THE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 77, Number 9 Chicago, Illinois, October 8, 1968 12 Pages, 1 SectionMaroon — Mark IsraelGrapes Are OutDemonstrators picket against the sale of California grapes at Harper Square Groceries last Saturday. A number of otherarea grocery stores were also picketed. The boycott supports the United Farm Workers in a dispute with California tablegrape growers.HospitalThe US Atomic Energy Commission(AEC) has renewed its contract with theUniversity for operation of the ArgonneCancer Research Hospital for five yearsat an estimated cost of $21,000,000.The University has had a contract withthe commission since 1950.The hospital, part of the University’smedical complex, is a research institutiondevoted to study of radiation effects anduse of radioactive materials in research.All research in the hospital is unclassi¬fied and involves the use of nuclear energyfor peaceful purposes.Entire cost of the hospital’s operation issupported by the AEC, which owns the Contractfacility. The University operates the hos¬pital, and staff scientists hold appoint¬ments in the University’s division of thebiological sciences and the Pritzker Schoolof Medicine.Chicago Operations Office, who signed thecontract, said: “The professional programsof the Argonne Cancer Research Hospitalare of the highest caliber. Their work isregarded as a major contribution to medi¬cal research. With the renewal of this con¬tract with The University of Chicago, wewill enable them to continue their efficientoperation of the highly-regarded researchcenter.”Dr. Alexander Gottschalk is director ofthe hospital and associate professor of Renewedradiology in the Pritzker School of Medi¬cine.Dr. Leon O. Jacobson, dean of the divi¬sion of the biological sciences and thePritzker School of Medicine and the Re-genstein Professor of Medical and Bio¬logical Sciences ,said the renewal “is aconfirmation that our contributions in can¬cer research are significant and appreci¬ated in this period of federal financialcutbacks. We are sure that with this sup¬port our physicians and staff will continueto progress in the struggle to control and,eventually, conquer cancer.”Dr. Jacobson is a former director of theArgonne Cancer Research Hospital.Studies currently in progress at the hos¬pital fall into three broad categories. UrbanCenterStudiesWestonThe Center for Urban Studies at theUniversity has received a $100,000 grantto study the effect of the atomic acceler¬ator upon the Weston area.The one-year grant from the US Depart¬ment of Commerce will enable the centerto investigate the problems and opportuni¬ties raised by the technical change, how itinfluences where and how people live, andwhat sort of urban planning, housing,transportation facilities, and other activi¬ties involving capital expenditures andservices provided through public effortswill be needed.The Center for Urban Studies, whichwas founded in 1963, is an interdepart¬mental and interdisciplinary unit of theUniversity engaged in studying the prob¬lems of urban life and also in trainingcandidates for the Ph.D. degree in edu¬cation, research, or professional careersthat require a broad and intensive under¬standing of urban life.The director of the Center for UrbanStudies is Jack Meltzer.Participating with him in the Westonstudy will be:• Dr. C. Knight Aldrich, Professor ofPsychiatry;• Miss Phyllis S. Kreinik, Assistant Pro¬fessor of Psychology in the Department ofPsychiatry;• Brian J. L. Berry, professor of geog¬raphy and chairman of the training pro¬gram in the Center for Urban Studies;• Terry N. Clark, assistant professorof sociology;• Theodore J. Lowi, associate professorof political science;• Norman Bradbum, associate profes¬sor of business and director of the NationalOpinion Research Center and• George Tolley, Professor of Econom¬ics.Continued on Page NineDoubling Makes Problems for StudentsBy Tim KelleyLife in a ghetto is an uphill battleagainst despair. In such conditions humanbeings are deprived of dignity and en¬veloped by a seemingly impenetrable at¬mosphere of hopelessness and gloom.But somehow the first-year students onthe first floor of Vincent House in Burton-Judson Courts are bearing up and remain¬ing cheerful. This floor might be calledthe teeming hub of the University of Chi¬cago housing problem as it affects fresh¬men. There fifteen students live, all butthree of them first-year, where only tenlived last year.“Every once in a while we can evenpull both chairs out to sit down,” remarkedTim Acker, of Sheboygan, Wise. “We’rethinking of getting tuberculosis so we canget rooms in a hospital.”The housing shortage has caused thehousing office to double students up inBurton-Judson and in Chauncey BoucherHall in rooms intended and sited for useonly as singles. The largest concentrationof these unexpected doublings amongfreshmen is in Vincent, which began the THEHOUSINGCRISISyear with 11 additional students housedin bunkbeds, far more than any otherhouse in the dormitory. According to JimRottsolk, resident head, seven of theserooms remain doubled.Most of the freshmen arrived on campusexpecting to be housed in single rooms,and now tell mournful stories of the shockwhich awaited them on that hectic firstday.“When I first came, I walked past myroom six or seven times because therewas someone in it already,” Ethan Haimo,of University City, Mo., remembered.“I opened the door and said, ’What’sthis other name on my door?’ ” saidMitchell Bobkin of Woodbridge, N.J. “Theorientation aide said, ’Oh, haven’t youheard?’ ”Continued on Page Nine PACK 'EM IN: Residents of Mead House, feeling the effects of the housingshortage, meet in the wide-open spaces of one of the newly formed si jieias-doubles.Student Tempers Flare over Speaker BansFrom the College Press ServiceAn issue that is tearing up Berkeley anda number of other universities is the aca¬demic right of students and teachers tobring to campus any speaker they want to.At Berkeley the dispute started twoweeks ago when the board of regents pre¬vented Black Panther minister of informa¬tion, Eldridge Cleaver and other lecturersfrom giving all but one lecture in a seriesplanned for a course on radicalism inAmerica.Georgia legislator Julian Bond, sched¬uled to address University of Tennesseestudents October 2, refused to appear inKnoxville because students there had beenforbidden to invite Dick Gregory to thecampus a week earlier.And at the University of Mississippi, stu¬dents obtained a federal court order (thesecond one in two years) to bring invitedspeakers onto the Ole Miss campus.BerkeleyThe University of California faculty lam¬basted their board of regents Thursday andsaid it would “take all appropriate steps togive full credit” for the course featuringCleaver.A faculty resolution passed by a 500-votemargin attacked the “hasty and ill-consid¬ered action” as a “violation of the aca¬demic freedom and autonomy of the fac¬ulty senate and of the faculty membersresponsible for the course.But the senate adjourned only to meeta mass of students chanting, “Shame,shame” over the ambiguous wording of theresolution. Students of the Center for Par¬ticipant Education—an agency of the stu¬dent government and sponsor of the course—plan a mass meeting Monday night inprotest of what CPE Chairman Rick Browncalled “toothless action.” Specifically the faculty resolution:• charged that the regents’ action vio¬lated the academic freedom of students by“preventing them from taking for credita course duly authorized;”• vowed that the Senate would seek tonullify a regental regulation (passed at thelast meeting) prohibiting more than oneguest lecture in a course per quarter;• encouraged those responsible for thecontested course to carry on their program“on campus or off,” and directed its com¬mittee on courses to “take aH'appropriatesteps” to ensure course and credit statusfor the program.”One of the major items drawing studentire was the defeat of an amendment insist¬ing that credit be given for the course.Meanwhile last week Cleaver, speakingat Stanford University, vowed he would“give 20 lectures” on the Berkeley cam¬pus,” and called Reagan a “punk sissycoward.”Tennessee“If the chancellor of the universitythinks the students are too simple-mindedto hear Gregory, they are obviously toosimple-minded to hear me,” Bond saidwhen he discovered he had been invited inGregory’s place. “I certainly don’t want topoison student minds.”Chancellor Charles H. Weaver had de¬nied a student speakers’ program permis¬sion to invite Gregory, saying he had“nothing to say to the University commu¬nity” and that his appearance would be“an outrage and an insult to many citizensof this state.”About Bond’s cancellation, Weaver onlysaid, “I am sorry that he is not coming.”“It’s not a matter of Gregory himself,”Bond said. “It’s a matter of students be¬ ing allowed to make their own decisions. Iwouldnt care if it were Harry Truman orGeorge Wallace being denied permission.The issue would be the same—freedom ofchoice.”Bond, who was nominated for the Vice-Presidency at last month’s Democratic Na¬tional Convention and later withdrew be¬cause he was too young, compared the UTadministration censorship with that of oth¬er Tennessee schools, where Gregory andother controversial speakers had been in¬vited to campus freely.MississippiThe Mississippi court order was issuedat students’ request by federal judge Wil¬liam C. Ready to prevent the MisissippiState Board of Trustees from using theirspeaker ban to bar civil rights leaderCharles Evers from an Oct. 2 speakingengagement.Evers had been invited by the univer¬sity’s Young Democrats and Students forHumphrey-Muskie chapters. Evers, thebrother of slain civil rights leader MedgarEvers, is NAACP state field director and aDemocratic National Committeeman fromMississippi.The afternoon before the speech wasscheduled, the trustees met and announcedthat the students must withdraw their in¬vitation. Instead, two officials of the YoungDemocrats, David Melpus and Danny Cul-pit, went to the federal district court innearby Greenville and obtained the tem¬porary restraining order.Evers, who flew from Los Angeles togive the speech when he heard of the banand the countermanding order, called theBoard action “a slap in the face of allyoung Mississippi whites.”The speaker ban invoked by the trustees requires that all speakers invited to thecampus of any state-supported school“must first be investigated and approvedby the head of the institution involved, andthe names of invited speakers must befiled with the Board.”A trustees’ resolution further says“speakers should not be approved who willdo violence to the acdaemic atmosphere ofthe institutions,” or who advocate “thephilosophy of overthrow of the governmentof the United States.” The resolution alsooutlaws speakers “in disrepute in the areafrom whence they come.”The practical meaning of the ban, accord¬ing to many Mississippi students, is tobar “political figures whose stand disa-gress with that of the trustees.”Two years ago Ole Miss officials attempt¬ed to use the ban to keep Aaron Henry,state president of the NAACP, from speak¬ing on the campus. Students and facultymembers got their first court restrainingorder at that time and Henry spoke asscheduled.That case, which may eventually lead toa ruling on the legality of the speaker ban,is still in the courts, awaiting the opinion ofa special 3-judge federal panel.The students who went to Judge Readycited other campus political speeches thisyear as evidence that the ban was beingused unfairly. Campaign workers forGeorge Wallace have spoken to large stu¬dent gatherings. A representative of theLoyalist delegation to the Chicago Demo¬cratic Convention also spoke this fall.The Trustees, who are appointed by Dem¬ocratic governor John Bell Williams, appar¬ently have the support of many state pol¬iticians for their action in limiting speak¬ers on college campuses. 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MICHIGAN AVE.Tel. 326-2550‘, i i i >) 18THE CHICAGO MAROON • October 8, 1968I Library Heads Up Construction PlansSTUDENTS-FACULTYwork for a cabinet levelDepartment of PeaceRead: “A Plan of a PeaceOffice for the UnitedStates” (Dr. BenjaminRush, 1799)Write: Congressmen, candidatesSupport: HB 19650-offered inthe House Tuesday,Sept. 10, by Represen¬tatives Seymour Hal-pem (R.NY) andGeorge Brown Jr.(D,Cal) and manyothers.S. 4019 - offered inthe Senate Wednesday,Sept. 11, by SenatorsVance Hartke, MarkHatfield, RalphYarborough.For information, bumper stick¬ers, peace medallions, write:Another Mother for Peace407 N. Maple DriveBeverly Hills,’ Gaf 90210By Robert SwiftAny urban university today has problemsrelated to construction and expansion, andthe University of Chicago, too, has itsshare. However, because of some foresightand planning, the University may be ableto eliminate some of its problems.For just over a year, students and facul¬ty have watched the Joseph Regenstein Li¬brary, a mass of concrete and exposed gir¬ders behind the old stagg Field fence, takesome semblence of structural shape.Architecturally, the library is composedof six distinct, but connected units. One ofthese, located on the southeastern part ofthe project, will be utilized as an adminis¬tration and office building and will also con¬tain the Graduate Library School. The oth¬er five units will compose the library it¬self and its extension services.The Regenstein Library will utilize someof the latest and best concepts on informa¬tion retrieval and research. The latest elec¬tronic equipment, including a photoduplica¬tion department and microtext copy andreading services, are to be used.No Serious DelaysAlthough weather has delayed comple¬tion of the library project up to threemonths and a steel strike has caused diffi¬culties with obtaining materials, J. LeeJones, University architect, insists the timecan be made up with dilgent plannng andhard work. Completion date is now set forSeptember, 1969.The University has also begun construc¬tion on other buildings and facilities. Oneof these, the Hind’s Geophysical SciencesBuilding on Ells Ave. north of 58th St., isdue to be completed in late February, 1969.The building will be the second talleststructure on campus and will contain bothlaboratories and classrooms.Exterior construction on the A. J.Carlson Animal Research Facility on EllisAve. south of 58th St. is nearly completedand the building is to be occupied late thisfall.Construction on the new Stagg Field hasbeen completed and the field should beready next month. Plans for a gymnasiumand tennis courts on the land are also beingconsidered.Big PlansThe University also has extensive plansfor future construction, according to the Of¬fice of Physical Planning. A Social ServiceCenter is soon to be constructed at 61st St.and Ingleside Ave. The University has alsoapplied for federal funds to construct anInternational Studies Institute on UniversityAve. south of 58th.Some of the proposed structures will ne¬cessitate the removal of older buildings.Ricketts is to be displaced by a new physi¬cal sciences building. Chapel House and amusic building will be displaced by the pro¬posed Pahlavi Building. The Young Memo¬rial Building will be torn down to make wayfor the proposed student village. InglesideHall, the Allee Animal Lab, and the Toxi¬city Lab will be removed and replaced bythe buildings of a proposed science center.In addition, the proposed Biological Sci-Continued on Page Nineeye examinationsFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8572The Odd Shopat THOMAS IMPORTSJewelry - African ClothingRobes - Black PaintingComing: Books from Africa10% Student Discount1352 East 53rd 684-6370 GIANT 6 FOOTGREETING CARDor use as aPOWERFUL FLOWERFULLWALL PANELTO BRIGHTEN YOUR “PAD”Write your own“thing” incenter offlowers.Beautiful 5color silk-screenedpaper wallpanel * . . .3 feet by 6 feetWHILE THEY LAST!comes inf sturdy tubey IJU with extra£, label formailingsend check or money order toTHE PAD. box,347,Glencoe, ill. 60022 Photographs by David TravisSomething More• banjos• dulcimersguitars• instructionclass & private* harmonicas•mandolins• records• song books• instrument building classes• accessoriesthe fret shop in Sight and SoundRecordersall qualitiesand sizesKungMoecketc5210 So. Harper HARPER COURT NO 7-1061October 8, ,1968' * THE CHICAGO MAROON* *Leftists Mounting Fail Election Offensive'NEW YORK (CPS)—With the presiden¬tial elections one month away, leftist stu¬dent and peace organizations across abroad spectrum have begun planning a“fall election offensive” opening a newphase in the national protest of the elector¬al system which began in Chicago lastmonth and which will continue through theinauguration in January.The National Mobilization to End theWar in Vietnam (known as “Mobe” forshort), a loosely formed organization whichin the past has coordinated many of themass anti-war demonstrations and whichearlier this year called for the protest inChicago, is the one group so far to becomespecific about its plans.Mobe leaders say they are calling onstudents to “find new ways of voting this year—in the streets rather than in pollingplaces” since voting for one of the threemajor candidates gives no chance for end¬ing the Vietnam war now.At an initial planning session this weekin New York, Paul Potter, a former SDSpresident who is now on the Mobe steeringcommittee, said his organization is aimingat a series of national, “decentralized”protest activites “leadng up to, but not in¬cluding, disruption of polling places.”Demonstrations PlannedThe thrust of the activities, he said, willbe to link the continuing war in Vietnamwith the concept that our present politicalsystem, rather than dealing with the situa¬tion, tends to perpetuate it. The program’smain features are to include:• On the weekend prior to the elections,Elrod Presents PolicePosition on ConventionRichard Elrod, assistant corporationcounsel for the city of Chicago represent¬ing the police department in the conventiondisorder prosecutions, presented the city’sposition at a Suburban Press Foundationluncheon last week at the Drake Hotel.Emphasizing that he was on the sceneAug. 27, 28, and 29, he said, “I can’t takethe position that all the demonstratorswere communist anarchists nor that allthe police were fascist pigs.” He admittedthat some policemen acted unprofession-ally and said that the police department’sInternal Inspections Division was investi¬gating charges of police misconduct.“The police,” he insisted, however, “hadto enforce the curfew and the court orderagainst an Amphitheater march, both ofwhich applied to all citizens, but mostof the 72 people we are prosecuting werearrested for disobeying and resisting of¬ficers, not for parading.”He went on: “Since the Secret Servicehad requested that no mass demonstrationsbe allowed and we had assasination threatswhich we couldn’t take lightly, we decidednot to allow demonstrations at the Am¬phitheater. Instead, we offered alternatesights for demonstrations. When this wastaken to court we sat for two days tryingto reach a settlement with the march lead¬ers, but they refused all alternatives.” “The news media,” he added, “tend tomagnify the statements of obscure people.You should ask yourselves how many peo¬ple’s view a statement represents.”Football TurnoutHits New RecordAn astounding 45 students have enrolledin the 1968 football class, a record numbersince the class was first organized in 1956.Walter L. Hass, professor and chairmanof the physical education department, hopesto expose the class to the theory and prac¬tice of the game of football.The course is open to any male under¬graduates and graduates. Since football isnot a varsity sport of the University, stu¬dents in the class do not receive awards.However, the class does serve to fulfillthe physical education requirement for un¬dergraduate students.Five games with neighboring colleges areslated for the season: Wilson JuniorCollege on October 12; North Central Col¬lege junior varsity on October 18; WheatonCollege Junior Varsity on October 25; Mar¬quette University Club Football Squad onNovember 2; and Lake Forest Varsity onNovember 9.you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933INTRESTED IN THESTUDY OF LAW ?A representative of the Wash¬ington U. School of Law (St.Louis) will be on campusWednesday, October 9, 1968at 9:00 A M. to talk to Studentsplanning to enter law schoolupon graduation, or thinkingabout it. Make appt. with theoffice of Career Counselingand Placement, Reynolds Club,Room 202. You won’t have to put DR. AARON ZIMBLERyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor- Optometristrow if you call us today. eye examinationscontact lensesPETERSON MOVING in theAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave. New Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.646-4411 DO 3-6866~T^mmCAG6 ’MAROON**i \ tWt *.1 % V* \ October 8, 1968•«vO*5Sl possible presentation of anti-war generalsat public hearings at which the issues sur¬rounding the war would be presented, com¬bined with• Delegations of anti-war demonstratorsvisiting the nation’s “35 key militarybases,” located mostly in the East andSouth, staging marches and “love-ins,”concluding with• The declaration of November 2 asVietman Sunday and urging clergymen op¬posed to the war to speak out against it totheir congregations;• The organization of mass rallies onthe eve of Election Day supporting a boy¬cott of the elections as irrelevant and ille¬gitimate, combined with activities the fol¬lowing day including• Mass demonstrations at polling placesof the major candidates plus various otheractivities, including leafleting and guerillatheatre performances, at other pollingplaces all across the country.“The important point about Mobe’s plan¬ning,” Potter said, “is that it provides achance to re-introduce the war in Vietnamas an issue nationally.”The gathering, attended by about 20,marked the first such meeting in the cityof radical campus and peace groups inter¬ested in protesting the elections, but al¬ready the lines of political difference couldbe seen emerging.War “An Old Issue”Jeff Shero, editor of the New York under¬ground newspaper, Rat, objected to sostrong a connection between the electionsand the war. “We should try to tie the pro¬test more to the on-going demands of themovement,” he said without becomingmore specific. “The war is kind of an oldissue.”Objections were also raised to the idea ofcounter-election polls at which persons op¬posed to the three major candidates couldcast their vote at an alternative pollingplace set up for the day by the protesters. “That tends to give the idea that we justdon’t have a choice this time,” Shero said,“when in fact we’ve never had a choice.’The Maroon will be delighted to print any announce¬ments of events for persons and organizations. Formsmay be obtained in the Maroon office, third day'sedition must be in by the previous Friday, for Friday'sedition by Wednesday.Tuesday, October 8ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING: Small Groups Club,7 pm, First floor Beecher Hall.DOC FILMS: The Big Sleep by Howard Hawks withBogie and Bacall, 7:15 and 9:IS pm, Cobb Hall.OPEN MEETING: Women's Radical Action Proiect,7:30 pm, East Lounge, Ida Noyes Hall.SPECIAL MEETING: Revitalization, 8:00 pm. CloisterClub, All interested students invited to comeand join.FOLK DANCING: International Folk Dancing, 8-10:30pm, International House.LECTURE: David Oates, Director, British School ofArcheology in Iraq, "Village and City in An¬cient Iraq", 8:30 pm, Mandel Hall.Wednesday, October 9RECRUITING VISIT: Washington University School ofLaw, For appointments, call extension 3282,or come to Reynolds Club, Room 202.SOCCER: Judson College, 3:30 pm, Stagg Field.MEETING: Council for a Volunteer Military, 4:00 pm.Third Floor Foyer, Ida Noyes Hall, Organizationand work.RADIO SERIES: Conversation at Chicago, WHPK 88 3FM, 5:00 pm, "Justice in Times of Violence",Kermit Coleman, attorney, American CivilLiberties Union; Anthony Platt, Research As¬sociate, Center for Studies in Criminal Justice;Kenneth Northcott, Professor, Department ofGermanic Languages and Literatures, Mod¬erator.ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING: Experimental DanceWorkshop with Shirley Mordine, 6:30 pm, IdaNoyes Theater, all men and women interestedin classes.REHEARSAL: University Symphony Orchestra, 6:30-10:00 pm, Mandel Hall.MEETING: Society for the Preservation and En¬couragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singingin America, 7:00 pm Wednesdays at 5544 S.Woodlawn, 667-3435.DOC FILMS: King Kong by Merian Cooper and ErnstSchoedsach, 7:15 and 9:15, Cobb Hall.COUNTRY DANCERS: British and ScandanavianDances, Wednesdays, 8-10 pm, Ida NoyesDance Room.Thursday, October 10MEETING: Chess Club, 7:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall 3rdFloor, to plan League matches versus otherChicago colleges.DOC FILMS: Monkey Business by Howard Hawks,7:15 and 9:15, Cobb Hall.FOLK DANCING: Israeli Folk Dancing by HillelFoundation, 7:30-10:00 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.'The UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE sells; soap, Styron,Shelly, sweatshirts, Skrip, supplies, Seven Up, sandwiches, safetyrazors, Sandburg, and all sorts of stuff.We sell prints, paintings, posters, lens, pins, Plato, photographicparaphernalia, paperbacks, postcards, and packets of pretty paperAnd magazines, mugs, matches Marlboros, Mencken, mints, mi¬crophones, microfilm, milk, and mediocre and marvelous mer¬chandise.Also Aristotle, almanacs, almonds, ashtrays, Austen, adding ma¬chines, artifacts, Aristophanes, an altogether alliterative as¬sortment.Besides bus tickets, briefcases, beverages, Baby Ruths BaconBerryman, bookcovers, Brown Bettys, and bunches of better books'.Throw in typewriters, texts, tissue, Thoreau, Tiny Tim, tea, T-shirts, toothpaste, toiletries, terrific trivia.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTOREON CAMPUS ..ELLIS AVENUE— 1 ■ 1 '■ 1 1 111 WW ■ 1. 1. 9. I18I8I ■- 'I W I !'■«"TY'yi » -i «k « « * . it v t < . i « « i «•»Radical Action Group Looks ForwardBy Charles Jaco and Bruce NortonHutchinson Commons was packed, as us¬ual, but Bob Ross seemed oblivious to thecrowd, concentrating all of his energy onone overpriced sandwich.“To begin with,” he said between mouthrfuls, “radical faculty and graduate stu¬dents have gone too long without a definiteorganization into which they can channeltheir actions. NUC hopes to replace thisdiffuse political action with a more coher¬ent situation.”The New University Conference (NUC),formed at the University in March and ac¬tive since June, hopes to provide facultiesand graduate students with a means of po-By Barbara Hurst“I’m free even if they put me in prison.”The statement was made by John Welch,70, yesterday as he announced his refusalto comply with the Selective Service Sys¬tem before some 90 persons at the HydePark Co-op parking lot.Another University student, Rob Skeist,also plans to turn in his draft card on No¬vember 14, the National Day of Resistance.Both are members of the Hyde Park Anti-Draft Union.All entering freshman recently receivedUnited States Armed Forces induction no¬tices, ordering them to report for formalinduction on September 30 at 6 a.m.The reverse side of each leaflet ex¬plained that the notices were sent out bythe Hyde Park Anti Draft Union (HPADU).The leaflets, individually typed with eachstudent’s name and address and depositedin mail boxes or under doors, were de¬signed to bring increased awareness andmore personal contact with the draft.According to Rob Skeist, coordinator ofthe HPADU, the purpose of the mailing(which was approved by the Student Ac¬tivities Office) was to “educate studentson the oppressive nature of the draft.”The HPADU grew out of last year’sSpecial Vietnam Convocation Group(SVCG), formed in winter of 1968 “to dis¬cuss the draft and plan a relevant convoca¬tion ceremony” held the night beforethe University convocation. In JuneHPADU was organized as a permanentdraft action group. There was little actualcarry-over of individuals from SVCG toHPADU, says Skeist, but both groupsshare the same concerns and the sametype of people.Purposes of the HPADU, according to its litical expression similar to, but not identi¬cal to, that offered to undergraduates bySDS (Students for a Democratic Society).The ten Chicago faculty members whohave joined NUC form a Faculty Chapterwhich will “formulate a concrete programfor working over the next few months” onspecific issues at Chicago, according toRichard Flacks, assistant Professor of Soci¬ology at Chicago. Flacks predicted thatsimilar faculty groups on other campusesacross the nation will soon begin to under¬take their own attacks on university situa¬tions that need to be changed.”Build Radical CommunityIn addition to pursuing specific Univer-Statement of Program, are two: “Oppo¬sition to the U. S. war in Vietnam, onpacifist grounds for some, on politicalgrounds for others; and opposition to thedraft system, because it supplies men forthe U. S. Army, it intimidates men intoplanning their lives as one draft dodgeafter another, and it discriminates in favorof the wealthy — against the workingclass.”All members of HPADU are not com¬mitted to refusing induction, said Skeist,“but most members are at least sym¬pathetic with draft resistance.”Educational ProgramThe five-point program, mainly educa¬tional in nature, includes counseling;leafletting, guerilla theater performances;speakers, panel discussions and movies onthe Selective Service System and the war;and support for draft resisters and demon¬strations at induction refusals.Counseling takes place at Quaker HouseJames Hillman, the well-known philo¬sophical psychologist from Switzerland,will be the Howard L. Willett Visiting Pro¬fessor in the College for the autumnquarter.Hillman is director of studies at theC. G. Jung Institute, Zurich, Switzerland.The Willett visiting professorship wasmade possible by a $500,000 gift from theHoward L. Willett Charitable Foundationof Chicago, announced in April, 1967.According to James M. Redfield, masterof the new collegiate division, Hillman will sity-related issues on various campuses, theCouncil seeks to build a general communi¬ty of radical scholars able to support radi¬cal movements on and off campus. Accor¬ding to Flack, the long-run concern is tocreate an alternative cultural and intellec¬tual tradition in the university that studentsand faculty can orient towards.” Theorganization intends to “attack and try toreverse the present trend of universities toserve established interests.”“It all grew out of a need for cohesive¬ness of direction among radical faculty andgrad students throughout the nation,” ex¬plained Ross. “We think the NUC can pro¬vide this cohesiveness.”(5615 S. Woodlawn Avenue) afternoons andevenings; HPADU’s general outlook andcounseling procedures are consistent withthose of the American Friends ServiceCommittee: “the counselor provides thecounselee with complete information mi hisalternatives, helps him carefully considerwhat position is consistent with his con¬cerns, and discusses with him the natureof the draft as an institution.” HPADUalso sponsors a “1-A program” to contactmen recently classified 1-A in order toinform them of counseling services.John Welch, coordinator of counselingprograms, has returned to the Universityafter leaving Chicago in the middle of lastyear and has just recently refusedinduction.Dedicated to non-violence, HPADU willcooperate with other Chicago anti-draftgroups “which share our concerns and ouroutlook on tactics,” such as AFSC andthe Chicago Area Draft Resisters.be on campus from Wednesday, Oct. 16through Dec. 12.He will deliver a series of Wednesdayevening lectures on the campus on the sub¬ject /‘Psychology and Alchemy.” The lec¬tures will be open to the public.Hillman also will teach an eveningcourse offered in the new collegiate divi¬sion on “Jung, Dreams and Emotions.”Registration for the course is limited tostudents in the new collegiate division.Redfield added that Hillman also maysupervise the independent study units ofsome students in the division. Ross denied, however, any knowledge ofthe actions or future plans of the Universityof Chicago chapter. “After all,” hecommented between snatches of conversa¬tion with a lad across the table, I’m onlynational director. Talk to Mel Ratenbergif you want to know about local activities.”Rathenberg, associate Professor ofmathematics at the university and a mem¬ber of the university NUC, was just emer¬ging from a conference with the local NUCin the main lounge at Chapel House whenI found him.Last 5-cent CokeAfter declining his offer of a bottle ofCoke from “what is probably the last five-cent Coke machine in America,” I sat withhim at the table in the Chapel House diningroom and discussed the aims and plans ofthe local NUC.“Locally,” said Rathenberg, “we haven’tdecided on anything concrete as of yet.We’re still formulating a common positionon the issues.“Eventually we hope to develop a pro¬gram of radical speakers at the University.We also plan to work on professional assis¬tance for instructors dismissed for politicalactivity. We don’t want any more Lynds.”“Lynd” is Staughton Lynd, former pro¬fessor at Roosevelt, dismissed from thefaculty for a trip made to North Vietnam;he was subsequently refused a position atseveral universities, including Chicago.Rathenberg continued; “We also hope toestablish a rapport between the radical stu¬dents and radical faculty members. Such arapport has been lacking for much toolong.”“We do not intend to become an organi¬zation with solely a university orientation.We plan to become involved in projects inthe city as a whole, as well as at theuniversity.”When asked about ties to other organiza¬tions, Rathenberg answered “Well, we’ll beworking in conjunction with several, de¬pending on the project. For example, theHPADU (Hyde Park Anti-Draft Union),SDS, and CADRE (Chicago Area Draft Re¬sistors). This does not mean, of course,that we will be affiliated with anyother group.”SG SpeakersProgramStudents interested in either work¬ing on or making suggestions foran SG Speakers program shouldcontact Steve Metalitz at Pierce1520x or Alan Lahn, 1508.2 Students To Turn in Draft CardsSwiss Philosophcal Psychologist IsWillett Visiting Professor in CollegeDAZZLING! ’ -LIFEPARAMOUNT PICTURESA ME FILMTWFrancoZeffireluPiWxllw ofRomeo^juuetNo ordinarylove story....TECHNICOLOR’ / A PARAMOUNT PICTUREFOR FEATURE TIMES CALL 944-2966CARNEGIEHUSH AT OAK Announcing the formation ofTHE COMMITTEE FOR DEMOCRATIC POLITICSThe Committee for Democratic Politics, a national organization, seeks to realize the truemeaning of democracy under the Constitution. The Committee will act as a public forum to give thepeople an effective voice on local and national issues. We propose:1. An end to all U.S. bombing in Vietnam.2. A national service requirement to replace the draft.3. Implementation of the Kerner Report recommendations.A. Registration of all firearms.5. Reform of the procedures for selecting presidential candidates.If you are also concerned with theseissues, please send in the coupon plusany contribution you can make to havethis ad printed elsewhere. A localsub-committee will be formed and plansmade for representation at a nationalmeeting to be convened within the nextfew months.On behalf of the Committee,Lester K. Little, AssistantProfessor of History The Committee for Democratic PoliticsBox 1355Bloomington, Indiana 47401NameAddress1 City |1 State Zip Code1 Telephone Occupation* Please make checks payable to “The* Committee for Democratic Politics”)Lb tm — —October 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5EDITORIALSStudent RevoltsLast spring in Japan, John Kenneth Galbraith said he thoughtthere was a student revolution spreading across the world. Theidea seemed slightly absurd at the time. Few people feel that thereis co-ordination between student movements in different countries.But in the United States, in France, in Mexico, in Japan stu¬dents are beginning to take the control of their schools away fromthe establishment (away from the board of regents, the govern¬ment. the regime). They are insisting on democracy for their owncommunities.The fight in the United States, on campus and off, is centeringon liberty and particularly on the freedom of speech. The liberalssay: ‘‘You mustn't fight or you shall inflame the Daleys and theOrdazes and the de Gaulles.”“The majority of the people,” they say, “will react and votefor Wallace, the junta, the machine.”But we have not enjoyed these freedoms for very long — notenough of our citizens enjoy them at all — for us to take them forgranted.The American liberals lay down in the fifties and let JoeMcCarthy run over them. We cannot let that happen again.And the students today are not lying down. They are fightingfor democracy; they fought in Chicago and Paris; they fought anddied in Mexico. The blood has begun to stain the streets but thestreets will flow with blood if we do not fight now to preservewhat freedom we have, if we do not join the fight to build democracyand peace and justice in the world.ApathyThe University of Chicago no longer has a yearbook; it diedfrom lack of student interest. The Maroon is in financial trouble,and needs students on its staff. Although student readership isfairly great, there is not a whole lot of active participation in put¬ting out the paper, or even in paying for it.Student government, which once used to be the best-run stu¬dent activity in the Midwest, has degenerated to the point thatmeetings are no longer called, much less attended.When the inactivity on the social scale is added to the dearthof interest in student organizations it seems evident that the stu¬dents are a self-sufficient lot, who organize their own parties andmeet many other students — or as many as they care to — in class,in the library, and elsewhere. With all of the formal student activitybeing underused, one would think that there would be no complaintsabout the calibre of student life here.One may think, but it just isn’t so. There are constant com¬plaints about opportunities for meeting people, and constant de¬mands that the physical facilities be expanded.They do need expanding, but many knowledgeable people arequestioning whether they would ever be used. They point to theunusual rate of students’ meeting each other during orientationweek, and expand their horizons just so far.They point to the couples that break up, without necessarilyknowing anyone else on campus. More likely than not, those stu¬dents retire to their rooms, leaving here after their four years areup as if this school were a penal sentence.Students here seem to have forgotten that they will get justas much out of this university as they are willing to put in. Whenthey are inactive it is they who suffer. When they complain aboutlack of a social life they are unjustified, and their complaints areignored. They and everyone associated with them is the loser.Agitation for a student union will be started again this year.Demands for other facilities will also be made by the activists oncampus. It would help considerably if they could count on theassistance of the vast mass of complaining students here. It wouldhelp even more if .he students would start rejuvenating studentlife here, and cease with their complaints until they do so. Clark ProvidesNo AlternativeBy David BarnardOne of the most depressing after-effects of theDemocratic Convention is the movement of many peo¬ple who were active in Senator McCarthy’s campaign(and of many who tagged along with Robert Kennedyand George McCovem) to support Attorney GeneralWilliam Clark for the U.S. Senate in Illinois.These people usually cite three reasons for theirdecision—a decision of the sort Democratic party power-mongers across the country (Daley, Connally, Bums,and the like) are counting on to get them out of themess they created for themselves this summer.The first reason is Clark’s supposed independencefrom Mayor Daley. The second is the opposition tocertain of United States strategems in Vietnam. Thethird is the fact that Clark requested that McCarthyand McGovern campaign for him in Illinois this fall.None of these appears iron-clad. Clark is picturedas “breaking” with Daley because he called for abombing halt (a topic on which His Honor is not knownto have formed an intelligible opinion; for all weknow he may agree with Clark); because he helpedwrite a watered-down minority plank that buried underan avalanche of words the most important of Mc¬Carthy’s proposals, i.e., the need to negotiate a newgovernment and U.S. withdrawal if Thieu and Ky didn’tagree; and because he then cast a meaningless votefor McGovern.This is unbelievable, especially since Clark linedhimself up solidly with Daley in defending the actionsof the police. Indeed, while the good Attorney*Generalwas inside the Amphitheater “breaking” from Daley,the police were bashing in the heads of students whomDaley and Clark later agreed provoked such bestial¬ity by their threat to the city.Within a few days, Clark’s people were pleadingwith the Mayor to attend Clark’s fund-raising dinner.They were doing this because they know that theyhave no chance to win without Daley’s help and Clarkhas no intention of losing it (although there is no waythat Clark can beat Dirksen anyway).Daley, seeming not to notice such an acute splitbetween himself and Clark as some people, includ¬ing the McCarthy-Kennedy Committee on this cam¬pus, did attend, and the Democratic party of Illinoiswas united once again for the 1968 campaign.Stop the BombingOn Vietnam, it is true that Clark wants to stopthe bombing. Humphrey wants to stop the bombing.George Wallace wants to end the war quickly. Bravo.None of these men talks any other language except“peace with honor,” and “free choice for the countryof South Vietnam,” thus ruling out the concessionsthe United States will have to make to stop the war.Ever since McCarthy began his campaign it has beenfashionable to be for peace, and now that U Thanthas said that the peace talks will go novAiere untilthe bombing stops Clark’s position no longer seemsparticularly bold.If Clark had really been opposed to the war in anyprincipled way he would have been fighting for Mc¬Carthy within the Illinois delegation all summer, ratherthan waiting until the day before the convention, whenthe favorite sons were dropping all over the place andHumphrey was home safe, to declare for McGovern whohad been campaigning sporadically for two weeks.Finally, Clark’s call for McCarthy’s help was notall that it could have been. When asked for comment,Clark said, “Well, this is a hard fight and we needall the help we can get.” This does not sound likea request made on the issues. Clark simply knows thatthere are voters who would be attracted to him byMcCarthy’s support, just as there are voters who willrespond to Daley’s endorsement. Support is support toClark--he needs all the help he can get.I hope 1968 isa black year forthe DemocraticParty, excepting,of course, formen like PaulO’Dwyer andHarold Hugheswho have stoodpassionately be¬fore the countryin behalf of peaceand reason.If men likeClark are allowedto survive, Daleyand his kind willstill be in charge,ready to lockupthe next conven¬tion.THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisTimothy S. Kelley, Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck,Contributing Editor: John MoscowProduction Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,Cameron Pitcairn, Howie Schamest, LeslieStrauss, Bob SwiftFounded in 1892. Published by University ofChicago students on Tuesdays and Fridaysthroughout the regular school year and inter¬mittently throughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quarter andduring examination periods. Of fices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago,. III. 60537. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service. Agnew! Gesundheit.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 8, 1968 V'V I 'tv* )W Ot.'t.Yv)'.: i'uci.Vvt'Th^ordinary savings account that will really send you.Open a 4% Passport One SavingsAccount and look what you get:Free checking accountNo matter how many or how fewchecks you write. Example: You writeonly 16 checks a month? Save $25.20yearly in service charges. (Think whatyou can save if you write more.)Free *5 Safety Deposit BoxYou can always use a safety depositbox for your valuable papers (espe¬cially when it’s free). Personal line of creditAnother bonus for Passport One sav¬ers. You simply "overdraw” yourchecking account.International Travel PlanTours and jet flights to ports of call atattractive rates. Example: 3 week roundtrip by jet to London. Hotel (13 nights),English breakfast and theatre tickets—all for $416. Open your Passport One Savings Ac¬count today. Minimum balance: $1000.Deposit or withdraw any time, anyamount, no notice required. Accountsinsured to $15,000 by the FederalDeposit Insurance Corporation. HydePark Bank and Trust Company, 53rd &Lake Park Avenue. (Phone 752-4600)Hyde ParkBankOctober 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONBEAUTY and the beastTHE APE MARILYN MONROEIS ISKING KONG MONKEY BUSINESSwith KAY WRAY with CARY GRANTWed. Oct.9 Thurs. Oct. 10Cobb Hall7:15 and 9:15 ’Y:A Doc Films 75< PresentationTHE130 MPH TIRE.For people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursstraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It'll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It's less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Easy.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We're tubeless.Other radials use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it’s tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us.FRONTENDBRAKE -MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500DiscountArt Materials• school, office &fi ling supplies• drafting materials• mount ing - matting -• framingDuncan’s305 F 53rd HY 3-4 I I I "Kubrick provides the viewerwith the closest equivalent topsychedelic experience this sideof hallucinogens I Magazine 'A fan¬tastic movie about mansfuture! An unprecedented psy¬chedelic roller coaster of an ex-perience!"~Maegaz;ne'Kubrick's '2001is the ultimate trip!'\U —Christian ScienceMonitorMGM presents a STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION2001a space odysseySUPER PANAVISION @OQ@00EE?METROCOIORSCHEOULE OF PRICES AND PERFORMANCESPRICE SCALE RESERVED SEATS ONLYMATS WFO SAT & SUN at 2 00 P MEVES MONDAY THRU SAT AT 8 30 P MSUNDAYS AT 8 00 P MSunday thru Thur* Eve* $2 90 $2 90 $2 50Fn . Sat . Mol* A Mo' Eve* S3 SO S3 80 S2 90180 N DEARB0PN STREET782 8230Most complete photoand hobby store onthe South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student .Discounts LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 COTTAGE GROVE AVENUE955-4545Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 Attention ! !BOREDHousewives MothersHave Good Office Skills ? ?NEED EXTRA MONEY ? ?thenEarn Top RatesDAYS - WEEKS - MONTHSWith//Y/A redaiwtA,(^//ic.The Temporary Service of IntegrityFree Gifts to Experienced Bona*FideApplicants who apply and Bring thisAd with themOctober 10-11-128:30 - 5:00To This Location OnlyLobby FloorHyde Park YMCAHome Office 1400 East 53rd Street Branch OfficeStivers Lifesavers, Inc. Evergreen Plaza7 S. Dearborn Street Garden LevelChicago, Illinois Evergreen Park, IllinoisAn Equal Opportunity Employerrr rrThe Other BookstoreA Play Presented ByTHE STUDENT CO-OPcontinues inThe Reynolds ClubPool Room Annex9 A.M. - 10 P.M.Sat. 12 - 6Bring a furry friendTHE CHICAGO MAROON October 8, 19681! Project T o Study T echnology ChangeContinued from Page OneA number of students will serve as re¬search assistants. Meltzer said they willbe able to use material from the studyfor theses and dissertations.In commenting on the research project,Meltzer said:“During the first year, effort will be de¬voted to collecting data and to developingresearch approaches. The first year repre¬sents a beginning step toward the ultimate objective of finding out how society can se¬cure the most benefit from future scien¬tific and technological changes and theireffects on regional and community de¬velopment.”During this first year, the participantsplan to develop a unified framework forviewing the problems and processes in¬volved in the growth of the community,to identify research topics and to develop a research design by assigning topics toresearchers whose competence can meetthe needs of the study and by exploringhow persons in other disciplines can aidin studying each of the problems.The participants plan to organize theproject through an ongoing seminar. Theyplan to proceed by studying five basicareas:• How Weston and other nearby com-Downright Inefficiency' Crowds B-JContinued from Page One“I almost fell through the floor,” de¬students also had diverse tragic accountsof living conditipns in the improviseddouble rooms. One remarked about the ageof the bunk beds and said he almost fellthrough the top bunk one night when aspring broke.“There’s an added danger,” another vol¬unteered. “You see I have this black eyeand my nose is slightly moved over tothe right? I walked into the bed.”“What we object to is the upper-class-men getting the larger rooms when weare two to a room,” one studentcommented.Another problem which was brought upwas the difficulty of getting rid of unde¬sired roommates even when openings dooccur, since the temporary occupants of the improvised doubles have the optionof rejecting alternative housing.“We’re stuck with them. We can’t getrid of them. We have no recourse,” onestudent fumed.The whole thing, another summarized, “seems like downright inefficiency.”However, a few first-year students point¬ed out the bright side of the matter. Asmall portion of the room fee is refundedto students in these temporary doubles.Physical and Biological Sciences ToMove West; Will Displace Bookstore munities make decisions, how the deci¬sions change the communities, and howthe decision-making process changes dur¬ing and after the synchrocyclotron is built.• How politics and government concern¬ing Weston on both a local and nationallevel change as a result of the installation.• Economic effects concerning changesin income and employment, the labor mar¬ket, migration and other population effects,and benefit and cost incidence.• The technological, social, and economicimpact of the accelerator on the mental at¬titude of the residents.• How land can be used and transporta¬tion facilities planned to gain maximumbenefits for the community.Participating with the faculty in the on¬going seminar will be senior scientific per¬sonnel from the accelerator installation,representatives from the State of IllinoisBoard of Economic Development, andother invitees.Continued from Page Threeences Building will displace the post officeand a proposed surgery addition will dis¬place the Bookstore.A spokesman for the office of physicalplanning added that these and other pro¬posed buildings would cause a general shift of the biological and physical sciences di¬visions west of Ellis, while the social sc-ences and humanities dvisions would re¬main east of Ellis in the main quadrangles.He further added that this would be a steptoward general interdisciplinary studies inthe divisions. Another HousingMeetingThere will be an open meeting onstudent and community housingon Thursday at 3 p.m. in the southlounge of Reynolds Club. All in¬terested students are urged tocome.BOGARTgets toughgets shot atgets laidand gets Lauren Bacall inTHEBIG SLEEP(dir. Howard Hawks)Tues. Oct. 8 Cobb Ha7:15 and 9:1575<A Doc. Films PresentationSpecial!For Back-toSchoolStyle Cut —Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8*2* FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400tfmtcr’sRead the ISRAEL andmiddle east news¬letter. For info andsample copy send $l toP.O. Box 233 I, Sunnyvale,Calif, 94087 We've moved.Come see our newshowroomsTURIN BICYCLECO-OPCheapest prices for Fal¬con, Carlton, Raleigh, Gi-tane, Ranger and RobinHood. “Factory trained"mechanics. Used bicyclesspasmodically. Fly-by-night rentals.Free delivery.21 12 N. CLARKLI 9-8863M-F 12:00-8:30SAT. & SUN. 10-8The Magical Mystery Turin* # 1, 1 ! I \ » »». SENSITIVITY -f-GOSPELACE HARDWARE1320 E. 63rd• Paint • Housewares• Tools • Electrical& Plumbing Supplies• Glass & Installation• Lock & Key Service You are invited to participate ina Christian Friendship Weekendon October 11-13 at the CursilloCenter, 1300 S. Wabash Avenue.The purpose of the weekend isto explore your problems, seehow the gospel relates to them,and together form a Christiancommunity. Registration for theweekend can only be madethrough:Serving Hyde Park—Woodlawn since 1901HY 3-2788 Father Robert B. Perry, O.P.1909 S. Ashland AvenueChicago, Illinois 60608Phone: MO 6-4500 or CA 6-0074foreign car hospital.. ' service5424 kimbark ave.cir.:.i mi 3-31 13----- 'October' 8, 1968 V 6 AlliedProducers,Ltd. FIRSTCHICAGOAPPEARANCE!DAVE BRUBECKTRiOfeaturingGERRY MULLIGANSUNDAY, OCTOBER I3. I968 * 3:0 ' PM * AUDITORI¬UM THEATRE S6.00. S5.00. 6’ CT. $3.00TICKETS AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 N. 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THI CHICAGO MARQQNVC'Vu't vo.vaVT -^1REPRINTED FROMTHE DAILY ILLINI, Champaign, Ill.April 27,1968Course Increases Reading SpeedStudents Can ComprehendAt 2,500 Words Per MinuteBy ED SEJUDDaily IUini Staff WriterSpeed reading does have its lit¬tle problems.As my hand hurried across thepages, making an audible “swish¬ing” sound, I became aware of acertain stillness in the library.Looking up from my book, I con¬fronted an assortment of stunned,bemused, disgusted and genuinelysympathetic countenances on thefaces of my tablemates, all silentlyasking, “Hey fella, what’re you do¬ing with your hand?”“Speed reading!” I cried, jump¬ing at my chance to show-off, “Ican read 2,000 words per minute(wpm), comprehend more, get lesstired, complete the assignment andSTILL log more drinking timethan ever before, FURTHERMORE. .”—and so the lecture contin¬ued, ending with “. . , That’s nobrag — just plain fact.”“It’s true however. Wednesdaynight the Reading Dynamics Insti¬tute graduated its first Universityclass, boasting that its students hadincreased their average readingspeed by five times and had madesubstantial increases in compre¬hension as well. Other classes willbe graduated Thursday, Friday andinto next week with similar results— it’s the payoff on a gamble that takes nine weeks to pan-out.First of KindThe Evelyn Wood “Reading Dy¬namics” course is the first of itskind to be offered on the Univer¬sity campus. It works on a newprincipal which uses the reader’sown hand as a “pacer," contend¬ing that you don’t have to mental¬ly repeat (“sub-vocalize”) all thatyou read, but rather that you can,when properly instructed, open adirect channel between your mindand the printed page. In theory, aperson can read (and eomprehend!) as fast as he can see, withhis top speed limited only by hisability to turn pages. Phenomenalresults have been obtained by ex¬ceptional students, many attainingspeeds in excess of 25,000 wpm—without sacrificing comprehension.Students at the Reading Dynam¬ics Institute learn to read DOWNthe page rather than across it.Their eyes flow across the pagesin soft-focus rather than in thejerky and old-fashioned “single fix¬ation” method.Dynamic readers actually learnto read lines BACKWARDS as wellas straight down! (At exceptionallyhigh speeds, it doesn’t matter whatdirection you read a line — back¬wards or forewards, it’s all the same.) Dynamic readers soon learnto read groups of lines at a singleglance, often reading the second-half of a paragraph before evenseeing the first-half!Greater CommandReading dynamically, you obtaina gt eater overall command of thematerial, as especially evident inlong novels where one often forgets the beginning of the story bythe time he reaches the end.Instead of bypassing “War andPeace," dynamic readers can onlycomplain, “Oh hell, I’ll have towaste two hours reading it!”Ideally, such a concept offersprinted material as if it were apainting, a sculpture, or other workof art. The reader considers it asa whole, as a complete, single en¬tity rather than an agglomerationof pages, paragraphs or chapters.Because such readers makefewer eye fixations and mental repetitions than ordinary readers, theyare less succeptible to eye fatigueand the usual headaches and drow¬siness.Since it is a manual skill ratherthan a function of intelligence, itdoesn’t matter what the reader'sIQ is. While P.E. majors still won’tunderstand texts on nuclear phys¬ics, they'll be able to read non¬technical material at speeds equalto their technically-oriented class¬mates. Paul Wilcher, super-reader whoconducts the course, is an instruc¬tor equal or better than any you’llfind on the University payroll. Hisclasses are cheerful and compe¬tent with an informality that offerswelcome relief from the drearyUniversity classes which studentsare so steeled against.The price is a factor which dis¬courages prospective students, butit’s cheap by any standards.If a student avails himself of allthe facilities offered by the Insti-tude and attends all the class ses¬sions, the price boils down to onlyabout $2 an hour, cheaper thanany private tutoring you’ll everfind. Spread over four years, thecourse can save thousands of studyhours and can probably affect aboost in a student’s grade-pointaverage. Assignments which oncetook days can be accomplished ina matte of hours, leaving moretime for other pursuits (fun, drink¬ing, girls, etc.). The Institute esti¬mates that it can save average stu¬dents 350 hours of study time eachsemester — probably an under¬statement.Class SessionsClass sessions are two and a halfhours long and are held once aweek (for eight weeks) in LandoPlace. Optional drill sessions areheld free each day at noon in theYMCA, with private counseling available as often as necessary.After the initial payment (whichcan be made in weekly install¬ments) everything is provided bythe Institute. The student bringsonly the essential apparatus — hishand.I attended the course in mycustomary manner, coming late toclasses, often without the assignedhomework and without attendingeven a single optional drill session.Nonetheless, I managed to increasemy reading rate by five times andcan now read average material atabout 2,000 wpm with good com¬prehension. More diligent studentsraised their reading rates by morethan 10 times, with accompanyingincreases in comprehension.You still feel a little silly in thelibrary, but finishing half a se¬mester’s reserve-file readings at acrack is more than worth it. Thecourse (which carries a money-back guarantee) seems a valuableinvestment for any student, or any¬one with great reading demands,and will undoubtedly gain popular¬ity as its reputation spreads.By the way, an average dynamioreader could have read this articlein about 30 seconds.Why not readas fast asyou think?You can. Incredible as it may seem, you don’thave to be satisfied any longer to read at 300,400, or even 500 words a minute. You can readby sight only and read without saying thewords to yourself, one at a time. You can doit, and quickly, using a revolutionary new,tested and proved reading discovery.It is called The Evelyn Wood ReadingDynamics Course. It was discovered in 1945by a Utah schoolteacher named Evelyn Wood.Based on her findings and research, the Read¬ing Dynamics Course was established in 1959.More than 400,000 men and women fromall walks of life have successfully proved thatthey could triple their reading speed with equalor better comprehension and recall. Hundredsof UI students have already taken the Courseand can now read all of their assignments inone-third to one-tenth the time, and withbetter understanding and recall.Accept our invitation to come to a FREEOrientation Session. We’ll show you a docu¬mented film of actual interviews with Wash¬ington Congressmen who have taken theCourse. As Senator William Proxmire ofWisconsin says, “This was one of the mostuseful educational experiences I have everhad.” We’ll demonstrate how ReadingDynamics guarantees to triple your readingability or the Course won’t cost you a penny.Take us up on our FREE one hour Orien¬tation offer. See the Orientation Schedule inthe box at the right. POSITIVEGUARANTEEOF TUITIONREFUNDReading Dynamics isguaranteed to tripleyour reading efficiencyor your complete tui¬tion will be refunded.Reading efficiency is acombination of speedand comprehension, notjust speed alone. All weask is that you attendclasses which meet oncea week for eight weeksand practice one hour aday on material of yourchoice for most of theCourse.FREEORIENTATIONSESSION!IN CHICAGO - at the Reading DynamicsInstitute, 180 N. Michigan Avenue,Suite 400Tuesday October 8—12:15 - 5:30 PMWednesday..October 9—12:15* 5:30 PMThursday....October 10—12:15 - 5:30 PMFriday October 11-12:15 - 5:30 PMSaturday October 12—1:30 PMMonday October 14—12:15 - 5:30 PMTuesday....October 15-12:15 - 5:30 PMWednesday.October 10—12:15 - 5:30 PMThursday...October 17-12:15 - 5:30 PMFriday October 18—12:15 - 5:30 PMSOUTH SIDE, 10540 S. Western Avenue SPECIAL STUDENT RATESLIMITED SIZE CLASSESREGISTER NOW BY PHONESuite 405TuesdayThursday....Tuesday^Thursday....SaturdayPhone Now!ST 2-9787 NameStreetCityState —Zip_(key coupon - CM 108)1The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute108 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago, III. 60601d] Please send more information.1Z1 Please send registration form and schedule of classes.I understand that I am under no obligation and thatno salesman will call on me.10 THE .CHICAGO MAJIOQN October 8, 1968MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over theI phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0M0, Ext. 3266.WANTEDWriter looking for EDITORIALASST. Part time. 374-2172.Assist grandmo. with girl 5, boy4, approx, one weekend per mo.Live in. Child care only. Driverslie. desirable. Work or personalref. req. near UC. Ml 3-1181.Going to CALIFORNIA? I want aride or co-hitcher. Diane 493-3410.BABYSITTER, 5 afternoons, ap¬prox. 20 hr./wk. for infant inSouth Shore, student wife pref.768-6180.Excellent Youth Leadership positionsafternoon, evenings and Sundays.Chciago Masada 973-3232.LOSTPrescrip. SUNGLASSES poss. Inblack plastic case. Contact BillWright Unlv. Ext. 4011.FOR SALESofas, carpets, tables. Excellentcondition. Cheap. 324-0899.Starr upright PIANO with guaran¬tee. Good condition. 288-2908 after6.2 silly kiddy cats. Cheap. Lovely.F ree. 684-2453.Season OPERA ticket. Wed. series!8 operas for *56. Coral 363-2445.YAMAHA '66. lOOcc. 752-9730.KLH 11-FM stereo phono & FM.Limited special — only *229. New.MUSICRAFT on campus. Bob 324-3005.AMP EX MCRO 20 Cassette redr/plyr/tp dk. 8 mos. exc. cond. *75,bst. ofr. Moore: 373-1133.Beautiful Sound. 12-string guitar.Brand new with hard case *100.684-5722.BUZZ, don't walk. Yamaha 80,4,000m. great shape *150. 684-5722.STEREO COMPONENTS — KLH,A.R., DYNACO. New & used.MUSICRAFT. Campus rep. BobTabor 324-3005.SHARE APARTMENTSGirl needed to share apt. 58thBiackstone. 324-2445. Furn. room. Mature fern. Sharekitchen 6. bath. Nr. 75th & Lake.*60/mo. SO 8-3330.5 rms. South Shore. *145/mo. 375-1125 after 5.TENANT REFERRAL SERVICE.Reasonable Rentals Desirable Apts.Lake Front Community. ExcellentTransp. UC Bus direct to campus.Efficiencies from *85. One Bed¬room from *110. Furnished andUnfurnished. Also large DeluxeApts. South Shore Commission ANon-Profit Community Organization.7134 S. Jeffery. NO 7-7630.SUBLETMale grad student to share apt.with 2 others. RE 1-6969 (ask forMenasche) or 536-0618 after 10P.M.Furn. Charming HOUSE on Black-stone, 3 Bdr., study, 2 bth. Fire¬places, to responsible. Refs. AboutNov. 15, 9 mos. to 1 year. *300/mo.PL 2-0505.SERVICESBoutique DRESSMAKING, altera¬tions. 667-7255.May 1 do your Typing. 363-1104.MINNETTE'S Custom Salon. Altera¬tions, dressmaking. 1711 Vi E. 55th493-9713.PERSONALSWANT TO BE PUBLISHED?The Maroon Classified Ads is will¬ing to sell its space at cost toaspiring poets, graffiti scrawlers,ego maniacs, and other creativewriters. There will be NO CENSOR¬SHIP, except, because of the lowprice, garbage will not be printed.Come on up to Ida Noyes room 304.One man's meat is another man'sperversion.DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION DEM¬ONSTRATIONS AND DISORDERS—witnesses and participants areneeded to tell their story to theCommission on Violence. Call andwe'll interview you. Bill SilvermanExt. 2392 or 363-5930.Is it later than you think?"Nor is it often observed thatthough God says that if Adam eatof the tree of good and evil, hewill die, the serpent denies it, andthe serpent turns out to be right."—Morse Peckham.AUDITIONS: Chicago pop musicmanagement company holding audi¬tions. Talented singers, vocalgroups, bands call AN 3-1671, PeterShelton 10:30-5 (M-F).Make It to Tahiti with MARCOPOLO.Housing Steering Committee Meet¬ing: Wed. 6 P.M. 5331 Dorchester—bring own dinner.DON'T BUY GRAPES.Wine is okay because most Cali¬fornia vintners have come to terms.Yes! The U of C does have cheer¬leaders. Come to tryouts 10/15 INHDance Room 7 P.M. jYou've got to be kidding. jYou must be accompanied by aparent if you are 18 years old oryounger to get the goodies atAHMAD'S.Sunshine Gospel Mission is swing¬ing again — Friday 8:30 INH. Title 69, Article 34Vi of the UrbanDebacle Grant Act. gets rid ofshops that don't submit to estab¬lishment aesthetics. Ask the TurinBicycle Co-op why they had tomove to an old warehouse.Experimental Dance. No exp. nec.Interested men, women Wed. 6:30Ida Noyes Theatre.To the lead singer of the Supremesand other friends: Greetings andsalutations from the Hyde Park ofthe East.All you need is pep to be a U ofC cheerleader. Join us at tryouts10/15 INH Dance Room 7 P.M.Thanks to the Maroon for praisingthe Court House's continental cui¬sine, i.e. shish kabob, dolmah, and Will anyone interested in a Christ¬mas charter to Europe call Ext.3272, 1-5 P.M. weekdays."You better leave that man's wifealone 'fore he put a slug in yourass." OTIS DICIT.Gyre and gimble in the fat at theBandersnatch.SUPPORT THE BLACK BOYCOTT.Students for an Open Chicago. 8:30Thursday, Blue Gargoyle.WRITER'S WORKSHOP —8377.Stuff your borogroves at the Ban¬dersnatch.YOGA — meditate, relax. Hatha.Sri Nerode: DO 3-0155.RUSSIAN taught by native teacner.Rapid method. Free trial lesson.CE 6-1423, 9-5. "Satan the Devil is still active,endeavoring to unbalance Christiansand ruin their relationship withGod." — The Watchtower.FIGHT DALEY! Hear John FryBlast the Machine. S.O.C. 8:30Thursday, Blue Gargoyle.PARASOCIAL EVENTDear Occupied Student:Greetings from the Chicago Re¬view! You have been classified1A, and you are cordially invitedto meet the staff for your pre¬deduction metaphysical at asoiree. Wednesday, October 9,8-10 P.M. 5757 S. Drexel. Dr. Klon¬dike, the Onion Lady, Crazy Claus,and refreshments will all be there.For the staff,Arnold Sans-Coeur. ■v.V" A? • Vv, .. . . i'Female grads to share apt. *65/mo.57th 8. Dorchester. 684-2452.Fern. std. wants apt. in HydePark with 1 or more girls. Heideafter 7. SU 7-4660 apt. 17J.for RENTNearby, economical, newly dec.unfurn. apts., 2 & 3V» rms. *77.50up. Free gas and elec. Clean,quiet- Williams, 6043 Woodlawn.CONDOMINIUM. 5537 Hyde Park“^d. 6 rm. 3bdr. 2 bth. Bldg. &apt. compl. remod. $22,500 poss.now. 363-6842., .4 . . The time remaining for a decisionis short. The opportunity is stillbefore you, like the open door ofthe ark built by Noah before theFlood, and like the open gatesof Jerusalem when Rome's armiestemporarily withdrew. But that doorof opportunity will soon close forall time. Prompt action is vital ifyou would be among the happysurvivors of this present system'sdestruction. What can you do andwhat will it require of you?What kinda motherfucker is it goesaround shootin peoples toes?.ill Every California grapefou buy helps keep thischild hungry.The farm workers of America do not askfor pity or charity. We ask for our rights.Rights that you accept as your due. Butfor us it is still 1930 and the Grapes ofWrath are still growing.We ha/e been on strike for threeyears and we are hungry. But thegrowers in California refuse to recognizeour rights and import illegal labor tobreak our strike. The Government doeslittle or nw.hing to stop it.So we appeal to you, the people of America, to help us.To help us get paid a living wage sothat our children do not have to quitgrammar school to help earn food (atpresent rates a farm worker who is for¬tunate enough to work 40 hours a week,52 weeks a year would earn $2386).To help us obtain the elementaryright to- collective bargaining, unem¬ployment insurance and health and wel¬fare benefits.To help us obtain the right to live and work with dignity.You can help by not buying Californiagrapes until the strike is settled fairly.When you refrain from buying Californiagrapes (except Di Giorgio “Hi-Color")you are telling the growers that you donot wish to take the food from the mouthof this child.For further information contact:United Farm Workers, 1300 SouthWabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60605,Phone (312) 427-7078 or 427-4357.Don’t buy California grapesComm lercial Requirement PhotograTECHNICAL & ANALYTICAL PHOTOGRAPHY pliers643-5511 Allen Gorman1342 E. 55th St.October 8, 1968 THE -CHICAGO MAROON 11D.lie fofto win 3k. Part. W ar tinvites you to visitt 7tk S nnua ( Wine SafeSaturday, October 12thVandSundau, October 13tb3rom to:oo _A.W. to 10:00 p.W.Vo dis count o ff.r.J u,itl be leSS tban 20%and Some wi fib e as blab as 50 %9 are Sa mp (e prices from the three hundred and twenty-six 'MJineSbe on Safehich eare toVJ aximiner ^Jderrenberg Spat fese 1966 vintage Re*. $2.98 Safe $1.96Schfoss \fo(lrads ^J^abinet (Sfue 1966 vintage Rr*. JIM Safe $2.94Wiftin ger Sraunfets A usfese K.Jin, 1966 vintage Rr*. $149 Sate $3.22Piesporter Cjofdtropfcben -Austese 1966 vintage Ret- JIM Safe $3.06Scb warzbofberger Sp a tfe.se 1966 vintage Ren. $).98 Sat. $2.93E.ckik eim er (jolt eshi It. Ja J„. Cat in el Seiner dadefu/ein 1966 Rr* JJ,'« afe $2.88Cb ateau Cjaudretfe Vouvrag 1966 vintage Rr*. 5) W Sate $2.18Coteaux du J.a on 1966 vintage Rr*. $2 49 Safe $1.77Chateau ■S> e \)erneuif Pouiffg - Suisse 1964 vintage Rr*. $2 79 3afe $2.06Cbabfis Ses Cfos Cjrand Cru 1964 vintage Rr*. $4 49 Safe $2.96Chateau d 'l^guem 1959 vintage Rr*. $1) 99 Sate $9.56Chateau Suduirant Sauternes 1945 vintage Re*. $8.9* Sate $6.92Cabernet SAnj ou l^oSe 1967 vintage Rr*. $2 19 Sate $1.88Save/ l^oSe 1964 vintage Re*. $2.79 Safe $2.08Oohaji ~Aszu 4 PuttonoS 1961 vintage Rr*. JI.75 Safe $2.91Chateau Safitte dotes de Sordeaux (jrand Cru 1962 vintage Rr*. $2.98Chatea'u cJdatour (_ ambfanes 1964 vintage Rr*. $2)9 Sate $1.71Viersteiner Ober Kebbacb bAeisting Orochenheeren AusfeSe Cabinet 1953Chateau Vfjoulon Saron Pbifippe 1961 vintage Rr*. $7.98 Safe $5.88Chateau rjCafite-l^otbscbifd 1961 Rr* $19.9$ Safe 15.76fSeaujotais *\JiffageS 1966 vintage R?n. $1.98 Safe $1.57Cba teauneu f -du-Pape 1964 vintage Reij. $2.08 Sate $2.23l^omanee 1923 vintage Rr*. $1-1.96 Sate $9.881937 vintage Port Rr*. $$.98 Safe $2.981856 vintage WaJ.i.a Rr*. $4$.00 Sate $22.50 Sate $2.27itat Rr*. $21 9$ Safe $12.453 US, an is k Sk I Safe $1.53mported Spanish Jnerrgm adeira Rr*. $4.98 Safe $2.47Setter Scb warze ^J^atz 1966 vin tage Safe $1.13Si ebfraumifcb Sp alfese 1966 vintage Rr*. $1.98 Safe $1.36earifg att en l Quantities of aft sate items are limited to stochs on handded to acquire the best values an d th e widest possi bte Selectiance is recommen5k. Part, W ar t2427 (fdast 72nd Street at (fdxch ange 351 (fdast 103rd Street at South arhtmf rwirann mapnn* a iQAa