/Moscow Answers Critics of AppointmentBy John MoscowThere seems to be a certain amountof misunderstanding and confusion on thiscampus about the role of ombudsman, andhow I will perfrom in it. My duties arefairly simple: to investigate complaintsabout matters at the University and tomake suggestions that will remedy the sit¬uations causing complaints. To do thisI am supposed to investigate administra¬tive procedures, and to see how well theyare being carried. In addition I am sup¬posed to ascertain if the proper policiesare being enforced, or if changes shouldbe made.So far students have approached me withproblems ranging from the rate of paybeing offered them, to poor advisoring tothe need to take certain required courses.I am attempting to arrive at some solu¬tion to each of these—solutions which will satisfy all parties concerned.I do not think that I will be able toaid the student Who asked that Cap &Gown be published this year, although Ican put her in touch with other similarlyminded students, and maybe help themwith the book if they decide to publish.Nor do I think I will be able to aid thosestudents who have policy differences withthe administration. I can examine the factsin that sort of case, and make sure thatboth parties know what the facts are, butif they differ after that I shall not becomeinvolved as ombudsman.There is an extremely varied range ofproblems that I shall be dealing with, andI am fairly sure that if I start to takepositions on issures that are too broad Iwill never be able to deal with the moreimmediate problems facing all of us atthe University. If the time comes when noTHE CHICA one has any problems with administrationand staff—when students know how tosettle their problems and all problems canbe solved, then the Ombudsman of thefuture may start dealing with more broad¬ly fronted arguments — for example themoral right of the University to move intoWoodlawn. For the present however Iwould rather leave such questions in thehands of the duly elected representativesof the students, the members of StudentGovernment.By their election they have earned theright — indeed the duty — to speak forthe student body. I could not, and wouldnot be able to do their job. Instead I intendto restrict my activities to solving — asagreeably as possible — the minor andmajor frictions that come of having anacademic community in an institutionalframework. JOHN MOSCOWOmmmmmVolume 77, Number 13 Chicago, Illinois, October 18, 1968 Two Sections, 20 Pages200 'Tent In' To,,ProtestLack of Suitable HousingMaroon — STEVEN AOKI"TENT-IN: Chicago students struggle to put up the first tent Thursday morning. Bynighttime there were ten tents and 200 demonstrators. By Barbara HurstTwo hundred students attended a “tent-in’last night to protest University urban re¬newal policies and the lack of adequatehousing for students.The tent-in, organized by the Fair Hous¬ing Alliance (FHA) grew out of growingstudent concern about housing shortage inHyde Park and Woodlawn.Night-time attendance at the demonstra¬tion far surpassed the day-time turnout.Because of afternoon showers and thestrike and supporting boycott at Hutchin¬son Commons, numbers dwindled fromclose to 75 in early afternoon to no morethan a dozen by 4 p.m.The tent-in was planned to begin at 10a.m., but the daytime program, which wasto have included speakers and discussiongroups, was cancelled and the schedule ofevents pushed to 10:30 p.m.“The official name for this place is‘Levittown U.S.A.,’ ” opened Howie Mach-tinger, a graduate student in sociology,who chaired the rally.Later, Machtinger declared, “Law andorder are superficial solutions. Inside theUniversity we are wasted. How can wechange?”But, he suggested, “We are no longerBoycottBy David SteeleA boycott of the C-Shop and HutchinsonCommons supporting a strike by six C-Shop workers was called off Thursdaynight as the strikers began negotiationswith union representatives and Universityofficials.The boycott was called Wednesday byStudents for a Democratic Society.The strike centered around complaintsof the workers over the high prices offood.SDS spokesman Chris Hobson said thatthe boycott would be resumed if negotia-QFe halted. THEHOUSINGCRISISpassive members of bad institutions.”Danny Freelander who has just returnedfrom Cuba said, “We are here becausethe housing situation for students has be¬come accute. But we must also realizethat the housing situation has becomeacute for other people in this area. TheUniversity has never really risen to de¬fend anybody but itself.”“They have,” he said, “turned HydqPark into an upper-middle-class neighbor¬hood. The irony is that this is no longereven a place for students.“The university will not use its influence,it will never use its influence, to turnthis community into a decent community,”Freelander said.The only administrator present at thetent-in was Wayne C. Booth, dean of theCollege. “I really have nothing to say,”Booth said. “This is a peaceful demon¬stration. If they want to get together totalk like this, that’s fine.”Continued on Page NineEndedManagement of Commons told workersWednesday they would be fired if caughttaking food, and six workers walked outthe same day.The strikers said they consider the ruleand the penalty ridiculous. “I can’t under¬stand why we can’t have a piece of pieor a glass of milk without paying thesehigh prices,” protested one striker.“At one time the workers had free food,”said an official of the workers’ union,Local 1657 American Federation of State,County, and Municipal Employees AFL-CIO. “But the workers took a pay raiseContinued on Page Three’69 Camaro SS Sport Coupe, plus RS equipment1. Wow! What i.s it?Python LTD.Fully equipped2. What happened to your ViperMark IV?I just eouldn’t identifywith that car. That’s what you said aboutthe Sidewinder Eight.But a Pvthon is some¬thing else. Four-on-th(floor, six-barrel earb,console taeh ... andwhat a steal! Ask the kid who owns one.Some people have a hard timecommunicating with youth.Not us.We just bring on the 1969Camaro, then tell it like it is.It is: Restyled inside and outwith a new grille, new bumpers,new parking lights, new instru¬ment panel, new steering wheel,new striping, and new colors including Hugger Orange, whichis wild.It is: Full of new featuresincluding bigger outlets for theAstro Ventilation, a 210-hp stand¬ard V8, and a lock for the steeringcolumn, ignition and transmissionlever.It is: Available with a littledevice that automatically washes your headlights when you hold thewindshield washer button in.It is: Still wider and weightierthan the rival sportster we’re toopolite to name.You should drive a 1969 Camaroat your Chevrolet dealer’s thefirst chance you get.Kven if you’re 42.Putting you first, keeps us first.4. Don’t vou tbink you ought tobold onto a ear more than amonth, Chet?When you see a greatbuy coming your way,you have to grab it. 5. That’s what I did yesterday-signed up for Living Insurancefrom Equitable. At my age thecost is low, and I get solidprotection now that will continueto cover my family later whenI get married. Plus a nicenest egg when I retire.With the right set ofwheels, you’ll go along way.For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.the|EQUItableThe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/E £) Equitable 1968REYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOP5706South University Ave,0nly shop on campus6 BarbersHours 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.Appts. if desiredExt.3573PizzaHY 3-8282Italian 8c AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry-Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd HYDE PARK!STARTSFRI. OCT. 18MMMOUNT RCTUStS presentsm . Jackx LemmonWitterMatthauateThe fOddCouplePHtaisiorTicieeaxoirA PARAMOUNT PtCTURl CANADA CALLING!ATTENTION CANADIAN STUDENTSA team of Canadian experts will be at your universitythe week of October 21, 1968.The Purpose: To answer your questions and discussthe economic situation in Canada today.This is your opportunity to find out what is going onand what job opportunities await you at home.Sponsored by the Department of man¬power and Immigration, teams will in¬clude Deans or Heads of Departmentsfrom Canadian universities, Canada’sPublic Service Comj ission and anOfPublic Service Commission and an Of¬ficer from the Department. PlanonattendingthisimportantmeetingOUT OF SIGHT BUT NOT OUT OF MINDDepartment Of Manpower And Immigration-Canadaf CornJt 3Lul fy -JM5 E- 55th' STREET -Tf^CHICAGO, ILL. 606154?Phone: FA 4-1651*3? LUCHINOSTUDIO OF THE DANCEFLAMENCO — PRIMITIVEMODERNIn Harper CourtMU 4-1173 5210 HarperThe Chicago Maroon October 18," V96* You don’thave to be e>Negro to drinkJoe Louis milk.Justlm*.MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.Wildcat Strike Condemned by UnionContinued from Page Oneinstead.” The union cannot support thestrike, because the University or StoufferFoods Corp., which operates the Com¬mons for the University, could obtain aninjunction against the union for breakingthe contract.The commons staff members who arenot on strike have mixed reactions to thestrike.The boycott, if successful, could causelayoffs in the Commons and would deprivethe non-striking workers of their jobs, ac¬cording to a union official.Members of campus Students for a Dem¬ocratic Society at a meeting Wednesdayevening voted to back the strikers with aboycott and pickets. A committee was setup to handle the preparations, and mem¬bers agreed to have pickets on duty at7 a.m. Thursday when the Commonsopened.The reactions to the pickets were mixed. Many union workers, who eat breakfastin the Commons, asked SDS pickets wherethe striking employees were. The strikersarrived about 7:45 and conferred with aunion official, who warned them of thepossible result of the boycott. The strik¬ers then joined the SDS pickets on theCommons steps.Staff members interviewed early Thurs¬day generally did not approve the strike.“They took the job under those conditions,”said one employee. Later interviews foundother staff members in general approvalof the strikers. “We support the peoplewho walked out. It’s as much to your(students) benefit as ours.”Charles D. O’Connell, dean of students,Wayne C. Booth, dean of the college, andGeorge L. Playe, dean of undergraduatestudents, who normally are at the Com¬mons every Thursday from 11 to 12 tomeet with students, were not thereyesterday.!HC House AutonomyProp o salGiven to Dorms for ApprovalA proposal for house autonomy is beingsubmitted for approval to each dormitoryin the University by the Inter-House Coun¬cil (IHC).The decision to submit the proposal tothe houses was made Wednesday night atIHC’s first meeting of the year.The IHC resolution defined house auton¬omy as “the ability of each house to de¬cide upon and enforce rules governing allareas of its social life.”The proposal, in its present form, will betaken to each house for consideration bysecret ballot. After voting, the proposal canbe amended if a house chooses to do so.The proposal, acknowledging the proba¬bility that different rules will apply to dif¬ ferent houses, states that house autonomywill have a different meaning for eachhouse.Several factors which will influence theflexibility of house autonomy are rights ofsizable minorities, provisions for security,rule enforcement, women’s hours, and theexistence of more than one house in a sin¬gle unit.The annual movement for house auton¬omy began when residents of Blackstoneapartments circulated a petition within thedorm requesting “the same freedoms forstudents in Blackstone apartments as thosewhich students would have in apartmentsanywhere else.” 4~HI WW"teVCOTTir-:-£hop<l % ^jHUTCtf mmmmiK vv*r«£R5 Ctrfeus < t)EcEHiT**eat mentBOYCOTT: Strike supporters outside the C-Shop Thursday.Cohn Resigns from University BankRoy M. Cohn announced Tuesday his res¬ignation as chairman of the board and di¬rector of the University National Bank ef¬fective immediately.Cohn stated his decision was promptedby the stabilization of the bank’s affairsunder the leadership of Norman A. Simon,President, and the local Chicago membersof the bank’s board of directors. He alsocited the bank’s excellent profit forecast.Cohn was legal counsel for senator Jo¬seph McCarthy during the fifties.Joseph F. Romano, New York Attorney,also resigned from the bank’s board.Gerald A. Gitles, Chicago attorney, who has been serving as chairman of the bank’sexecutive Committee was elected chairmanof the board.Wallace G. Lonergan, assistant profes¬sor at the University of graduate schoolof business and associate director of theUniversity’s Industrial Relations Center,who has been a long-time member of thebank’s board, was elected vice-chairman.All members of the bank’s board of di¬rectors are now Chicago area residents.Other board members are Yale Brozen,professor of economics at the University,and Paul Sugar, Chicago attorney.Don’t sit around the campusagain this weekend, wishing you weresome place else. Be there ... and back,fast with Ozark.And if you’re under 22, you qualify for Ozark sYouth Fare. Your Identification Card, goodfor one year from date of issue, costs only $10unif you sttvt on confirmed reserva¬tions. Call your travel agent or Ozark.go-getters goOZARKAIR LINES INSTANTEMPHASIZERNew standOUTpocket-modelreference markerby Eberhard Fabermakes words, titles,numbers, and mainpoints stand out. Intextbooks, reports,maps —on any kindof paper.Pocket-size standOUTgoes with you, marksthe important stuffin either brighttransparent yellow orpink for easy reference.Won’t show throughpaper, either.At your collegebookstore.standOUT 49$TM Reg U S Pat Off and Other CountriesQctobsr 18, 19/58 Cohn & Sternmmn Sc (HampxtBShopA COAT FOR ALL SEASONSThis London Fog all weather coat staystrim, crisp & handsome no matter what.Machine washable, water repellent Dacron/cotton with zip out Orion pile lining to keepyou toasty on the coldest days. Navy, black,olive, natural, British tan. $50IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsTte fibicago Maroop—"The Chicago Maroon October 18; «,966IBMMBA’s in Finance at IBM“In my jobI can’t depend oncookbook solutions.”“There are so many variables in a financialdecision, a canned approach just won’t do,”says George Henke. “That’s why my graduatework has been such a tremendous help.”George joined IBM after earning his MBA in 1967.He started as an Associate Financial Analyst.Within seven months he was promoted toFinancial Analyst. Today, he's involved withthe projection and evaluation of financialfactors that affect the development,manufacturing and marketing of a product.As the Financial Analyst on a pricingproject, George starts with the basicconcept—the engineer's original idea. Hecontinuously assesses all the factors that couldinfluence the product's introduction —competi¬tive products, market forecasts, productioncosts and its probable life expectancy. Ultimately,his analysis will help determine a price for theproduct that is both competitive and profitable.Checked IBM carefully“After studying the company’s history andpotential growth,” says George, “I realizedthat finance is one of the best routes tomanagement at IBM.“Then I found that information processingis one of this country’s fastest growing majorindustries. To me, that says exciting work andgreat opportunities for my own growth.”IBM offers attractive opportunities for MBA’sin such areas as Financial Analysis, Account¬ing, Internal Auditing, Financial Planning andControl, and Information Systems. In addition,IBM needs qualified MBA’s for careers inmarketing and engineering.Check with your placement officeIf you’d like to know more about opportuni¬ties for MBA’s at IBM, ask your placementoffice for more information.Or send a resume or letter to Irv Pfeiffer,IBM Corp., Dept. C, 100 So. Wacker Dr.,Chicago, III. 60606. We’d like to hear fromyou even if you’re headed for militaryservice.An Equal Opportunity EmployerNorthwesterners Applaud RevisionsHl/TCHINSON COMMONSBy David L. AikenProposals for wide-ranging changes inundergraduate curriculum and student lifeat Northwestern University, released by afaculty committee this week, have beenwidely hailed at the suburban university.The 140-page report, issued after a three-year study by a subcommittee of the mainfaculty advisory council on curriculum,recommends:It appears that no one on this campusis pleased with the housing situation.Even President-designate Edward Leviwas so moved as to insist on extensiverenovations in the President’s House be¬fore he would take up residence.Arthur Mhyrum, the architect of the ren¬ovation said that many of the changeswere mechanical in nature. For one, avery complicated and antiquated heatingsystem is being replaced. Air-conditioningwhich had been limited to only a fewrooms is being installed throughout thehouse.The major renovations are coming onthe first floor where the living room isbeing greatly expanded by incorporatinga hall into the room.It will now be possible for PresidentLevi to hold various functions in the pres- • substituting courses in the “scope andmethod” of particular disciplines for pres¬ent general education courses in the fresh¬man year, and study in the student’s majorfield in the sophomore and junior years;• more emphasis on interdisciplinarystudy;• increased independent study, particu¬larly in the senior year;• elimination of “in loco parentis” so¬cial regulations; andident’s home which previously had to beheld in other public facilities.This is the third time it has been ren¬ovated since its construction in 1894. Theliving room was enlarged for the firsttime in 1924 and in 1940 several gothictouches were added and the library wasmodernized.Nearly all the renovations have comeon the first floor which is most oftenseen by the public, while the second andthird floors have remained virtually un¬touched since 1894.Mhyrum said that had it been up to him,he would have torn it down and startedfrom scratch. “When we began workingon it, we found it wasn’t particularly well-built. Contrary to public superstition theybuilt them a lost worse in the old days.” • “radical improvement or modifica¬tion” of the fraternity-sorority system.The committee which prepared the re¬port, written by English professor Jean H.Hagstrum, has no power to implement it.Curricular proposals must be imple¬mented by deans and faculty in eachschool within the university. Social lifeproposals will go to dean of students andvice president for student affairs RolandJ. Hinz and the student-faculty Committeeon Undergraduate Life.Reaction of most faculty members con¬tacted by the student newspaper, the DailyNorthwestern, was favorable.Moody M. Prior, professor of English,commented:“The most interesting thing about thisreport is the break with the old conceptthat the first two years of college are forgeneral education. By allowing studentsto choose a major immediately, we cancapitalize on student interests, yet not shutthem out from other fields.”One dissenting voice came from WalterGregg, head of physical education, whosaid the recommendation to eliminate therequired physical education courses was“shortsighted.” He was “heartened,” how¬ever, by the proposal to offer course credit for physical education courses to those whoelect them.The report, titled “A Community ofScholars,” noted that the committee con¬sulted UC’s dean of the College, Wayne C.Booth, and drew from the book he edited,“The Knowledge Most Worth Having.”The report called for giving students anincreased voice in many aspects of univer¬sity affairs, although formal control onlyin student affairs.In student affairs, it said students “willnecessarily make regulations” in their liv¬ing units. When students violate municipallaws, the report said, they will “be treatedas adults.. .We do not see it as a properrole for the university to act as policemenfor the state.”Student control over student affairs, how¬ever, is not absolute: “The university it¬self. . .does have the right to review stu¬dent actions even in the realm of studentaffairs,” the report said.It denied formal participation by stu¬dents in setting the curriculum, althoughit would allow “extra-curricular classesrun by the students. The official curricu¬lum. . .should be voted upon by the facultyalone.”Sheaffer’s big deal gets you through29 term papers, 3 book reports,17exams,52 quizzes and 6 months of homework.President's House RenovatedCONSTRUCTION: Remodeling on the second floor of the president's house.has the finest dining facilities available in which to hold yourevening special functions. Accomodations for up to 450. Type ofservice is optional. Prices: $2.50 and upSmaller facilities available for breakfast and lunch. To reservecall Mr. Brimberry, Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3535.j——tt—* ——October 18, 1968 The Chicago MaroonSorry about that.The world’s longest writing dollar ballpoint pen.Sheaffer’s big deal means you canwrite twice as long. Because youget the long-writing Sheaffer dollarballpoint plus an extra long-writing49C refill free. All for just a dollar.How much do you think you canwrite? SHEAFFERHELP KEEP OURSTREETS BEAUTIFUL DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-6866JESSELS0N’Sf|5 Same Day 5 Hr. CleaningNo Extra Charge8GMW&3P&SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARS G&El&MElMgWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOOD Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student DiscountPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd 1363 E. 53rd. 752-6933MAKE YOURimports, inc. NEXT CARHD2235 S. MICHIGAN326-2550 ran5■■, -*EDITORIALBoycottYesterday at noon, business at Hutch Commons was a bitbelow normal. Not particularly surprising; now that places likethe Gargoyle and the coffee shops are again open, why pay HutchCommons prices? Yesterday, though, there was supposedly aboycott of Hutch Commons and the C-Shop, in sympathy with sixC-Shop workers who walked off their jobs Wednesday afternoon.Who were the people who crossed the picket line and whydid they do it? Most of the 50 or so people eating in Hutch Com¬mons were graduate students or older University professionalpeople. There were few undergraduates there, and the peoplewho were there did not indicate, by their appearances or theirstatements, that they were particularly committed to thwartingthe establishment.But most people, right, left, or — as most of these peoplewere — moderate, will not cross a picket line, out of respect forsomeone else’s protest. What, then, were these people doing inHutch Commons?There were, of course, a handful of people who did not knowor care about the workers who walked out, such as the man eat glunch in Hutch who said, “I didn’t bother reading the signs. Iassumed it was another of those student demonstrations.” Andthere were also a few who knew what the issue was, but didn’tsupport the workers’ right to strike, like the lady who told usthat when she went to work for the University she only got 45cents and hour, and therefore people now getting $1.96 shouldn’tcomplain.But most of the people, when asked why they were eatinglunch in Hutch, did not even mention the workers or their walk-out.They had crossed the picket line because they objected to thestudents who were participating in the protest and to their tactics.They had been harassed, they claimed, and they were eating inHutch to assert their rights to eat where they pleased.There is no question that some of those supporting the boy¬cott had very strong feelings. It is also true that when protestorsclosed the doors to Hutch Commons, barring entrance until acashier opened them from inside, it was to be expected that by¬passers would be antagonized. It’s easy to understand why onegirl eating in Hutch Commons said, “I never planned on crossingthe picket line, until I say some students close and lock the doorto Hutch and not let people in. But you can’t force people to goalong with you, and that’s why I came in.” Several students eatingin the C-Shop claimed they were in there because they werethreatened by “an SDS member who said he had the power tobash our faces in.”Harassment like this is useless and destructive. The peoplewho are hurt most by it are the workers. It is also true, however,that these were isolated occurrences, and that for the most part,the “harassment” consisted of arguments and positions that somepeople didn’t like.The picketers were not very organized, they did not have neatsheets printed explaining in detail the entire situation. When theyargued with people, it was not always quietly, dispassionately.But they were not malicious, there was no name calling. If thearguments were not always cool and dispassionate, it’s because thepeople who were out there supporting the workers were not in¬dulging in an academic exercise.What usually happened when anyone tried to enter HutchCommons was that a student would stop him and ask, “Do youunderstand what the issues in this boycott are?” Most of the peoplewalked by without stopping or listening. Many of them didn’tknow what the issues were. They knew that some workers hadwalked off their jobs, they saw some students walking around, andsome signs, and assumed that if SDS supported the workers, thenthey had to be on the other side. Levi's Ombudsman First, a clarification: I didn’t “insist”that any house choose open hours—al-Mr. Levi wants the students to have avoice in the University. What they shouldsay and how they should say it are. how¬ever, matters for responsible people to de¬termine.Veteran readers of the Levitical bookwill not be astonished by the provost’s lat¬est work of super-arrogation. They will re¬call that in the spring of 1966 the facultysenate was told that their rules and agen¬da were likewise out of their hands. Theywere spoon-fed a meal of loaded resolu¬tions which (being responsible people intheir own fashion) they promptlyswallowed. Now the students are being fedtheir ombudsman (or, being Chicago,should it be alderman?) goose-fashion, asin Mondo Cane.For a man as undeniably clever as Mr.Levi to perform this Dalevesque charade(provoking while claiming to soothe, bully¬ing while pretending to encourage) is theunnerving aspect of the spectacle. It bearsthe stamp of Poor Judgment. Can thismean the provost is sincere? If we cannotcount on his cynicism in small matters(students, teachers, community) and therestriction of his idealism to great ones(University, Society, and other Ideas thatdo not bleed), our confusion under his pres¬idency will be sore indeed.Philip Fertik though I think it is workable in all thehouses, given a roommate-consent and 'ar¬bitration board’ system. What I did saywas that all houses should assert theirright to determine their own hours inde¬pendently and democratically (which doesnot preclude, by the way. provisions toprotect large minorities), and that allhouses should support other houses in thatassertion.Second, a point against your advisedstrategy—i.e., to have hours quietly “justdrop.” The trouble with the University’shaving one ostentacious policy and a dif¬ferent enforcement policy is that when theheat is on the University can, as it has inthe past, use the explicit policy as a basisfor exemplary disciplinary action. The on¬ly security all students have against sel¬ective inforcement due to societal pres¬sures is an explicit policy that guaranteesthe rights of students in these matters. Tothe contrary, some may raise the drinkingrules as an example of “workable duplic¬ity.” But compare the different societalattitudes toward drinking with those to¬ward drugs or sexFor similar reasons. SG and the draftgroups were not satisfied last year by theUniversity’s issuing a press statement onthe readmission of draft register, but stillinsist on the inclusion of readmission inTasteRe: Karl Bemesderfer's assertion in lastTuesday’s Maroon that he would rathertake a drug problem to John Moscow thanmake an ass of himself in print twice aweek.I hope that Mr. Bemesderfer has had thegood taste not to have placed a letter intoday’s Maroon.Len Handelsman '69HoursA few comments on your Tuesday editor¬ial on ‘Hours:’ the student bill of rights. For the sametype of reasons, we should not accept aninformal ‘wink of the eye’ policy in so¬cial rules.Finally at your editorial’s suggestion Iam informing Dean O’Connell that I wouldbe pleased to meet with him at any time,in any dorm, or any building, under anyreasonable conditions of light, heat, andventilation, to discuss the right of studentsto determine their own life-styles. My onlyreservation is that I prefer an open meet¬ing at which the people affected can bepresent.Jerry LipschPresident, Student GovernmentBULLETIN OF EVENTSCollege. "The Yiddishe Mameh: JewishAchievement and Jewish Neurosis." HiilelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn,_8:30 pm.Saturday, October 19Friday, October 18F^OOTBALL: North Central, Junior Varsity, StaggField, 3:15 pm.SEMINAR: Dr. Leon Knopoff, Institute of Geophysicsand Planetary Physics, UCLA. "Structure ofthe Low-Velocity Channel and its Relationshipto Large Scale Tectonics." Ryerson 251, 4 pm.FILM: King and Country, Cobb, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.,$1 (DFG).MARTIN YARBROUGH: folk, pop, calypso singer inconcert I.N. Cloister Club, 8 pm, $1. (REVI¬TALIZATION).LECTURE: "Greek Theater: Conventionalism or Real¬ism." David Grene, Professor, Committee onSocial Authority. Downtown Center, Rm. 700,8 pm.WILLIAM DRAPER HARKINS LECTURE: "Homo¬geneous Hydrogenation and Hydroformylationof Olefins." Geoffrey Wilkinson, Professor,Imperial College of Science and Technology.Kent 107, 8:15 pmCONCERT: I Madrigalisti di Venezia. Music of Monteverdi, Legrenzi, and Cavalli. Mandel Hall,8:30 pm.LECTURE: Mrs. Zena Zlau, Senior Research Asso¬ciate, Institute for Juvenile Research; Lecturer,THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Caroline Heck,Timothy S. Kelley, Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editor: John MoscowProduction Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,Cameron Pitcairn, Howie Schamest, DavidSteele, Leslie Strauss, 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. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0600, 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. BICYCLE TRIP: South along the lakeshore. LeaveIda Noyes parking lot about 1 pm.MEETING: Council for a Voluntary Military. Com¬pilation of research for newsletter. Third floorfoyer, Ida Noyes, 2 pm.DEADLINE: for submitting applications to take Nov¬ember Law School Admissions Test. Blanksavailable at Gates-Blake 110.FILM: The Pawnbroker, Cobb, 7:30 and 9:30 pm, $1(Pierce Tower F.C.).SERVICE: Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. E. SpenserParsons- "Christ and the Quadrangles;" 11 am.CHESS CLUB: Meeting to organize two teams forChicago Idi Noyes, 3rd floor, 3 pm.SUNDAY EVENING AT BONHOEFFER: "Politizationof the University?" Fred Reisz, 5554 SouthWoodlawn, Supper, 5:30, program 6:30.DISCUSSION: "University Reform," Bob Ross, BrentHouse, 5540 Woodlawn, Dinner, 6; lecture 7:30.FILM: (Hiilel): ''The Dybbuk" 5715 Woodlawn, 8.DEBATE: Mikva vs. Ireland. Law School Lounge, 3:30pm.LECTURE: ''Hinduism and Contemporary IndianYouth," Phillip -H. Ashby Swift Common Room,4 pm.LECTURE: "An Example of Popular Esoteric IndianReligion Today: The Radha Soami." (Ashby).Swift Commons, 8 pm.LUTHERAN STUDENT WIVES GET ACQUAINTEDMEETING AND PLANNING FOR THE YEAR:Mrs. Louraine Robertson, 1369 Hyde Park Blvd,#502, 8 pm.Mystery TourThis Saturday SG is running a freebus tour through the urban renewalareas of the City. The tour, leavingIda Noyes lot at 12:30 p.m., willbe conducted by graduate studentswith expertise in the* workings ofurban renewal. Contributions tohelp pay for the bus will be soughtbut not demanded. Sign up in theStudent Activities office, Room 209,Ida Noyes. iMonday, October 21Sunday, October 206 The Chicago Maroon October 18, 1968•1*MfiL-|..,„>' VDefense Loans Cut by over $50 Million1 National’■ WASHINGTON (CPS) — Colleges andI universities requested $247 million for Na-i tional Defense Education Act (NDEA)I loans this year, but federal budget-makers* would only let them have $190 million. Tne Univessity requested about $2 mil¬lion and received only about $1.5 million.“About one third to one-half of the grad¬uate students are affected by the cut, be¬cause they had to take University loansinstead of NDEA loans,” Mrs. Shuchtersaid. The loans are being given on a ‘firstcome, first serve’ basis, she said.This year, according to Mrs. Schuctera definite amount, $300,000 was set asidefor the College. “Applications are still be¬ing accepted for the College, but studentsshould apply quickly — the money that isleft must be picked up by the end of thewinter quarter,” she said.Schools in 45 states were affected by thefederal cut. California, Hawaii, Maryland,Texas, and Utah weren’t hit because re¬quests from schools in those states wereunder the limits set in the Office of Edu¬cation’s formula for assistance.In March, the Office of Education noti¬fied financial aid officers at the 1800 schools in the NDEA program that thetentative 1968-69 allocation would be $190million. But Congress stalled on approvingthe legislation containing the appropria¬tion. Finally last summer, a continuingresolution granting the $184 million waspassed. In August, OE notified schools thatthe regular allocation would be that lowerfigure.Will Hollingsworth, chief of the NDEAprogram management section at the Of¬fice of Education, says the cut is “sominor” that there is not “much impact.”Apparently not many schools have had tocut off any students’ entire NDEA loans.But the money being used to make up forthe cut might have gone to others.Under provisions of the National DefenseEducation Act, a student may borrow upto $1,000 each academic year to a maxi¬mum of $5,000. Graduate and professionalstudents may borrow as much as $2,500 ayear up to $10,000. The repayment period and interest do not begin until nine monthsafter the student ends his studies. Interestis three percent on the unpaid balance,with repayment spread over 10 years.The act’s “forgiveness” provision allowscancellation of up to one-half the loan ifthe borrower becomes a full-time teacherat the rate of 10 percent for each year ofservice. Borrowers who teach handicappedchildren or in certain areas may qualifyfor further forgiveness.Repayment is delayed if the student re¬sumes study, or serves in the ArmedForces, VISTA, or the Peace Corps.Eligibility is based primarily on need,With the college deciding the merits of in¬dividual cases. A student is asked to listhis expected income for the semester withhis costs. All or a portion of the deficitmay then be granted.Since the loan program was authorizedin 1958, more than a million students haveborrowed over $1 billion.Financial aid officers at some schools! approved students’ requests based on thesmaller figure, only to find out later thatthe final allocation would be only $186 mil¬lion — nearly $5 million less than lastI year.That’s all Congress would approve, de-| spite the earlier promise from the OfficeI of Education.The shortage of NDEA funds has re-I suited in some students’ losing loans theythought they would have. Others foundI their loans cut when they returned toI school this year. Financial aid programsI elsewhere are being crimped.1 The University of Chicago received about$250,000 less than last year, according toCarolbeth Shucter, financial aid offices.VOLVO)VoEvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.Till' 1,1-1 l r.f.„ l.uv IMtl .1 >1 U-I- M> lull",hx.irlk Inn, Imi" \\r ill hi I ”ii.n .inli'i' I In! wi' iln kimw ill,it ii\rr•>.y III .ill III. Will* li LI-1. Mil III ill.' I mil'll M.lli - III till- I.HlII \i\ir- .111' -till mi till' nail.Iln' I ii • -1 ii'.i-iiii Ini I hi \ lii” .i \nl\n mm. i- I ii'i-.i ii-i- ui' li.ivr.! ti'tt ill -Iui k. \InI finnklx . Hi' ilnn I rX|n*rt In li.nr IIm'III.1 lull”.\\ 111, li In in”- n|i .ill inliTi'-liii” | hi i ,n|n\ .11 ml 11 \nhn-. (IniI ll-lnllli'l - llkr III Inn llli'lll Ih'i.iii-i' tlli'X l.l-l. \\I• likr In -i'llIII.-Ill lii'i';in-i' 11 ii ■ \ ilnn I.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-38001■i*1i Be Practical!BuyGOODNEWSContact Lens Wearersi Utility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St. jI Ames Contact Lens[INSURANCE512.00 ANNUAL PREMIUM• Immediate coverage.• Pays doctor for refitting.! • Pays laboratory in full.• Protects against everyloss or damage to lenses.• Non-cancellable, no limitto number of losses.ELIIMiliWIWIJSHiq ^ ^ ~ i►f AMES INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. !• P. O. Box 45045 >| Chicago, Illinois 60645 J| NAME J1 STREET 11 crfy 11 STATE ZIP ! CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $10 'used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERY TWA's Croup ThcRApyFree time and far off places. Going alone or with favoritepeople. Being open and doing your thing.Hacking around Central Park-worshipping sun, surfand Big Sur...the total sounds of the Fillmore, East andWest...friends, old and new...Hare Krishna fromcoast to coast...laughing, learning, caring.Being able to take weekend vacations becauseyou’re under twenty-two. Clever enough to stay awayfrom the crowds of old people on their holidays.Taking advantage of your TWA 50/50 Club Card to roamthe US for half the regular fare.Calling us or your travel agent...then following goodvibrations on TWA.1ft lOAfi TKn rklonn Mamiwiml i l t 2 35 if' I Hi { I . *t i i ii J ;.M4» '4 t v 11 -• j < sr: \ 11S SOUTH SHORE-SOUTH CAMPUSMonday through Friday except on University HolidaysFall, Winter, and Spring Quarters • 1968-69597H STMtTBUS ROUTE AND SCHEDULEEffective 9 23 68(Approximately 60 minutes round trip undernormal driving conditions. Stops at all inter¬sections upon signal from patron.)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery andproceeds South on Jeffery to 76th Street,East on 76th Street to Exchange AvenueNorth West on Exchange to 71st StreetWest on 71st Street to Crandon AvenueNorth on Crandon to 68th Street; West on68th Street to Stony Island; North on StonyIsland through Jockson Park Drive to 59thand Stony Island; West on 59th Street to cIJis Ave¬nue; South on Ellis Avenue to 60th Street, East on60th Street to Stony Island; then South East throughJackson Park Drive to 67th and Jeffery, the Starting JPoint.SCHEDULEA.M.Start* at 67th & JofFery6:407-408 40 5-27:008:00900rip ends at 60th 4 Stony) 7:20*8:20*9-20*P.M.Starts at 59th 4 Stony"S'-4 "S'2:303:30 4..4:30 * 5:5:30 | 69TH SffffT |s! iA \ $»* *1 n *! I ii iTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS BUS SERVICEEFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 23, 1968Buses are clearly identified by a sign reading "CAMPUS BUS." Upon signal from a patron,buses will stop to take on or discharge passengers at any intersection. The "N," "E," and "S"Buses will operate as stated below, Monday through Friday, except on official University holi¬ days. The "C" Evening Bus will operate 7 days a week except on University Holidays. Schedulesare subject to change without notice.Because of legal restrictions, use of the above transportationservices is limited to members of the University faculty, staff,and students. Passengers will be admitted to the vehicle uponsurrendering a ticket to the driver, except on the "C" Bus, whereUniversity identification must be presented. The driver will not bepermitted to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identification as astudent, faculty member, or employee will be required when pur- WHO MAY RIDEchasing tickets. One-ride tickets at 15 cents each and MonthlyCommutation tickets at $4.50 each for the "N" and "E" routes,and at 25 cents each ride or Monthly Commutation rate of $7.50each for the "S" route, are sold at the following locations:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th St.)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Avenue) Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th St.)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th St.)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Ave.)law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th St.)(NO refunds on lost or unused commutation tickets. "S" routetickets are accepted on all routes).ROUTES AND SCHEDULES(E) EAST-WEST-BROADVIEWMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under nor¬mal driving conditions. Stops at all intersectionsupon signal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony Island bus proceedsWest on 59th Street to Cottage Grove Avenue;goes North to 57th Street; then East on 57th Sreetto Stony Island; North to 56th Street; West on56th to Lake Park; North to 55th Street; East on55th to Cornell; North to E. Hyde Park Blvd. (51stSt.); East on 51st to S. Hyde Park Blvd.; South to57th Drive; then S. W. to 57th and Stony Island;then South to 59th Street, the Starting Point.NOTE: All runs make pickup stop at the Broad¬view.SCHEDULEStarts at 59th & Stony"£"-27:007:308:008:30A.M."£"-l6457:157:458:158:45(Last trip ends at 57th & Stony)Starts at 59th & Stony"E"-4P.M."E"-3* 1:30 Tuesday only*2:00 Tuesday only*2:30*3:00*3304:004:305:005:30 4:154:455:15(Last.trip ends at 57th & Stony)* These runs will not be madeDecember 23rd through January 3rdnorMarch 24th through March 28th.Interim Periods. (N) NORTH-SOUTHMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under normaldriving conditions. Stops at all intersections uponsignal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 48th and Greenwood, Bus proceeds Eastto Dorchester; goes South to 53rd Street; then Eastto Harper Avenue; South to 54th Place; West on 54thPlace to Dorchester; South to 56th Street; East on56th Street to Lake Park Avenue; South to 57thStreet, West on 57th Street to Dorchester; South to58th Street; West on 58th Street to Kimbark Avenue;South to 59th Street (a Loading and UnloadingPoint for LoS School patrons). Then the Bus proceedsWest on 59th Street to Ellis Avenue; North to 57thStreet; East on 57th Street to University Avenue;North to E. Hyde Park Blvd.; East to Woodlawn;North to 49th Street; West to Greenwood and thenNorth to 48th Street, the Starting Point.NOTE: P.M. Buses start at 59th and Kimbark but runthe same route.SCHEDULEA.M. Starts at 48th & Greenwood"N"-l "N"-2 "N"-36.50 - -7:20 7:21 7:22*7:50 7:51 7:52*8:20 8:21 8:22*8:50 8:51 8:52*9:20 - -P.M."N"-412:00*12:30*1:00*1:35*2:05*2:40* (Last trip ends at 57th & Ellis)Starts at 59th & Kimbark"N-4" "N"-5 "N3:25* - 34:10 - 44:40 - 45:10 - 55:40 - 52:4V(Last trip ends at 58th & Dorchester)* These runs will not be madeDecember 23rd through January 3rdnorMarch 24th through March 28th.Interim Periods. (C) COMBINED EVENINGROUTE(7 days per week except on University Holidays)NOTE: This service is free to University of ChicagoStudents, Faculty and Staff upon presentationof University identification.(Approximately 30 minutes round trip under nor¬mal driving conditions. Stops at all intersectionsupon signal from patron)ROUTEStarting at 59th & Dorchester, bus proceeds Westto Cottage Grove Avenue; South to 60th Street;East on 60th Street to Woodlawn Avenue; Northto West bound Midway Drive; Midway Drive toEllis Avenue; North to 57th Street; East on 57thStreet to University; North to 53rd Street; Weston 53rd Street to Greenwood Avenue; South to54th Place; West on 54th Place to Ingleside;North to Hyde Park Blvd.; East on Hyde ParkBlvd. to Dorchester; South to 53rd Street; Easton 53rd Street to Harper Avenue; South to 54thPlace; West on 54th Place to Dorchester; Southto 55th Street; East on 55th Street to S. HydePark Blvd.; South to 56th Street; West on 56thStreet to Lake Park Avenue; South to 57th Street;West on 57th Street to Dorchester; South to 59th& Dorchester, the Starting Point.SCHEDULEP.M. Starts at 59th & Dorchester"C"-I No 9:10 Run6:10 9:40*%40 10:10*7:10 10:40*7:40 11:10*8:10 11:40*8:40 12:10** Specific pickup stops at:59th & Kimbark 6C*h & EllisIda Noyes Hall Law SchoolHarper Library 57th & Ellis59th & Ellis Reynolds Club(Last trip ends at 57th & Dorchester) (S) SOUTH SHORE-SOUTHCAMPUSMonday through Friday except onUniversity Holidays(Approximately 60 minutes round trip under nor¬mal driving conditions. Stops at oil intersectionsupon signal from patron)ROUTEThe A.M. bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and pro¬ceeds South on Jeffery to 76th Street; East on76th Street to Exchange Avenue; North West onExchange to 71st Street; West on 71st Street toCrandon Avenue; North on Crandon to 68thStreet; West on 68th Street to Stony Island; Northon Stony Island through Jackson Park Drive to59th and Stony Island; West on 59th Street toEllis Avenue; South on Ellis Avenue to 60th Street-East on 60th Street to Stony Island; then SouthEast through Jackson Park Drive to 67th and Jef¬fery, the Starting Point.A.M. SCHEDULEStarts at 67th & Jeffery'S"-J "S"-2 "S"-36:40 7:00 7:20*7:40 8:00 8:20*8:40 9:00 9:20*(Last trip ends at 60th & Stony)Starts at 59th & Stony'S"-4 "S"-5 "S"-62:30 — —3:30 4:10 —4:30 5:10 5:11*3:30 ' — —* These runs will not be madeDecember 23rd through January 3rdnorMarch 24th through March 28th.Interim Periods.(Last trip ends at 68th & Stony)Further information may be obtained from the Department of Buildings and Grounds/960 East 58th Street, Mr. A. Herbster, Midway 3-0800, Extension 3082.E. L. MILLER, Director, Plant Operations THEATRE INVITESp I / [rYOU -to anOPEN HOUSE..WED. OCT. 23from 4 to 6 pmReynolds Club3rd floor TheatrePLANS FOR YEAR!TRYOUT NOTICES!!Coffee &ALL old members,NEW members andinterested peopleareWELCOME!!!ANDERSON’SBULKOSERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY GASOLINEAT LOWEST PRICESFEATURING THEBULKO PANTRYA complete Grocery StoreOPEN 24 HOURS57th & COTTAGE GROVETAKCAM-YB.NCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take out1318 East 63rd MU4-I062Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856POETSand suchThe Maroon Classified Adswants to publish originalworks of campus creativewriters. To this end, wewill rent our space at cost(considerable below regularstudent rates). Come to theMaroon Business Office,Room 304, Ida Noyes HallJbi ba of Georgetown U.African & Indian clothesbedspreads — sandals, etc.22 East Elm 10%discountThe Chicago Maroon October 18, 1968Soldiers Join SanBy Phil SernasSAN FRANCISCO (CPS), Oct. 12 — Su¬perficially it looked like most other peacemarches. There were the disorganizedthrong gathering in a park, monitors withbullhorns trying to get order, and peopleselling peace literature.But this march was different. It was notled by draft resisters or pacificists or radi¬cals or hippies, but by soldiers.The difference showed in many ways.It was a quiet march, without the singingand chanting of slogans that usually marksuch affairs. And there were no right-wing hecklers, for who could call thesepeace marchers cowards?There were about 20,000 who eithermarched or attended the rally afterward —half of them were servicemen, reservists.Tent-In| Continued from Page OneYesterday’s tent-in rose out of mountingstudent protests over the housing situationin the past few weeks. It was announced atrally Monday by the FHA. The FHA listsas some of its objectives for housing “De¬cent. low-cost’’ housing for students andfamilies in the neighborhood, Universityunderwriting of student leases, an immedi¬ate halt to all destruction in the south cam¬pus area, and open access to all Universityfiles on housing and real estate holdings.The housing situation has been particu¬larly problematic for the University thisyear. Largely because the drafting ofmany graduate students failed to material¬ize, the University found itself with morestudents who wanted a place to live thanthey could house. This has led to somedoubling in single rooms for freshmen, andthe University’s leasing rooms for studentsin local hotels. and veterans of Vietnam and previouswars, or both. They set out from the Pan¬handle of San Francisco’s Golden GatePark, led by about 300 active-duty service¬men, a few in uniform.There might have been more active dutyservicemen marching, but local armedservice bases scheduled special marchesand maneuvers for this weekend. Leadersof the march had failed to get an injunc¬tion against the special maneuvers. Oneinstallation, the Presidio of San Francisco,abruptly cancelled all leaves and passes.Several soldiers went AWOL to join themarch. Four of them, accompanied bysome of the demonstrators, went to thePresidio afterwards to turn themselves into military police.The organizers of the march also hadtrouble getting information onto some ofbases. One group, including Navy nurseSusan Schnall, who marched at the headof Saturday’s parade, dropped leaflets onseveral Navy installations from a privateplane. The Federal Aviation Agency threat¬ened to fine the plane’s pilot for flying toolow and although a Navy’ spokesman saidno action was planned at present againstLt. Schnell, he added that a “higher au¬thority” might have more to say aboutthe incident.After a march through the streets of SanFrancisco that was so long it could onlyhave been planned by military men, thesoldiers, veterans, and their civilian sup¬porters held a rally in front of the CivicCenter.Airman First Class Michael Locks, oneof the organizers of the demonstration,who marched at its head in uniform, reada regulation from the Secretary of theAir Force saying the uniform should notbe worn at demonstrations “in oppositionto the deployment of U.S. armed forces.”Locks said, “I can think of no greaterFALL RUSH SMOKERS7:30-10:30All upperclassmen cordially invited to attendMonday, Oct. 21Tuesday, Oct. 22Wednesday, Oct. 23Thursday, Oct. 24 Phi Sigma Delta5625 WoodlawnPhi Delta Theta5625 University Ave.Alpha Delta Phi5747 UniversityDelta Upsilon5714 WoodlawnPhi Gamma Delta5615 UniversityPhi Kappa Psi5555 WoodlawnPsi Upsilon5639 UniversityZeta Beta Tau5472 EllisThe Interfraternity Council Francisco Protestcause for which to wear my uniform thanthe cause of peace.” The crowd gave hima standing ovation.A number of the speakers pointed outthat this was the first time servicemenand veterans had openly marched againsta war. They said soldiers would exercisetheir constitutional right to dissent. “Theday of the silent sacrifice is over,” saidSteve Pizo, a Marine reservist. “We arenot weapons; we are men and we willresist any organization that would makeus less.”Dave Kleinberg, a Vietnam veteran, toldthe story of a friend of his who waswounded badly by schrapnel in Vietnamand fell into the arms of another soldier“not mumbling ‘those bastard Viet Cong’but ‘that bastard Johnson.’ ”Don Duncan, the former Green Beretwho is now an editor of Ramparts, saidthat “if all the political prisoners in stock¬ades were released, this (crowd) wouldbe only about one-tenth of the peoplehere.”“We are not only protesting the war butalso the system that got us into Vietnam,” Duncan added. Besides an end to the war,he said the demonstrators want:• to end the draft;• to end military propaganda amongour civilian population, “like John Waynemovies”;• to get the military off the campuses;• the Pentagon to release a list of sol¬diers imprisoned or discharged becauseof their opposition to the war;• an end to the stigma attached to adishonorable discharge, wjiich Duncan saidsoldiers receive because “they refuse tohave their consciences dictated to by menwho have none.”The day’s main speaker was Hugh Hes¬ter, who proved that a 73-year-old retiredbrigadier general can say some prettyradical things. “Conscription is not onlyunnecessary, it is a vicious form of in¬voluntary servitude and must be stopped.”he said. “All the people who have beencharged and convicted and sentenced forviolating the draft laws should be freed.”He said he would not counsel draft re¬sistance but added, “It takes courage torefuse to fight in a war that is unjust andimmoral.”That's right. You, too, can bo a pilot.Join the United States Air Force and qualify forpilot training. Become a leader with executiveresponsibility.Well, what else? A pilot is the office'’ in chargeof a million dollars worth of high flying, sophisti¬cated supersonic equipment, isn't he?Yes, and you'll wear a snappy blue officer's uni¬form, enjoy officer's pay and privileges. You'llprobably travel to exotic foreign lands, and havea secure future in the biggest scientific andresearch organization. World's biggest.You'll be where all the exciting Space Age break¬throughs are. Where it's happening. Now. Today.Right now. This minute. The Air Force is the "now"place to be.If you yearn to fly and don't try the AerospaceTeam, you'll miss your big chance.let that be a lesson!UNITED STATES AIR FORCEBox A, Dept. SCP 810Randolph Air Force Base. Texas 78148! NAME AGE 11 (PLEASE PRINT) 11 COLLEGE CLASS 111 GRADUATION DATE DEGREE 111| ADDRESS 11. 11 CITY STATE 1ZIP 1—~ 1L» _lOctober 18, V968 “ The Chicago MaroonKr\*l Kfc OOfcSrM./ iHOBBY CENTERSLOT RACING HDQ.CHEMICAL APPARATUS “H.O” “N” TRAINROCKETS &ROCKET SUPPLIESARTS & CRAFTSTOYS, MODELS,GAMES, ETC.OPEN SUNDAYS2116 E. 71st 493-6633 AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students, with ID cardssales & servicemi 3-3113foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.authorized SMC5424 s. kirn bark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615 HOW MUCH YOU MAYSAVE ON YOUR CARINSURANCE WITHSTATE FARMFrank Spinelli1369 E. 53rd. ST.955-3133& STATE FARMMu'uii »utoTtol).le insurance CompanyMont Office Bloomington, Illinois UNIVERSITYTHEATRECASTING! ’ t ' 1 < 1 !SAT. OCT. 191 - 6 pmMON. OCT 217 - 10 pmfor Webster’sTheWhite DevilDirected byTerry C. FoxRenolds ClubTHEATREAre you looking past tomorrow?^ AAASince cave drawings of the Ice Ageman, people have struggled tocommunicate. With stories, maps,legends, paper, spoken words oflove and fear. This business ofcommunications... meaningfuldialogue... is still chief amongtoday's preoccupations. And it'sone we at Western Electric, indeedthe entire Bell System have workedat since 1882.Cable, microwaves and satelliteshave brought nations face-tc-faceacross continents and oceans.Closed-circuit TV helps educatorspenetrate barriers of slum and tar¬paper shacks. In fact, our whole way of iifa in America is being en¬riched simplybyadvances in phoning.Whether basic or brilliant, eachadvance must arrive when it'sneeded. And each must be economi¬cally producible whenever it'sneeded. At Western Electric wespecialize in production and logis¬tics. It's our job in the Bell System...to help men overcome communi¬cation barriers with dependable ser¬vice at low cost. To this end weneed an ever increasing numberof new fresh ideas. Your ideas.Ideas that look past tomorrow. Management Opportunities at W.E.for Liberal Arts and Business Graduates:General Management Computer SystemsAuditing & FinanceGeneral AccountingPurchasing& Transportation Production ManagementProduction ControlPublic & IndustrialRelationsConsider your future in communications. Get thedetails from our brochures Then see your PlacementOffice and meet us on campus. Or write to Managerof College Relaticis. Western Electric Co., Rooin 2510A,222 Broadway. New York, N. Y. 10038, We are anequal opportunity employer with plants and servicecenters from coast to coastWestern Electric1=7-7 MANUFACTURING l SUPPir I'ftlt Of THE BEll SYSTEM Play tex * invents the first-day tampon(We took the inside outto show you how different it is.)Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy).Inside: it’s so extra absorbent.. .it even protects onyour first day. Your worst day!In every lab test against the old cardboardy kind...the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent.Actually 45% more absorbent on the averagethan the leading regular tampon.Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you.It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect everyinside inch of you. So the chance of a mishapis almost zero!Try it fast.Why live in the past?10 The Chicago Maroonfrw*.r*' !r!’} r,*if October 18, 19b8MAROON 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 thephone.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 3-0800, Ext. 3266.VEHICLES FOR SALE'67 BSA Lightning 650. Low miles,helmets. Ml 3-4978.'66 YAMAHA 250. Ex cord. Also,new helmets. 493-5346 or 675-4952.'65 MGB mint. Rblt. trans, valves,doz. of xtras incl. Abarth, wires,Blpkt, O.D. $1595 or offer. 955-5223.'62 Volkswagen 1500, FM radio, newtires, excellent shape. $900. FA 4-8200, Rm 364.'61 Chevy—4 dr., auto., V-8, goodcondition. 955-1766.'60 Ply. Valiant runs gd. $150 takesit. 752-7516 Rich.'57 CHRYSLER good condition, newbattery—best offer. 684-1369 eve¬nings.'55 AUSTIN-HEALY convt. wirewheels, radio, gd. con.d. $674 oroffer. 487-6212.MISC. FOR SALEOLD OFFICE TYPEWRITER.Needs cleaning. $15 firm. MaroonBusiness Office, Rm. 304 INH, Ext.3266.cSTEREO COMPONENTSAT LARGE SAVINGSDual 1015, base cartr. $79.50AR 4x Speakers $48.45Ampex 1150 tape deck $199.95MUSICRAFT campus rep. Bob Ta¬bor 324-3005.Floor SPEAKERS, Laf. SK-125A'S,$50 Ml 3-6000 , 229c.Anybody want a good tent onlyused twice? Well, I got one. Agood Canadian name brand hiker'stourist two-man centre pole type.Canopy, sewn-in floor. Cost $40new. Pay me $25. 324-9358 after5 or weekends. Or University Ext.3265.CONTRARY TO POPULAR BE¬LIEF, these records I sell are NOTused or in any way defective.What is true is that if the recordexists, I'll discount it. For exam¬ple, the new Butterfield Album isonly $2.90. Sanford Rockowitz, 288-4204.SCM port, typewriter—excel, cond.w/case—$25. Buying electric, mustsell. 285-2127.BATIK BANNERS, wall hangings.Our walls got full. $6-$15. 5340Woodlawn, 493-0856.GE cartridge tape recorder withAC-DC converter $50. Ml 3-6000Rm 550, Ken.PEOPLE FOR SALEYoung woman, 24, seeks bearableemployment. Qualifications: Degreein fine arts, wide interests. Pleasecall Univ. Ext. 3265, or 324-9358evenings.Term papers, theses typed. IBMElec. 40c/page. Mrs. Cohen 338-5242 evng.Wife of CTS student will babysitfor your child in my home duringthe day. BU 8-9840, ask for Barb¬ara Bauman.Experienced PHOTOGRAPHERneed part-time permanent employ¬ment (15-20 hrs.). Marc Pokempner624-5558.CLERICAL 8, LITE BOOKKEEP¬ING, part-time. NO 7-7609 after 6.May | do your typing? 363-1104.PEOPLE WANTEDPermanent full time babysitterwanted Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5 P.M. BeginH/l or sooner. My home pref.,meals incl. NO HOUSEWORK. 955-1795.Lovely, quiet room/bath & board‘n exchange for BABYSITTING.1 child - 4 hrs./day. 955-0170. Excellent Youth Leadership posi¬tions afterns., evngs., and Sundays.Chicago Masada, Youth Group ofthe Zionist Organization, 973-3232.REGISTERED NURSES—All shifts.Pediatric Hospital for childrenwith long term illnesses. Multi-Disciplinary services. Associatedwith a University program. Excel¬lent salary and personnel policies.La Rabida Sanitarium.Mrs. Scanned, DO 3-6700.TUTOR in H.S. math, chem. 8<German, hopefully in one person.DE 2-1161, or LI 8-1161.TUTOR wanted for Akkadian les¬sons. 487-6212.GIRLS wanted for sales and model¬ing positions part-time. Stop andsee Mrs. Posey - Daily 10 a.m. to7:00 p.m.Plus5225 S. Harper Ave.RUNCIBLE SPOON?Wanted: Adult size Runcible spoon.Wil pay $3.00. Call Jim—667-6512.Call Ken, Ext. 3265, and tell mewhat a runcible spoon is. Quickly.STILL LOOKING FORA PLACE TO LIVE?We've got one for you. Rememberthat GRUBBY BUT CHEAP BASE¬MENT in the VICTORIAN TOWN-HOUSE? It's available again. Theguy who was in there cleaned itup very nicely, so it's not sogrubby any more. $50/month takesit. No hassles 'from residents ofhouse. Private entrance. All utilitiespaid. It's at 60th and Blackstone,but don't let that scare you, allthe houses between it and the Uni¬versity have been cleared. CallUniversity Ext. 3265 or 324-9358evenings and weekends.A free banana to the renter ofthe above.Room for girl. 3rd fl. of prvt.home. $40/mo. MU 4-5076, 5-9 P.M.or wkend.For sublease: apt. 3 rms + kit.& bath. $115/mo. -F utilities. Frankat 643-2980 or 493-4196.THINGS WANTEDVisiting scholar needs furnishedapt. or quiet room with Bath. Im¬mediate occupancy through Dec.Ext. 3781.RIDE wanted to BERKELEY. Orshare drive-away. HY 3-3500 rm.206. Please leave message if out.SHELL PRESIDENT COIN GAME.I can feel that $5,000 already. Ifyou've got Warren G. Harding andwant a piece of the action, callUniv. ext. 3266.PERSONALSQ. where does the new studentombudsman stand?A. he worked for Humphrey thissummer.FREE! Charter bus tour of UrbanRenewal (remove all). See UC'sHyde Park, Oakland, Sears, etc.,etc., sign up at SG, 218 INH. Leave12:30 Satruday afternoon from INHparking lot.Enlightned authoresses—call HY 3-4516 and ask for Alan.Congratulations Allen Woll! fromall your friends. (We'd have listedour names, but we ran out ofmoney).RECON—a nationwide computerizedSUMMER and permanent job serv¬ice—and it's free to you! Formsin 202 Reynolds and stud. act.office, 2nd floor, Ida Noyes, uc/nsa.NikonNikkormatCannonZeiss IkonKodak PentaxMirandaYashicaLeicaMinolta And as for the rest of us, whattruly needs to be said?Joel's face is so hairy I'm goingto get some vaseline and fuck it.FREE BLACK KITTENS, fullguaranty, call 363-5644.Let MARCO POLO send you. 288-5944. Happy forty-six, mall!Old idiots are crazier than youngones.Sophomore Joe Stirt still takes itthrough the ear (@ 5,000wpm.).Read your own or read someoneelse's poetry and plays at theBLUE GARGOYLE, Thursdays,9:00.Upperclassmen invited to visit thehouse, meet the Delts—5747 Univer¬sity, Oct. 22, 7:30-10:30 P.M.Proliferous activity—Bandersnatchweekends open 5:30 to 12:45 everynight.VETS FOR PEACE IN VIETNAM.U of C chapter forming. 1st meet¬ing Friday—Oct. 18th—4:00 P.M.BLUE GARGOYLE.Write this way to Blackfriars. Firstcompleted act and synopsis forspring musical-comedy productiondue November 11. Call Alan Bud-nick, HY 3-4516. It is a symptom of the putrefactionof our way of life in the U.S. thatnone of these modes of living are"live options" for a sensitive indi¬vidual.You don't have to be a gourmet toenjoy the Court House.Consumatory activity nightly atthe B.S.TONIGHT—Yarbrough at CloisterClub—8:00 P.M.Para R.M. Lawrence:"Por una mirada, un mundo;por una sonisa, un cielo;por un beso . . . , lyo no seqe te diera po un beso!"G. A. Becquer.Bob Ross of the New UnivesityConfeence discusses university re-fom at Brent House (5540 Wood-lawn) 7:30 Sunday, sumptuous 75cdinner at 6.135mm Super Takumar 3.5new $88.49MODEL CAMERANr. U.N.B. HY 3-92591342 E. 55th St.WHAT? A FREE smmer and perm¬anent job service? Sure. Applica¬tions in 202 Reynolds and 209 IdaNoyes, uc/nsa. Any student interested in smallseminar on Machine Politics con¬tact Barbara, 955-5036. Likewisefaculty to teach.WANTEDPEOPLE to sing, play music, act,read poetry, hang your paintingsor photographs, or otherwise per¬form or exhibit at the BLUE GAR¬GOYLE.YOGA—meditate, relax. Hatha. SriNerode: DO 3-0155.If you and your chick like beerand classical guitar and youhaven't come to the Court House,after 9:30 weekdays for a PITCHERyou aren't where it's at.If you do not get it from yourself,Where will you go for it?The angle of the dangle is inverse¬ly proportional to the heat of themeat.The psychedelic elbow hath some¬thing up his sleeve.The Committee of Returned Vol¬unteers invites returned PeaceCorps, AFSC, IVI, and other inter¬national volunteers to a meetingoutlining action programs aimed atforeign and domestic problems.Snday, Oct. 20, 3 P.M. at 925 W.Diversey (2800N) For further in¬formation, 548-0933.The Hamilton Jewish Community isthe cause of 50% of the anti-semit-ism in Canada.Persian stew at Ahmad's. Youknow where that is—follow thefoxes to 57thturn right. and Blackstone andThe Clown is alive and well andliving in Hitchcock.MODEL CAMERA1342 East 55th The true Buddha is in the home;the real Way is everyday life. Aman who has sincerity, who is apeace-maker, cheeful in looks andgentle in his words, harmoniousin mind and body towards parentsand brethren, such a man is vast¬ly superior to one who practicesbreathing control and introspection.Love in every sandwich at theBLUE GARGOYLE.News item: "CAPE KENNEDY—The Apollo 7 astonauts reportedlycaried 100 special medals aloft intheir moonship Friday when theybegan their 11-day orbital lourney.The medals, about the size of aquarter, bear the insignia of Apollo7 and presumably will be dis¬tributed to favored people asmomentos after the flight."Fly Chicago-London roundtrip for$240. Call Ext. 3272, 1-5 P.M. week¬days for details.M's on sale from Lower Flint. It's better to have failed a Was-serman than never to have lovedat all.We apologize to our customers thatwe are sometimes so busy thatthey are forced to accept a sub¬stitute—the Medici.Angie Lee—Folk Singing at theBLUE GARGOYLE every Friday,9 P.M.Congratulations to Chicago fyi's forbeing voted most improved chapterin Phi Gamma Delta.Ken Sherman is really cool. BAKE IN.Wed. Oct. 23, 5468 S. Ellis, 8-11P.M. Bring empty coffee cans ifyou want to bake—or join us tosit and rap while the bread isrising and have some hot out ofthe oven! 493-3721.PLANTS ALIVE, an infomal gal¬lery of pots and plants, needs some¬one to manage things. Must haveaesthetic feeling for plants. Thecollection comprises the largestvariety of unusual plants in theChicago area. Also a kind of year-round ceramic art fair with plant¬ers from the kilns of most of theregion's best potters.Nathan A. Morris5210 Harper Ave.667-2036.Discussion of what's happening inthe university—what should happen-now-HOW? BRENT HOUSE, Sun¬day, 7:30. Food for thought at 6.Indulge the appetitive instinct atthe Bander.Will the management of the CourtHouse please fill the tampax ma¬chine.The water a cow drinks turns tomilk.The water a snake drinks turns topoison.KHARIS WALKS AGAIN! BreastedHall Oct. 31. WANTED: One-or more-beautifulfemales to mother lonely male inLower Flint. Ext. 3269.Razors pain youRivers are dampAcids stain youDrugs cause cramp.Guns aren't lawfulNooses giveGas smells awfulYou might as well live.Alpha DeHa Phi Rush Smoker-5747 University, Tuesday, Oct. 22.7:30-10:30 P.M.YR Beer Blast—Saturday, 9 P.M.at 5711 S. Harper. Students andguests welcome, $1.50/person, $2.00/couple.EMMETT: Please come to ChessClub Sunday at 3 P.M. In Ida (Noyes and pick up your trophy.STUDENT SPECIAL! 10% to 20%Discount. Sandals made to order.40 Styles to choose from. Offerexpires Oct. 31, at AD LIB STU¬DIO, 5225 Harper Court—A7. 752-3945.Psychological study being conductedon the problem of self-control. Re¬quire students who wish to cutdown on the number of cigarettesthey smoke. If you are at allinterested contact Mr. Frankel:Ext. 4711 and 4713. After 5, call363-5267. Writers' Workshop—PL 2-8377.You don't mind, do you?i'll bet you're wondering who thescrufty characters in the pictureon this page are. Here's the letterwe got with the glossy:"GREETINGS!You are about to receive (or havealready received) a big ad fromCapitol records for the new MADRIVER album. Capitol doesn't knowanything about the kind of peoplewho like our music, so they let uschoose where to put our ads.MAD RIVER ads are appearingin the underground papers, THENEW REPUBLIC, THE NATION,THE GUARDIAN, RAMPARTS,THE SATURDAY REVIEW, and14 selected college papers acrossthe country. We picked the col¬leges where we figured the peoplewould be most like ourselves.MAD RIVER is five musicianswho dropped out of Antioch Collegeand now live in Berkeley. We playour music for ballrooms, schools,and at benefits for the Peace andFreedom Pary, the Berkeley July4 rally on Telegraph Ave., be-insat Golden Gate Park, and the Mid-Peninsula Free University in PaloAlto, among others.We write this letter in an attemptto let you know that we're not justanother plastic rock group, but abunch of people like yourselves whoenjoy playing music more thanplaying college. We hope that ourassociation with Capitol can helpin some small way to show alarge establishment institutionwhere things are really at.Yours for fucking the oldestablishment by infiltration(and maybe creating a newone thats just as bad,although we hope not),Harry Sobol, manager, forMAD RIVERP.O. Box 3256Berkeley, Calif. 94711Bandersnatch open every night 5:30-12:45.CARL: Minto Shanahan is alive andwell.VETS FOR PEACE (Students andfaculty): call 955-3623 or 288-3834.Tired of asking, "So what do youdo in the New Collegiate Divisionanyway?" Buy the NCD Journalat the Bookstore in limited editiononly 50c.WANTED: talented people. Performat the BLUE GARGOYLE.A business major is not enough.We want connoisseurs. Phi GammaDelta.Rush Smoker Oct. 23.Hallowe'en special! THE MUMMY'SHAND at Breasted Hall—Oct. 31.The Consumer Society must die aviolent death."The Lovely and Talented MichaelSherman, above, was only one ofthe performers at the Biafra reliefconcert last Friday. This photowas taken a split second after hecaught his right cowboy boot ona loose board on the stage. Hefell on his guitar. Too bad."—TheUniversity of Western Ontario Ga¬zette, Oct. 11, 1968, caption belowa picture of an entertainer.No vivid writing, please.Taking up a blade of grass, Useit as a 16-foot golden Buddha.If you meet an enlightened manin the street,Do not greet him with words, norwith silence."Resurrection, madame" said thePhoenix, "is the simplest thing inthe world. It is no more surprisingto be born twice than once."* —Voltaire.How come, when the editorial pagepeople make a correction, theyusually have to make another.That doesn't make any sense.What does the Bible show as tothe meaning of all these worldevents? It shows that for this un¬righteous world time is running outfast! Surely you want to live insuch a wonderful new order asGod's word describes. Think of it—no more war, crime, violence,poverty, hunger, poor housing orsickness!MARTIN YARBROUGH-TONIGHT. So is Jerry.Enlightned authors-call 684-7037 andask for Susan. And so is, ... well, so was . .well, so might be Roger Black. CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE ?TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREETOctober 13, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 11SAVINGSCERTIFICATESUniversity National Bank offers you—• Savings Certificates paying the highest rateof interest permitted by law5% per year on certificates of $1,000 or more• Savings Certificates backed by bank safetymember: Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationChicago Clearing House AssociationFederal Reserve System• Savings Certificates tailored to fit your needsavailable for 3, 6,7, 8, 9, 10,11 or 12 month periodsFor maximum income with maximum safety and maximumadaptability to your personal needs invest in fluctuation free UniversityNational Bank Savings Certificates.Just ask any of our officers. They’ll be happy to handle thedetails for you.Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?UNIVERSITY NATIONAL RANK09 1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and servicemember: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve Systemprepared by03creative graphics, incChicagoThe Chicago Maroon October 18, 196bTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL IS umber Four October 18,1968TENNIS SHOES OHM!? SHOES WITH HEELS. RIDGES^.Ofi SUCTION dCIIPSThe CollegePhotographs by David Travis.aoyotA 6b! ,*<3ivW «» a *U#llo3 Architectural NoteTHIS IS AN architectural note because that’s all it’sworthy of (i.e. not noteworthy). The subject was graph¬ics or graphic since it is kind of small. Notice please thenew sign on the College Admissions and Aid Office onUniversity Avenue at any rate or its portrait somewherein this magazine (it is a magazine in case you hadn’tnoticed). It may be the dawning of a new UniversalDay (Helvetica , actually).What this infinite crypt means, is that the PlanningOffice has finally taken cognizance, and applied cogni¬zance at that, of the graphical potpourri that tells uswhere we’re at (ugh) campus wise. The sign is merelyan experiment though, and may or may not portend alucid sans serif future. It was designed by a youngChicago designer by the name of David Root who thePlanning Office feels is “imaginative and worthwhile”.It is a slick, very current looking sign if a little color¬less. There really wouldn’t be any great harm in in¬cluding a bright color here and there around the cam¬pus. Nevertheless, it is a positive step in the rightdirection and the Planners are to be congratulated. Onehopes that the powers that be will have the intelligenceto allot some cash for further experimentation and forsome sort of large scale reworking of the annoyinglyand irrelevantly eclectic graphics around the Quads.Root is also doing the graphic design for the GeophysicsBuilding (the Ellis Avenue Aberration) which will pro¬vide further material for judging his work.At one point, the Planners were considering givingsome of this work to the Cambridge Seven, a reallyswell bunch of guys of talent, but the inevitable finan¬cial considerations intervened. Such short-sightednessmay also screw the theater design although rumor hasit that the likes of Benjamin Thompson is being con¬sidered for that job. That would be nice.:j ii cj i i)£C. .'Vj*^-AALL!i.i --OPf-Q ootbM optoifC aiffjoseph losey’sKING & COUNTRYDirk BogardeFriday, Oct 18, Cobb Hall Tom Courtenay7:15 & 9:15, 75c Doc Films PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393mu* ^ .ijSomething More I''*'• banjos• dulcimersguitars• instructionclass & private• harmonicas’mandolins• records• song books• instrument building classes• accessoriesthe fret stop5210 Sc. Harper HARPER COURT in Sight and SoundRecordersall qualitiesand sizesKungMoecketc.NO 7-1060Democratic ConventionDemonstrations andDisordersWitnesses and participants are neededto tell their stories to The Commission>on The Causes and The Preventionof Violence. Call and we llinterview you.Anongmity guarenteed.Bill SilvermanExt. 2392 or363-5930 eveningsThe Grey'City Journal Onl<f fatty Unt4can 4rar****{& fawfda44icat <puta.ri4.t4' in all (?6ica<p* ...*76* (ZOTi'fc*? T^OTiSS52ft SoutA ^at/ket frunt667-4002Dining at the Court House is handled with moreaplomb than display ads In the Maroon.minimum afaet tdi dinner fourThe Year’s Most Significant Reserved Seat Attraction)OS€PH t LtVINtE AN AVCO tMBASSY FILM . , LAST WEEKJEANNEMOREAU"THE BRIDEWORE BLACKD<reci«a byFRANCOISTRUFFAUTCOLOR by DeLuxeTH6 LION IN WINTERTank MKKRotvaS""" .ioiin castlkSX' timothy daktons^?^ANTHONY HOPKINSitfSiSr NIOKI. STOCKSLSST NICKI.TKKKY^"'Based upon the piav cy Executive Producer Screenpw byJAMKS (iOI.DMAN JOSKI’H K.I.KMNK .JAMKS OOI.DMANProduced o» Directed by M;:cic composed andMARTIN KOI.I, ANTHONY HARVKY “"**•*“’.IOIIN HARRYin AVI D KMHAKS\ I’ANA' ISIOV* i-rouiKSCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES & PRICESALL SEATS RESERVEDALL MATINEES MAIN FL.AT 2:00 P.M. It MEZZ. BALC.Wednesdays & Saturdays .. $2.50 $2.00Sun. & HolidaysEVENINGS $3.25 $2.50MON. THRU SAT. at 8:30 P.M. — SUNDAY at 8:00 P.M.Sun. thru Thurs $3.50 $2.75Fri., Sat., Hoi. Eves & Hols. $4.00 $3.00HOLIDAY MATINEES: Nov. 11, ►8-29; Dec. 21 thru Jan. 1For theatre party information, phone MARGE ROVIN ASSOCIATESat (312) 321-0520.ORDER YOURTICKETS NOW •A WALTER REAOC THEATRE ■1L, ESQUIRE PREMIEREOCT. 31 2424 N. Lincolnal Fullerton-Hoistedone block east ofFullerton "El" stopJel.s 528-9126FREE PARKING'2438-40 N. Halstec[ Student Price $ 1,5o"|Starts Oct. 25Godard’s brilliant satireon happy warriorsLes CarabiniersFast DependableServiceT.V. - Radio - Tape ne-corder - PhonographCornell Eledroilcs StrvicoLULL, 55th St. PL2-7730October tf, IMS Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.TheaterA Very Sweet, Funny Rose TattooTENNESSEE WILLIAM’S The Rose Tattoo is nowplaying on Clark Street at the Ivanhoe supper club andtheatre-in-the-round. The combination has its limitations.There are three bars on the premises. This leads someof the audience to laugh at things that were never meantto be funny. The atmosphere is a nice one, though. Anold colored man turns on the faucets for you in thelavatory.The theater itself is small and comfortable and theacoustics are excellent. The problems always present inan arena, however, are only moderately well handled inthis production. much more horrible happens when she proudly insultsthe two clowns Bessie and Flora. Deciding that, “I don’taccept insults from no one,” Flora mockingly informsher of Rosario’s infidelity. His erst-while lover, she says,was Estelle Hohengarten, a black-jack dealer. This Sera-fina cannot allow herself to believe because she will haveno reason to live if she does.In Act Two enters Mangiacavalo, “with the body ofRosario and the head of a clown.” Serafina falls in lovewith him, seeing in him her husband’s return. Rosario’sghost keeps them apart, and in a fit of confused anger,Serafina forces Mangiacavalo to call Estelle. As soon as‘The Ivanhoe used to put on bad showswith big names. Now they’re tryingto put on good shows with big names.’Director George Keathley has overreached to theneed for an uncluttered stage. The Rose Tattoo takesplace in the broken-down house of Serafina Delle Rose, aseamstress; prescribed rickety pillars to enhance its di¬lapidated appearance. In the Ivanhoe production thesepillars have been sacrificed to the view.Again. Williams devotes almost a third of his direc¬tions describing Serafina’s “seamstress dummies” whichare placed in the house in eerie, unnatural postures toadd an air of unreality to the otherwise domestic scene.The dummies have been omitted. Keathley defended bothomissions with diffidence; too many props, he said, de¬tract from the action. This may be a valid argumentagainst the pillars, but the dummies play a part inseveral scenes and Williams obviously thought them im¬portant.Arena actors must be especially careful to play notto one group of seats but to the whole audience. HereKeathley and his actors have done a good job. she answers, Serafina grabs the phone, then falls backin shock, finally forced to accept Rosario’s unfaithfulnessand give up her self-made prison.The tragic potential in The Rose Tatoo is consider¬able. Keathley’s production, in concentrating on the com¬ic, is limited. The acting is nonetheless good. Rita Mor¬eno gives a tense and consistent performance, sustain¬ing an impressively high, emotional pitch. Apart fromthe slight miscasting that was no fault of hers, she is out¬standing.Other noteworthy portrayals are Mangiacavalo and Rosa. Mangiacavalo is pitifully funny as he loses his jobfighting with a salesman and Rosa is convincing as ayoung girl and a beautiful, vindictive older one.The Ivanhoe used to put on bad shows with bignames. Now they’re trying to put on good shows withbig names. They have imported director Keathley to up¬grade their mediocre image. Keathley, who speaks withconfidence and perfect diction about his work, is mostnoted for his successful Broadway revival of the GlassMenagerie with Maureen Stapleton. He predicts thatChin-Chin may be the next show at the Ivanhoe. This the¬atre has an excellent chance to inject some much-neededfreshness into the Chicago stage. All the components foran exciting show are present in the present production,if the actors could only abstain from playing for the au¬dience instead of to it. As comedy, The Rose Tattooshould be only bittersweet.Christopher LyonOdiumODIUM ODIUM ODIUM ODIUM - Do you havelandlord/lady? Is she/he odious? Are you will¬ing to see this told as it is? Do you want to seethe Muck Raked? Have you been without hot wa¬ter for weeks? Has your rent been raised (hasyour building been razed?) nineteen times in thelast eleven days? Yes? Yes! Well, lets get gal¬vanized! Lets bring the wicked oppressors to theirknees! A Crusade! Aux armes mes citoyens! Lur¬id yellow pages falling mercilessly on their villan-ous heads smothering them in truth and righteous¬ness! Hokey? Sound like what to do? Then callthe Grey City Journal or Michael Sorkin or RogerBlack (easy because they’re roommates) or anyone else at the Maroon wit de dirt! And shoulderto shoulder we shall prevail. UIIURU!Salzburg Great Theater: Part TwoThe Rose Tattoo investigates the interaction of deathand love upon the seamstress Serafina, who lives on theGulf Coast between New Orleans and Mobile. She feelsherself much superior to her peasant neighbors becausethe family of her husband Rosario owned land in Sicily.After he is shot and killed smuggling dope in his banana-truck she falls apart, and finds pride only in the know¬ledge that she made love to him every night for twelveyears and that he never touched another woman. Forthree years after his death she sits in front of her sewingmachine and becomes fat and ugly. Rita Moreno accom¬plished only part of this effect in her portrayal of Sera¬fina. An outstanding make-up job has made her uglyenough, but no amount of padding could make her as fator undesirable as Serafina. Thus when Bessie tells herthat the sight of her in a real dress would be twice aspleasant if it were the right size, the remark is very ef¬fective.The audience laughs anyway. George Keathley cheer¬fully admitted after the show that he drilled this groupthoroughly in order to squeeze every laugh out of theaudience. “Night after night after night the audiencelaughs in exactly the same places.” And so this really isa very funny Rose Tattoo.But Tennessee Williams’s humor should work on twolevels. First, the exasperatingly human plights of hischaracters are superficially, almost grossly funny. Sec¬ond is a richer humor derived from the depth of hischaracters’ reactions to tragedy and love Keathley hasplayed to the first sort of humor and been very success¬ful with his Chicago audiences. This fnay explain whyRita Moreno doesn’t really have to be as big as MaureenStapleton, who originally played the role. All she has todo is time her jokes like Lennie Bruce.In playing the show for laughs, Keathley has missedmuch of its meaning. For the second level of humor isricher. Serafina is certainly funny, but she is also trag¬ic and beautiful. After her husband’s death, one calamityfollows another. Her daughter falls in love with a sailorvirgin named Jack (Ronald Lohse) but all Serafina caresto know is that he’s a sailor and (oh, my God!) he’s gota gold earring. Her attitude alienates her daughter Rosa(Fawne Harriman).Crushing as it is to lose her daughter, somethingI H 4 ■*•!/. Yi . J i J'jb 11 * DO YOU REMEMBER a gnawingly incomplete reviewin the last GCJ? Well, dry your tears, here’s Part II:The prologue to the play has promised a hiddenriddle and here it is: why should the different soulswho have only played assigned roles be differentlyjudged? Is it because some deviated from their roles?Is it because they grow attached to their roles and willnot relinquish them? Is it because the roles theychanced to play are good, bad, or indifferent? Wecan’t solve the riddle because we cannot see the scriptor read the mind of the Master who makes thejudgement.The way that the supporting characters involvethemselves in the play is absorbing; only the Master6When did you last seea play by Hugo vonHofmannsthal?’stands aloof. World and Death has assigned rolesproducer and staff manager — by adversary periodicallyinterferes with the action.Loudmouth seems entirely unnecessary in his ca¬pacity as anti-chorus: his opinions are always oppositeto those of the audience. If this is von Hofmannsthalattempt at comic relief, it is unsuccessful.Two other characters serve no constructive dra¬matic function. A prophet and a saint do nothing morethan stand in the balconies that frame the GoodmanTheatre stage.Edgar Daniels is magnificant in the demandingrole of the Beggar. Enormous in body and voice, heis expressive and compassionate as well, and giveshis role meaning and depth.Kathleen Doyle gave a more than competent per¬formance as Wisdom, but then, she “had a less demand¬ing role.”J -JL TJctdber* l#/f968 * ‘ “ifj */«»*■,» Maurice Copeland as Wealth performed adequatelybut not memorably. The role is an important one, itshould be a foil for the Beggar, it should equal himin stature and Copeland’s interpretation is simplyshallow.The other earthly characters, Stephon Kenner asthe King and Donna O’Connor as Beauty were bad.Mr. Kenner moved stiffly, spoke in a monotone,and did not at all come across as a man who enjoyedhis power. Miss O’Connor also had an unattractivevoice and failed to overcome the errors in her make¬up and costuming. As The Farmer, James Rowe lookedthe part, but his voice and actions were the products^of an acting school, not an actor.Dina Halpern, as World, the chief superhuman char¬acter, played her role with an Oriental style, empha¬sizing the vanity and pettiness of the world. Perhapsher years of experience in the Yiddish theater explainher stylized interpretation of the role.Dennis Dugan as Loudmouth was unintentionallyclumsy in a role which demanded an agile clown.Perry Baer, as Adversary, was intentionally clumsy,but, as noted, his role was strangely ambiguous.Of the other characters, the Second Angel TianaLippold was singularly uninspired in a small but im¬portant role.The Angels enter uncelestially walking down theramp and the Souls make their final exit holding handsas they walk up the ramp in a travesty of the greatscene from “The Seventh Seal”.The designers of this production might have learnedfrom the text that what pleases in a play is notspectacle but the actions of man: World offers to per¬form earthquakes and cataclysms; the Master prefersto see human actions. The costumes and make-upwere garish and inappropriate, spectacular rather thansignificant.Too, six attendants dressed as Arabian bottle impscluttered the stage to no obvious end on numerousoccasions throughout.It’s true, there are a number of serious faults in theproduction but Edgar Daniels performs memorably and,after all, when did you last see a play by Hugo vonHofmannsthal?Tom BuschThe jjrey . City Joprpal * , «T *»'.** *« «.t «Some decisions are relatively unimportant.Where you put your engineeringtalent to work is not.As you contemplate one of the most important decisions of your life, we invite you to consider acareer at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Here, you will find wide-open opportunities for professional growthwith a company that enjoys an enviable record of stability in the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.We select our engineers and scientists carefully. Motivate them well. Give them the equipment andfacilities only a leader can provide. Offer them company-paid, graduate-education opportunities.Encourage them to push into fields that have not been explored before. Keep them reaching for alittle bit more responsibility than they can manage. Reward them well when they do manage it.And your decision is made easier, thanks to the wide range of talents required. Your degree can be aB.S., M.S., or Ph.D. in: MECHANICAL • AERONAUTICAL • ELECTRICAL • CHEMICAL • CIVILMARINE • INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING • PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY • METALLURGY • MATERIALSSCIENCE • CERAMICS • MATHEMATICS • STATISTICS • COMPUTER SCIENCE • ENGINEERINGSCIENCE • ENGINEERING MECHANICS.Consult your college placement officer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, Engineering Department,Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108.Pratt & Whitney AircraftEAST HARTFORD AND MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUTWEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA u> AlRCfADIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATIONAn Equal Opportunity EmployerSUN . . . La protection flnancidre que vou*donnez a votre famille aujourd'huldevra lui §tre procure d’une autrefapon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetflche a votre place.En tant que repr^sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter k un moment devotre choi» ?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office Hour* 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysLIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY loPWitzie ’i 3tower Sli“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREET mi 3.402O WHPK-FM 88.3First on your dialUniversity of Chicago student-operated radioSATURDAY 192:30 The Flea Market—Adiverse magazine ofmusical and spoken art5:45 Comprehensive Critic6:00 More Flea Market,until 2:30 a.m.CNews at 8 and 11)SUNDAY 2012:30 Conversations at Chi¬cago. Erica Fromm,Fred Zuspan, GeorgeMeyer on “Hypnosis”1:00 Hellhound: Country Blues3:00 Sunday Soul Session5:45 Comprehensive Critic6:00 African High Life andCalypso8:00 News: Evening Report8:10 Sweet Sound of SoftSoul10:00 On Point (News at 11)12:00 Joint SessionMONDAY 217:00-10:30 a.m. MillardHowar’s Happy Wake-upService For Americans(News at 8)2:30 Grieg Peer GyntNo. 18t2Beethoven: SymphonyNo.6, “Pastorale”Chopin: Ballade No. 14:00 Concert Hall. Brahms:Serenade in A, Op. 16;Antheil: Ballet Mechan-ique; Bruckner: SymphonyNo. 6 in A5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News & Events6:00 The Soul Man8:00 News: Evening Report8 10 Community Viewpoint9:00 One Foot In the Gutter-Bop and Hard Bop11:00 News: Late Report11:05 Andy’s Monday BluesTUESDAY 227:00-10:30 a.m. Happy Wake-Up Service (News at 8)2:30 Eclectric Listening:Mussorgsky-Ravel: Pic¬tures at an Exh!b*tion.JSBach: Passaeaga! :a titFugue, Cmn. Shostako-vich:Violin Concerto No.4:00 Classical Gas. Mahler:Symphony No. 25:45 Comprehensive Critic5 50 Campus News &. Events6:00 H!n and Funky8:00 News Evening Report8: 10 Community Viewpoint9:00 Jazz-Things11:00 News: Late Report11:05 Magic Music WEDNESDAY 237:00-10:30 a.m. Happy Wake-Up Service (News at 8)2:30 TASTE. Benda: FiveSy mphonies.Bruch: ViolinConcerto. Dvorak:Ser¬enade. Haydn: SinfoniaConcer tante in B flat.Mozart: Concerto fortwo pianos, K365: Quar¬tet in C, K465, “TheDissonant.” Stotzel:Concerto Grosso5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News 8s Events6:00 South Side Soul8:00 News: Evening Report8 10 Community Viewpoint9:00 J azz-Man11:00 News: Late Report11:05 Third World RaspberryTHURSDAY 247:00-10:30 a.m. Happy Wake-Up Service (News at 8)2:30 Blitzina. Dvorak: Vio¬lin Concerto. Schumann:Symphone No. 1. Mozart :Quartet No. 174:00 Classical Music5:45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News & Events6 00 Thursday Soul Session8:00 News: Evening Report8:10 Community Viewpoint9 00 Non-Western lazzsounds11:00 News: Late Report11:05 Letters From A DustyBoxcar wall—EricAnderson and like thatFRIDAY 257:00-10:30 a.m. Dr. Feelgood’sSound Therapy Clinic(News at 8)2:30 Musik Aus Deutschland4:00 Classical with Monte &.Martha. Gliere: RedPoppy. Vivaldi: FourSeasons. GottschalkNight in the TropicsTelemann: Concerto inD mj for 3 trumpets.Ippolitor-Ivanov Cor¬tege of the Sardar.Mozart Fugue, G Mn.5 45 Comprehensive Critic5:50 Campus News &. Events6 00 Soutnem Funk8:00 News Evening Report8:10 Community Viewpoint9:00 Jazz11:00 News: Late Report11:05 The New BluesClip this program guide andpaste your radio under it.Hubert Humphreyis the only manstanding betweenRichard Nixonand the White House.Will you stand with him?It’s no secret. Not all of us were for Humphrey at the be¬ginning. Some of us supported McCarthy. Some RFK. SomeMcGovern. Now Hubert Humphrey is our man—and he’sthe only man who can stop Richard Nixon in November.Think about the alternative. If you'd like to help, mail inthis coupon today. Your future could depend on it.YOUTH COALITION FOR HUMPHREY140 North State — Chicago, Illinois 60602Yes, I want to help Humphrey beat Nixon in November.I want to join Youth Coalition for HHH.NAMEADDRESSCITY PHONEZIPInspector Clouseau (Peter Sellers) inA SHOT IN THE DARKUNCUT!Sunday, Oct. 20, Cobb Hall 7:00 & 9:00, $1. CEF ltd.The Grey City Journal October lrf, 1968 VV'.iAin’t Nobody Gonna Change My AttitudeWELL, I REALLY don’t see any particular reason whythere shouldn’t be an editorial in this space. But, Om¬budsmen, signs, and coldwater are much in the news (sic)and appear the obvious choice.NOW FOLLOWS RIGHTEOUS EDITORIAL ON THEf ADMISSIONS BUILDING, AND WHY THERE IS NOHOT WATER IN MY APARTMENT: First of all, sowhat? If this guy wants to sell used cars and drugsto the administration, why not? And what precedent isthere anyway for rational decisions around here, huh,huh? And who is anything but jealous of an operatorFilmsHaHaHaHaHaI AM EASILY amused. I find situation comedies utterlyuproarious. Barbarella did cause a chuckle or two.I am easily titillated. I consider the underwear adsin the Times Magazine frankly hard core. Barbarellatoo had its moments.But should I, sometimes I ask myself, should I en¬courage such traits? Should I pass my life in front ofthe teevee with the Sunday Times in my lap sippingPepsi? And should we, to speak as a counselor andfriend, should we see such flicks as these?Reader, no! Life has intenser pleasurers! Drive-inNympho, Secret Sadist, Weird Pleasures, and TwistedWoman, these alone—forget what other people havesaid—these do tell it like it is. With these, you get hard-ons!There are works too which make other people laugh,not just bubbling morons like myself, but real people.The Magic Christian and Candy, Lolita and Dr.Strangelove.Which briigs me to the one stimulating curious sa¬lient crucial thing about Barbarella—what was TerrySouthern’s name doing among the credits? Did he toonot go to the University of Chicago? Why then did hedo this to me?Michael Andre slick enough to get his hands on 500 Administrationclams and a charming broad every month? And so Mos¬cow isn’t so swell to carp on. And so Livingston hasn’trepaired the boiler for WEEKS. Tant mal or tant mieux—it is something else and isn’t that what we all want-more? You don’t stop pissing just because there’s onlya sink to do it in. Especially if you’d been doing it on thefloor for years.And as far as Aristoie is concerned, there is no par¬ticular difference in making an ass of yourself in printtwice a week or on occasion. And how could anyone whocan eat two tons of salt a week know anything at all.And about that sign, have they so little to do at the plan¬ner’s office that they can spend hours making a secretout of a sign of all things. (You remember surely what asign is, sort of a board with some letters on one side—not much secret material at any rate) And, Richardand Paul, no amount of admirable sentiment, no matterhow few errors it reveals, can sustain that prose.THEGREYCITYJOURNALEditorMichael SorkinAssociate EditorsMichael AndreTom BuschEllen CassedyRachel KarlinWilliam MurnaneHoward SchamestKen ShermanSusan SlottowThe City White hath fled the earth,But where the azure waters lie,A noble city hath its birth,The City Grey that ne’er shall die.WHATS NEW AT LOWES ON COLUMBIALowes Hyde Park Plaza55th & Lake ParkMu 4-1505 Open Sundays 12 to 5 Look to LowesFor Service...Selection...SavingsOctober 18, 1968 The Grey City Journal 56 JVewnntage <Boofo;In a TimeofTormentSfWKK?«S®«i8SSmwmmmvwm'misifflRiaaiwswiwwe^88WMSIN A TIME OF TORMENTby I. F. StoneAmerica’s most dis¬tinguished independentjournalist examines keyissues and personalities:LBJ, Vietnam, Fulbright,The Negro, The Kennedys,The Left. The Right.V-439 $1.95. CITIES IN A RACEWITH TIMEby Jeanne R. LoweAn interpretation — ac¬claimed by the experts— of the most importantexperiences of certainAmerican cities in tack¬ling urban and humandecay. A Vintage GiantV-469 $2.95. SIX PSYCHOLOGICALSTUDIESby Jean PiagetIn English for the firsttime, these essays onmental development arean incisive summary ofthe work of the eminentSwiss psychologist. V-462$1.65. THE RESPONSIBLEELECTORATEby V. 0. Key, Jr.with the assistance ofMilton C. Cummings, Jr.The rationality in presi¬dential voting between1936-1960 is analyzed byan examination of votingstatistics and data onvoting behavior. V-470$1.65.SecretMlflP|PeacemVietnam0MAN AGAINST POVERTY:WORLD WAR IIIEdited byArthur I. Blaustein andRoger R. WoockThe most comprehensivecollection of present daythought on virtually allaspects of poverty bysuch figures as MartinLuther King, BarbaraWard arid Michael Har¬rington. V-81 $2.45. HO CHI MINHby Jean LacoutureThe first major biogra¬phy of this puzzling worldfigure ... by the authorof Vietnam Between TwoTruces. V-215 $1.95. THE ARTIST’S JOURNEYINTO THE INTERIORand other essaysby Erich HellerWith grace, wit and eru¬dition, one of the lead¬ing critics of Germanliterature examines thecharacteristic quali¬ties of modern Germanthought from Goethe toWittgenstein.V-438$1.65. THE SECRET SEARCH FORPEACE IN VIETNAMby David Kraslow &Stuart H. LooryIn unprecedented detail,this book reveals for thefirst time the labyrin¬thine course of peacediplomacy accompanyingthe escalation of theVietnam war. V-152$1.95.FanshenWiiaammmas pr*■'JAMES M.ABTHTJB. T. H ABUf? |THE MILITARY HALFby Jonathan SchellThe author of The Villageof Ben Sue describes thedestruction of ruralSouth Vietnam by theU.S. military, committedto destroying, as opposedto U.S. civilians abroad,intent on rebuilding.V-435 $1.65. FANSHENA Documentary ofRevolution in aChinese Villageby William HintonThe agonizing story ofrural China in turmoil asseen in the life of a sin¬gle northern Chinese vil¬lage on the eve of theCommunist takeover. AVintage Giant. V-465$2.95. CRISIS NOWJames M. GavinIn collaboration withArthur T. HadleyOne of the best informedcritics of the Vietnamesewar share his views onmajor issues facing theU.S. from “error abroadto squalor at home.”V-434 $1.65. Tl IK WISDOMOK\\SK(\\ HITY: xn v< w vn sEGYPT: Military Societyby Anouar Abdel-MalekHistory of 15 years ofEgypt’s national revolu¬tion 1952-1967 with em¬phasis on the army re¬gime, the Left, and socialchange under Nasser.V-428 $1.95. THE WISDOM OFINSECURITYA Message for an Ageof Anxietyby Alan W. WattsThe foremost Western in¬terpreter of Zen Buddhismasserts that highest hap¬piness is found only inawareness that imper¬manence and insecurityare inescapable. V-468$1.45.NIETZSCHEPhilosopher,Psychologist, Antichristby Walter KaufmannAn updated, expandedversion of a highly re¬garded, many-facetedstudy of Nietzsche’sunique contribution tophilosophy and psychology. A Vintage Giant.V-436 $2.45. THE DISSENTINGACADEMYedited byTheodore RoszakEssays criticizing theAmerican academicworld, condemning itsdryness and introversion,urging it to programs ofsocially responsible ac¬tion. V-472 $1.95.PRELUDEto mmA VIEW OFUJSBAN AMERICAFROM THE BOTTOMSEARCH FOR A METHODJean-Paul SartreSartre’s attempt to purifyMarxism and enrich itwith existentialism issummarized and fore¬shadowed in this intro¬duction to his Critiqueof Dialectical Reason.V-464 $1.65. PRELUDE TO RIOTA View of Urban Americafrom the Bottomby Paul JacobsA blistering, superbly re¬searched account of therotting inner-city coreand the officiousness,sluggishness and hope¬lessness of those pre¬suming to help. V-433$1.95. ADAM AND HIS WORKSCollected Stories ofPaul GoodmanFive new stories and vir¬tually the complete textsof the exuberant writer’sthree story collections:The Facts of Life, TheBreak-Up of our Camp,and Our Visit to Niagara.V-473 $1.95OTHER NEW TITLES: UNITY, FREEDOM & PEACE: A Blueprint for Tomorrow by Nelson A.Rockefeller V-355 $1.95 / THE WILL TO POWER by Friedrich Nietzche V-437 $2.95 /FROM ANATHEMA TO DIALOGUE: A Marxist Challenge to the Christian Churches byRoger Garaudy V-461 $1.45 / A LOSS OF MASTERY: Puritan Historians in ColonialAmerica by Peter Gay V-463 $1.65 / THE COLOSSUS and Other Poems by Sylvia PlathV-466 $1.25 / THE DRAGON: Fifteen Stories by Yevgeny Zamyatin V-467 $1.95 / 1848:THE MAKING OF A REVOLUTION by Georges Duveau V-471 $1.95 / REVOLUTIONARYIMMORTALITY: Mao Tse-tung and the Chinese Cultural Revolution by Robert Jay Litton V-474 $1.95 / THE ENLIGHTENMENT: The Rise of Modern Paganism by Peter Gay V-475$2.95 / FIRST SEASON by Israel Horovitz V-476 $1.65 / THE UNDERTAKING AND OTHERPLAYS by David Trainer V-477 $1.65 / COLLISION COURSE Edited by Edward ParoneV-478 $1.65 / TWO-FACTOR THEORY: The Economics of Reality by Louis 0. Kelso andPatricia Hetter V-482 $1.65 / SOVIET MARXISM by Herbert Marcuse V-480 $1.95 / ATIME OF WAR/A TIME OF PEACE by Sen. George McGovern V-481 $1.65 / DISOBEDI¬ENCE AND DEMOCRACY: Nine Fallacies on Law and Order by Howard Zinn V-483 $1.45.The Grey City Journal '' Octgtar Ttf.UWv. 1.Culture VultureCulture-Love in the Second City LoveTHE CULTURE VULTURE yawns and stares glazedlyout on a city that by rights (that is judging from ad¬vance announcements) should be seething with creativeactivity. It is met not with the baroque ensemble playingin the neighboring tree-top, nor with a brightly coloredposter dripping out of the sky proclaiming performancesin search of audiences, but with a scene of the usualwindy, fall-colored street and pavement and buildingChicago. Yet, it knows quite well (that is its job) thateverything is happening and that if a person had enoughmoney, time, energy, and culture-love to explore someof the possibilities, it could be a rather interesting if noteven hectic, place to be.TheaterThe most exciting thing happening in theater thisweek is the return of the National Theatre of the Deafto Mandel Hall, Tuesday at 8:30. The National Theatreof the Deaf is a troup of professional deaf actors whoare trying to create a new and vibrant theatre formcombining the features of mime, dance, manual signlanguage, music, and simultaneous narration. The resultis a type of theater which can be equally enjoyed byhearing and deaf audiences.The Crossword Man by Richard Gosswiller is at theHull House Playwrights Center, 222 W. North av. at 8:30Friday and Saturday.At the Jane Addams Theater, 3212 N. Broadway,The Indian Wants the Bronx and It’s Called the SugarPlum, both by Israel Horovitz, are continuing.The Salzburg Great Theatre of the World continuesat the Goodman Theatre, 200 S. Columbus Drive throughNovember 2.The Theatre Royal Windsor is at the AuditoriumTheatre, 70 East Congress Parkway, October 22 (Tues¬day) - 24. England’s oldest theatrical company will bepresenting four comedies. String Band weekends for a month starting today.Martin Yarbrough is appearing at the Cloister Clubof Ida Noyes Hall tonight at 8:00.Edward Mondello will present an organ concert atRockefeller Chapel Tuesday at 8:30.I Madrigalisti di Venezia will be at Mandel Hall to¬night at 8:30. This Renaissance music ensemble fromItaly will open the Chamber Music Series for 1968-9.Reverend Gary Davis, “legendary blind blues sing¬er,” will be appearing at the Quiet Knight, 1311 N. WellsSt. until Sunday. Shows are at 8:00, 10:30, and 12:30,with the 8:00 showings open to anyone and the othersrestricted to those over 21. There is even a note thatreservations are recommended.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is presenting apopular concert at 8:30 Saturday, in Orchestra Hall.Jose Feliciano is appearing at the Auditorium Thea¬ter 8:30 Saturday.At Roosevelt University, 430 S. Michigan Ave., Rob¬ert Conant will present a program of French harpsicordmusic Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. Othello. Old Orchard; Skokie. It’s just a film of aplay but, ah, such a play!Titicutt Follies. Aardvark; 1608 N. Wells. This film,documenting the horror of the insane assylum, wasbanned for political reasons in Massachusetts.Romeo and Juliet. Carnegie Rush at Oak.The Dybbuk. At Hillel, 5715 S. Woodlawn, Sundayat 8:00 p.m.King and Country, Doc Films Friday at 7:15 and9:15.ArtFilmsMusicHarperi remember Theater Coffeelast week?) is House, 5238 South Harperfeaturing the Lake County The Two of Us. Cinema; Chicago at Michigan. Sen¬timental but important to the pop cul specialist for itstars Michel Simon who has been the most popular starof French cinema for thirty years. Why? •The Bride Wore Black. Three Penny Cinema; 2424N. Lincoln. Truffaut, becoming more and more inter¬ested in technique to the exclusion of content, here re¬duces himself to absurdity. But with magnificent style.Barbarella. Chicago; Randolph and State. You readabout it in Playboy, bought the comic book, heard aboutit on T. V. and radio, and now, at last, it’s here!Ulysses. Lake Shore; 3175 Broadway. Absolutely un¬equal to the book in any way, naturally enough, but im¬moral as well in its freedoms: imagine, retelling Uylssesin the present! The idea.Bye Bye Braverman. Hyde Park. Sidney Lumet,strangely enough, has directed a remarkable, perhapsa great film; nobody’s going though, for who will forgiveThe Group? Options continues at the Museum of ContemporaryArt, 237 E. Ontario until Sunday. Word of advice; GOAND SEE IT.Dada, Surrealism and Their Heritage opens at theArt Institute today. Included in this exhibit are paintingsand sculpture by Calder, Dali, and Duchamp.This is scarcely the extend of art exhibits aroundChicago. Anyone who cares about discovering the offer¬ings of the many smaller galleries should find himselfa copy of the WFMT guide or some such publicationand choose to see from the lists.Extracultral EventThe CIRCUS comes to Chicago—the InternationalAmpitheatre at 42nd and Halsted October 18 (today)through the 28th. In fact, it’s the Ringing Bros, andBarnum & Bailey Circus ! ! ! (lions, tigers, bears, seals,clowns, tight-rope ) now owned by Roy Hofeinz,the Astroman.Robert Cotver is reading his The Cat in the Hat forPresident, a fantastic piece of political satire which ap¬pears in the latest New American Review, in BreastedHall, Thursday at 8 pm.And finally there’s a Mexican Restaurant at 642 N.State — LAPOSADA DEL RAY. Extra note here is toeat flautas! Obviously here is one of the places Chicagomanages to hide so brilliantly and so cruelly. Ah, butWe’ve discovered it; may its comparative anonymityend.II -SH E I SJt LM3 PERFORMANCES NIGHTLY THRU DAWN FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREOctober 10Co»onGIG! Andre*,THI AMIRKANIZATIONOf IMIIYFRIDAYOctober 11TMf LOVED ONE October IITMf COLLECT OfSATURDAYIOctober 24 Octator 11Sellers Kv/br.ck Halloween TreatLOUT A rasputin mw THt nrriusOO.W, IS November 1Mi<hoel Come lynn iedq' o*e, A Ion BotesTMf WRONG SOXY GfOKT 01*1October 1?0* STRAMGflOVf October 19Oeon Mort.nTMf AMtUSMfRS October 2bDudley Moor* Peter CookSfDAiZlfD tomei CoburnIM LIKE HINTPIUS THt Playboy SorMl'—Every n.qM a New Oopter—loltn Wayne .n 'Tkt Sign Of The Eogle UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTSTHE NATIONALTHEATREOF THE DEAFwithTHE WESTERN WORLD’S FIRSTPROFESSIONAL COMPANY OF DEAF ACTORSA Japanese Kabuk: Drama,A Program of Poetryand Sheridan’s THE CRITICONE NIGHT ONLY!! MANDEL HALLTuesday, October 22nd 8:30 p.m.Tickets UT Office, Reynolds ClutxExt. 3581Special Student Prices at Box OfficeFOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLY;VWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY IIAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYINCLUDES GAS, OIL, 8c INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH•330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 'PERFECT’ - MAROONPARAMOUNT PICTURESA ME FILMTheFrancoZeffirelliRomeo^juuetNmsnsccmsTSTALK STRAIGHT WillThinking of returning to the U.K. ? Get in touch withthe team of ICI scientists visiting your campusshortly. They will tell you about jobs available now,where these are, how much they pay and what thehousing situation is. If you've only just arrived, dropin just the same for a chat about your futureprospects.Id’s recruiting teamwill visit your compus on 24th OctoberContact them through Mr. L. S. Calvin,■Career Counseling and Placement,5706 S. University AvenueOctober 18, 1988 ^^TECHNICOLOR* / A PARAMOUNT PICTUREFOR FEATURE TIMES CALL 944-2966CARNEGIENo ordinarylove story.... lark Ctheatreenjoy ourspecial studentrate7RC !ta"f e. _rJ T timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredailyopen 7:30 a.m.-lateshow 3 a.m.Sunday film guildevery wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 50clittle gal-lery for galsonly• clark parking—1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.write for your freemonthly programclark & madison fr 2-2843BIKES LIKEMOTHER USEDTO MAKETURIN BICYCLECO-OPCheapest prices for Fal¬con, Carlton, Raleigh, Gi-Lane, Ranger and RobinHood. ‘‘Factory trained”mechanics. Used bicyclesspasmodically. Fly-by-nightrentals. *Frefe delivery.2II2 N. CLARKLI 9-8863M-F 12:00-8:30SAT. & SUN. 10-8^JheJjAa^ical^Mysteijr Turin CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUIS-Tirnes.****Should win Academy AwardLESNER NEWS •“A Treasure”TERRY TRIBUNE‘‘Film is a Smash”MARSTERS AMERICAN‘‘Everyone Should See It”JUDITH CRIST N.B.C.TV TODAY SHOW‘‘I Love This Movie”t ft ^^the\OtTiAK> OfVStudent rate every S 1 50day but Sat. |The Grey City Journal 7PLUS IS MOVING UP —WITH CAPEZIO! WITH LA PIUMA!In order to complete your fashion wardrobe,Plus has taken two new large stores upstairsat our old location.In addition to the fashions you've alreadyaccepted so well, we ll now be handling bootsand shoes by Capezio and La Puima.Many new accessory items will be availableto complete your fashion picture as well asprovde gifts for the girl who knows.Store hours: 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. every day.Plus Inc., 5225 South Harper Ct„ Chicago, Illinois60615. Phone: 324-6800.THE STUDENT CO-OPOn Saturdays conveniently opens when others close.Come on down from 12 6, (Mon, Frh 9 10)Ke4f4toi<Hi Gluh Pool eMailTHE PAWNBROKER Sat. 7:30, 9:30. Cobb Hall. $100Musicraft SpecialReg $269.95THE KLH* MODEL ELEVEN-FM•The Model Eleven-FM adds a high-performance FM multiplex tuner to the basic Model Elevenphonograph to provide a complete stereo music system in portable form. Like the rest of theEleven's circuitry, the tuner is fully transistorized, and it adds only a pound to the weight of thesystem. But it performs as well as component tuners of several times its size and cost.The KLH* Model Eleven is the first high-performance stereo phonograph in easily portable form.Only 28 pounds, the Model Eleven is small enough and light enough to travel wherever there is anoutlet. And it can fill a living room with the kind of sound once available only from a massive andexpensive sound system. ^ <MtuiOtaft48 E. OAK ST. - DE 7-41502035 W. 95TH STREET 779-6500 Or Campus: Bob Tabor324*3005The Grey City Journal October 18, 1968 GOLD CITY INN* * * * Maroon."A Gold Mine of Good Food"IO %Student DiscountHYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try our Convenient TAKE-OUT Ordersinnmro-o-innnrrrinnnrBsn oasau 656o'tnnnflStudents & Faculty *10%Use this ad foro discounton all Dry CleaningatPUBLIC CLCANCRS, INC1380 E. 53rd., 1310 t. 53rd St., 1457 E. 51st.While you are there, pick up your per¬manent 10% Courtesy DISCOUNT CARD.JLSL& Si B.p-fl-fi a a nn.g-P-fl-gJLftAAJUULPJLg 98 9990999^FoodDrinkPeople NOW ONSTAGE'aWQBLD PREMIERE IN ENGLISH! _|HOOO VON HOFMANNSTHAL'S "T~| 1(ZI FESTIVAL PLAY311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W of McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400j&tucr’s SLZBURCCRSTTTH6TTKOFTHcWORLDNightly axept Mood through NOT tMata 2 00 pm. There., Oct 10 « 17! STARRINGL EDGAR OANttLSI WITH DINA NALPfcRNANO MAURICE COPELANDI Gcxxlman TheatreKM B.Cotumhus Drive CEhlral* 8*37jtjrfrptQptN ?>rra Kidman*** -