthe United States.A small river, the San Antonio, windsthrough 18 feet below the very center ofthe city, and rather than pour sewage intoit as in Chicago, San Antonio has land¬scaped it and built shops and restaurantson either side.The city is one of the older in the UnitedStates. There are Spanish missions, datingfrom the beginning of the 18th century.The whole city has a somulent, semi-tropi¬cal atmosphere, somewhat Southern.But what must not be forgotten, is thatSan Antonio -is a poor city. Several hundredthousand of its citizens are below the pov¬erty level. Most. of them speak Spanish.Its schools are bad. Its industry is fleeing.Only the federal government, which ringsthe city with army and air force bases,maintains the city’s prosperity.San Antonio was mortified two weeks agowhen CBS broadcast a brutally honest anal¬ysis of the city’s poverty, contrasting itto the lush, ante-bellum Menger Hotel, andto the Hemisfair.But, at least with the Hemisfair, the con¬trast is not entirely accurate. The Hemis¬fair (or as the city PR people now prefer,the San Antonio World’s Fair) was con¬ceived not as a shining symbol of the city,such as Seattle’s Century 21 Exposition in1962, or of the whole country, such as Ex¬po 67 or Japan's Expo 70. It was designedstraightforwardly as a project to bringbusiness to the city, (through tourist trade)and to renovate a deteriorated downtownarea.Almost all the fair buildings were de¬signed by San Antonio architects. The ma¬jority of them will be permanent—amongthese a convention center, three big thea¬ters, an amphitheater, a large museum ofTexas culture, plus several older, “histori¬cal” buildings that were reconstructed andmoved.More importantly, as Allision Peery, aSan Antonio architect, the chief of Hemsi-fair architecture and design, and now thedirector of post-fair use of the site, saysthe Hemisfair was conceived as something“to get the city going, and to get the peo¬ple to work together.”As a result, Hemisfair does not comparevery well with any of the last expos—with,of course, the exception of the 1964-5 NewYork Worlds Fair, which can hardly besaid to compare at all.Still Hemisfair attempted the expo ap¬proach in certain ways. A uniform graphicdesign was introduced. Guidelines weredrawn up. But now bootleg signs have ap¬peared in abundance, and visitors havetaken down many of the original signs forsouvenirs. Expo 67 had 120 men working inthe designing department during the fair.Hemisfair has one.All buildings had to be approved. But thewhole idea of the architecture was to bequiet. “We did not want muscular design,”Peery says, “so that all the random standsand things that have to be set up wouldnot destroy it.” Unfortunately, however, “all the random stands, while not destroy¬ing the design of the big buildings, manageto overshadow them. The exception is thevery fine tower, designed by San Antonio’sbest-known architect, 0‘Neill Ford.Attempts were made at unified design,such as a system of waterways, and pedes¬trian bridges over them. (One did not findoneself so frequently imperiled by the fastlittle electric carts that swarmed over Expo‘67.) But the grand effect in Montreal ofTotal Design does not come through. Theappearance of Hemisfair is that of a ratherpleasant, human-scale fiesta. There are nostartling new works of architecture.There are no Habitats that show us new de¬signs for living. There are no exhibits thatintroduce us to new technologies.The theme of the fair “The Confluence ofCivilizations in the Americas” confines thefair somewhat to the old Columbian Ex¬position kind of fair—which is based on theexhibition of artifacts. The Texas pavilion,titled absurdly The Institute of Texan Cul¬tures, does this very well (it was designedby a Los Angeles firm). There are nopictures of Texas governors and theirwives: the buildings are devided into sec¬tions devoted to national, racial, and ethnicgroups,including a large section completewith three movies Negroes.But the best exhibit in the whole fair—onall levels—is the United States pavillion.One part of it is a national version of theTexas pavillion. But the other part is afilm, entitled U S and made by FrancisThompson, the man who made “To BeAlive” for the New York fair.US is the finest piece of film propagandaI have ever seen. It does not exhort theworld to be impressed by your power andwealth; it exhorts Americans to pay atten¬tion to the destruction they are wreakingupon the land, the damage machines aredoing to the human spirit, the oppressionthe country is bringing to millions of itscitizens.The film is technically perfect. (It beginswith three separate screens and theaterswhich merge to one huge curved screen anda vast theater during a cut from Wrightmaking his first flight to the view from athundering jet.) The photography is magni¬ficent. The music (David Amran) perfectlymatch. The narration (W. H. Auden) issuperb.It is impossible to relay the very tellingeffect the film has upon its viewers. It hascaused a great deal of controversy. LadyBird wanted to have it censored. I heardone woman say, “I thought it didn’t pre¬sent a very good image of us.” Her hus¬band replied, “Well, I thought that at first,but then that’s the way it is.”And it is. The film offers a challenge toAmericans, a challenge which most Ameri¬cans are unaware exists, never mind readyto take up. It is entirely appropriate the USshould be shown in San Antonio, where thechallenge needs desperately to be met.Hemisfair seems to have succeeded as ur¬ban renewal project. Whether it can suc¬ceed as a revitalizing agent in a city en¬tirely different from Montreal and Seattleis yet to be seen, but it is something whichshould be closely watched.R. B. By Walter GrantWASHINGTON (CPS)—This is the storyof how a small group of students opposedto the war in Vietnam unintentionallycaused the death of the college intern pro¬gram on Capitol Hill.It started last summer when college stu¬dents working in Congressional officesbegan circulating petitions against the war.One of the students said the petitions weredesigned to “convince the policy-makersthat the most respected elements of ouryoung society are concerned with ouractions in Vietnam.”The student interns thought they had theright to express their opinions about thewar. Several Congressmen apparently dis¬agreed, and told their interns not to signthe petition. Many members of the Con¬gressional Establishment were furious; theinterns were to be seen and not heard.Another group of interns started acounter-petition in favor of the war. Thisgroup, however, raised few eyebrows.For the first time last summer, the Pres¬ident did not meet with the interns. Thesummer ended, and most people forgotabout the controversy caused by the anti¬war petitions.But Congress did not forget, and whenthe final supplemental appropriation billpassed last December no funds were madeavailable for the student intern program.At the time, few people even realized theprogram had been dropped, and the actionwas not reported in the press. But an irri¬tant had been erased, and peace wouldreturn to Capitol Hill.Not all Congressmen were in favor ofscrapping the program, however, and ahandful of House members made a last-ditch attempt to revive it last week. Theyfailed.The last effort came during the Housedebate on Congress’ own budget for thenew fiscal year. The House bill under con¬sideration had an amendment attachedwith specifically denied funds to the in¬tern program. Rep. Thomas Rees (D-Calif.) offered an amendment to strike outthe restrictive language, so that extrafunds would be available for Congressmenwho want summer interns.The amount at stake was only about$327,000, a pittance by the commonstandards of Congressional spending. ButRep. George W. Andrews (D-Ala.) andother conservatives argued that the funds should be denied in the name of economy.Rep. Basil L. Whitener (D-N.C.) said,“In my 12 years in this body, I believethat if I were asked to cast a vote on thebiggest waste of money ever engaged inby this body, it would be the expenditureof money in this so-called college internprogram.” Opponents of the program of¬fered only subtle hints as to their realreasons for opposing it.The few members who spoke in favor ofthe program tried to shed light on why itwas being dropped. Rep. John Moss (D-Calif.) argued, “The plea here that we aredoing this cutting to save money isspecious. It is being done to punish a groupof people because their conduct did not ac¬cord with the views of some members ofthis body who just are not in touch withreality. . .”Rep. Silvio Conte (R-Mass.) pointed outthat the same appropriations bill whichdenies funds for the intern program pro¬vides money for 78 additional policemen tothe Capitol Police force.Rep. William Ryan (D-N.Y.) said theprogram “was eliminated in a fit of petu¬lance on the part of the House in reactionto the fact that so many interns, like youngpeople all over the country, and like 80per cent of the voters in the recent Demo¬cratic primaries, expressed doubts aboutthe Vietnam policy.”Rep. Hervey Machen (D-Md.) interpretedthe House action as a way of “serving no¬tice to the young people of this countrythat we cannot afford dissent and we wantcomplete control over the people we bringin to see the government in operation.”When the vote was taken, few membersof the House were on the floor. Funds forthe intern program were denied, 66 to 14.Despite the efforts of a majority of Con¬gressmen, there still are some internsworking on the Hill this summer. Nobodyknows just how many, but the number isdefinitely far less than the 1,300 studentson the payroll last summer.Some of the interns working this summerare not getting paid at all. Others aregetting paid out of their Congressman’spersonal funds, and a few Congressmenhave been able to squeeze enough moneyout of their existing office appropriation tohire an intern.Officially, however, the program is dead,and peace has returned to Capitol Hill inthe summertime.2 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 11, 1968SUMMER IN THE CITYCampaigning in Chicago:THE CHICAGO McCarthy headquarters oc¬cupies the 17th floor of a comparatively oldbuilding on Monroe with treacherous ele¬vators. The rooms are small, stuffy, withsmoke, and overcrowded with young people(some in their early teens) who walk in andout, talking freely and loudly. A table, alsosmall and overcrowded, heaped with cam¬paign literature and toped by a hat for do¬nations, stands near the entrance. A Ken¬nedy man comes in to look around, as yetuncommitted. The routine work is gladlyinterrupted by argument and informal de¬bate. In an uncanny way, we feel the manonce more alive and running in the game.There is a feeling here, that everyone isworking and deciding together. A more crit¬ical observation would be that there is lackof organization. Although the letter writingand such is done in a back room, there ismore general talk about the man, then spe¬cific plans on how he can appeal to the var¬ious ethnic groups in Chicago; going to theindividual people on the streets is stressed over any attempts to organize “McCarthyClubs.”Nixon headquarters are on the secondfloor of a new building, complete with adoorman and an inside newstand. On enter¬ing the offices, one is greeted by a secre¬tary who formally takes you behind thescenes to whatever or whomever can helpyou. Order, hierarchy and respectabilityreign. The rooms are large. Everythingand everyone is in the right place. Woodengavels and bronze elephants are neatly ar¬ranged on the desks. Work is going on qui¬etly, smoothly, accurately. Here, one getsexact information on what is being donespecifically in the Chicago area. Differentappeals are made to different groups:youth, rank and file, women, wealthy busi¬nessmen and other respectable members ofsociety. A Nixon man has been at a Lith¬uanian festival; an attempt to organizesororities and fraternities is planned. Mostof the work is done by letter writing t oContinued on Page Seven McCarthy HeadquartersNEWS FROM THE QUADRANGLES301.9fOBi:Dr. Melvin Griem in a showdown with some cancer cells.Licensing the Tumor Gun Med School Receives*500,000 Mellon GiftBy Robert FactorDeep beneath noisy Ellis Avenue, largeX-ray machines and a linear proton beamaccelerator are used daily to treat cancerpatients.Now a new direct procedure to destroythe tumors of various forms of cancer isbeing tested at the hospital run by theUniversity for the Atomic Energy Com¬mission, and the results so far have beenquite encouraging.The procedure consists of “shooting” atumor full of radioactive chromium seedswith a specially developed implantation“gun.” According to the chief investigator,Dr. Melvin L. Griem, associate professorof radiology and director of the ChicagoTumor Institute in Argonne, 18 of the 25patients receiving the treatment haveshown “favorable” responses. One patientwho received the treatment 7 and a halfyears ago is leading a normal life today,although at the time of the treatment, hehad a life expectancy of six months.The chromium seeds which eventuallycome to rest inside the tumor are pre¬pared from a special high-purity wiremade by the U. S. Bureau of Mines. Bu¬reau scientists had first prepared the high-purity chromium to investigate its metal¬lurgical properties. The physicians at Chi¬cago learned about the material andrequested supplies for research.The highly pure chromium implants arealmost completely inert in the body, andthere is no evidence that they may causeany unfavorable reactions. To produce the implantation seeds, thehair-fine wire is first cut into three-sixteenth inch lengths. These lengths arethen irradiated for two to three days in aresearch reactor at the Argonne NationalLaboratory in Lemont, Illinois. Such treat¬ment converts atoms in the wire to theradioactive isotope, chromium-51.Here also, it is essential that the originalchromium be pure, for any impuritieswould also become radioactive, and couldsubject a patient to undesirable radiation.Implantation of the radioactive seeds iscarried out with a gun specifically de¬veloped for clinical use, and now availablecommercially. Frequently, surgery is notrequired. In patients with deep-seated tu¬mors sufficient exposure of the tumor canbe achieved during a surgical procedure.From three to sixty seeds have been im¬planted in tumors of individual patientsand good results have been obtained withtumors located in a number of differentparts of the body.The type of radiation given off by thechromium-51 is highly desirable for tumorimplantation because the radiation is notso penetrating that it would cause damageto normal tissues of the body. Many seedsconcentrated in a small area can thus bevery effective in destroying a tumor with¬out affecting normal tissue. Chromium-51has a half-life of 27 days which is longlong enough to insure that the tumor re¬ceives an effective dose of radiation, andshort enough so that removal of the im¬plants is not necessary. The newly-named Pritzker School ofMedicine will receive $500,000 from theRichard King Mellon Charitable Trusts ofPittsburgh, for expanding and strengthen¬ing its medical teaching.The University is one of 30 Americaninstitutions that will share a $10 milliongrant from the Mellon Trusts for medicalteaching.Dr. Leon O. Jacobson, dean of the divi¬sion of the biological sciences and thePritzker School of Medicine said aboutthe grant:“In making awards of this magnitude atthis time, the Mellon charitable trusts havetaken a step of great significance in help¬ing to resolve the major financial crisisnow facing private medical education.“Our experience has been that our ef¬forts to remain independent and promoteleadership require more rather than lessfrom unrestricted resources,” Dr. Jacob¬son said.In announcing the grant, the board ofMorrell H. Cohen has been appointed di¬rector of the James Franck Institute at theUniversity for a three-year term effectiveJuly 1.Cohen, 40, holds joint appointments asprofessor in the department of physics, inthe institute, and in the committee onmathematical biology.Cohen succeeds Stuart A. Rice, professorin the department of chemistry and in theinstitute. Rice, 36 has served two suc-Postgraduate HonorsThree Chicago students have beenawarded grants-in-aid from the AmericanCouncil of Learned Societies for postdoc¬toral research in the humanities andrelated social sciences.The scholars are:• Oscar T. Broneer, professor emeritusof classical languages and literatures(topography and architecture of the Isth¬mian Sanctuary of Poseidon).• T. Bentley Duncan, assistant professorof history (the Portuguese mid-Atlantic is¬lands in 17th century trade).• Peter Novick, assistant professor ofhistory (American attitudes toward foreignpolicy since the 1930’s). trustees of the trusts said:“One of the most serious ■ problems inour medical schools today is the need formoney with which to pay adequate salariesfor competent teachers on permanent fac¬ulty staffs.Ten American schools receiving grants,including the Pritzker School, will receive$100,000 each year for the next five years.Twenty others will receive $50,000 eachyear for the same period.The letter of announcement to the deansof the medical schools states, “You mayallocate the grant within your discretionand need. We hope it will help to attractsome of the most promising young phy¬sicians to your faculty as full-time teach¬ers in medicine.”All the schools receiving grants are pri¬vate medical schools. Since there are 45such schools in the United States, the Mel¬lon grant will go to almost three-fourthsof the total.cessive three-year terms, he will remainon the faculty but is resigning as directorin order to devote more time to hisresearch and teaching interests.Commenting on the appointment, A.Adrian Albert, Dean of the Division of thePhysical Sciences, said: “Stuart Rice andhis students have been engaged in a verybroad range of theoretical and experimental studies on the electronic states of atomsand molecules i n crystals, liquids, andgases. His goal is that of obtaining anunderstanding of the various transportmechanisms which operate in these sys¬tems in terms of the electronic structureof the medium.“His successor, Morrell Cohen, has beena leader for several years in our solidstate effort to continue and the Institute toexpand its efforts in other direcions.”The James Franck Institute, formerlycalled the Institute for the Study of Metals,was founded in 1946 as an interdisciplinarylaboratory where physicists and chemistscould focus on the study of solids, partic¬ularly metals. It was renamed for theNobel Prize winner last year in recognitionof the broadening of the fields of researchbeing conducted by its faculty.Cohen To Head Frank InstituteJuly 11, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3EDITORIAL Miss Holmes and TACTMayor Daley and Model CitiesA number of people think Sen.John L. McClellan’s subcommitteehearings on the $927,000 man¬power training program that sal¬aried several Woodlawn gang mem¬bers is part of a plot to kill the Of¬fice of Economic Opportunity andthe TWO-University Model Citiesproposal. The Arkansas Democrat,a segregationist whose hearingshave not been notably unbiased,may well hope he can influencefurther cuts in poverty spending.But the man behind the scenes isChicago Mayor Richard J. Daley.Daley’s concern is not over theOEO but over the TWO-UniversityModel Cities proposal, which willcounter the proposal the Daley ma¬chine will present in October tothe Department of Housing andUrban Development. What Daleydoesn’t like about it is that it is ex¬pected to give TWO greater controlover the program than the Mayor’sOffice. TWO, not the Mayor’s Of¬fice, will control the purse strings,and this will mean a loss in politicalpower for Daley — currently allpoverty-type funds are channelledthrough him.Although nobody seems to besaying it in public, it is fairly wellestablished that Daley “put McClel¬lan on” to the issue in hopes ofdiscrediting TWO — and the Uni¬versity — so that their Model Citiesproposal could be easily rejected,and McClellan leaped at the chanceof taking a pot-shot at OEO. Theopen, well publicized hearings areunessential to a fair analysis of theprogram and its funding and in factare detrimental to it.Police superintendent James B.Conlisk has announced an investi¬gation of the Rangers, and Daleywill probably order more inquirieslater on when they can do the TWOModel Cities proposal more harm.Other facts of the situation sup¬port this analysis. Not only havemachine men tried to bribe Wood-lawn organizations into going alongwith Daley’s Model Cities proposalinstead of TWO’s, but Chicago po¬lice have played an important partin eliciting “evidence.” It is an es¬tablished fact that murder chargesagainst two sons of Ranger motherAnnabelle Martin were dropped inreturn for her testimony in earliertrials. It would be interesting toknow whether Mrs. Martin is nowon the payroll of the Gang Intelli¬gence Unit, and whether George Rose, another subcommittee wit¬ness, was ever prosecuted on thenarcotics charge he faced earlierthis year.But the most obvious evidenceof collusion against TWO and theUniversity came from Cook CountyJail Warden Winston Moore, whocharged in effect that the Univer¬sity was plotting to strengthenWoodlawn gangs so that it couldlater have an excuse for flatteningthe ravaged community and rebuild¬ing it to conform to its own expan¬sion plans. Dr. Irving Spergel ofthe School of Social Service Admin¬istration has since defended hisrole in the manpower project andJulian Levi, who is in charge of theUniversity’s role in the Model Citiesproposal, is fighting the city aggres¬sively.So far as the manpower programis concerned, this newspaper doesnot feel competent to be a judge.Certainly the Rangers are not thealtruistic community organizationsome have been making it out tobe on the other hand, but neitherare they simply or chiefly a streetgang of the 1950’s type. And it isunfortunate that their experimentaljob training program is being ir¬reverently dismissed the way it is;this will only frustrate creativeenergies and encourage destructiveones.So far as the Model Cities pro¬posal is concerned, the Rev. ArthurBrazier of TWO put it well whenhe said that white attempts to im¬prove the ghetto have all failedmiserably. Woodlawn residentsknow, at least on one level morethan anyone else, what is good forthemselves. They want to be giventhe chance to remake the commu¬nity they live in. This the TWO-University proposal, and not Da¬ley’s, will allow them to do.SUMMERThe Chicago MaroonRoger Black, EditorJohn Recht, Managing EditorRobert Factor, Associate EditorJeffrey Kuta, Senior EditorMark Steinhoff, Photography EditorThe Chicago Maroon is published bi-weekly on Thurs¬days during the summer, and twice weekly on Tues¬days and Fridays during the regular academic year.Non-profit postage paid at Chicago, Illinois. The Ma¬roon offices are on the third floor of Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637. Telephone(312) Ml 3-0800, extension 3265. Mail subscriptionsmay be ordered from the Maroon for $6 per year.Subsequent issues of the Summer Maroon will appearon July 25, August 8, and August 22. Subscribers tothe College Press Service. Founded in 1892. Zap. By Jeffrey Kuta“We thank God for meetings like thisthat alert us to the great dangers that ourcountry faces today,” began the Baptistminister.The place was the Bunker Hill CountryClub, a post of the Veterans of ForeignWars, in Niles, Ill. It was a hot, humidFriday night, but the gray-painted meetingroom was air-conditioned and the metalchairs were cold.The audience numbered about 200, count¬ing the members of the sponsoring NorthSuburban chapter of TACT, which standsfor Truth About Civil Turmoil. Half themen wore sport shirts, short-sleeved, openat the collar; half wore coats and ties. Thewomen wore bright-colored cotton dressesthat looked alike. Middle-aged couples,mostly. A lot of Polish accents. And, oddly,three Negroes.“There are mobs roaming the land today,and our political leaders are not facing upto this fact,” warned a TACT leader. In acalm, sincere voice, he told of a “sinisterconspiracy that threatens the nation fromwithin” and introduced the evening’sspeaker, who would tell more about it.Enter Miss HolmesShe was Lola Belle Holmes, a middle-aged Negro who had worked for the FBI,from which she was dismissed in 1964.Since then she has devoted much of hertime lecturing to defenders of freedomsuch as TACT. Miss Holmes is a master ofthe loaded word, the innuendo, the proof ofguilt by association. She has been dis¬credited by the press, but she is so used tothis that she doesn’t read criticism anymore.Miss Holmes is a stern, God-fearingChristian who loves America. “If you findsomething detrimental to wnat you believein, fight to destroy it,” she urged. She iscertainly trying. Within three minutes shehad linked the menace of world Commun¬ism, established by “a handful of ruthlesscriminals,” with the passage of the 1965Civil Rights bill, “planned and written byMoscow Communists.” She didn’t want toget into the merits or the demerits of thebill, she said.The segregated Southern schools MissHolmes attended didn’t hurt her at all, shesaid, because you get out of life only whatyou put into it. Sure Negroes are discrimi¬nated against—but they should accept dis¬crimination with pride instead of allowingthemselves to be “used” by Communiststhe way Martin Luther King did before hewas assassinated by them.The Communist AgitatorsWhite racism is not the cause of Negrodiscontent—if it were, Miss Holmes said,she herself would have to be includedamong the white racists. (Laughs.) Theproblem is rather that people are tellingNegroes that they’ve been short-changedand that they should use violence to settlethings. “Bad social conditions don’t ofthemselves engender discontent,” Lola ex¬plained. “It’s the Communist agitators thatare behind it all.”And they’ve been increasing theirstrength ever since 1933 when FDR recog¬nized the Soviet Union. Since World WarII, in fact, Miss Holmes said, the UnitedStates has helped turn over several nationsto Communism. And today the governmentis financing the War on Poverty and themobs in the streets.“It is socialist-ridden and ought to beabolished forever,” Miss Holmes said ofthe poverty program. She told the wholesordid story of what is being done withour tax dollars, revealing the links be¬tween individuals in the poverty programand Communist - linked organizations.“These are the people who are running theWar on Poverty,” she cried.That was the highpoint of her preparedspeech, “The War on Poverty Is a Fraud.”She concluded: “The whole country is go¬ing down into oblivion, we’re in the midstof revolution, and it is all being financedby the federal government,” which Miss Holmes likened to “an octopus withtentacles.”Miscellaneous HolmesismsIn the course of the evening Miss Holmeshad also attacked the Kerner Report, thepress, anti-gun legislation, the Ford Foun¬dation, President Johnson, SCLC, EarlWarren, the Warren Report, the Su¬preme Court, the Fifth Amendment, andthe Chicago School Board. A few MissHolmesisms:•Kerner Report — “Phony” and full of“sociological double-talk” and “hoopla.”(Laughs.) It “serves to further the blackrevolution and the crushing of all law-abid¬ing citizens and taxpayers.”•Anti-gun legislation — “No law canstop criminals. We need guns for protec¬tion.”•Chicago School Board — “It’s Commu¬nist-infiltrated.”•Mayor Daleyls shoot-to-kill order — “Itshould have been given years ago.”(Laughs.)A man from the audience asked whomMiss Holmes supported for President.George Wallace, she declared. Five min¬utes later the same man asked what shethought of the John Birch Society. Lola saida few kind words. In each case, roughlyhalf the audience applauded — that wasmore than the proportion of hard-coreTACT members there.There are 15 chapters of TACT in Chi¬cago, 3000 throughout the nation. And theymobbed the literature tables on the wayout.LETTERSWon’t LeaveIn your issue of Friday, May 24, therewas a front-page article with a bannerheadline listing various professors leavingor about to leave the University. Towardthe end of the article my name was listedas one of those leaving. Let me assure youthat there is no foundation whatever inthis report. Blandishments from the out¬side would not tempt me to leave this Uni¬versity, which I find excellent for teaching,study, and scholarship.SAUNDERS MAC LANEMax Mason Professorof MathematicsArtThe Loredo Taft National Monument(known to us peons as the Midway Studios)has gone elitest on us. It’s classes are nowopen only to bona-fide BFA students.This is contrary to the traditions of aliberal education.This is contrary to good sense, since realart students tend to go to a school with areal art department, hence the better workhere has often been done by non-artmajors.This is contrary to fair play since it isnot stated in the catalogue which seeming¬ly offers art, and since it applies not justto incoming freshman but to all; even sen¬iors who have been planning and waitingfour years to have free hours for studiocourses.Regardless of whether the cause is theadministration’s unfair allocation of re¬sources or the studio’s particular policies,this is awful, selfish, unfair, isolationist,exclusionist, elitist, etc., etc., etc. Ofcourse the College shouldn’t allow it. Butthey are. So other departments ought toretaliate by refusing to allow bona-fideBFA students to register for courses (notto penalize the students but to force an im¬mediate reversal of policy).An art student who,for obvious reasons,ought to remainANONYMOUS4 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 11, 1968THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5 802 ELLIS AVENUE • CHICAGO • ILLINOIS 6063 7TEXTBOOKS • GENERAL BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY • "TYPEWRITERS♦TAPE RECORDERS • ♦PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES • "GIFTS • *At main store only.MEMORANDUM TO: DEPARTMENT HEADS, PROFESSORS, DEPARTMENTAL SECRETARIES•Thu University cf Chicago Bookstores personnel will dc all incar power to obtain a sufficient number of copies of all re¬quired and recommended texts for every course offered duringthe autumn quarter.Information forms (Forms ifS7) requesting information fer fallquarter textbooks wore delivered to all departments on May 3th.To 'date the Bocks tors has received the needed textbook informationfor only about 30£ of the courses which will be offered.Publishers representatives report that there will be a shortagecf textbooks this fall, most college bookstores have placed themajority of their orders, some titles are now out-of-stock, andthat reprintings in most cases will not be available before the.fall quarter begins.The later we receive the required and recommended books information,and therefore the later we place our orders, the greater the chancethat the needed titles will not be on our shelves when classes begin.However, we will place all orders immediately on the day we receivethe necessary information.This is an appeal tc all those deciding upon titles to be used, andthose in positions to forward that information tc the bookstore, todc sc just as soon as possible. Thank you.The University of Chicago BookstoresJuly 11, 1988 THE CHICAGO MAROONiTHE MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per line re¬peat. Count 35 characters and spacesper line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60657.No Ads will be taken over the phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSMUST BE IN BY MONDAY AT 3 P.M.NO EXCEPTIONS. OFFICE IS OPEN11 TO 5, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.ApartmentsFACULTY COUPLE seeks fall sublet: 2bedrooms, furnished, Hyde Park. 324-3869.IDEAL STUDENT apartment. 3 rooms andstudy. 5131 University 3-B. $100 start July25. Call Wolin-Levin or 324-8229 after 6.LARGE, BRIGHT 4'/2 room apt August andSept. Sun porch, 2 cats. $100/month. 53rd.324-8229.LUXURY APT, beautifully furnished. Sharewith 1 male grad student for summer.Private bedroom, direct view of lake. 50thSt., tlth floor, $81 mo, HY 3-9123 after 8 pm.SPACIOUS 5 ROOM apt for rent a availSept. 1. S Shore. 2 blocks from lake. 1 blockfrom 1C. Convenient to campus and shop¬ping. Sun porch. Backyard. $135/month.Call 375-8225.FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for July andAugust. Furn. Phone 363-0773 after 5.5508 S Cornell, 8 rooms, 3 baths, 4 beds.FoodDrinkPeople311 e 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400j&merfc Rehab. Conservatives. Appoint only. Wilson288-5381 ams or Costa 667-0757.SUBLET 3Vi rm apt on Dorchester, Aug,Sept. $95. 643-2222.SOUTH SHORE area, near lake. 5 roombasement apt, only $75/month. Available inAugust. Call 221-9840.CONDOMINIUM: 6 and 7 rooms, 2 beds.Hyde Park Blvd. and 55th st. Remodeled.$20,500 and up. DO 3-6842.WantedWANTED: RIDE for 2 to Mexican border.Will pay. Call 324-0969.RIDE TO BLOOMINGTON, Indiana: Twolovely female UC students wish ride toBloomington leaving Friday evening, July12, and returning July 14. Call 324-7813.CampingEquipmentCAMPING EQUIPMENT rental: Tents, sleep¬ing bags, stoves, lanterns. Contact Hickory,Ext. 2381 or 324-1499.Appointments$20 TO ANYONE flying to San Franciscoaround July 15 who will watch 2 childrenon the flight. 324-8229.WANTED: Full-time copy editor and proofreader, chances of rapid advancement. Sal-Newly OpenedCZECHOSLOVAKIANRESTAURANT2527 North ClarkExcellent and inexpensive cookingExpert Typing ServiceFast, Accurate, Hassle-lessJudy 858-2544TAKCAM-Y5.NCHINESE - AMERICANDependable Service RESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDon your Foreign Car AMERICAN DISHESHyde Park Auto Service CLOSED MONDAYOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393 1J318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.AS A MATTER (IF ary range: $100 to $125/week. BA required.If interested call Dominich Able, trade editorof the Henry Regnery Company, at 527-3300,Ext. 57.For Sale82nd CRANDON8 rm Georgian, excel condition, full com¬pleted basement, 3 bedrooms, l'/j baths, 2firepl., gas heat, 2 car garage, by owner.Low 30's. ES 5-6938.PianoOLD PIANO. $60 or best offer. Call 324-1675.MusicRAVINIA FESTIVAL Four O'clock Concert,Sunday, July 14. Chartered bus leaves fromInternational House, 1 pm. Andre Vander-noot, conductor. Masuko Ushioda, violinist.Music by Berg, Bartok, Shostakovic. Roundtrip bus fare, picnic lunch, admission tounreserved seats, all for $4.50. Reservations:Int'l House Assn, 1414 E. 59th St. FA 4-8200.TheaterSTRATFORD FESTIVAL Weekend, Ontario,Canada, July 19-21, by chartered bus, leav¬ing from International House, Friday, 6pm. Program: Midsummer Night's Dream,Romeo and Juliet, Symphony: Bach, Vivaldi. Round trip fare, two night's lodging, and3 tickets, all for $35.50. Reservations: Inter¬national House Association, 1414 East 59thStreet, FA 4-8200.PersonalsTHE CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEW wantsalert (Meaning awake at least) studentreviewers in almost every area: poetry, po¬litics, novels, theater, films, records, youname it. We want long or short, well-con¬sidered reviews of Malcom Lowry's newnovel, for example, or of the new PeterWeiss novel, of Wm F. Buckley's new book,of the selected letters of Theo Roethke,or Muriel Spark, of Jan Myrdal, of Ho ChiMinh's biography, of Kirst's new novel, ofSeymour Krim, of Orlando Cepeda, and soforth. Please come see us on the 3rd floorof Ida Noyes or call us a* Ext. 3276 orget in touch with our editor, Jeff Schnitzerat HY 3-2909. We want you; we need you;we may even love you.WANTED: A permanent home for twofemale Siamese cats. Loveable though tem-permental. Call 221-9840.NEED MONEY? Be a sales representativefor a socio-politco-satircal new poster line.Ideal for individuals and organizations.Write for complete poster profit kit: GROSSNATIONAL PRODUCT. Box 427, Wayzata,MN 5-5391. VACATIONING? Responsible student willhouse-sit or animal-sit during July in returnfor quiet study-place. Alan 752-2811 or 643-5307.THE CHICAGO MOVEMENT didn't ask forthe Democratic Convention, but it's coming,and so are tens of thousands of people whowant an end to our aggression in Vietnamand the racism in America. Effective organ¬izing demands your participation. We need:volunteers, housing, meeting halls, marshalls,funds. If you can help, please call or write:National Mobilization, 407 S. Dearborn, Rm.315, Chicago. (312 ) 939-2666.SUBJECTS WANTED for hypnosi7~experi-ment at sleep lab. Good pay. Call JimKahn, Ext. 2340.SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200Where will you be August 26?EXERCISE, RELAX, concentrate, meditatefor tranquility and autonomy. Come aloneor in groups. Yogi Sri Nerode. DO 3-0155.DISCOUNTART MATERIALS• Office Supplies• School Supplies• Picture FramesDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 BE 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 CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionof the Or dinal Lost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY'prateA 'priedGrAdcnirestaurant!32l East 57th STPEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING10% Student Discount1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933 ^ foreign car hospitalService and Sales5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd Plaza.HYde Park 3-8372BANDERSNATCH SUMMER FILMSMy Name Is Ivan The Pad and How To Use ItJuly 16 July 238 p.m. Admission 75 cents Ida Noyes HallVOTE FOR THE PARTY OF YOUR CHOICE!..Sun Life Insurance is a sureway to financial independencefor you and your family.As a local Sun Life representa¬tive, may I call upon you at yourconvenience ?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street,Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390- 793-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THEHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3 7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES Hyde Park Car Wash1330 E. 53rd StreetFrom now until August 30th we will feature Donkey and Elephant inflatables at 694 each withany gasoline purchase.We will maintain a tally to datein our window. Drop in and parti¬cipate in our straw vote.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 11, 1968CULTURE VULTURETHE LONG,. COLD SUMMER continuesdespite occasional blasts of hot air fromCongressional committee hearing rooms,Presidential candidates, and Mayor Daley.If noise is not your bag, though, you canhave a great time turning on to the myr¬iads of cultural offerings that make Chi¬cago. Besides, it’ll help you to sublimateall that mental anguish or at least keep itpent up until convention time, if there isa convention.Historical NoteThe U.S.S. Pueblo was captured by theNorth Koreans 171 days ago today.MusicRavi Shankar, The sitar star of India willface a raving public in the AuditoriumTheatre this weekend, accompanied by sa-rod artist Ali Akbar Khan. The perform¬ances begin at 8:30 p.m. on Friday andSaturday, July 12 and 13, and ticket pricesrange from $3.50 to $6.50. It’s really un¬fortunate that to hear a master like Shan¬kar you have to enrich a monopolist likeFrank Fried of Triangle Productions, butthat’s life in the big city.Grant Park Concerts. The Music Shell fac¬ing the Field Museum continues to rever¬berate for your listening pleasure. Tomor¬row at 8 p.m. Elyakum Shapira will con¬ duct Jack Cecchini in Vivaldi’s Guitar Con¬certo in D.A really big treat opens Saturday: a con¬cert performance of Leonard Bernstein’s“Candide”, with Maurice Peress conduct¬ing and some of the original Broadwaycast. The show begins at 8 p.m. Saturdayand 7 p.m. Sunday, July 13 and 14.Something else to look forward to is aconcert performance of Puccini’s “La Bo-heme” on Saturday and Sunday, July 20and 21. Guiseppe Patane will conduct theconcert featuring Teresa Orantes, Enricodi Giuseppe, Carolyn Smith-Meyer, andJulian Patrick.Ravinia Festival. The annual summer fes¬tival at Ravinia Park continues with con¬certs by the Chicago Symphony under thedirection of Seiji Ozawa and guest con¬ductors. Tonight’s concert has Andre Van-dernoot conducting Michael Rabin in Pro-kofieff’s Violin Concerto No. 2 in G.Rockefeller Chapel. Several musical per¬formances will be held in RockefellerChapel this summer. Edward Mondello,university organist, will present an organrecital at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 23. Mon-dello’s recital will include selections byBach, Couperin, and Franck. Daniel Rob¬ins, university carilloneur, and the Cham¬ber Brass Players will perform outdoorconcerts at 8 p.m. every other Wednesday:July 24, August 7, and August 21.HEADQUARTERSContinued from Page Threetion for an Open Convention. Paul Finney,these various groups, which are alwaysorganized and treated separately, different¬ly. Some street work is done, but not asmuch as with McCarthy. Mr. Nixon, I amtold by a volunteer who lowers her voicefor this, appeals, with talk of a stability,to the Negro.Youth also works here, but takes ordersfrom above. The atmosphere is convention¬al, the approach is old; yet there is a solidpenetration. Nothing and no one is wasted.In fact, a criticism leveled on headquart¬ers by a Nixonite is that the kids come in,sit around, and do nothing. No great talkgoes on here, but the Nixon people know alot about office management.Rockefeller headquarters on the ground-floor, open onto the world—you see themblatantly as you enter the building. Theatmosphere is bright clean and crisp likenew money. Teller windows greet you onentering. The volunteers are also brightand clean. They come to the point and notime is wasted. In this campaign, you aretold over and over, emphasis is placed onthe wealthy influential groups. About theNegro volunteer—I am reassured that hisand/or father is very wealthy and veryinfluential.Since time is valuable, appeals are notmade as much by letter writing or randomsolicitation. Instead, personal confrontations Nixon Headquartersare important. It is not the individuals onthe streets, but important gatherings thatare sought. Rockefeller people will gatherostentatiously at sports events, openingsof suburban shopping centers. Black peoplealso are sought, but the emphasis is on thewell-to-do, influential Negro, not the face¬less individual. The voters are buyers andthe newest techniques in advertising mustbe employed for the people, for the dele¬gates.McCarthy people are talkers, intellectu¬als, people who don’t care as much abouttheir appearances as about their opinionsand their man. With Nixon are the respect¬able, if not the narrow. Emphasis is oncubbyholing and clergy. With Rockefelleris the splash of the nouveau rich, who usethe flashy and striking to make up for timein their attempt to reach position—not starting from the bottom but going straight tothe top. And Humphrey and Wallace do nothave working headquarters in Chicago,and yet they always seem the surest oftheir positions.SUSAN HAIG Theater‘Tis a Pity She’s a Whore. Court Theatercontinues its production of the rarely pre¬sented Jacobean tragedy by John Ford.Directed by D. Nicholas Rudall, it featuresDiane Rudall, familiar to Chicago audi¬ences from her several appearances inleading roles at Hull House. This first playof their three play season will run twomore weekends, Thursday through Sunday.Curtain is at 8:30 p.m. in Hutchinson Court(or in Mandel Hall weather not permitting),and tickets are $2.25 on Thursdays andSundays, $2.50 on Fridays, and $3 on Satur¬day. Student and faculty discounts of 50cents apply every evening but Saturday.Season tickets also available.The second play of the season will beBertolt Brecht’s Galileo, directed by Den¬nis J. Hayes and featuring James O’Reillyin the title role. (Zonk.) Galileo opens Fri¬ day, July 26 and plays for three weekends.ArtRosner Student Gallery. Approximately 30works of art made by University of Chi¬cago students are currently being exhibitedfor sale at the Rosner Gallery for StudentArtists, 235 E. Ontario. The exhibit willcontinue through Thursday, August 10. Gal¬lery hours are: 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesdaythrough Thursday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fri¬day and Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m. on Sun¬day. The gallery is closed on Monday.Renaissance Society Gallery. The Exhibi¬tion of Textiles of Illinois Craftsmen ison display at 108 Goodspeed Hall, 5845Ellis Ave. The exhibition is in conjunctionwith Sesquicentennial Celebration Through¬out Illinois, and it will continue throughJuly 31. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 5p.m. daily; closed Saturday and Sunday.CONVENTIONContinued from Page Onewho has emerged as the top man in Mc¬Carthy’s campaign, does not want to see amillion McCarthy people arrive in Chicagofor the convention. He wants to go directly,privately, to the delegates. His success sofar is not apparent. But in any case, theMcCarthy campaign is becoming more con¬fused all the time. Many reform-mindedDemocrats in the McCarthy camp have be¬gun to despair that the McCarthy campaigncan ever become organized. They havecome to long for the Kennedy type of“ruthlessness.”Lowenstein and the Coalition becomethen, the people to watch. Their organiza¬tion is also confused, and largely for thesame reason: every one is doing their ownthing, indeed that is. probably the basis forthe Coalition in the first place.But if anyone can pull it off, Lowensteincan. He was one of the people who lastNovember urged McCarthy to become acandidate. In December he broughttogether several hundred people for aCoalition of Concerned Democrats—a dumpJohnson movement.No one thought then that Johnson couldbe dumped. As underdog candidate in theDemocratic Congressional primary in Nas¬sau County, New York, Lowenstein usedMcCarthy tactics—massive use of cleanstudent volunteers—and won the nomina¬tion. After the assassination of RobertKennedy, Lowenstein organized a secondcoalition the Coalition for an Open Conven¬tion, with the idea of consolidating Ken¬nedy and McCarthy forces in orderto dump Humphrey. And now not manypeople think Humphrey can be dumped.July 25: ‘The StudentRevolution.’ Articlesfrom Paris, ISeiv York,and Chicago. Yesterday the vanguard of Lowenstein’sstaff arrived in Chicago. They are settingup a group rallying around the phrase“On to Chicago,” the last words that Ken¬nedy spoke and a phrase that McCarthyhas used since New Hampshire. Lowen¬stein’s million may never materialize, butwhat he hopes to do is indicate to the Dem¬ocratic delegates what he thinks is anoverriding sentiment for a change—a senti¬ment reflected in the fact that the adminis¬tration received fewer than 20 percent ofthe votes in the primaries. The On to Chi¬cago people are not sure whether they willhave several rallies at the time of the con¬vention or one big rally. They don’t knowwhere they will have them; they don’tknow where they will put the millionpeople if they come.But they are working on the convictionthat the new political movement thatstarted in New Hampshire irresistableand if the Democrats try to resist it, theywill lose. And while the delegates may beable to ignore private persuasion by theMcCarthyites, while they can ignore apeace demonstration and a fourth partymovement, it will be difficult for them toignore half a million or a million clean,middle-class Democrats calmly , on nation¬al color TV, insisting on a change.CrossThe Generation GapWith a CyberneticBicycle From usTurin Bicycle Co-opFalcon, Carlton, RaleighGitane, Robin Hood,and Ranger Bicycles.used bicyc les , spasmodi cal ly—— “factory-trained” mechanics.fly-by-night bicycle rentals.1952 N. Sedgnick WH4-8865M-F 2-8:30 Sat.-Sun. 10-8closed thursdaysmagical mystery tourThe Maroon needs someoneto operate its addressingmachine. $8 for a short after¬noon’s work. Every two weeks.Four times this summer.Call MI 3-0800, Ext. 3265. SAVE ONOur Vacation Film SpecialReturn Film You Don’t UseMODEL CAMERA13 42 E. S5th HY 3-9259Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856ftftft Cornell! OJtorht1645 E. 55th STREETCHICAGO, ILL. 60615Phone: FA 4-1651 >> Only 2 more weekends to see"Tis Pity She’s a Whore”Thursday thru Sunday, July 11-14 and 18-21Student-faculty discount: 50<t (except Sat.)Brecht’s "Galileo” opens July 26COURT THEATRE5706 S. UniversityMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3581July 11, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7SPECIAL“PEACE OF MIND”OFFER*Wills • stocks certificates • income tax records • passports • mortgages •birth certificates • real estate deeds • insurance policies • coin and stampcollections • bonds • medical reports • jewelry • automobile titles •contracts • trust agreementsMany of these would be difficult or impossible to replace if they werestolen, lost or burned.All of your valuable papers and property need the protection and securityof a University National Bank safe deposit box. This is the best way to enjoy“peace of mind” with bank safety.It’s easy to rent a safe deposit box in our vault. The cost is as low as$5.00 per year. Just ask any of our officers. They’ll be happy to help you.'And to make it even easier, we have a special offer for new safe depositcustomers. We’ll give you your first six months rental free. So you can findout for yourself the “peace of mind” you can enjoy knowing your valuablesare receiving proper bank protection.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 41200strength and service03 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association Federal Reserve System8 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 11, 1968