ITHE CHICAGO MAROONVolume 77, Number 19 Chica9° ltlinoi>' Friday, November 8, 1968 Turn the page for newsNext week Edward H. Levi will be inaugurated president of theUniversity. For some time, students have had a number of opinionsof him, most of them strong. The Maroon is compiling informationfor a special report on uThe New Administration" in next Friday'spaper. We would appreciate responses to the following questions.1. What do you think of Edward Levi?12. What do you think will be the difference between his andGeorge Beadle's administration?3. What would you like to see Levi and the administration do overthe next few years?4. What do you think Levi's attitude towards students is? Whatshould it be?Fold into eights, staple & put into Fac Ex BoxThe MaroonIda Noyes—303Faculty Exchange4 « « ♦ )JIMAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 40 cente perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.All ads must be prepaid.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 40637.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 3-0000, Ext. 3244. building in good neighborhood onUC busline, near 1C, CTA, parkand lake. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths,newly decorated kitchen, appliances,study rooms, storage, etc. Otherstudents in building. $200. Get aGroup and Move-In. 643-3445 after3 P.M.SHORT-TERM LEASE, 2 weeksfree. Nearby, economical, newlydec. unfurn. apts. 2 and 3'/i rms.$75, $89.50. Free gas and elec.Clean. Quiet. Weilliams, 6043 Wood-lawn.Girl, free rm/brd. Live 8800S, 2200E.Companion to 10 yr. old. Helen,KE 6-6112.2 Bedroom apartment to sublet E.Hyde Park near 56th and Everett.Available Nov. 15. Call HY 3-2647.HOUSE FOR SALE WORTHLESS BASTARDSLook on the bright side—two ofthese three worthless bastards willlose today.LOSTAPTS. TO SHARENeed 1 Grad. Stu. to share 3 manapt in Hy. Pk. $50/mo. Call 5-7P.M. 684-3644.Grad male share 4 bedroom apt., 2baths, repainted. $45+deposit. CallTed 643-4821 after 11 P.M. 5327Dorchester.FOR RENTRoom for female student in So.Shore reasonable—kosher kitchen.SO 8-4861 5:30-9:30.GROUP IN—Students—share thisfine 7-room (plus garage) flat inJackson Park Highlands. Well-kept 8211 Crandon. Exceptionally well-built house. Fine neighborhood.Ideal for University family. Custombuilt. 8 large rooms. 3 good-sizedbedrooms, lVi baths, full basement,gas heat. 2 natural fireplaces, 2-cargarage. $29,500 by owner. ES 5-6938.WANTEDEasel, cheap. 955-5240.Working girl wants place to stayfor 1 mo. Call NO 7-8643, room 303between 5-7 P.M. M-F, 4-10 P.M.Sun.THE HUNT! Men's Blue Topcoat. Left in SS108, Thursday, 31 Oct. $5.00 re¬ward. Call 748-2752.Green & White Woolen Girls Cap.Made in Demark. Stupendous senti¬mental value. Please call 684-6772.MUSICMusical Society Concert Wed., Nov.6 12:30 P.M. Mandel. MessiasenQuator Pour La Fin Du Temps.GOD needs an electric bass player.Rock group doing its own & otherthings. Gigs. Must be over 21. CallBob, NO 7-4700, X8382 or 493-0831.FOR SALE80" Modern Sofa; 8x15 Gold Woolcrpt; Drop Leaf Dining Table; Dan¬ish Chair; Oak Pedestal Tble; 4b"high dresser; end table. KE 6-2928after 6:00 P.M.STEREO COMPONENTS—all lead¬ing brands at discounts. A.R.,DYNA, SCOTT, FISHER, KLH.MUSICRAFT, campus rep. BobTabor 324-3005.Old Fender Guitar. Maple neck.Good cond. after 6 P.M. 768-7855.VW 1963, good cond. 684-6814. BMW 500 R51/3 Super-Cycle Perf.Cond. Call Gary 643-1145.1960 VW Bus, Rblt eng. 15,000 mi.Call Ml 3-0800, X3378 9-5.PEOPLE WANTEDStudent wife to babysit 3 da. awk. My home. 288-7317 eves.YOUNG MAN for light duties inHyde Park music 8, dance studio.Evenings, Monday-Friday, 5:30 to7:30. Phone BU 8-3500 between 2-6P.M. DISTRIBUTORSMALE OR FEMALEMust be able to make campus de¬liveries. Earn $200.00 n»r monthand more. Will not interfere withschool activity or study. Ideal forindividual, partners, or marrieds.An appointment convenient for you.PHONE 427-9350SEYMOUR KOHN 330 S. WELLSSUITE 1402 CHICAGO, ILL. ern Dance: Harper Theatre DanceFestival features PAUL TAYLORDANCE CO. Tues., Fri., Sat., Sun(Mat. 8. Eve.) $2 STUDENT DIS¬COUNT on most seats except Sat.$2 per ticket for groups of 5 stu¬dents or more on Tues.—all seatsCall Harper Th. for info. IMME¬DIATELY.Students interested in having aCap 8> Gown this year call Ext4207.Prudish young female desires ad¬venturous young male to changeTHE HUNT IS COMING! For info,on helping or joining call 955-6777. '59 PORSCHE 1600. For informa¬tion—Larry at 955-0575. Wfrelooking fortrouble.NSA speaks your languageAnd furthermore, if you are especiallyadept in a foreign language, developing “secure” communicationssystems to transmit and receive as a prerequisite to NSA interviews foremployment. Pick up a PQT Bulletin PEOPLE FOR SALEBoutique dressmaking. Vests,Slacks, alterations. 667-7255.Expert typing service. Rush Jobs.Judy 858-2544.May I do your typing? 363-1104. winter Quarter.her views. Contact Cathy 2322xRickert.Special Blackfriars' meeting onWednesday, November 6, 7 P.M. inIda Noyes Hall for all interestedin working on material for asatirical revue to be presentedthe National Security Agency is readyto give you immediate linguisticassignments or may even train youin an entirely new language.Demonstrated ability in languageresearch can lead to more complex andsophisticated duties. The systematicaccumulation of information,examination of data and preparationof special reports are important parts ofthese assignments. And scientificlinguists will find nowhere else theopportunities for practical applicationsof their craft.At NSA you will be joining an Agencyof national prominence—a uniquecivilian organization responsible for vital information.NSA offers you this opportunity tofurther broaden your knowledge ofmodern language or area studies, andto use your talents in a challengingand rewarding career while you enjoyalso the broad, liberal benefits ofFederal employment. In return, we askthat you not only know your language,but that you be flexible, naturallyinventive and intellectually curious.That’s a lot to ask.Do you fit the picture?Where to go ... what to doLanguage applicants must take theProfessional Qualification Test (PQT) at your Placement Office, the soonerthe better. It contains a brief registrationform which must be received inPrinceton, N.J. by November 22(for the December 7 test).College Relations Branch, NationalSecurity Agency, Ft. George G. Meade,Maryland 20755. Attn: M321,An equal opportunity employer M/Fnationalsecurityagency PERSONALSWatch the election results at HillelHouse beginning at 8:00 P.M.. . . but is a Bandersnatch a so¬cially acceptable creature?SKI ASPEN. 8 days, 9 meals, alltows, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec. 14.$199 . 764-6264.SOC shall save CHICAGO.Poetry and pastalakiaPoetry and popcornPoetry and pastryPoetry and peanut butterPoetry and playsThurs. 9:00, Blue Gargoyle."I cannot help but say that HueyP. Newton is the baddest mother¬fucker ever to set foot inside ofhistory." —Eldridge Cleaver.Christian Science meeting, Tues.7:15, Thorndike Hilton Chapel, allwelcome.Bored with Elections? Come toAfrica with Doc Film ... see Ha-taril, Howard Hawks' African ad¬venture-comedy-drama. TONIGHT.I want SS (Semi-starving Students)of all Political, Racial 8< SexualPersuasions to act as BusinessRepresentatives for Muddled EarthEnterprises: Generous Amusement,Some Risk (optional), High Com¬mission for Commercial Derring-Do.752-5113, Colonel Spock for inter¬view.Take the pragmatic approach—whatwould it be like if there were noBandersnatch?There will be a discussion withDr. Maurice Friedman on "TheCovenant of Peace" and JewishPacifism at Hillel House on Thurs¬day (Nov. 7) from 3:30 to 5:00P.M.Why let Daley control the air youbreathe and the water you drink?Elect V.V. Adamkus Sanitary Dis¬trict Trustee.Ken Sherman is a heavy duty curd—Margret Fleckenstein.BORIS meets BELA, in "The BlackCat" Edgar Ulmer's classic horrortale, with both Karloff and Lugosi,tomorrow at Doc Films.Dance on Snow, Ski with us atASPEN. One week—call Jean-Pierre at 324-0132.HOWARD is the RED BARON.Music Wednesdays and Fridays.Come to the Blue Gargoyle at 9:00and sing or listen.What do VOLUNTEER? do? — Al-most anything: teach Afro-Ameri¬can history, help children withlanguage disabilities and speechproblems, aid in developing musicalskills, work with retarded children,tutor in math, reading, English,spelling.VOLUNTEERS are used in hos¬pitals, to work with youths inphysical education and recreation,to chaperone trips and tours, toact as big brothers and big sis¬ters, to work in drama and theatre-'groups, and to counsel in any num¬ber of ways.Obviously the wide range of tal¬ents and skills needed is great.The call is issued to blacks andwhites, teachers, doctors, lawyers,counsellors, social workers, min¬isters, journalists, newscasters, stu¬dents, housewives. The amount oftime a volunteer can donate isflexible and the corps is equippedto match the volunteer's availabil¬ity.If you will answer this call, thecorps is located in Room 400 at123 W. Madison St. The phone num¬ber Is 372-5143. Anyone interested in participatoryart and creating an art environ¬ment for FOTA call 667-5809.Soon! Bolivian peanut soup at theBlue Gargoyle. Pester staff fordetails.Ghost free copies on copier at Uni¬versity N'tl Bank.Friday, 8:30 P.M. JACOB ANDESAU IN MIDRASH, KABBALA,AND MODERN POETRY. A StudyEvening at Hillel with Rabbis MaxD. Ticktin and Daniel I. Leifer.Its lovelier the second time around,huh, San.Trip out with MARCO POLO, 288-5944.WRITER'S WORKSHOP — PL 28377.Election Night Special, Alpha DeltaPhi, 5747 Univ. free refreshmentswhile you watch the returns on 4TVs, from 7:00—?Tired of the Streets? Vote in theBlue Gargoyle.Barb H. — you have more couragethan I do to appear in public withhim — Sis.Daley and reactionaries detestAdamkus.JONI MITCHELL will appear live,in concert at Mandel Hall, Mon.evening, Nov. 18. If you have neverheard her album on the WarnerBros. — Reprise Label, borrow itfrom a friend ("everyone in Rick¬ert has it") and listen to it 2 or 3times. Tickets go on sale Nov. 11 atthe Mandel Hall Box Office.4 TVs, 4 results, ADO, Nov. 5.Just what does everyone in Rickerthave?Persons with ideas for spontaneous,people-involving events for FOTAcall 667-5809.Who would have guessed that softdrinks come in such delightfulweird flavors. Try a few at Ah¬mad's.come share joy marsh 8< trishHow long has it been since youcould hear yourself think?The Blue Gargoyle.THINGS TO DOContact Barbara at 955-5036 andform a small seminar on MachinePolitics. Be a student or a teacher.Try a cheeseberger at the CourtHouse. Hans says they are thebest in Hyde Park, and after hav¬ing one the other night, I'm in¬clined to agree. Snack menu servedafter 9:00 P.M.See the current feature at theHyde Park Theatre. Joseph Loseydirects "Accident," starring DirkBogarde and Stanley Baker.Losey is definitely one of thegreatest living directors, and Bo¬garde one of the finest actors.Their view of modern man maynot sit well with you, but thesincerity of their vision is com¬municated with a disturbing suc¬cess.This movie Is so tightly knit, so,almost, well, perfect, that it isdifficult to discuss. Either you willlike it or you won't, depending onyour world-view, but you will beable to appreciate a work of artin either case.FOUNDA blue contact lens found on thecorner of 55th and Woodlawn onthe evening of 11/3 has been turnedover to the Maroon office for safe¬keeping.i8 The Chicago Maroon November 5, 19681. What do you think of Edward Levi?THE CHICAGO MAROONi 'Volume 77, Number 19 Chicago, Illinois, Friday, November 8, 1968 Turn the page for newsNext week Edward H. Levi will be inaugurated president of theUniversity. For some time, students have had a number of opinionsof him, most of them strong. The Maroon is compiling informationfor a special report on uThe New Administration" in next Friday'spaper. We would appreciate responses to the following questions.2.What do you think will be the difference between his andGeorge Beadle's administration?3.What would you like to see Levi and the administration do overthe next few years?4.What do you think Levi's attitude towards students is? Whatshould it be?Fold into eights, staple & put into Fac Ex BoxThe MaroonIda Noyes—303Faculty Exchange5By Sylvia PiechockaA major research effort of internationalacclaim faces extinction because of the re¬cent cut in National Science Foundation(NSF) grants. It is the cloud physics labhere which has, since its foundation in 1946,been the only University effort to centeraround field experiments in studying pro¬cesses in natural clouds.Its major strength, according to Dr. Ros-coe Braham, professor of geophysical sci¬ences, has been this dedication to first¬hand examination in an equipped airplaneas contrasted to theoretical examinationand study from models.The severity of the cutback arises fromthe fact that the expenditure level for thisfiscal year is determined on the basis ofactual money paid out during last fiscalyear.In 1967 the department had decided toreplace its seven-year old airplane with an¬ other model because there was no longera margin of safety and because researchfindings had changed the flight require¬ments considerably. In order to hold backon its expenses (so money could gotowards the newly-contracted airplane in1969), Braham and his associates decidednot to engage in field activity but rather toanalyze previous data and to refurbish old¬er equipment.Consequently, when the fiscal budget wasdetermined, it was based solely on lab ex¬penditures—a minimal sum compared tothe cost of operating and equipping an air¬plane—and the department found that ithad committed itself far above the allow¬able ceiling.The result was that all field work waspostponed as an airplaine without sufficientequipment did not justify the time and haz¬ard involved in flying it. In addition, twopost-doctoral posts, full-time jobs for an electrical staff, and all but three posts fora technical staff were cancelled. In addi¬tion, lab space for eleven graduate studentswas reduced to two, maximum money forundergraduate assistance was reducedfrom $16,000 last fiscal year to $3,000 forthis fiscal year, and all lab work was vir¬tually eliminated.This has had drastic effects, accordingto Braham, who feels that graduate trainingis the first objective research has to geartowards. The department has committed it¬self to eleven fellowships. All of them havebeen honored but through non-grant funds.“The students now have other responsi¬bilities which means they have less timeavailable for study and research,” saysBraham. “This can only lengthen time forthe completion of degree requirements.”Furthermore eight of the eleven graduatestudents had reasonably specific theses in mind which six of them had to alter alongmuch more theoretical lines.“It is much more difficult to estimate theimportance of tomorrow’s findings,” con¬tinued Braham. The only thing thpt he feelscan be done is to evaluate past work whichhas, he added, included a rather impres¬sive record of world leadership in rigorousconstruction of cloud policy experiments.Although the research has been dam¬aged “beyond repair,” Braham feels thatthe department might be able to continuework on a “survival basis” if it can,among other things, complete the analysisof its last major field project (whichalready has had a major impact onscience), operate the new airplane for atleast 50 hours, and keep its option for leas¬ing it. Dean A. Adrian Albert of the physi¬cal sciences division is helping along theselines.1. Making out yourlaundry list? 2. You?Writing a poem. Liston. “How do I lovethee, Mvrna, lot mecount the ways...”3. That’s Browi 4. That’s Omar kha\What about: “A jug otwine, a loaf of broad,And thou, Mvrna,beside me...” yyam.Then how am I goingto show Mvrna howmuch I care?5. Why don’t you see if you canland one of those great jobsEquitable is offering.The work is fascinating, thepay good, and theopportunities unlimited.All of which means you’llbe able to take care of awife, to say nothing ofkids, extremely well.“O, my Mvrna is likea red, red rose...”Make an appointment through your PlacementOfficer to see Equitable's employment represent¬ative on Nov. 20 or write: Lionel M. Stevens,'Manager, College Employment.theiequitableThe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F © Equitable 1968 ft* Take aFLYING FLINGon OZARK, that isWith Ozark’s new Weekend Unlimited fare, youcan fly to any of Ozark’s over 50 cities and backagain for just $30 plus tax ... as many cities asyou want to visit, or just one city, . . . you nameit, ... a real Flying Fling. Leave any timeSaturday, start your final flight before six P.M.the next day. So get up and go .Call your travel agent or Ozark Air Lines.go-getters goOZARKN2 PUBLIC LECTURES"Mastering Life in a ChangingWorld” Friday, November 8th, at 8 p.m."The Science of Yoga”Saturday, November 9th, at 8 p.m.by BROTHER MOKSHANANDA ofSELF-REALIZATION FELLOWSHIPfounded by Paramahansa YoganandaAuthor of “Autobiography of a Yogi"ADD A NEW DIMENSIONTO YOUR LIFEThrough simple time-tested techniquesof concentration and meditation learnhow to tap the inner soul-source of phys¬ical well-being, mental calmness, andever new joy.3 CLASSES—PRINCIPLES OF SELF-REALIZATIONSHERMAN HOUSEClark & Randolph, Chicago KaUMMUZMUiSiauta mum &azis.JUST A*4 COVER CHARGETO SEETHE FOUR SEASONSIN THE EMPIRE ROOMDURING THANKSGIVING WEEK,MON., NOV. 25th thru SAT., NOV. 30thSpend Thanksgiving at our place and we’ll giveyou plenty to be thankful for. Like our studentrates in the world-famous Empire Room, thehome of total entertainment, where you’ll see thesights and sounds of the stars. Thrill to the excitingFour Seasons . . . and dance to a sock-it-to-you rockband, too. (and your reservation is guaranteed!).SPECIAL STUDENT ROOM RATESYou’re also welcome to make The Waldorf Astoria yourvacation headquarters. We’re right in the center-of-it-allwith the right rates!Per Person: Doubles $9.50 /Triples *8Get with it. Get it all. Get it now.Call "BETTY LOU” at (212) 355-3000for guaranteed reservations.k “We know what’s happening”hgjPark Ave. between 49th & 50th Sts.New York, N.Y. 10022ASAMATTEROF^ ... some day either your family willneed money to replace your earningsor you yourself will need an incomefor retirement. Sun Life insurance canprovide both.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLU798-0470 — FR 2-2390SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAThe Chicago Maroon November 8, 1968fFund Drive Nearing $160 Millionfy Jeffrey KutaThe Campaign for Chicago has passedie $155 million mark. Gaylord Donnelley,University trustee and chairman of theiree-year drive to raise $160 million, an-Hinced this morning that the campaigntal as of October 31 was $155.4 million inifts and pledges.The current effort, largest of its kindnong American colleges and universitiesi when announced in 1965, is scheduled for1 completion December 31. Chicago will thenI undertake to raise another $200 million inrw“the remaining seven years of an overall1 ten-year program aimed at securing $3601 million. Donnelley called the campaign total “ atremendous tribute to the leadership andinspiration President Beadle has broughtto this great university” and said he ex¬pected to surpass the $160 million goal bythe end of the year.Beadle, who retires next week, praisedalumni for their support during the laststage of the campaign and noted that “theUniversity of Chicago has already sur¬passed any previous fund raising effort byany institution.” But he also pointed outthat “a staggering list of needs remains tobe met in such areas as student aid, stu¬dent housing, faculty support, and academ¬ic facilities.” Campaign sources say that, while somerestricted gifts have been made towardsprojects that were not original goals of thecampaign, the drive has failed to financesome of the University’s primary needs.Virtually no money has yet been set aside,for instance, for the proposed student vil¬lage housing complex.But they express optimism that the lastweeks of the campaign will be fruitful.Alumni, who have already contributed $32million, are expected to give even moreduring “the good months” of Novemberand December when many begin thinkingof obligations to fulfill and tax advantages.And one campaign official speaks of one or two major gifts yet to come “that we canalmost taste already.” ,Charles U. Daly, vice-president for de¬velopment and public affairs, said that thecampaign’s immediate task is to surpassthe $160 million goal by December 31 inorder to meet the full provisions of a $25million Ford Foundation matching grant,$5.5 million of which remains to be earnedby cash gifts on a three-to-one matchingbasis.Though the three-year goal may be met,fund-raising activities are not likely toslacken in the near future. According toFairfax M. Cone, chairman of the board oftrustees, the ten-year goal of $360 millionis based on “a searching analysis of theUniversity’s minimal needs in this decade.Delighted as we are at progress to date,we cannot pause in seeking support.”Beadle pointed out that private educationat Chicago and elsewhere is facing a timeof great crisis. “Costs are going up stead¬ily,” he said. “Government support hasslowed down. Private universities todayface responsibilities and challenges thatcan be met only through extraordinary ef¬forts.”And other spokesmen for the campaignfear that even further decreased govern¬ment support during Richard M. Nixon’sadministration will necessitate even great¬er private contributions than had been esti¬mated during the next several years.“But even beyond that,” he said, “pro¬jections for the ten years ahead indicatethat a huge task likes before us. Those whoare doing so much to make the currentcampaign successful also are putting downa strong foundation on which we can buildeven greater strength into the Universityunder the leadership of Edward H. Levi.”SDS ACTIVITIES: University of Chicago Guerilla Theater giving a performance on Election Day in Lincoln Park.SDS Protests on Election DayA death march, a gathering in LincolnPark, a strike and demonstrations wereelection day protests of the Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS).Their protest of the elections, which SDScharged “Offered no real choice,” beganwith a death march through the Universitycampus and south Hyde Park area. Themarch ended in front of the administrationbuilding where a satirical play, “What’sthe Party’s Line,” was given, featuring the three presidential candidates and presi¬dent-designate Edward Levi.A strike of classes was called by the na¬tional office of SDS for Tuesday; however,it was a failure here at the University ofChicago. The few students who went onstrike also went to a rally in Lincoln Parksponsored by the regional SDS. At the rallyleaflets were passed out, and extensive dis¬cussions were held. In the park were stu¬ dents from most colleges and some highschools in the Chicago area.Late in the afternoon the students leftthe park and marched to the Conrad HiltonHotel for another rally and demonstration.About 400 students participated in themarch.After the Hilton rally there was a smalldemonstration at the campaign headquar¬ters of Vice President Hubert Humphrey atState and Randolph Streets.HPADU Holds Resistance Teach-InWorkshops and a speech by StaughtonLynd are the main features of ResistanceTeach-In, scheduled for Friday evening by► the Hyde Park Anti-Draft Union (HPADU),as a prelude to the National Day of Resis¬tance on November 14. The session will be¬gin at 7:30 pm at the Blue Gargoyle (in theDisciples Church at 57th and University).Lynd, who now describes himself as “ateacher in the movement,” will close theteach-in with a speech on resistance poli-i tics at 10 p.m. Spokesmen said that Lyndwill talk about resistance not as a three-orfour-year fight with the draft, but as a wayof personal and political life. He is alsoexpected to speak on the relationship ofresistance to such events as the generalelection, the inauguration of Ed Levi andthe selective service system.Most of the session will be devoted togroup discussions rather than formalspeakers. It is intended to give people anopportunity to talk about the implicationsof resistance with other people with first¬hand experience in various aspects of theresistance movement. The speakers willpresent opposition to the draft and the waras the first step to resisting the present'establishment and building a new society.The teach-in will be opened by a mem¬ber of HPADU. Michael Presser, ’70, willthen speak on “What the Resistance Move¬ment is About,” followed by John Welch,’70, “An End to Channeling: My Decisionto Resist”, Chris Hannafan, “Why I Won’t Register”, and Rob Skeist, ’70, “A Ques¬tion of Effectiveness.” All four are Univer¬sity of Chicago students who refuse to co¬operate with the draft.At 8 pm the teach-in will divide intoworkshops concerning Vietnam, con¬scientious objection, black resistance, pris¬on life, and resistance. A break with folk¬singing and perhaps films is planned for9:30.Discussion leaders for the workshops are:• Jeff Sharlet, an interpreter fo Viet¬namese with an army intelligence unitin Viet Nam from 1965 to 1967, and founderand editor of the “Viet Nam GI” news¬paper;• Vivian Rothstein, a former studentnon-violent co-ordinating committee andJOIN community organizer who partici¬pated in the US — South Viet Nam —North Viet Nam conference in Czech¬oslovakia in September, 1967, and sub¬sequently toured North Viet Nam as theguest of its government;• Carl Zietlow, former Chicago secre¬tary for the American Friends ServiceCommittee who has done such things asliason work for a Quaker Action Groupwith the Cambodian government and Na¬tional Liberation Front representatives inThnom Penn, Cambodia;• Kerry Berland, an alumnus of theUniversity, will lead the workshop on legalaspects and political relevance of con¬scientious objection. Recognized as a CO at 18, he turned in his card last year and isnow a member of CADRE and a counsellorin the Midwest Committee for Draft Coun¬selling;• Walter Bell, a student at RooseveltContinued on Page 13 GEORGE BEADLEUniversity PresidentFaculty Housing CommitteeTo Publish Report FindingsThe committee for a Summary State¬ment of Basic Housing Gidelines, com¬posed of faculty members appointed bypresident-designate Edward H. Levi, willshortly publish its report, provided the fi¬nal draft is approved by Levi.The committee, according to the Univer¬sity of Chicago Record, was appointed “toreview and describe basic housing guide¬lines for the University. . .(and was) askedto take into account the following topics:student and faculty housing, and neighbor¬hood consideration”.Members of the committee are: JosephSchwab (Chairman), Fred Eggan, JohnHope Franklin, Philip Hauser, NormanNachtrieb, Edward W. Rosenheim, Jr., andRoger Weiss.When asked why he believed no studentswere invited to serve on this committee, Chairman Schwab answered: “Since thefunction of the committee was to reviewand describe basic guidelines, and since Isuspect that Mr. Levi is intelligent, I sus¬pect that those persons chosen as com¬mittee members were chosen because theywere qualified to do the committee’swork”.Schwab remarked parenthetically that healmost always consults a physician ratherthan a plumber when he’s sick.Concerning the Jaffe-Roger-Wertymerstudent housing committee report, Schwabsaid, “Everyone on the Schwab Committeeread it, and I thought it was an admirablereport; and I’m sure that the factual dataaffected judgments,—although the studentreport was only one of several sourceswhich affected judgments”. He added,“Those kids must have worked their headsoff on it”.November 8, 1968 The Chicago Maroonr « 4 • « i i » ♦ ♦ •*.r*Programming at IBM“It’s a mixtureof science and art!!“A lot of people have the wrong ideaabout computers,” says Earl Wilson. “Theythink the machines solve problems all bythemselves.”A programmer at IBM, Earl got a B.A. inModern Languages in June, 1967, andjoined IBM a month later. He’s now work¬ing on a teleprocessing system that willlink computerized management informa¬tion systems of several IBM divisions.“When a computer comes off an assem¬bly line,” he says, “it’s practically useless.It can’t function as a problem-solving tooluntil somebody writes a program—a setof instructions that enables the computer you have to analyze problems logicallyand objectively. But once you’ve madeyour analysis, you have to start thinkingcreatively. There’s a huge variety of waysto write a program, and the choice is upto you. There’s plenty of room for individ¬ual expression." grammer, no matter what your major. We’llstart you off with up to twenty-six weeks ofclassroom and practical training.Check with your placement officeIf you’re interested in programming atIBM, ask your placement office for moreinformation.Programmers hold a key position in thecountry’s fastest growing major industry-information processing. Business Weekreports that the computer market is nowexpanding at about 20% a year, a ratemany experts think will be sustained atleast until 1975. 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 graduateschool or military service.An Equal Opportunity Employerto do a specific job. And to do that, you’vegot to be part scientist, part artist.“Science is involved,” he says, “because You don’t need a technical degreeIf you can think logically and like to solveproblems, you could become an IBM pro¬ IBM..* The Chicago Maroon4 *. tk »*■•-•»%* „ 9tp 4 f. 4 * * .-. * - * . ' y • .*is C s ij. 1 !•;? J is* Itfive Faculty Receive 7968-69 Grants u-Five University faculty members havebeen awarded Fulbright-Hays grants forthe 1968-69 academic year by the Bureau ofEducation and Cultural Affairs of the U.S.Department of State.They are:• Zbigniew Golab, professor of Slavic ling¬uistics, who is conducting a special studyof linguistic contact between Slavic Mace¬donian and Arumanian in Yugoslav Mace-Jonia. (Arumanian is the name given toisolated dialects related to the Romanian language scattered throughout the South¬ern Balkans.)•David Klahr, assistant professor of be-navioral and information sciences in thegraduate school of business, who is lectur¬ing in management information systemsand organizational behavior at the LondonGraduate School of Business Studies inLondon, England.•Richard W. Parks, assistant professorof economics, who is lecturing in econom¬ics at the National University of Tucumanin San Miguel de Tucuman, Argentina.LStill No Election ResultsFor the second time, the results of theOctober 31 and November 1 SG elections^ffiave been delayed.The outcome was scheduled to be an¬nounced last Saturday, but the theft of theBurton-Judson ballot box necessitated 3 re-ote there. The ballot box was returned,and the revote took place on Tuesday andWednesday.The winners were than to have been an-ounced yesterday, but due to an irregu¬larity in balloting at Woodward Court, thefinal tallying was postponed again.Jonathon Dean, a law student in charge. of the elections, invalidated the resultsTV from Woodward when a complaint waslodged by several people that the ballotbox was unmanned for an hour during ascheduled voting period.Woodward residents will be able to voteagain for SG representative from the Courtbetween 5:30 and 6:30 today. The con¬tenders for the seat are Linda Killian ofthe Halloween Party and Verne Culberson,an independent,Dean stated that the final ballot countwill be made at 10 a.m. Saturday in the SGoffices in Ida Noyes. He invited all candi¬dates to send representatives to witness thetabulation. •Dr. Henry Rappaport, professor of pa¬thology, who is lecturing in pathology atthe University of Chile in Santiago, Chile.•Larry A. Sjaastad, associate professorof economics, who is lecturing in econom¬ics at the National Universities of Cuyo(Mendoza) and Tucuman, Argentina. The Fulbright Awards are made underthe Mutual Educational and Cultural Ex¬change Act of 1961. Under this Act, grantsare made annually to about 2,500 UnitedStates citizens to go abroad and about 6,000foreign nationals to come to the Unitedstates.FOTA To Hold Spring Fete“An explosion of arts within the Univer¬sity” is the proposed! theme for the 1969Festival of the Arts, scheduled for May 1-16.A list of activities, decided upon at Tues¬day’s meeting, is geared towards specificinterests of FOTA members. In its filmsection, for example, it includes plans toobtain uncut versions cf Ingmar Bergmanfilms—hopefully through the efforts of Er-land Bohlin, visiting assistant professor ofSwedish, and the Swedish embassy JeffJans, FOTA film man, is also consideringlunch-time movies and the presentation ofstudent-made films.In addition to films, FOTA has otherareas which involve student creativity. Twoof the more notable ones are the poetrysection, headed by Abbey Friedman, whichplans to sponsor student readings and thedrama division under Richard Hack which, in addition to seminars and workshops, isconsidering two original scripts for produc¬tion. Both have been written by students.Jazz and folk, classical music, and Mad¬rigals fall into additional categories. Theseare under the direction of Julie Gordon, Al¬len Chill, and Kathy Talles, respectively.Active involvement is also high on thisyear’s agenda. Spontaneous art and work¬shop activities are planned by Judy Weis-man and Steve Wilson. And to promote in¬terest in FOTA publicity chairman, DougKissel, is thinking in terms of homemadebuttons and a contest for a FOTA emblem.Peter Ratner, general chairman ofFOTA, summed up the spirit of this year’sgroup when he said:“It’s about time we can give this Uni¬versity something to remember—somethingreally big, really creative. We want toseparate FOTA from other things oncampus.” ul!Jimmy’S'9nd the University RoomL.. i- KtfMifi fXCtUSIVEtK fOR ”GARGOYLE: Stands Silent Watch over the CampusHELP KEEP OURSTREETS BEAUTIFULMAKE YOURimports, inc. NEXT CAR2235 S. MICHIGAN rWTTTTli[T| THEBOOKNOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-75I ITheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications,Also tables and charts.11 yrs. *sp. Who cares! Who’s got the Coke? Coca-Cola has therefrethjrng taste you never g6t tired of. That’s why things go.better wifb Coke; dfrer feofce, afrer CokertfANaSCKn»T$ UNLIMITED:T IN ORIGINAL NCD Prints JournalFor Division's WorkThe new collegiate division’s student ad¬visory committee has begun publishing aquarterly journal Agore.According to the publication, its name isan Homeric word meaning “public space,those places where persons are judged, notas they happen to be, but as they choose topresent themselves.”Maxine Miska and Kathy Atlass, bothstudents in the NCD do the selection, lay¬out, and copyreading. “About half of whatwas submitted for the first issue was pub¬lished,” said Miss Miska. “We are strivingfor qualty.” Any faculty or student mem¬ber of the division may submit work to thejournal by leaving it in the student advis¬ory committee box in the NCD office inCobb Hall.“We want variety & papers, criticism,satire, or poetry,” said Miss Miska. Thefirst issue contains art, a contest, photog¬raphy, poetry, prose, a Liberal Arts I lec- |ture by Michael J. Buckley, and a piece by 1James Redfield, master of the division.On the first issue’s cover is a portrait of (a Russian family; the young boy in the jcomer is Lenin. “We used it,” Miss Miska <explained, “to express the family relation- !ship of the NCD. And the innocent lookingboy in the picture later thought thoughtswhich jolted the world. Who knows whatpeople, whose thoughts appear in this jour¬nal, will also influence the world?”While Agore is aimed mainly at NCDmembers, Miss Miska thought that non¬members, especially first year students,would be interested in it, because “itshows what the NCD is, a collection ofexceptions.”Agore is free to NCD members and 50cents for nonmembers. The committee usesthe money earned from sales to help fi¬nance committee activities, which includeseminars, lectures, and dinners.k«*» Maroon — DAVID TRAVISt BOOKSTORE MANAGER: Harlan Davidson who has reorganized and vastly* improved University Bookstore.f Maroon — DAVID TRAVISCHECKING OUT: Cashiers take money from eager University buyers.What’s so special aboutBeechwood Ageing?We must be bragging too much aboutBeechwood Ageing.Because we’re starting to get someflak about it. Like, “Beechwood,Beechwood . . . big deal.” And “IfBeechwood Ageing is so hot,why don’t you tell every¬body what it is?”So we will.First, it isn’t big woodencasks that we age Budweiserin.But it is a layer of thinwood strips from the beechtree (what else?) laid downin a dense lattice on thebottom of our glass-linedbrewing tanks. This is where Budweiser.LAGER BEERW***/ and y Mbreweo and canned by^ b - ffiusd Jko ^-TABTiP’flwe let Budweiser ferment a secondtime. (Most brewers quit after onefermentation. We don’t.)These beechwood strips offer extrasurface area for tiny yeast particlesto cling to, helping clarifythe beer. And since thesestrips are also porous, theyhelp absorb beer’s natural“edge,” giving Budweiserits finished taste. Or in otherwords, “a taste, a smooth¬ness and a drinkability youwill find in no other beer atany price.”Ah yes, drinkability. That’swhat’s so special aboutBeechwood Ageing.But you know that.ROCK, FOLK, JAZZ GROUPS! Enter the ’69 Inter¬collegiate Music Festival, co-sponsored by the brewers ofBudweiser. Write: I.M.F., Box 1275, Leesburg, Fla. 32748.Budweiser.- WN6 Of . ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LQUtf . NEWABH -*-tOWMC£LES • ION *■'-* 7... ..A***_The Chicago Maroon "Saturday afternoonisn't nearly as toughas Saturday night"We keep warning you to be careful how you use Hai Karate^After Shave and Cologne. We even put instructionson self-defense in every package. But your varsitysweater and best silk ties can still get torn toshreds. That’s why you’ll want to wear our nearlyindestructible Hai Karate Lounging Jacket whenyou wear Hai Karate Regularor Oriental Lime. Just tellus your size (s,m,l) andsend one empty Hai Karatecarton, with $4 (check ormoney order), for eachHai Karate Lounging Jacketto: Hai Karate, P. O. Box 41 A,Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 10056. That way,if someone gives you someHai Karate, you can be alittle less careful how you use it.Send for your practically rip-proofHai Karate Lounging Jacket.Allow 6 weeks for delivery. Offer expires April 1,1969. If your fevorii# store Is temporarily out of H»l Kerete, keep askin(,•«>**,» >• •«*> \. ■* .1::, V. » - —-t-l* -SK-PU of C Bookstore BetterBy Sue LothReturning students who entered the Uni¬versity bookstore this fall expecting thetraditional chaos were surprised to findthat they actually could buy books withoutwaiting in long lines. What happened?Simply, new people and new ideas havebeen injected into what the Maroon lastyear called “that haven of inefficiency on58th and Ellis”. In late April, Harlan L.Davidson replaced C. F. Hughes as bookdepartment manager of the main book¬store, and general manager of the threeother University bookstores (located atJudd Hall, the graduate school of business,> and downtown).Davidson is a book man who enjoys his work. He presides over his empire from aminiscule not-quite second floor officeoverlooking shelves on the main floor.Brightening the office walls are picturescreated by Taiwan Aborigines and his fourchildren (ages 3, 4, 8 and 9), includingabstractions of “a bumblebee in a hurri¬cane” and “what it feels like to see aturkey.”As a former commuter from Westport,Connectict, to the offices of Holt, Rine¬hart, and Winston in New York, Davidsonnow views his daily drive via Dan Ryanfrom the North Shore village of Northfieldto the University campus as relativelyshort.Through his former job of college de¬ partment director of marketing, midwestregional manager with Holt, and as direc¬tor of bookstore sales and service withMcGraw Hill, Davidson has visited almostall the major campuses in the UnitedStates.Davidson has many ideas about improv¬ing the bookstore. And apparently, somehave been successful, because, as he men¬tioned, although the bookstore has doubledits business this fall, not one complaintwas filed with his office.Bernie Grofman, 1965-66 Student Govern¬ment president and graduate student in the political science department, the firstgraduate stdent to be hired by the book¬store, said that the store is now tryingharder to “keep in touch” on what booksstudents need. Store employees made hun¬dreds of calls to professors during thesummer to determine early what books t»L/0order. The result, Grofman added, wasV I“no doubt the largest selection of required | stobooks, proportionately, in the store’s his¬tory. And if you’ve been here a while, onijfinds it somewhat miraculous.”Graduate students have been hired toto categorize and reorganize titles relatingUnder New Leadershipto their own graduate division. The stopaiso now has what Grofman described asa “usable inventory system from whichcustomers may quickly find the availabil¬ity of any of the store’s 35,000 titles inr/ock.”Davidson also plans to increase the book¬store’s used book line as an added serviceto students. Because so many Universitystudents keep their textbooks from year to/ear, Davidson noted, he plans to do busi¬ness with other bookstores and used book“jobbers.”Davidson said that the bookstore giftdepartment still exists, but “has been drastically reduced in space and numberof items carried.” Grofman commentedfurther: “At least no more bras are soldin the bookstore, as they were 18 monthsago. That was our committee’s first recom¬mendation.”He was referring to a report filed lastyear, by a faculty-student fact findingcommittee headed by history professorRichard Wade recommended severalchanges for the store, including proposalsfor an inventory system, more studentemployees, and removal of the gift depart¬ment to devote more space to textbooks.The Wade committee also noted that1 ■ 1 construction of a new bookstore was“imperative.”One Wade committee recommendationunlikely to be instituted in the nearfuture is a student book discount. David¬son explained, “Most students don’t be¬lieve that bookstores really make verylittle profit. They think the store is runlike a jewelry or furniture store, withhuge percentages of profit.”He said that a survey of the National Association of College Stores showed thatalthough stores received a 20 percent dis¬count on books, their overhead averaged24 percent. Thus, Davidson added, “fora $5 textbook we pay $4 to tl\e printerand $1.20 for postage, paperwork, pro¬cessing, pricing, shelving, and inventoryon that book.” The store was operatedprimarily as a service, he said, not as amoney-making venture.Maroon — DAVID TRAVISBOOKSTORE INTERIOR: Students browse through one of the many stacks ofbooks within the store. Maroon — DAVID TRAVISINFORMATION DESK: Lack of space causes overcrowding in front of informationarea.What’s New With Mr. Lowe? iBring Mr. Lowe In andGET $1.00 OFFAny Lowe’s $3.79 or $4.59 LPLook to Lowe’s for service...selection...savings^OlD ON ALL SALE ITEMS GOOD TILL NOV. 15, 1968 . 1538 Eas; Wh St.MUseum A- ‘ 505Mon., Fri. 9:30 to 9 Sut 5Of PER CUSTOMERNovember 8, 1968 The Chicago MaroonEDITORIAL LETTERSElection ResultsFlo Ziegfeld may be dead, but his spirit lives on, gettingstronger every four years, as the United States governments addsyet another in its series of extravaganzas.They may have outdone themselves this time, though. Thepinnacle was probably reached in the attempt of a familiar per¬former to recreate his showstopping act, as 267 precincts in CookCounty coyly refused to appear. This was an amusing interlude;we must give Mr. Daley some credit for a certain amount of audacitythat shows a true disregard for what anyone else thinks.The spectacle did become a bit wearing at times, though. Manyof the things that cynically amused us were also very disturbing.We laugh at the thought of the supersonic ultraviolet incandescentcomputers helpless, not able to count, but more serious is the factthat to this hour we don’t know, probably never will know, howmany people cast their votes for Hubert, how many for our nextPresident. The breakdown of the National Election Service’s com-■ puters may delay a final tally for days, even weeks. The' ludicrousfact Is that it tfiay not be within the realm of possibility to know„ what the votes were. This may not ordinarily he so serious, but in ,a race where Mr. Nixon is currently ahead by only 26,000 out'of► 70 million votes, the problem becomes more serious.Now there is even a possibility that Humphrey may have re¬ceived more popular votes, due to votes from Alabama on thenational Democratic ticket. We wonder if Mr. Nixon recalls anoffer he made some time ago and which Mr. Humphrey refused,that the major candidates agree to turn over the victory to whom¬ever received the greatest popular vote.There is actually very little tobe gloomy about Certainlywe can look forward to anamusing four years!What the election of Richard Nixon to the Presidency meansto us, to students and the academic community is something thatno one has yet cared to think very much about. Although many ofus didn’t like admitting it, come Wednesday morning at 9:30 whenNBC declared Nixon the winner, we gulped, and felt an apprehen¬sion we might not have felt if Hubert had won. We may not havevoted for him, didn’t trust or like him, but the alternative . . . Well,like it or not, Nixon’s the one, and Spiro comes along with thepackage.But lest we become prematurely apprehensive, we should re¬member that Mr. Nixon has some special words for us, “the youngpeople.” Actually, his words were addressed to Mr. Humphrey’svolunteers, but we can assume that what’s good enough for themis good enough for us. Don’t give up, he urges us, “Go on to otherareas of public service.” Mr. Nixon is probably well aware thattheer is a sizeable group of young people who don’t intend to giveup, that will go on to other areas of public service. Of course wemay not be serving Mr. Nixon’s public, and those “other areas”may not always be aboveground. But what is not yet known iswhether our paths will cross with Mr. Nixon’s, and whether theconfrontations will be cordial.There is actually very little to be gloomy about. Certainly wecan look forward to an amusing four years; Spiro will keep thingsjumping even if the President gets bogged down with an obstinateCongress. And for those of us who were hoping that Hubert wouldwin, and put off the confrontation for another few years, it shouldbe remembered that this is exactly what it would have been: anuneasy interim, a stopgap that might not have even been able tolast. Besides, waiting around for a revolution to get ripe can beboring. Maybe in the next four years we’ll get to the point at whichsomething has to be done—or find out that there’s nothing to do.The Chicago Maroon ' November 3, 1963 U of C vs. StoneybrookThe most recent (November) issue ofScience magazine contains a four-page re¬port on the attempts by the students andfaculty of Stonybrook (SUNY) to define theobjectives of the institution and the rela¬tionships within it.Two recent events here on the UCcampus—the tent-in and the boycott of 4-5November—reflect a significant differencebetween the direction of this Universityand that of Stonybrook. Neither the tent-inor the boycott was creative in the sensethat the Stonybrook conference was; whileUC students and faculty seem content withexerting pressure against an existingstructure in order to implement theirviews, the Stonybrook community has gonemuch further and questioned the ability ofthe existing structure to express the viewsof its members.Beginning with a three-day workshopsponsored by the faculty senate and activ¬ist students, the Stonybrook communityformulated some tentative recommenda¬tions:• Abolition of university requirements:*• Creation of a liberal arts major tosupplement the more restricted depart¬mental ones; * \ '' •9 ^Jie creation of-two separate faculties,* ooe for teaching and one for research;• Promotion of professors primarily onthe basis of teaching ability;• Greater university attention to com¬munity service, and credit for such servicein faculty promotion;© A policy whereby tenure decisionsshould reflect student evaluation.Their conclusion that “the responsibilityfor all education policies lies with studentsand faculty and not with the adminis¬tration” has fantastic ramifications.These recommendations shall be re¬worked by a group of twelve men (withstudents and faculty equally represented)and a referendum shall be held in thespring with voting by both students andfaculty (on an equal basis). The facultysenate has pledged that resolutions af¬firmed in the referendum which are rele¬vant to faculty shall become part of thepolicy of the faculty senate. Further, thefaculty senate has insisted that the admin¬istration accept a serious moral responsi¬bility for the implementation of all resolu¬tions affirmed.Such action on the UC campus would re¬quire (as at Stonybrook): strong lead¬ership and support from the faculty sen¬ate; the commitment and participation ofstudent government; and most important,the participation of a significant number ofstudents (apart from SG). This last re¬quirement will be focal here at Chicago;the question is Can a significant movementand organization of students (especiallyamong the residential undergraduates)combine itself with the faculty over someTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Carolina Hack,Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaAssistant to the Editor: Howie SchamestContributing Editor: John MoscowNews Staff: Waltar Cipin, Caroline Daffron,Debby Dobish, Ann Goodman, Bruce Gres-sin, Con Hitchcock, C. D. Jaco, StephanieLowe, Chris Lyon, Bruce Norton, DavidSteele, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,David Steel#, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jean WiklerFounded 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 Hail, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service.h. >• •< i i t: i ‘Hi i > ./ii , I i i period of class days during the winterquarter to ask• What are the aims of UC (as definedby the students and faculty—not as dic¬tated by the adminitsration)?• Are the present structures,capable ofimplementing these aims? V• What must be abolished or modified• within the university in order to facilitateexpression of the accepted aims?UC has had the past reputation of beinjfan excitingly creative institution, but thatis a past reputation. It is in the interest ofall members of the University commu¬nity-faculty, students^ and adminis*tration—that the active and conscious evo¬lution be initiated which can offer hope forthe future of the school.I wish to emphasize that this evolutionmay prove to be a discontinuous one. Thatis, a serious appraisal of the widening dis¬content with the educational process in thiscountry and baroad suggests that an evolu¬tionary “jump” may be necessary in the1form of the university. Does the academiccommunity here at Chicago have the lifewithin it to respond to the challenge ofquestioning its foundations in the interest/of wh^t may finally be .a quantum-in¬crease in the energy of education? Ques¬tions such as “Should the presidents of thestudent body and vf the faculty senate**have equal status with Mr. Levi?” shouldand must be considered.Paul M. BrinidiDinner FarceNot even the crudest political caricatur¬ist could have imagined a blunter exipression of all that is rotten about theAmerican university than the one designedby whoever planned the Hilton dinner tocelebrate the inauguration of President,Levi.It would have been sufficient for such acaricaturist merely to depict the scences ofcelebration by the assembled fat cats, poli¬ticians, and other dignitaries in the midst:of the opulent (if sagging) Hilton, inter¬spersed with images displaying the mas¬sive indifference and cynicism with whichthe inauguration was greeted by the stu-\dent body and the surrounding community.A piece of guerilla theater containing suchscenes would be a neat way of symbolizingthe fact that the loyalties of the universitypresident are neither to the scholarly com-’munity, nor his students nor to the peoplewho live under the shadow of his in¬stitution—but rather to the wielders of cor¬porate wealth and political influence. But1even the blackest of humorists would havethought that the inclusion of Mayor Daleyand McGeorge Bundy as celebrants toogross a way to make his point. iAfter all, he would have reasoned, itwould hardly be credible for Mayor Daleyto be present at such an affair—not afterdozens of students at the University had^been brutalized on his orders; not whilesome of these students walk the campusstill bearing the scars of back-alley beat¬ings at the hands of the cops; not whilestudents and faculty and university em**ployees continue tc be harassed in thestreets around the campus by these samerepresentatives of the mayor; not aftermost of the major learned societies in the®nation had voted to avoid holding theirconventions in Chicago during the mayor'sterm in office; not when the intellectualcommunity of the city, the nation—indeed^the world—has come to view the man asthe latest symbol of all that they most des¬pise.As for McGeorge Bundy—equally incred¬ible. After all, he was the chief intellectualarchitect and justifier of the Vietnam war;he had three yqars ago on national TVused lies and innuendo to insult the integri¬ty of a distinguished member of the Uni<versity faculty; he had recently declaredfor a de-escalation of the war in order tobetter prolong it; he was widely seen inter¬nationally as a war criminal. *Well, now we read in the Maroon thatContinued on Page Ninei » > j - . -V » - * • ' ALETTERS TO THE EDITORContinued from Page Eightsuch crudities are, in fact actually to bestaged by the University trustees: the in¬auguration of the new president really willbe celebrated in person by the nation’srich and powerful, with Mayor^ Daley andMcGeorge Bundy (and others with similarrecords) in active attendance.It is, of course, Mr. Levi’s privilege tofeel honored by such an occasion. More-oever, if this is anyone’s university, it iscertainly his—his family has been involvedin its affairs ever since the beginning, andno one can match his intimacy with theplace over the years. So it is surely hisprerogative to hold an affair depicting withsuch clarity the institutional connectionsand loyalties of the University. (One mightonly wish that he would resolve, after thisdinner, to abandon the usual cant aboutthe “neutrality” of the University).However, it does seem necessary for thesubstantial number of members of the Uni¬versity who feel dishonored by this occa¬sion and who have loyalties quite opposedto thoee of Mr. Levi to register this fact.SD& trail for a -massive protest at the Hil¬ton is entirely right. We ought to" say, bythe most effective means possible, that weregard the social order presided over by- the men at this banquet to be intolerableand illegitimate; that we intend to continueahd Intensify the effort of end the Daleydictatorship, to stop the war in Vietnamand to make new Vietnams impossible;that we want a.society in which all mencan come to the banquet, a universitywhose president is chosen by and respon¬sible to the faculty and the students, and a“life of the mind” which does not dependfor its survival on the beneficence of fatcats, and gangsters and war criminals.Richard FlacksAssistant Professor of Sociology SG ElectionsOn October 31, and November 1, StudentGovernment (SG) held its fall quarter elec¬tion to fill freshmen class and vacantseats to the SG Assembly. The electionswere effectively not announced. If not forthe article appearing in the Maroon, Tues¬day, October 29th, nobody would haveknown about the election. No notices orsigns were evident, informing students thatthere was to be an election. No noticeswere posted informing students of the timethe elections would be held, or of the placewhere they would be held. Chalk up onepoint for SG.So the elections were conducted. ThatSaturday, however, it was disclosed thatthe ballot box at BJ was “stolen”, and thata revote would be taken Tuesday andWednesday. An article subsequently ap¬peared in the Tuesday Maroon informingstudents of this fact and announcing theschedule for the revoting at BJ. Chalk uptwo points for SG.So the elections were conducted. As be¬fore, there were no notices posted as towhere and when the ballotting would takeplace. There are two dining rooms at BJ,however, to my knowledge, only one wascovered. This meant that if a person hap¬pened to walk in sr different door when* bewent to eat, be could neither have voted-or have possibly known that an electionwas even in progress. Chalk up threepoints for SG.During the election, the “stolen” ballotbox mysteriously reappeared, still locked.Johnathan Dean, a law student in chargeof the elections, announced, however, thatonly the results of the new, ballotting wouldbe counted. Chalk up four points for SG.The result were to be announcedWednesday night. However, Thursday,Dean announced that the results will bepostponed until Saturday. It seems that aUniversity of Chicago BookstoreOn Campus -- Ellis at 58th ballot box was unmanned at WoodwardCourt during a scheduled voting period andthat several people are contesting the re¬sults. Because of this, Woodward residentsmust vote again. Chalk up five points forSG.There’s a great deal of talk on thiscampus, that students are apathetic andtake no part in student activities. SG com¬plains constantly that students never votein SG elections.Why don’t students take a part in studentpolitics? Chalk up ten points for SG!Robert Swift, 72Ombusdman?An article in the October 10 issue of theHarvard Crimson (as well as the NewYork Times) carried the story of the ap¬pointment of John Moscow as “student om¬budsman” to protect student interests inuniversity policy-making.The Crimson article went on to say:“Chicago’s ombudsman is the first at anyAmerican college said a Chicago dean af¬ter Edward H .Levi, provost of the univer¬sity announced the appointment yesterday morning.”While the appointment of an ombudsmanat Chicago is an important step forward, itis certainly not the first such appointmentat “any American college.” Two years agothe post of ombudsman was created at SanJose State College after a proposed “Bu¬reaucracy Control Board” was turneddown. It was the ombudsman, Rev J. Bent- -on White, who prevented serious violence(while promoting justice) in September1967 when black students threatened directaction unless their demands (dealing withdiscriminatory practices in housing and ex¬ploitation by the Athletic Dept.) were met.Ombudsmen at other California collegesand universities (such as San FernandoValley State) have been operating for atleast one year, and I know of one Easterncollege that appointed one this year.The action taken by Provost Levi whilenot a first, is nonetheless constructive andconsistent with progressive thinking inhigher education.Phillip WhittenPresident — Student AssociationHarvard UniversityGraduate School of Educationcontact lenses leada dean life?Contact lenses can beheaven ... or hell. Theymay be a wonder ofmodern science but justthe slightest bit of dirtunder the lens can makethem unbearable. Inorder to keep your con¬tact lenses as comforta¬ble and convenient asthey were designed to be,you have to take care ofthem.Until now you neededtwo or more separatesolutions to properly pre¬pare and maintain yourcontacts. You wouldthink that caring for con¬tacts should be as con¬venient as wearing them.It can be with Lensine.Lensine is the one lenssolution for completecontact lens care. Just adrop or two, before youinsert your lens,coats andlubricates it allowing thelens to float’more freelyin the eye's fluids. That's because Lensine is an"isotonic” solution,which means that itblends with the naturalfluids of the eye.Cleaning your contactswith Lensine retards thebuildup of foreign de¬posits on the lenses. Andsoaking your contacts inLensine between wear¬ing periods assures youof proper lens hygiene.You get a free soakingcase on the bottom ofevery bottle of Lensine.It has been demonstratedthat improper storage be-tween wearings mayresult in the growth ofbacteria on the lenses.This is a sure cause ofeye irritation and in somecases can endanger yourvision. Bacteria cannotgrow in Lensine which issterile, self-sanitizing,and antiseptic.Let your contacts be theconvenience they weremeant to be. Get someLensine, from the MurineCompany, Inc.L. nuJ in, .j• 'November 9/ 1968 .. 4 ,Th« Chicago MaroonVDear Mr. Doan:Business has cast itself in therole of the doting parent,scratching its corporate headand asking : Now where have Igone wrong? We on the otherside of the aptly-namedgeneration gap can readilyanswer your question. Thequestion we can't answer—andthe one you must answer—ismore difficult: What does, andwhat will, business do right?The image that the corporateworld has created in theacademic world is a highlynegative one. Business, whichhas sold us everything fromliving space to living bras, hasbeen unable to sell itself.Hopefully, our dialogue willhelp dispel the "businessmyth" —although all mythsare based on varying degrees•of truth.And what exactly is this image?It's that of a potential vehiclefor social change overcome byits own inertia. Business has animmense social power which isexceeded only by its inadequatesocial commitment. Thisis not to deny that many majorcorporations are involved inhealth research, agriculturalimprovement, etc. But what wequestion is whether businessis really carrying —or plans tocarry—its share of thesocial burden.A psychologist's associationtest, for instance, wouldyield such verbal gems as"business” and "air pollution.""business" and "war¬profiteering," "business" and"planned obsolescence."You yourself know only toowell the two-syllableassociative response generatedby "Dow Chemical." It is hardfor us to applaud a newmeasles vaccine juxtaposedwith such immoralities.Thus, many of the qualities weassociate with business arecontrary to our very way of life.We have awakened from thesleepy fifties and have begunto challenge both political andsocial tenets. Yet, while wequestion our involvement in amore-than-questionable war,business apparently closes itseyes and fills its wallets.This is what troubles us.As corny as it sounds, we c/ohope to change the world.Business, meanwhile, is tryingto change its image. Butin so doing, it is merelycreating a battle of antitheticalstereotypes.Thus unless it decides to giveitself—and not merely its image— a major overhaul, businesscan continue to write off agrowing segment of collegeyouth. Perhaps our dialogue willhelp give the corporate worldthe rectal kick it so desperatelyneeds.Sincerely, 'CLsStan ChessJournalism. Cornell Forget yourimage,business...OverhaulyourselfIS ANYBODY LISTENINGTO CAMPUS VIEWS?BUSINESSMEN ARE. ^Three chief executive officers— TheGoodyear Tire & Rubber Company'sChairman, Russell DeYoung, TheDow Chemical Company'sPresident, H. D. Doan, andMotorola's Chairman, Robert 1/1/.Galvin—are responding to seriousquestions and viewpoints posed bystudents about business and itsrole in our changing society . . .and from their perspective as headsof major corporations are exchang- Dear Mr. Chess:I agree with you that businesshas done a wretched job ofselling itself. We tend to feelthat our role in developing thehighest living standards in theworld is self-explanatory, anddoesn't need much selling ; andwe are so busy, and engrossed,in what we're doing that wedon't really have time to "sell''what we do. sibilities be-di^charged mosteffectively?Obviously all of society'sinstitutions must assume someshare of the burden ; there isno sole responsibility. Can youvisualize a solution in whichonly one segment of societyprovides equal opportunity forNegroes?Simple explanations of why acompany is producing a productin the national interest don'tprovide the answer to "selling"business, as we at Dow are alltoo well aware. The fact thatin the judgment of our militaryleaders the tactical use ofnapalm is effectively saving livesof our troops, and serves anindispensible need in accelerat¬ing the end of a dirty andunpopular war . . . the factthat there simply is no truth toreports of massive casualtiesamong Vietnamese women andchildren resulting from napalm. . . the fact that hundreds ofAmerican doctors who havevolunteered their services inVietnamese hospitals report nothaving a single civilian napalmburn case, all are documentedfacts blandly ignored by thosenot responsive to reason. ButI have yet to hear criticism ofnapalm from any returningcombat veteran.Doesn't this really mean thatjudgments should be made onthe basis of objective inquiryand not unfounded opinion?Honest differences will alwaysarise. But a better understand¬ing of viewpoints and motiveswill follow from objectivediscussions. Business must sell"itself", not an image of itself.It is from this perspective thatI think we should examine yourcentral question of "whetherbusiness is really carrying-orplans to carry—its share of thesocial burden."You are of course aware ofbusiness' direct involvement incontemporary communityaffairs through such programsas those dealing with hard-coreunemployment, blight-areahousing, civil rights, trafficcongestion, and pollutionproblems.To me these programsare evidence that business todayis assuming a much more activesocial role. But this does notanswer two questions funda¬mental to your inquiry: to whatextent should business —aneconomic vehicle whose primarycommitment to the communitylies in its economic functions —assume social burdens; andhow can these social respon- I believe maximum long-termprofit growth is consistentwith, and in fact cannot beachieved without, maximumservice to society. Maximumservice to society can beachieved only through maximumdevelopment of, and release of,the ability of individuals.And maximum release ofindividual abilities brings aboutmaximum profit-growth.Further, in my view, servicecannot be delivered best bydeliberately trying to be ofservice. Service can more oftenbo achieved by inairectionthan by any direct attempt tobe of service.Business does so many thingsright that I don't really see thisas an issue. We have developeda system that the rest of theworld is frantically trying tocopy. It is the worst systemgoing except for all those othersystems. Business can't doeverything for everyone, ofcourse; it wasn't designed forthat. Like all of us, it should bedoing what it does best. As aneconomic instrument, it canbest fulfill its social commitmentby excelling in that respect.Our nation is going through aperiod of transition to newpolicies and new philosophies.Your generation on the campusis doing us a real service byquestioning our assumptions, .and by making us aware ofhypocrisies and outmodedparts of our systems andinstitutions. You want to doaway with outmoded ideologies,and so do I. As new values areaccepted which emphasize therole of the individual in societytoday, and new relationshipsdevelop between the public andprivate sector of society, thenmore realistic answers will befound as to how business, inharness with government andeducation, can share the socialburden by providing real —rather than illusory—service.H. D. Doan, President,The Dow Chemical Companying views through means of acampus/corporate DialogueProgram on specific issues raisedby leading student spokesmen.Here, Stan Chess, a Journalismsenior at Cornell, is exploring issueswith Mr. Doan.In the course of the entire DialogueProgram, David M. Butler, inElectrical Engineering Program atMichigan State, also will exchangeviewpoints with Mr. Doan; as willMark Bookspan, a Chemistry majorat Ohio State, and David G. Clark,Political Science MA candidate at Stanford, with Mr. DeYoung; andsimilarly, Arthur M. Klebanoff. inLiberal Arts at Yale, and ArnoldShelby. Latin American Studiesat Tulane. with Mr. Galvin.These Dialogues will appear in thispublication, and other campusnewspapers across the country,throughout this academic year.Campus comments are invited, andshould be forwarded to Mr.DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron. Ohio.Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical,Midland, Michigan; or Mr. Galvin.Motorola, Franklin Park, Illinois,as appropriate. >,000\(copies first‘—""^printing/by ROBERT L SHORTCharlie Brown, Snoopy,Lucy, Linus, and Schroederdramatize new parables tofit our times.Cloth. $4.95 / Paper, $1.95At all bookstores-f- Harper s) Row1817 ofSki Buffs do it!•crirutg «ummm*English feather*For men who want to be where theaction is. Very schussy. Very mas¬culine. ALL-PURPOSE LOTIONS2.50. $4.00, $6 50 From the com¬plete array of ENGLISH LEATHERmen's toiletries.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietoreye examinationsfashion eyewearcontact lensesDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza 4t\♦<11Itl41200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372! TOYOTA , TEST DRIVE ONE - YOU’LL BE SWITCHED Wlttzies 2hopALL MODELS - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY “FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1 [BOB NELSON MOTORS 7722 Stony Island 374-4555 1308 EAST 53rd STREET MI 3.4020 *to The'Chicago Maroon •' November 8, 1968 - ‘IMPERFBWe have Rod McKuen’s“Lonesome Cities”For Poetry LoversWe also have I. F. Stone’sIn a Time of Torment” in stockTH£ WOK CENTERSAVING HYDE PARK PQ.R OVER 30 Y€ARSv WITH THE VERY 0EST AMD FRESHEST ’'FISH ARC SEAFOODClifton Utley Wins Alumni AwardClifton M. Utley, radio and televisionnews analyst, and “Studs” Terkel, radiopersonality and author of “Division Street,America,” will receive the 1968 Communi¬cator of the Year Award of The Universityalumni association.The award certificates will be presentedat the University’s 12th annual communi¬ cations dinner at 6 p.m. Monday, Novem¬ber 11, at the Center for Continuing Educa¬tion; This is the first year the award hasbeen given to two persons.The dinner was originally scheduled tobe held June 8, but was postponed.Guest speaker at the dinner is scheduledto be David S. Broder, political correspon¬ dent for “The Washington Post” and co¬author of “The Republican Establishment”(1967, with Stephen Hess). Broder wasawarded the 1961 Washington NewspaperGuild Award for Interperative Reporting“for his sparkling and comprehensive storydescribing how John Fiezgerald Kennedyhad the night before won the DemocraticSmith Named Psych HeadBrewster Smith, professor of psychologyat Berkeley and director of its Institute ofHuman Development, has been appointedchairman of the department of psychologyat the University. Smith, 49, is an author¬ity on social psychology and human inter¬action. His current work deals with moralorientations among student activists on theBerkeley campus. He is particularly inter¬ested in their principled moral judgmentsand efforts to esablish personal idenities.Commenting on the appointment, D. Gale Johnson, dean of the division of thesocial sciences at the University, said Mr.Smith comes to the University of Chicagowith the background of a highly successfulcareer as teacher, research scholar, andacademic administrator. We were mostfortunate that he decided to leave Califor¬nia to come.”Smith has held positions at Harvard andNew York University, and was chairmanof the department of psychology at VassarCollege from 1949 to 1952. He is the co-BULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, November 8LECTURE: "Human Gonadotropin Relasing Factors,"Dr. Horsf-Dieter Schlumberger. Max PlanckInstitute for Virus Research, Tuebingen, Ger¬many. Dora DeLee Hall, CU, 12:30 pm.LECTURE: "Black Themes and the New Criticism,"Mr. Williams, Breasted Hall, 4 pm. <*,»■LECTURE: "Chemical and Crystallographic Studiesof Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase,"Dr. Paul Wasserman, MRC Laboratory of Mole¬cular Biology, Cambridge, England. Rl 480,"4 pm.LECTURE: "Jacob and Esau in Midrash, Kabbalaand Modern Poietry," Rabbi Max D. Ticktinand Rabbi Daniel I. Leifer, Hillel Directors.Hillel House, 8:30 pm.DOC FILMS: "Alexander Nevsky" by Sergei Einstein.Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.GILBERT AND SULLIVAN OPERA: "Princess Ida,"University of Chicago Laboratory SchoolParent's Association. Mandel Hall, 1:30 and8:30 pm. CROSS-COUNTRY: Albion and Bradley Universities,Washington Park, 11 am.THEATRICAL INTERVIEWS: Hull House Theater, 2to 5 pm.FILM: "Lavender Hill Mob," Cobb Hall, 7 and 10 pm.FILM: "Big Deal on Madonna Street," Cobb Hall,8:30 pm.GILBERT AND SULLIVAN OPERA: "Princess Ida,"Mandel Hall, 1:30 and “8:30 pm.Sunday, November 10UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Reverend Wil¬liam Graham Cole, President, Lake ForestCollege. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 am.Monday, November 11Saturday, November 9 RECRUITING VISIT: Hoffmen-LaRoche, Inc., Nutley,New Jersey. All degree levels in biology,chemistry, statistics, and pharmacology. Callext. 3284.RECRUITING VISIT: United States Naval WeaponsLaboratory, Dahlgren, Virginia. Graduates atall degree levels in mathematics, physics andstatistics. Call 3284. author of Opinions and Personality and haswritten or helped to write more than 100articles, chapters, and reviews. He is for¬mer editor of the “Journal of Social Is-sue”and the “Journal of Abnormal andSocial Psychology.” He is also an adviser toa number of government agencies.As chairman, Smith succeeds EckhardH. Hess, who has been chairman of thedepartment since 1963. Hess will leave hispost to devote more time to his research at’the University.O'Connell NamedDean of students Charles O’Connell, hasbeen elected chairman of the board oftrstees of the College Entrance Exam¬ination Board for the period 1968-1970 lastweek.Dean O’Connell, who first came to theUniversity as a graduate student in 1946,has been dean of students since July 1967.He served as director of admission andaid from 1958 until then, also assuming theposition '»i assistant professorial lecturer inEnglish in 1961.The College Entrance ExaminationBoard is a non-profit association of 1207universities and associations which spon¬sors admissions testing, placement, finan¬cial aid, guidance servides,films, research,and publicationsACCUTRON••425” Waterproof,* sweepsecond hand,applied romannumeral dial.$115.00Or gainWe ll give you that guarantee when you buy an Accutron" time¬piece. It'll be accurate to within a minute a month.t An average oftwo seconds a day Other watches have their own notions about howlong a day should last. Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours and 56minutes Or make it last longer than the usual 24 hours. Accutrondoesn t believe in making time Or losing it. Just keeping it.ACCUTRON' by BULOVA r goes hm-m-m m.QaJikin ^l%-Student discount v1422 East 53rd Si. Phono. 35?-0: You don'tJustin''. nomination in Los Angeles.” Broder re¬ceived his A.B. degree from the Universityof Chicago in 1947 and his A.M. in 1951.The Communications Dinner brings to¬gether University alumni who haveachieved distinction in the communicationsfield.Since 1957, the Communicator Award hasbeen presented annually to an alumnusof the University who has made outstand¬ing contributions to the advancement ofcommunications.Previous recepients of the Communica¬tor of the Year Award include John Gun¬ther, author of the Inside books; Milton S.Mayer, writer and educator; William H.McNeill, Professor of History at the Uni¬versity of Chicago and author of The Riseof the West; Leo Rosten, writer and editor,and Ray Sherer, NBC News White Housecorrespondent.Terkel, who is also an interviewer andmoderator at Chicago radio station WFMT..was bom in New York City in 1912. He re¬ceived his Ph.B. degree from The Univer¬sity of Chicago in 1932, and his J.D. in 1934.He has conducted the program “The WaxMuseum” since 1945 and “The Studs Ter¬kel Almanac” since 1952, both on WFMT.Terkel is the author of “Giants «f Jazz”(1966) and the play “Amazing Graces,” aswell as various short stories.Receptions To Be HeldAs part of Edward H. Levi’s in¬auguration ceremonies, informal recep¬tions for students will be held nextWednesday, in order to give students anopportunity to meet the new president.The reception for students in the^ Collegewill be in Bergman gallery, on the fourthfloor of Cobb Hall, between 2 and 3 pm.Graduate division students will meet in theSouth Lounge of Reynolds Club from 3 to 4pm., and students in professional schoolswill meet between 4 and 5 pm, in the lobbyof the Social Service Administration build¬ing.co.ECT IN ORIGINAL PCfaiiO. PL 2-tM. OQ 3-9186 1340 E. S*rd ^ .v-v I, IfM ' When you come on inaVan Heusen shirt...the rest come off likea bunch of stiffs.VAN HEUSENNow from Van Heusen ... the scent of adventure ...Passport 360 ... the first to last and last and last!•• Friends! 9,,- , rewarding career- Innaering at V;address Tor417 Fifth Aveg •$heepsKin* weartuHleog^N^a vpvfc. tfajp4r* .djiryTk*OWca*wffA message for MBA’s and otherGraduate Business students fromthe multi-facetedSTANDARD OIL COMPANY (N.J.)WHERE YOUCAN HELPTO SHAPE ABETTER WORLD| Jersey ^ndard has contributed to the | The contribution of Standard Oil Corn-development of many nations by providing pany (N.J.) & its affiliates thus extendscapital and adapting modern business far beyond the basic economic function oftechniques and organization to a great supplying energy from petroleum and othervariety of cultures. products essential to modern civilization.■ The Company’s affiliates around theworld have also assisted in the establish¬ment of training centers, medical clinicsand hospitals, in the provision of adequatehousing and the building of roads. Theyhave supported local cultural efforts. Theyare active in the field of public health. Inharmony with the broad Jersey concept ofcorporate citizenship, affiliates are pur¬suing a wide variety of programs in supportof education. The Esso Education Founda¬tion has made grants of more than $24million to institutions of higher learning inthe United States. ■ Jersey seeks to exemplify both at homeand abroad the creative social awarenessexpected of a modern corporation in ful¬filling its multiple responsibilities to share¬holders, customers, employees, govern¬ment and the general public.| Isn't something like this really whatyou've been preparing for?| Make it a point to see the Jersey Stan¬dard representatives when they visit yourcampus—and talk over the various manage¬ment opportunities in our world wide familyof companies.Jersey representatives will be here onNOVEMBER 13,‘ 14STANDARD OIL COMPANY (N.J.)and affiliates Humble Oil 4 Refining Company, Enjay Chemical Company, Esso International Inc.,Esso Mathematics 4 Systems Inc.. Esso Research and Engineering Company, Esso Standard Eastern, Inc.An Equal Opportunity Employer Sheaffer’s big deal gets you through29 term papers, 3 book reports, 17 exams,52 quizzes and 6 months of homework.Sorry about that.write?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 canSHEAFFER”^ ive/co/ne Aafr &ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER OFFERSffffGREAT NEW 250AA«« Regular list pripe $2.50Ww • Full 12” carriage with Auto Return1QA■ • All repeat functions™ • Students and Faculty onlyFOR INFORMATION CALL 928-7829♦This offer good only through J & R Office Machines,authorized distributor SSB- office typewriter® division &&** **11 y//sn-i Aacr cu&a^r an*/ -ify/s/af 1541 €. MyJe Park EH. pj! 2-9255 f& appointments 4^|whatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS* TINTING • CUTTINGWAVINGRANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic SalonAIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —5700. HARPER AVENUE FAirfax'4-2007 1 Has what you need from a $10used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.CARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998 FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYDecoration Colors and Qual¬ities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.FREE DELIVERY“Worship the Lord in the Beauty of Holiness”—Psalm 29:2 RENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYfVWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY II!AS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYINCLUDES GAS, OIL, 8c INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASHr . -• y.r #:■ .« * . * - * ■ vv.■IMPERFECTFSACCSL Discusses Student VillageBy Robert SwiftThe Faculty-Student Advisory Committeeon Campus Student Life (FSACCSL) heldan open informational meeting on the pro¬posed Barnes Student Village, Thursday.Nov. 7, at 4:00 p.m. in the Reynolds ClubSouth Lounge.The meeting was conducted by NaphtaliH. Knox, Director of the Office of PhysicalPlanning and Construction of the Univer¬sity. Several representatives of the BlumCommittee were also present.Knox began the meeting by showingslides of the preliminary plans for the vil¬lage. He described the Village as being sit¬uated on land between 55th and 56thstreets running from Ingleside to Univer¬sity Avenues. Ellis Ave. would thus bemade part of the village and blocked off.The facilities, designed by New York ar¬chitect, Edward Barnes, will comprise sev¬en towers, each six stories high. Four ofthese towers will comprise a central “ur¬ban” quadrangle and have rooftop suitesand gardens.The typical floor plan calls for two suitesper floor as well as at least ten singlerooms. The singles will be 135 square feetin size, with dimensions of approximately8 feet by 16 feet.According to Knox, the “common facil¬ities” are an important part of the Villagecomplex. The commons area will comprisea cafe underneath which are provisions fora student operated Rothskeller, a book¬store, mail room, student offices, the newWHPK studios, private dining rooms, regu¬lar dining facilities and administrative of¬fices and services.Knox disclosed that present plans callfor the Village to house approximately 900students, with 516 in corridor singles, 68 incorridor doubles, 18 in three-man suitesand 160 in five-man suites. The plans alsocall for 64 apartment units, Half of whichwill be kitchen efficiency apartments. Theothers will be one bedroom Apartments.Knox stated that the bedroom apartmentscould house a married couple with a smallchild and although the efficiency apart¬ments are designed for single occupancy,there would be no restriction as to its occu¬pancy.The group was informed that the totalcost of the Village would be approximately$14.5 million with a cost per student housedof approximately $11,000. These figures in¬clude a central air conditioning unit for theVillage.Knox continually emphasized that theseare just preliminary structural plans andthat “there is nothing in the physical struc¬ture that prevents any situation that want¬ed to be changed to be changed.Several of the students present at themeeting were disenchanted with the Vil¬lage plans. Students asked if the Villagecould be made up of apartment units. Onestudent quoted a housing report that statedthat apartments would be cheaper for theUniversity to construct.Ed Turkington, director of student hous¬ing, and secretary of the Blum Committeeanswered the question, saying that a sur¬vey of the residents of the Universityapartment at 57th and Dorchester in- VILLAGE PLANS: E. L. Barnes, architects of the Student Village, submitted this scale model.dicated that 50% were dissatisfied with theconcept of apartment housing. Turkingtonsaid that the residents informed him thatthis was because there was no commonarea: they didn’t know or have any contactwith other people in the building. Turking¬ton stated that with the common area,apartments would cost much more thandormitories. Other students reacted to security mea¬sures, and specifically a concrete fencewhich is to be constructed along 55thStreet. Knox said that the fence could beeliminated.Knox added that the entire plan was go¬ing through a period of review. “There isno one kind of student and no one bestplan,” he said. “A variety of student plans are needed.”Knox concluded saying that the facilitycould be opened for the fall quarter of1971, depending on how long this period ofreview takes. Knox expects the review totake several months; * however, after re¬view by the student and faculty com¬mittees, the plan must be utlimately ap¬proved by the trustees.Dongld Levine Announces SeminarsFor Student Faculty communicationDonald N. Levine, associate professor ofsociology and social sciences and formermaster of the social sciences collegiate di¬vision, has announced the beginning of anew series of seminars entitled “CollegeForum.” This series will be held bi-weeklyon Friday afternoons, beginning later thismonth and continuing throughout the year.According to Levine, the program isaimed at all faculty members and studentsat Chicago and is designed “to to providea discussion of social and intellectual ques¬tions of general interest to the college com¬munity,” and he hoped that it would “pro¬mote communication and make for abetter informed public.”The format of each seminar will be sev¬eral presentations of different viewpointson the day’s topic, followed by questionsand discussion.Faculty members and students as well as outside speakers will participate in thepresentations, and Levine encouraged stu¬dents with ideas for topics or participants,or who wish to offer a presentation of atopic themselves to see him.The subject of the first forum will beannounced soon, and although the topics ofsubsequent seminars have not been funallydecided upon, Levine named as possiblesubjects the Barnes student village project,“Should a doctorate be required for teach¬ing at the University?” “What are the ap¬proaches to a liberal education?”, and “What is the University’s relation to thelocal community?”The idea for the series, originated a whileago by Professor Levine, was enthusiastic¬ally received by the Dean of the college,Wayne Booth. “College Forum” is beingorganized by a steering committee headedby Levine and including Joseph Schwab,Harper professor of natural sciences anda professor of education; James. M. Red-field, master of the new collegiate division,(NCD); Lois Crayder, ’69,; Michael Sor-kin, ’69, the editor of the Grey City Journal;and Mark Wener, ’70.HPADU Holds ConferenceLewontin Chosen Evolution PresidentRichard C. Lewontin has been designatedpresident-elect of the 1200-member Societyfor the Study of Evolution.Lewontin, 39 is professor of biology andassociate dean of the University’s divisionof the biological sciences and the PritzkerSchool of Medicine.The international professional societywas founded in 1939. Its membership in¬cludes geneticists, taxonomists, anthropo¬logists, biologists, paleontologists, and oth¬ers concerned with organic evolution.Earlier this year Lewontin was electedto membership in the National Academy ofSciences in recognition of his individualdistinguished and continuing achievements in original research in evolution and popu-laton genetics.Football Game Sat.The Football club of the University willtravel to Lake Forest College for its fifthand final game of the season on Saturday.Play will begin at 1:30 pm.The Maroons, who now boast a 2-2 won-and-lost record, are rated as the third bestdefensive team among the nation’s 40 clubteams. Lake Forest has yet to win a gamethis seasonThe Maroons will be without their full¬back and leading ground-gainer, TimMcGree, who suffered a broken ankle lastweek against the Marquette University. Continued from Page OneUniversity and a member of Blacks Ain’tGoing (BAG);• Carl Meyers, an induction refuser in1959 who has been imprisoned in SouthVietnam, France, and various parts of theUS for demonstrations against the makersof war policies;• Jeff Falk, formerly a University stu¬dent and now a full time CADRE worker,who is an induction refuser who handlescorrespondence with imprisoned draft re-sisters; • Bob Freeston, a former VISTA work¬er and Chicago school teacher now work¬ing full time for CADRE, refused inductionlast March and last month ws sentencedto three years in prison; and Rick Boar-man, a CADRE member and former AFSCdraft consellor who was classified a C. O.and who refused to report for alternativeservice when his job as a counsellor wasnot judged suitable civilian work “in thenational interest” will lead the workshopson resistance.ANDERSON’SBULKOIN ORIGINAL SERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY GASOLINEAT LOWEST PRICESFEATURING THEBULKO PANTRYA complete Grocery StoreOPEN 24 HOURS57th & COTTAGE GROVENovember 8, .1968M « I • t < l ' TAKCAW-YMfCHINESE-AM ERIC ANRESTAURANTHY 3-8282 Specializing inJtalian 8c American CANTONESE ANDDishes Sandwiches AMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYDelivery Service 11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUN DAYS AN D HOLI DAYS12 TO 9 P.M.OPEN 7 DAYSCarry-Outs Orders to take out1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd 1318 East 63rd MU4-I062Tto# Chicago Maroon -. .13.’ ~ *• > + * 1 !Today, there isa newcollection oflove poems andlyrics byAmerica’s mostinterestingyoungpoet. l-JVlad HatterRestaurant & CafeON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE TRACKS’&3.95—Now, at your bookstore.135,000 first printing. Enjoy your food listening to classical music — OurMenu is exquisite and reasonable • Steak burgers*French Pancakes • Hoppel Popple • Homecookeddinners • Fabulous Vala’s Ice Cream, Sodas, Pas¬tries and Coffee •1656 E. 53rd STREET 955-2229FORTRAN FOR KNUCKLEHEADSDo the FORTRAN manuals confuseyou? Do you keep generatinggarbage on the printer? To seehow simple programming can be,try "FORTRAN for Beginners" . . .Send $3.00 toThe Belmont PressPO Box 5911Minneapolis Minn. 55419keep informedRead the ISRAEL and>MIDDLE EAST NEWS'.LETTER. For info andsample copy send $| toP.O. Box 2331, Sunnyvale,Calif. 94087RANDOM HOUSEYou can now listen to ROD MCKUEN’S LONESOME CITIESon Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Records, Inc.HOW MUCH YOU MAYSAVE ON YOUR CARINSURANCE WITHSTATE FARM Never tod late-UNDERSTANDING COMESFASTER WITHCLIFF S NOTES! CAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURETRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREET 5706South University AveREYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOPOnly shop on campus6 BerbersHours 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.Appts. if desiredExt.3573Frank Spinelli OVER 175 TITLES $1 EACHAT YOUR BOOKSELLER Be Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “ Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St.SaSame Day 5 Hr. CleaningNo Extra Charge1369 E. 53rd. ST.955-3133 AtiteSvLINCOLN. NEBRASKA 68501* | ST ATE FARM| Mu'uai Automobile Insurance Company0)(icr Bloomington. Illinois Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount[1363 E. 53rd. 752-6933 Something More ■• banjos• dulcimers• guitars• instructionclass & private* harmonicasmandolins• records• song books• instrument building classes• accessoriesthe Fret shop in Sight and SoundRecordersall qualitiesand sizesKungMoecketc.5210 So. Harper HARPER COURT NO 7-106014 The Chicago Maroon^ . . November 8, 1968MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.All ads must be prepaid.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Roomj04 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. TOJ:M P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 1-0000, Ext. 3266.EARS _/Sympathetic ear. 643-7178.WANTED TO RENTFOR RENTFurnished room: 493-3328.Room for female student in So.Shore reasonable—kosher kitchen.SO 8-4861 5:30-9:30.GROUP IN—Student-share this fine7 room (plus garage) flat in Pack-son Park Highlands. Well-kept build¬ing in. good neighborhood on UCbusline, near I.C. CTA, park andlake. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, newlydecorated kitchen, appliances, studyrooms, storage, etc. Other studentsin building $200. Get a Group andMove-In. 643-3445 after 3 P.M.Girl — free rom/brd — live 8800S,2200E, companion to 10 yr. old.Helen KE 6-6112.2 Bedroom apartment to sublet E.Hyde Park near 56th and Everett.Available Nov. 15. Call HY 3-2647.Short-term lease, 2 weeks free.Nearby, economical, newly dec.unfurn. apfs. 2 8< 3'/z rms. $75 8>$89.50. Free gas and elec. Clean,quiet. Williams, 6043 Woodlawn.SHARE APARTMENTSGirl to share apt. 54th & Univ.S39/mo. Begin 12/15 or 1/1. 684-7927.Want to share an apt? $50/mo,own room, one block off campus.Call 324-5478 before 9 A.M. or keeptrying.Fern. $46. Hyde Park. 493-6147.3rd quiet male for 7 rm Hy Pkapt. $50/mo 324-7907 after 10 P.M.Need 1 grad stu. to share 3-manapt. in Hy. Pk. $50/mo. Call 5-7P.M. 684-3644.Fern R mtOwn Rm$40Cls2Cps667-4639.FOR SALEGood Used TVs reconditioned. $24.95& up. American Radio. 1300 E.53rd. 53 Kimbark Plaza.Columbia Mstrwk tape-recorder &tapes. Orig. $90. Now $45. 684-7927.Female's bike. $15 or offer. 667-4639.Cannon Guild Harpsichord; 2 yearsold, excellent condition. ContactPaula Shevick: 955-3768 or 1-219-883-1400.Old Fender Guitar. Maple neck.Good cond. after 6 P.M. 768-7855.1960 VW bus rblt. eng. 15,000 mi.Call Ml 3-0800 X3378, 9-5.Amplifiers, turnables, loud speakersIn various conditions. Used tape.All priced to walk out with. OnlyWednesday and Thursday, Nov. 13ana Nov. 14 at the Dept, of Music,soj5 University Ave., between 10:00A.M. and 4:00 P.M.HONDA 305 1965 Needs wk. $180 orbest offer. John X8535 days.typing servicesThesis typing—568-3056 eve”Term papers, Theses Typed. IBMelec. 40c/page. Mrs. Cohen 338-5242evngs.Expert Typing Service. Rush Jobs.Judy 858-2544.Way I do your typing. Call 363-1104.be trapped by Hyde Park’sfirst and finest BoutiqueTHE MOUSE TRAPjewelry, hip clothing, craftswe custom-make clothes atincredibly reasonable prices1453 E. Hyde Park Blvd.363-9215Female looking to share apt. w/grad female(s) in H.P. 448-4738.Fml trans student needs ROOMnext '/*, call JAKE 410 Ml 3-6000. TUTORSHaving trouble with German? Ex¬pert tutoring. Reasonable rate. Con¬tact 721-1138.French Tutor—Parisian—PhD Can¬didate in Rom. Lang. 3 yrs. U.S.college teaching. KE 6-4300 Apt.508 after 7:00 P.M.WANTED TO BUYUsed Stereo Speakers. PL 2-6408.LOSTGrey Kitten with brown collar11/3/68 53rd & Dorchester—RewardMl 3-1960.PEOPLE WANTEDGirl—care for blind—retarded girl15, live-in from Nov. 22nd to Nov.31st. S. Side. Helen KE 6-6112.DESPARATELY "NEEDED? UpperWallace needs one (or more) kind,understanding beautiful, tolerantfemale to occupy a male from Flint.Call if interested. Ext. 3260.YOUNG MAN for light duties inHyde Park music and dance studio.Evenings, Monday-Friday, 5:30-7:30.Phone BU 8-3500 between 2-6 P.M.Desk Clerk (male) 3 nights perweek 12:00 Midnite until 8:00 A.M.Do not apply unless you plan tostay thruout summer of '69. Apply:The Quadrangle Club, 1155 East57th Street. LIVING THEATRE? May get hereyet. Til it does, see Living Theatrethis weekend .. . . Reynolds ClubThtr. 1st UT play of season. Cost1 buck GAME THAT HAS NONAME, 8:30 nitely. •JACOB AND ESAU InTmiDRASH,KABBALA, AND MODERN POET¬RY. A Study Evening with RabbisMax D. Tickin and Daniel I. Leiferat Hillel, tonight, 8:30 P.M.EISENSTEIN meets PROKOFIEVin Alexander Nevsky—see the greatbattle on the ice. Friday night atDoc Films.Anyone interested in participatoryart and creating an art environ¬ment for FOTA call 667-5809.Hear STAUGHTON LYND "tonightat RESISTANCE TEACH-IN — 7:30Gargoyle.JON I MITCHELL LIVE AND INPERSON at Mandel Hall Nov. 18,8:30 P.M. Tickets at Mandel HallBox Office beginning Monday.At Sticks and Stones, you'll learnmore about the Ghana Dance En¬semble. Student donation $1.50. 667-5814, eve.If Tricky DickHas made you sick.See Ira peeBehind the Tree.THE GAME THAT HAS NO NAME.Reynolds Club theatre—$1THIS WEEKEND ONLY! 8:30 P.M.WAITRESS part-time. Court Houserestaurant in Harpers Court. SeeDave.DISTRIBUTORSMALE OR FEMALEMust be able to make campusdeliveries. Earn $200 per monthand more. Will not interfere withschool activity or study. Idealfor individual, partners, ormarrieds. An appointmentconvenient for youPHONE 427-9350SEYMOUR KOHN 330 S. WELLSSUITE 1402 CHICAGO, ILL. Pause in your search for Ultimatesand come to the Blue Gargoyle.Mazel, Tov, Allen. May the two ofyou be very happy together.—Mother.THINGS TO DOHear Joseph Jarman Co.—tomorrownight at Alumni Hall at Beldenand Kenmore (two blocks fromthe Fullerton "L" stop).Subscribe to the Chicago Journal¬ism Review (see ad in Personals).Insist that your local booksellersupply a browsing copy of thosebooks WRAPPED IN SARANWRAP. This obscenity (sealingbooks) must be stopped.Buy used electronic equipment andtapes at the Department of Music,5835 University Ave., on Wednesdayand Thursday, Nov. 13 and Nov. 14between 10:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.Priced cheap enough to wlk outwith.Write Mitch. LIFE WITHOUT MUSIC? Stereocomponents new 8, used at bigsavings. MUSICRAFT — CampusRep. Bob Tabor 324-3005.The Baker Street Irregulars andMARTIN YARBROUGH think JONIMITCHELL is a really fantasticsinger and guitarist.Hail to thee blithe BandersnatchBird thou never wert.a plane maybe?. . .. . . could it have been . . .Try to be hypocritical enough toreally feel bad about the election.PERSONALSThey are here, the most versatiledance troupe on the west coastof Africa. Nov. 15 and 16 at DunbarAuditorium. Call 324-7600.No thigging In the Bandersnatch. Modern Jewish authors on film.Interviews and readings of SHM-UEL JOSEF AGNON and ISSACBASHEVIS SINGER. Tuesday eve¬ning, November 12, 8:99 P.M. atHillel House. Admission free.Reprinted from Newsweek (Oct. 28,1968):IN DARKEST DALEYLAND. . . The Chicago Journalism Re¬view grew out of the complaintsof young newspapermen who holdthat the Daley city newspaperscopped out in their coverage afterthe Democratic convention . . .The (1st) issue is devoted toshort critiques of coverage of theevents at Grant and Lincoln parksby the city's four newspapers. Eachone is written by a reporter—whois unidentified—of the newspaperin question . . . The result is asweeping criticism of all four Chi¬cago papers. The Sun-times wasaccused of burying stories aboutpolice violence. The Tribune wastaken to task for reporting thatdemonstrators broke a ground-floorwindow in the Hinlton Hotel whenIn fact, the Review says, the po¬lice pushed the crowd into it. TheDaily News was criticized for re¬ printing Mayor Daley's 77-page"White Paper"—without any com¬ment at all—in the form of a pull¬out supplement designed to bemailed to out-of-towners. TheAmerican was chided for allowinga front-page interview with Chi¬cago officials to be edited by Po¬lice Chief Conlisk and his PR man.And all of the papers were deridedfor failing not only to report thatthe police smashed in windows ofcars displaying McCarthy stickers,but also for accepting the policereport later that the damage hadbeen done by "hippies."The Chicago Journalism Reviewwill be published monthly. To doits job, it needs wide-spread cir¬culation, and financial support.Send $5 for a one year subscriptionto 5000 S. Dorchester Ave., Chicago,Illinois 60615.YOGA—transcend depression, an¬xiety, ennui. Sri Nerode DO 3-0155."Someone non-descript,A Russian Swede or PoleWho brothel bound wastripped . . . regained hisbalance, lost his soul."THE GAME THAT HAS NO N*ME,This weekend only, 8:30 P.M.RC Theatre—students $1.RUSSIAN taught by native teacherrapid method. Free trial lesson.CE 6-1423, 9-5.RESISTANCE is bigger than burntdraft cards. Turn on.Escape odious landlords, room¬mates, dirty dishes, studying—cometo the Blue Gargoyle.SKI ASPEN. 8 days, 9 meals, alltows, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec.14. $199. 764-6264.SOC shall save Chicago.JONI MITCHELL wrote "BothSides Now," Judy Collins' currenthit.MARVIN FRANKEL—will I ever,see you again?HOWARD is the RED BARON.Ghost free copies on copier atUniversity N'tl Bank.John the Baptist, the Dalai Lama,John the Non-Baptist all play theGAME THAT HAS NO NAME . . .charming . . . absurd . . . tonight,Sat., and Sun. only. 8:30 RC Thea¬tre 1 buck for students.Play us a birthday tune of yourG-string, won't you Mark? Trip out with Marco Polo to thefurthest reaches. 288-5944.WRITERS' WORKSOP—PL 2-8377.Persons with ideas for spontaneouspeople-involving events for FOTAcall 667-5809.DANCE ON SNOW, SKI WITH USAT ASPEN. One week. Call Jean-Plerre at 324-0132.Picasso Fucks (in various vibrationfrequencies) are said to be aGroove; (Sorry, no unicycles, onlymotorcycles).Persian stew at Ahmad's.And some pretty strange sundaes.Eisenstein's ALEXANDER NEVSKY—the classic Russian epic withProkofiev music—at Doc Films to¬night.LOWES is having a sale on everyrecord In the store. Bring today'sMaroon ad to Lowes and get $1off any record. If you forget totake the Maroon, you'll find a pileof them at Lowes. Hurry.Who is Joni Mitchell?RESISTANCE TEACH-IN Tonight!7:30 Blue Gargoyle.Fungus Is looking for a relation¬ship 2212X.Stop singing to the cockroaches andcome sing at the Blue Gargoyle,Wednesdays and Fridays at 9:00P.M.poetry . . . drama . . . games . . .sex 1st play of the season thisweekend only . . . 8:30 P.M. RCTheatre. THE GAME THAT HASNO NAME ... $1 students.Jarman and Mitchell are coming.11/16 Ida Noyes Hall. 8:00 P.M.Their performance will be a con¬cert of total communication, amulti-media production. They're outof sight. JOSEPH JARMAN CO.We're starting a new arthropologyjournal—it's got articles like:1. Categories of Noodles among theCampbell soupkids;SEXSATIONAL? YOU BETCHA!2. Bicxjdy, Mangled Corpses amongthe Montagnard tribes:SCHOLARLY?! YOU BETCHA!3. Field Vocabulary for Work amongthe Goo Kwogs: How to find shelterfor your motorcycle. And the properlovers. For your Motorcycle. Silly?You Betcha. bottom. It only costs NOTHING If youcan prove that you're a member atthe AMATeur organization. Ourcrosshairs are breathing on yourneck.Ah-ha, Allen Woll, Guess Again.Any student interested in smallseminar on Machine Politics con¬tact Barbara, 955-5036. Also facultyto teach.Roses are Red,Violets are Blue,Nixon's the One.And Agnew's the Two.The Laughing Coyote Mountainfacility is a learning environmentfor maximal brain function towardwhole person evolution.The Adventure Trails Research andDevelopment Laboratories, Inc.,non-profit, I.R.S. tax-exempt andtax-deductible, is the administra¬tive umbrella under which eachsector of the public work is sub¬sumed. These include the BrainLaboratory, the Consciousness Lab¬oratory, and the Technological ZenRetreat and Refuge.The comprehensive facility, pur¬posefully primitive yet comfortable,is located upon the entirety of ourprivately owned 10,000-foot moun¬tain in the middle-range of theRockies, with a 50,000 square mileview of the Earth-circle, from thebirthing of sun out of the GreatCreation Plains to its dying behindthe 200 mile long granitic upthrustof the Great Divide; 10 milesnortheast of the gold mining villageof Black Hawk.November 8, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 15PEOPLE USERSWe’ve been doing so much lately to make banking at University Nationaleven more pleasant for our customers that many of them have taken toreferring to us as “people likers”.We’ve remodeled and redecorated to make our bank building more attractiveWe’ve installed a new air-conditioning and heating system and recessedfluorescent lighting to make our customers more comfortable.And we’ve added extra customer convenience with the addition of our newwalk-up window which enables us to provide bank service six days a weekfrom as early as 8:00 in the morning to 6:00 in the evening.But most important of all is something that hasn’t changed. Our officersand staff are continuing to knock themselves out to be as helpful to ourcustomers as they possibly can.If you’re not already a University National Bank customer, stop in to see us.We’d like to show you first-hand why they’re calling us the “people likers”Isn’t this another good reason for doing business with University National?Checking Accounts Business Loans Foreign ExchangeSavings Accounts Student Loans Letters of CreditCertificates of Deposit Cashiers Checks Withholding Tax DepositsSafe Deposit Boxes Money Orders 24 Hour DepositoryPersonal Loans Travelers Checks Banking By MailFree customer parkingUNIVERSITY NATIONAL RANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4-1200strength and serviceG3 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association/ Federal Reserve System16 The Chicago Maroon November 8, 1968A NUMBER OF THOUGHTS crossed my mind as Isat between the hours of seven and three transfixed bythe electoral process. Actually, I was overwhelminglybored. I thought about this for some time before arrivingat the conclusion that the election was overwhelminglyboring. In fact, it was so boring that even Walter Cron-kite wasn’t interested. It was so boring that Huntley andBrinkley were bored. It was so boring that Gore Vidal &William Buckley were bored. It was even so boring thatmy roommate, who simply likes to watch television, wasbored. Furthermore, it was so boring that I am entirelyunwilling to concede that anything at all took place onTuesday. That was another thought that crossed mymind. Maybe nothing did happen. After all, the mediadid admit cooperation and I certainly have never seenany of the candidates recently anywhere but in the tube.And it was rather brazen of them to change all theresults in the time I took to go out to dinner. (Quite adisappointment for $2.35 at that). It soon became quiteclear to me that the electronic kingmakers were basingthe entire fraud exclusively on my activities. Why else,for example, was it that the Democrats were always inthe lead on our TV while they lost consistently when Iwatched down the street? This sort of haphazard deter¬mination of the election is made all the more pre¬posterous by the fact that I am not even of voting age.The networks really did do a bad job of it. Additionand subtraction were major problems. Neither CBS nor.NBC was ever sure how many seats there were in thelouse and I can assure them that their attempts to cov¬er up by throwing out a newr figure every ten minuteswore perfectly transparent. Also, it didn’t take a math¬ematical whiz (in which category I most indubitably do:<! fall) to recognize the inherent"inconsistencies in-ved in claiming that with each new vote cast, thepercentage of total raw votes declined. And adding uphe totals of the Maine vote. I regularly got 105%. I couldbelieve it in Chicago, but Maine?However, these petty irregularities aside, the realproof of conspiracy was to be found in the oracle ma-hines. Now I am perfectly willing to grant that theseinstruments may have some considerable vatic powerut I know full well that even the most prescient Univacmust have some data to work with. So what am I tofhink when one of these machines, completely off the topof its head, with absolutely no vetes in, predicts, to with¬in one percentage point, the cutcome of the election inHawaii? Is it talking through its hat? No. The conclusionis clear—this election was programmed months ago. Theonly mishap in the entire plot occured when the Texascomputer balked at not being instructed to elect LyndonJohnson and had to be destroyed. They didn’t fool me.Not for a minute.And did Dr. Stanton and his cohorts believe that 70million people would actually get out of bed in order tovote for the candidates they had created? As far as thatis concerned, they couldn’t possibly have done a worsejob. Talk about a credibility gap. How could they imag¬ine that 70 million people could be even partially pre¬pared to acknowledge the existence of such patent fakes.I do suppose that they thought they could cloud the issueby confounding us with Hubert the Harris Lion and I willadmit to having been rather hard put at one point todistinguish between him and one of the alledged candi¬dates. But not that hard put. Its pretty easy to dis¬ The Author Bends with the Political Breezetinguish a lion. Although he did look a lot like somefellow named Dirksen who claimed to have travelledfrom the Ohio River to South Beloit defenestrating Irish¬men.Lest anyone remain unconvinced of the magnitude ofthe deception, I offer final and conclusive evi-dence-^which only my perceptive, journalisticallytrained eye has enabled me to observe. At one point,while basking in the simultaneous and synesthetic ex¬perience of two television sets, I noticed that both werebroadcasting exactly the same picture, a picture inwhich none of the candidates appeared! Voila!And, as if the injury of being duped weren’t enough, these people have added the consummate insult of ex¬plaining to us how we are being duped and then, my penfalters, telling us that its poetry! Around 2:30 in themorning when cur defenses were low and we were goodand drunk (remarkably, the drunker I got, the boringerit got) out trots the one on channel 5 with the longsideburns and says as insignificantly as possible, “its allthe willing suspension of disbelief.” Willing like hell. Theman has sideburns and he thinks he’s Coleridge. Heprobably can’t even scan Virgil. Anyway, I once wrote apaper on exactly that subject and I can tell you it’s notso.Tenants Put Landlord in Hot Waterthere WAS BUZZING in the halls of the L-shapedapartment Building at 53rd and Kenwood at sundownWednesday. For the first time in five weeks tenants weretelling one another, hot water was flowing from theirfaucets. Amazing. And what’s more, the tenants learned,fa another four or five days they would actually haveheat.The 60-some tenants who occupy the building’s 31apartments had been without heat and hot water since(October 7, and their pleas for redress had been ignoredhv their landlords.Having gained little assistance from the managementor the city fathers, last week the tenants went to the law,ar)d their current ability to take warm baths flows A lid Get Theirsdirectly from that action.The tenants first succeeded in causing the (Sty Build¬ing Department to bring suit against the landlord, direct¬ing him to repair the building or have it placed in receiv¬ership. In addition, last weekend, the tenants themsleveshired a lawyer and brought suit against their landlords.Most of their tenants withheld their November rents andpurchased a cashier’s check which they sought to givethe court as evidence of their good intentions.The suit, demanding the right to take over the buildingif repairs were not made and asking for certain punitivedamages, was signed by some three dozen tenants, manyof whom were on hand as the hearing opened at theCivic Center last Monday. For jijost fof this was their first trial, and what emerged from the modern¬istic courtroom located some 24 floors above Picasso’sfolly was right out of “Inherit the Wind.”The student’s suit was not the first item on the court’sagenda. First, a kindly looking old man in a Sears,Roe¬buck-blue suit persuaded the court to give him anothermonth to pay the mortgage on his 480 acres of farmland. He would sell his livestock, he said, but pleasedon’t take the farm. Then, a pair of lawyers debatedwhether the deposed, or “allegedly deposed” minister ofsome sort of African evangelical congregation should beenjoined from spending church funds pending settlementof his employment status. As a spectator conjured up im-nc>. .„.V. Continued on Page ThgeeTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number Seven November 8,1968Do You Recall an Election?The FourthChicago Internationalfim festivalnov. 9Saturday The young film-makers havesomething to say' Their new ap^proach. developing technicalskills and areas of concern arecomprehensively displayed in thisscreening of the finalists in ourInternational Student Film Com¬petition.All tickets for this program. S1.5C1-4 pm 9 pm Opening Night: Special tribute presentation andappearance of Mr Mervyn LeRoy— America's great producer/di¬rector. Highlights from the filmclassics of Mr LeRoy will beshown including: Little Caesar.I Am A Fugitive From A ChainGang. The Wizard of Oi. ThirtySeconds Over Tokyo. Quo Vadis.Mister Roberts, and GypsyBlack Tie $15 per personReception to follow The Museum of Contemporary ArtFor Festival Guests attendingGala Opening NightBlack Tie12 MidnightStudent Films, Pert One An Evening withMervyn LeRoy Reception forMr. Mervyn LeRoy playboy theaternovember 9-17nov. 10Sunday1-4 pmStudent Films, Part Two Second section of the finalists inthe International Student FilmCompetition.All tickets for this program. $1.507pmCaneda: Part 1A four part tribute to 30 years'extraordinary work of the Canadian National Film Board. "The Films of McLaren"Norman McLaren's experimentalproductions have gamed himworld wide fame He is a visionary poet, master of technique,and creative animator Among hisaward winning films which win beshown Neighbours. 1952 Oscarwinner; Blmkity Blank, winner atCannes, and his latest masterpiece. Pas de DeuxTickets: $2 50 per program/$6for Series 9:30 pmCanada: Part 2A four part tribute to 30 years'extraordinary work of the Canadian National Film Board “lipiriwntil FHmt"Twelve films selected from thebest of the experimental productions of Canadian film makersIncluded are prize winning animated, op. and "non filmed" produe tions covering experiment*tion m film over the past 20years •Tickets $2 50 per program/$6for Series.nov. 11monday3pmComa L'Amora(Like Love)Italy B/W 90 Min. In an attempt to salvage their re¬lationship. a photographer basedin London and an actress workingin Rome return to Positano,where, two years earlier, theybegan playing the game of loveNow. there is a growing aware¬ness that the game of love, onceplayed, cannot be repeated. Before they are again united—in anew relationship — a tense andlonely separation must be experier>ced. Sensitive direction andexcellent performances. (U S.Premiere/Berlin Festival Winner)Director: Enzo MuziiCast: Alfred Lynch, AnnamariaGuarnieri 5pmCanada: Part 3A four-part tribute to 30 years'extraordinary work of the Canadian National Film Board “Clnbma VArttA"Three films selected for their excellent semi-documentary valuesNever A Bark ward StepNotes tor a Film About Donna andGailThe House That Jack BuiltTickets: $2 50 per program/$6for Senes7pmCanada: Part 4A four-part tribute to 30 years'extraordinary work of the Canadian National Film Board “tost of ttw NationalFilm Board"Demonstrating the diversity andcreative immensity of the Canadian National Film Board—elevenfilms, including Universe, winnerOf 23 international awards 60Cycles, winner at the MoscowFestival, and The Great Toy Robbery. the hilarious spoof of thewestern filmTickets $2 50 per program/$6for Series 9:30 pmTht Days of MatthowPoland B/W 80 MinMatthew lives in a solitary placein the forest with Olga, his sister, who takes care of him He is *mature man, but he is helplesslike a child lonely and alienated He endeavors to take upwork and establish contact withothers, but all his attempts fadWhen Jan. a stranger, enterstheir home. Matthew knows ie isabout to lose h»s sister, and n« ,sforced to take his first totallyindependent action DirectorLeszczynski. thirty four year oldgraduate of the Lodz Film School,has created a touching and <tramatic first feature(U S Premiere/Cannes Festival)Director: Witold Leszczynsk.nov. 12tuesday12 NoonEducational FilmFinalists Screening the finalists in the Educational Film Category, includingspecific and general subjectfilms, and animated educationalfilms.Tickets complimentary by reservation.3pmOsadlockHungary B/W 89 Min.It is the early fifties — VinceBognar. like most of the Hungar tan people, is depressed His daysare spent at the factory, hisnights passed in the company ofdrinking mates or street walkersHe becomes more hopeful whenhe meets Gabi. a sensitive divorcee But their happiness, at best,is turbulent They must deal withFeri, her former love, who hasbeen scarred by years of politicalimprisonment Vince realizes thathe must fight for his loveA well performed and well motivjted love triangle tragedy (U SPremiere/London Film Festival)Director: Tamas RenyiCast. Gabor Koncz. Mari Torocski,1st van Deg i 7:30 pmSeated at His Right(Seduto Alla Sua Destra)Italy Color 95 MinA tautly dramatic and violent film involving the head of a nationalmovement for independence inan emerging African countryLalubi, the idealistic Africanleader, is played by the fine Amer•can actor, Woody Strode He isbetrayed by a traitor who givesinformation to the national powerforce this leads to Lalubi'sarrest and tortureValerio Zurlim, an intense andwell qualified director of theyoung Italian school, has poisedthis gripping encounter with greatcare and constructed it with thekeenest psychological insight(U S. Premiere/Cannes Festival)Director Valerio Zurtini 9:30 pmInnocwncw UnprotectedYugoslavia Color/BW 80 MinThis film is an old movie, and itIs a brand new movie; it is black and white, but there is colot itis a documentary, but it does notseem factual; it is bizarre comedy. yet what we see is not funnyInnocence Unprotected **•> afilm made by and starring an e*traordmary Serbian acrobatnamed Dragoiiub Aleks. Thatfilm has been re prepared ornamented, and lengthened creat nga peculiar cinematic time machine The film, like the man whoc reefed it originally, almost seemsto be hanging by its teeth, shotfrom a cannon, and run over bya car It is strange and unforgettable (U S Premiere/Berlin Festival Prize)Director Pusan Makeveievnov. 13wedn’day The most exciting and ambitiousfilms produced for industry —screening of the finalists of theIndustrial Film Category.Tickets complimentary by reservation.12 NoonIndustrial Film Finalists 3pmNo VlatnamaaaEvar Callad Mo NlggarUnited States B/W 85 Min The title comes from one of theslogans of the black anti warmovement in America In thefilm, three black veterans of thewar in Vietnam discuss their militant opposition to the war andtell of their experiences The mostpowerful section deals with ttieblack veterans' feelings upon returning to racist America, as theysee it.A sustained outcry against thewar and the effect it is having onthe lives of the black American.(New York Film Festival)Director: David Loeb Weiss 7:30 pmMartyr* of LoveCzechoslovakia B/W 73 MinA fantasy/trilogy^by the NewWave Czech director. Jan Nemec.There is the clerk, caught be tween two generations, who experiences erotic inhibitions, themaid, who dreams a sentimentaland romantic fantasy, and theorphan, trying to fit into a slightlysour and decrepit society Allthree are timid, sentimental, andcomic misfits, and all three aremartyrs.At the end of the film, you realize that this poetic fantasy, inwhich Nemec has whimsicallycaricatured our society, is sigmficant to a whole generation. (U S.Premiere)Director: Jan NemecCast. Petr Kopriva, Hana Kuberova, Josef Koneck 9:30 pmThe Emperor andthe GeneralJ»pan B/W 158 Mm One minute and forty secondspast midnight. August 14. 1941)A meeting is being held in the a»rraid shelter below the JapaneseImperial Palace Atomic bombshave been dropped on Hiroshimaand Nagasaki The end is in sightThe next 24 hours will be Japir smost critical.This film is an epic semi -doc umentary of the twenty four hoursthat sealed the fate of a nation itstars Toshiro Mifune, the leadingJapanese actor and was scriptedby Shinobu Hashimoto whosefamous screenplay, The SevenSamurai, was directed by *urosawa (U S Premiere)Director: Kihachi Okamotonov. 14thursdayipHuntary 8/W 74 Mn. Seeking shelter from a storm, ayoung man spends the night in anisolated cottage on Lake Balaton.His imagination begins to runwild producing vivid scenes re¬membered from his adolescencemixed with fantasies of youth. Hischildhood, his rebellions againsthis parents, his first love—all areseen in Fellini-i»ke flashbacks. PalSander, the director, hae a pri¬mary interest in childhood mem¬ories and the world bf thedtolescent. A more beautiful por¬trait of these worlds cannot beimagined. (U.t. Premiere)Director: Pal BandarCast: Gabor Ferenczi, ftalaisTardi, Miklos Szurdi •P* The first presentation of this pro¬gram received excellent responselast year In '68 we see an entirelynew program of the most excit¬ing examples of this evocativecinema-form: the art of the movietitle.Sal Bass, USAMaurice Binder, EnglandFrancois Trauffaut. FranceAll tickets for this program: $1.50TIib Crwte BbbwCanada Qatar M MinThe "game" it Ufa ... Vie rulesare Ernie’s and Ernie is weird.Ernie is also funny, tragic, alien ated. and cool All of whichmakes this engaging movie acomedy, a love story and a tragedy Ernie's rejection, or imagined rejection, drives him to fantastic schemes usually with tragicconsequences.Don Owen, thirty five year olddirector of this National FilmBoard/Canadian BroadcastingCompany co-production, has wonover a dozen film awerdt for Meprevious work, Nobody WavedGoodbye (U S Premierey Bart*Film Festive*)Director: Don OwenCast: Atoxk Kenner, Judith Boult,Jackie Burroughs A gripping and tense adventureof the six day war between theJews and the Arabs, but it is aninsult to simply label this a ''w*r'picture The director, Un Zoharhas given us e genuinely "Israeli"picture which not only conveysthe pulsating atmosphere of thecountry, but also the vital, warmlyfunny and loving nature ef • heIsraeli people The pholograpnywdh 4b Owing pace end abruptscene cutting and me MRhscene reproducing Me epic ta«*battle of the war, are certainlyworth toeingDirector Un 1ahertekerwm Geen*MM MMer***nov. 15frfday Screening tha finalists of the Television Production Category, plusa selection of the best Interna¬tional and United States Theatri¬cal and Television Commercials.Tickets complimentary by reser¬vation.•pasYugoslavia B/W 90 Min. Ivo Bajsic finishes his drink atthe bar on the roof of Zagreb'stallest skyscraper. Then he jumpsto his deathA most exciting psychologicalfilm, PROTEST begins with estartling effect and with each suc¬ceeding scene, the excitementmounts. Bekim Fehmiu, Yugosla¬via's outstanding young actor,plays Bajsic, a man who experiences continual conflict becausehe cannot stand the injustice ofsociety. His "protest'' against ar¬tificiality brings about his suicidalend. (U S. Premiere)Director: Fadil MadzicCast: Bekim Fehmiu, llija Dzuvai-ekovski, Nada Subotic mi W «> Min.A contemporary love story abouta young soldier and his girl, Jane.She comes to see Standa at aneir base just as his unit is alerted end he is forbidden to leave thebase area They will be saparetedfor a least a year. Defying militaryregulations, with the help of anunderstanding squadron leaderend the men of the base, Janespends the night with St at 4a inthe barracks.Director Brynych is one <jf themoat important young Czech fHm-makers; his leaf film, THE FIFTHHORSEMAN IS FEAR, receivedcritical acclaim end numerateprizes. (U S Premiere)Director: Zbynek Brynych(NOTE: This performance is abenefit for the American FieldService. For ticket informationcell: FR 2-4830) A camp retrospective of "B" qual¬ity Mm from the thirties' Our Feature Attraction The kingof the Chinese detectives supersleuths the mysterious murder o'a young millionaire who freaxsout at a seance.Extra Added Attractien ChapterEight: The Weird, WhisperingShadow with Deia Lugo-Even More Extra Added Our annual "Six Weeks Too Soon Newrear s Eve Celebration" plus surprteos like cortoone. dishes, hatsA hems!!!nov. 16Saturday Part oneAn exciting program of the bestof our entries, including ShortSubjects from Canada. France,Switzerland, Scotland, Yugoslavia,Italy, England, Australia and theUnited States.All tickets for this program: $2.50 Presenting the Festival AwardWinners in the Feature Film Cat¬egory, Short Subject Film, Tele¬vision Commercial and StudentFilm Competitions.All tickets: $3.75 Presenting the Festival AwardWinners in the Feature Film Cat¬egory, Short Subject Film, Tele¬vision Commercial and StudentFilm Competitions.(Identical Program to 6:30 pmshowing.)All tickets: $3.75 at Marina City —McFetridge Hall z'"Black TieDonation: $35 per couple.Call Mi 2-3348 for information.v /2pmInternational ShortSubject Competition, •:30 pm 9:30 pmBeet of The Festival Best of Tha Fssttval 10:30 pmTha Film Fas tival Ball To Bo Announced12 MIDNIGHTnov. 17Sunday1 pm Chicago's Gerald Temaner andGordon Quinn display their de¬veloping film-making method,cinematic social inquiry, In twonew films . . .Tht Inquiring Hunt — en experi¬ment in the filmed interviewform.Thumbs Down—chronicle of ateen-age group's planning o< ananti war Mass. Second Section ot the best ShortSubject films from Cenada,France, Switzerland. Sweden,Scotland, Yugoslavia, Italy, Eng.land, Australia and the UnitedStates, in en exciting presen¬tation.All tickets for this program: $2.50 Screening ot the entries in ourspecial competition The NotionalAnthom o Contemporary Visualiiabon and "Special" IndustrialFilms of 1968 •All tickets for this program: $1.50 Presenting the Festival AwardWinners in the Feature Film Cat¬egory, Short Subject Film, Tele¬vision Commercial end StudentFilm Competitions.Awards Presentations.All tickets: $3.75 The End4pm 7pm 9pm“Cinematic SocialInquiry”—Tha Molhod ofTemonor/Quinn International ShortSubject Competition, “The Special Film” Beet of The Fee tivalEach Program (unless indicated) $2.50Canada Serlee (4 Parts) $6 00Students (With current 1.0.) and Senior Citltona (Over 65)- All regular Feature Film Programs- $1.50Student Paea (All events except: Opening Night, Ball. Best of Festival) $30.00Early Feature Pass (Any three “3 pm’s") $5.00 Playboy Theatrs Fostlval Box Office opens 5:00 p.m. Friday, November 11204 North DearbornTickat Rasarvatlons A Program Information: 944-3434 (5 -10 pm Daily)Chicago International Film Faatival Headquarter*: Mi 2-3111information on Group Ratos: Mi 2 3348 No mail orders.Each featurs film program begins with tha screening of aNational Anthem film entry, a finalist from theTelevision Commercial Competition end a Short Subject.The Chicago International Film Festival la a non-profit cultural enterpriseAll program* and order ol films aub)ect to change without notice.2 The Grey City Journal November 8, 1968Odium VHot Water Flows After Pipe UpJudge Warned66Get that job done fastThey need heat”Continued from Page Oneages of some South Side Father Divine buying baubleswith cash wrung from hard pressed disciples of his holyroller sect, the judge decided to stay this particular man-of-Gcd from writing any more checks.There may be eight million such stories in the nakedcity', but this sort of human drama only primed the stu¬dents for the main event, Black et al vs. Drovers Trust.The students had subpoenaed a variety of workmen,and as they watched, their lawyer, Perry, oops, NormanLewis cross examined them, seeking to demonstrate thatthe landlords had taken their time in launching andworking on repairs to the boiler. One tenant, a graduatestudent (of course) had compiled a day-by-day dossier ofthe comments mads by management regarding the stat¬us of the repair work. Another tenant told of her illtreatment in earlier times at the hands of the manage¬ment.Then, for those with harder hearts, Lawyer Lewistrotted out the piece de resisance, a 75 year old tenantlady, living on social security, just recovered from athree week hospital confinement for arthritis. Yes, thelady said, she could ill afford to keep her oven runningall day to heat her apartment, but to do otherwise wouldallow the level of dampness to rise in her apartment andthis would inflame her arthritis to the critical point.Counsel for the defense could say little. He continuallyassured the court that the landlords were using all delib¬erate speed in repairing the boiler. The defendant, Mr.Levenstein, who with his brother Mr. Livingstone, ownsthe building, sat impassively through most of the pro¬ceedings, though at one point, he threatened to punchLawyer Lewis in the nose.The defense counsel committed his client to agree toadd overtime shifts to speed the repair work. But few were impressed; like Hamilton Burger, Mr. Lewissohn ofthe defense could win few friends in that court. Thejudge ended Monday’s session by warning the landlord,“You better get that job done fast. There are youngstersgoing to school in that building and elderly women witharthritis. They need heat.”When the case resumed Wednesday, the two sidesagreed to accept a guarantee that the hot water wouldbe resumed by Wednesday at 6 p.m. and the heat thefollowing Monday. With that agreement, the emergencystatus of the suit—which allowed it to be rapidly placedon the court schedule—was removed. The suit will becontinued next week, however, as the plaintiffs presstheir demands for some sort of financial redress.The resumption of hot water and the impending resto¬ration of heat, most tenants agreed, was a direct resultof their suit, not a natural result of the pace of repairwork. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ So hot water is restored, heat is coming, and nextweek the courts may decide to award the students somedamages. Whatever the eventual outcome of the suit, thetenants feel they have already won something of a moralvictory. Their law suit brought them heat sooner and itmade their landlords squirm a bit, a rare feeling forrentiers operating in the tight sellers market for livingquarters around the University of Chicago. PerhapsMssrs. Levenstein and Livingstone will work more rapid¬ly when repairs are needed in the future. Perhaps otherlandlords, and other tenants will notice the actions takenby the residents of 53rd and Kenwood.Now, tenants in that building are able to take showersin their own apartments and when they do, they maywell be humming “solidarity forever.”David P. GlickFilmsFox Lionizes Hepburn’s Winter RoarsTHE LION IN WINTER is part cf the continuoussearch to create a contemporary epic. Like most modernepics that decide not to use the present day as their formof reference, The Lien In Winter is set in a historicaltime that is far enough back that we really don’t knowmuch about it, this time England circa 1183. (The factthat the playwright James Goldman is an American isnot so surprising when one learns that he went to UC.Apparently he took the idea cf a direct continuity inWestern Civilization seriously.) Also Goldman makes anattempt to have the past time appear at once real and atheart modern. In this respec he is far more successfulthan the director of the film, Anthony Harvey. Gold¬man’s success is mainly his skill with language (it isalso relevant that he was originally a musician). Besideswriting remarkably crisp dialogue, Goldman has a knackof making words sound at once real and archaic. Everyonce in a while he slips — “I’m like the wcrld; you can’tget around me,” for example — but these slips are in¬frequent. Harvey, on the other hand, depends upon propsand costumes. He seems to be trying to look like Falstaffand ending up like Tom Jones.When plays are filmed they either are totally violatedso that we get a director’s vision somewhat complicatedby a property or we get a rather impersonal photograph¬ing of another work, generally resulting in schizophrenicart. There are exceptions to this, but The Lion In Winteris not one of them. It is the kind of film about which thefirst thing one talks is the script. Goldman’s script, then,should be considered by itself. He does a damned goodjob of a nearly impossible task. Any time anybody brings up this period of English history we immediately startthinking of Shakespeare’s history p’.ays. Goldmancouldn’t keep me from thinking about Shakespeare en¬tirely, but there was much less time I was thinkingabout Goldman’s Henry II then about Shakespeare’s suc¬cessors. What Goldman has done is to make this a fami¬ly story. There is Henry the King who has made a politi¬cal marriage to Eleanor of Aquataine and had four sons.The first, the rightful heir, died leaving in question whowill inherit the throne. It would be no problem exceptthat the marriage had love, too, which has now beenperverted into politics: Eleanor and Henry are two beau¬tiful fighters.The problem, with, this script is that somehow the twothings — the epic quality and style — and the familystruggle which is really the heart of the work — neverquite come into proper resolution. This is partly, I think,due to the fact that Goldman in his attempt to be mod¬ern and relevant has failed to come to grips with theromanticism that is at the core of his dual conception. Itis also partly due to the fact that Goldman never estab¬lishes for the film what people he is talking about. It wasnot until after the film was over that I was able todiscover that the virile homosexual who had dominatedthe struggle for the throne was Richard the Lionhearted.It is a fascinating conception of Richard but it is difficultfor those of us who don’t know that Richard was the sonof Henry and Eleanor to understand this variation on ahistorical figure when we don’t have the original themeto begin with. Goldman never even tells us who gets thethrone in the end. Anthony Harvey’s direction is basically competent andnot very interesting. He has given us a good reading of aplay which was not so very difficult an interpretive prob¬lem to begin with.The acting, however, is worth the price of admission.Katherine Hepburn is Katherine Hepburn. Any womanwho could make moments of Guess Who’s Coming toDinner seem good could never do wrong with a role likethis one. Henry is the kind of part that Peter O’Toole isbest at and O’Toole at his best is quite fine indeed.Timothy Dalton’s Philip of France is wonderful to look atand to listen to. John Castle and Anthony Hopkins aremore than goed. Only Jane Merrow’s Alais, the mistressof Henry, is disappointing. She is beautiful and charmingbut no match for Hepburn’s vigor. Alais comas off asrather weak, a conception that seems to be as muchHarvey’s fault as Miss Merrow’s since he always favorsHepburn in his shots. Otherwise Harvey’s direction ofactors is excellent. He has not capitulated to the recenttendency to shoot everything in close-up. Stage actorsget much of their power from the way they stand and wemust be able to see this.All in all, The Lion In Winter comes off as an enjoy¬able if somewhat insignificant film. There is one thingwhich would improve it greatly — an intermission. Thescript has obviously followed the play both in structureand in length. For God’s sake man, if you’re going togive us a curtain line let us have a curtain.T. C. FoxLyric onTHE LYRIC OPERA’S fifth production this season, Ver¬di’s Un Ballo en Maschera is surely welcome back in therepertory, Although it is easy to become fond of it, Ballois one of those almost-but-not-quite operas that stay onthe fringes of popularity without ever becoming morethan an esoteric rarity. There are good reasons forthis—Ballo is a hodge-podge if ever there was one, aspectacularly absurd plot with just enough of the strong Musicin Mascheracharacters and situations for which Verdi wrote his mosttelling music. There are ups and downs in commu¬nicativeness: Renato and his unfaithful, guilt-ridden wifeare powerfully delineated all right, but the music as¬signed to Riccardo (the tenor about whom the plot re¬volves) is graceful rather than compelling. Then thereare the trimmings—a sorceress, an amorphous pack ofconspirators, and one of those offensively cute sopranoNovember 8, 1968 Productionpages, all dragged in from Les Huguenots or thereabout.But if the opera is uneven it can nearly always be fun,provided it gets the right kind of affectionate treatment.The first act, especially, needs all the vocal brillianceand directorial zip it can get. It was here that the LyricOpera’s Ballo was weakest Saturday night. Nino San-zogno, who conducted Norma and Falstaff so ably,Continued on Page FiveThe Grey City Journal 3“A real Yummy movie-movie. A ball from beginning to end.”—Judith Crist, NBC-TV & New York Magazine“A satiric arid devastating put-on of Hollywood. One of the year’smost intriguing and baffling movies.” -Joseph Gelmis, Newsday“The Legend of Lylah Clare is a takeoff so faithful in spirit that it isalmost indistinguishable from its model .'-Renata Adler, New York Times“Lurid fantasy with its thundering parodies of themarquee names of the 30’s will be food for themovie nut.” -Kathleen Carroll, Daily News..METRO GOUDWYN MAYER PRESENTS AN ASSOCIATES AND ALDRICH COMfWY PRODUCTION•*Tl.e LEGEND ot LYLAH CLARE**KIM NOVAK-PETER FINCH ERNEST BORGNINEMILTON SEIZER ■ R0SS6LLA FALK GABRIELE TINTI • w'InTIna cowtsf itt meriwuher«.crm hkowniHUGO BUTLER-.JEAN ROUVEROL- ROBERTALDRICH mhrocoiok i ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!STATE LAKEabc GREAT STATES THEATER MGM .Best'Live-ActionShort['SiRiect! aceIL«UMBIA PICTURES RELEASEssHot Millions95Opening November 15A Wild Western Comedy!IBS SEATS &HB LIFE OFSNEAKY PITCHstarring Jerry Harperwith Win StrackeGoodmanThea+re200 S, Columbus Dr,CE t-2337 FoodDrinkPeople311 E. 23rd Street2 blocks W ol McCormick Place-Telephone 225 6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400 ,.JJ&mcr’oMUSICRAFTSPECIAL .. --- •• - •*1 ly*. w i$ 39 X-4C2-speaker2-wayloudspeaker system$57.00 Here’s the exciting new JensenX-40, .ultra-compact loudspeakersystem. Physical dimensions: <)necubic foot. Sound dimensions:It’s way ahead of anything elsein its class. Jensen engineers havecreated this big-system soundwith an 8-inch, long travelI' IT.XAIR" woofer and a 3-inchdirect radiator tweeter housed ina fine oiled walnut cabinet. Thiscompelling model has a high fre¬quency balance control. And is atwo-way system that covers the-complete audio range from 30 to16,000 cycles. That’s a lot of soundbetween anyone's bookends.SPECIFICATIONSComponents: An 8-mcH long-travel, low resonance FLEXAIR® woofer with6.8 oz. DP Alnicc-5 magnet and a 3-inch direct rodiator tweeter. FrequencyRange: 30-16,000 cps. Crossover Frequency: 2,000 cps. Power Rating:25 watts. Impedance: 8 ohms. Controls: high-frequency balance control.Dimensions: lO’/i" H.; 19*/*" W.; 9" D. Shipping Weight: 24 lbs.ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak $t.--DE 7-4150 ^/*/# IIA It /t SMTT~ 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500AUuiOtaftThe Grey City Journal November 8, 1968 IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsCohn A StemaTount Sc (ftampuaShop TCOSljrnng ^Bob NewhartMetrocolor PLAYBOYTHE AT E R V1204 N DEARBORN . PHONE 944 3434The Powderhorn by LakelandSelected for wear by the U.S. Olympic team.Double wool outershell, Acrilan pile lining, zipoff hood. Bottle green or luggage tan, $60.YOU MAY WIN THIS JACKET. Register with usduring Lakeland week, ending Nov. 16. No pur¬chase necessary.Metro Goldwyn M.iyerpresentsA Mildred FreedAlbert ProductionM nrIII,:Peter UstinovMaggie SmithKarl Malden ,. 4* lA perfectlydelightfulcouple...outwit acomputerof millions!TODAYTell’em Lylah’s coming,as soon as she gets her harness on!JensenSpeakerSpecial 14SO e. 57nSTREET H$e Park's Oldest andMost Dist\rpjishe3Coffeehouse♦ It!MusicContinued from, Page Threeseemed to be picking at the music and only accentuatedthe frequent triviality of the proceedings. Fortunately,things improved steadily from the second act on and, bythe time the final curtain fell, Mr. Sanzogno’s readinghad provided us with a satisfying evening of musicaltheater. The production, the Lyric’s own, looks prettygood (with the exception of Ulrica’s hut, which is drearyin a functional rather than an atmospheric way), and ifRenzo Frusca’s direction did not approach Gcbbi’s Fal-staff, neigther did it prevent the whole project from turn¬ing out well.Musical grab-bag that it is, Ballo offers a wide assort¬ment of singers an opportunity to do their thing. Record¬ings remind us that during the Metropolitan’s GoldenAge audiences were treated to the luxury of a FriedaHempel as Oscar and the likes of Journet and De Segu-rola as the conspirators. These roles apparently no long¬er interest major singers and although they can be doneby lesser talents, a degree of sparkle is lost. Specifically,Sylvia Stahlman is no coloratura and thus, for all her reputation in the role, no Oscar. The conspirators (PaoloWashington and Peter Van Ginkel) and Ulrica (FrancaMattiucci) are tolerably competent, but the same cannotbe said for Ronald Combs in the tiny role of Silvano:surely there is someone in the Lyric’s chorus who cansing these lines acceptably? These singers do not makeor break a performance, however, and the Lyric hasbeen fortunate in its casting of the major roles.We are hard-pressed to decide whether Luisa Marag-liano or Peter Glossop is the star of this production. Bothare outstanding. Miss Maragliano, a singer new to me,has a huge voice, capable of sailing over the loudestclimaxes with ease and yet encompassing a singularlylovely pianissimo as well. Her way with the role ofAmelia right now includes some scenery-chewing (a badcase of exaggerated histrionics in “Morro, ma primagrazia” for instance) but it is definitely major league.Glossop is endowed with an equally rich, powerful voice,as well as the sort of dramatic presence his colleaguesconspicuously lacked the other night. For sheer volumehis work must be commended.Interpretively he is con¬ scientious and sometimes more. It will be a pleasure towatch him grow in the role over the years, but his isalready an extraordinary performance.Renato Cioni’s Riccardo can also, on the whole becounted a success, though it is a triumph of techniqueand intelligence over a voice which is becoming bleatyand threadbare at the top. His mezza-voce is quite livelystill and he alone in the cast seems capable of movinghis voice with any agility, which he demonstrated in “Ditu se fedele” and the ensembles. He comes no closerthan anyone else to making sense out of the character(such as it is) but this makes small difference in anopera where a number of characters are expected toremain true to stereotype, as it were.On the strength of its principals, then, this Ballo is acreditable offering. We might hope for that perfect all-star Ballo, done in the grand manner with absolute con¬viction, but the current production at the Lyric at leastmakes all the important points and should enjoy a com¬fortable success.William MurnaneTheaterShepherd Premiers Crahhy PlaySAM SHEPARD, WINNER of last year’s Obie Award,is one of a new group of playwrights who reject tradition¬al concepts of the well made play, social realism of theShaw variety, and psychological drama. They rely onjarring the orientation of the audience, on presentingabsurdities to point out the absurdity they see arouadthem. Shepard in particular stives for an innocence, anaivet’e in his characters, to heighten the incongruitybetween their outlook and their surroundings.Last Friday night the Chicago City Players gaveSam Shepard’s Fourteen Hundred Thousand and RedCross their first showings outside New York. These playsrequire difficult child-like sort of acting, and the ChicagoCity Players do them justice. The Baird Hall Theatre,part of the Wellngton Congregational Church, houses theproduction, which is appropriate. Red Cross was ori¬ginally done at Judson Poets Theatre in Judson Memo¬rial Church off Washington Square.Fourteen Hundred Thousand is an attack on differentkinds of conformity. The theme is represented in thebuilding of a bookshelf which will hold fourteen hundredthousand books. Ed (Morton Zwick) is the conformistwho has built the frame for the shelves. All Tom (PeterColeman) and Donna (Kathleen Ruhl) have to do is “fillin the shelves.” They should have done so long ago, butthey have begin to doubt whether the books are impor¬tant. Sam Shepard has doubts about the value of dramat¬ic form. They and the playwright finally decide thattheir respective frames are necessary but both tell usthat the shelves in the frame are perhaps superfluous orat any rate precariously balanced, for they fall everytime the door clcses. At last a few are in place. “Shallwe paint them?” Donna asks, and answers for herselfand the playwright emphatically, “No! Colors aren’t im¬portant. I don’t give a damn how it looks.” Ed wants tohelp. “You’re only in the way,” Donna tells Ed andShepard tells dramatic forms. Peter Coleman and Kathleen Ruhl in “Fourteen Hundred Thousand”The shelf-frame of drama must have knowledge asits content, however. (Shepard and his fellows considerBeckett and Ionesco arriere-garde to say the least.) Thebooks for the bookshelves must be carried up manyflights of stairs. Here Shepard does an about-fact. Donnaand Tom become conventional in unconventionality; Edis lost in his normalcy. After Mom and Pop have bothbrought up a handful of books and both have collapsedfrom the strain, Ed helps out and returns, observing,“You don’t notice the climb if you don’t concentrate.” Itno longer matters. Donna, Tcm, Mom, and Pop haverejected the knowledge downstairs and here we see Shep¬ard’s underlying respect for what the books represent.The four characters have, in fact, reversed roles with Edand Ed is therefore lost.Conformity in any direction is, in the end, alwaysconformity. Those who attempt to resist it are doomed tofailure. And so, as first Mom and Pop, then Donna andTom recite in unison (sic) their idealistic vision of StripCity, “from Maine to the top of Florida and only a milewide,” Ed is drawn into the vortex and is soon drowned.In Red Cross Shepard has attacked the same prob¬lem in a different way. Conformity takes the form ofcrabs. The maid (Pat Grove), replacing Ed as the con¬ventional figure, is ironically the vehicle used to tell uswhat to do. “If I had parasites eating off me and drain¬ing me of all my blood, making me weaker and weakerwhile they got stronger and stronger.. .I’d have enoughsense to have my bed changed!” Jim, (Allen Carlsen),our hero with crabs in his pubic hair, won’t let herchange it,-though. He gets red in the face. “I’ve seenyellow spots before,” she reassures him, but no oneshould see the evidence of an embarrassing erection be¬neath society’s blanket, not even the maid.And so Jim heads her off. He has her help him done is his and the crabby one is not. How clever! Hemerely changes beds and is absolved of conformist im¬plication.Now he can teach the maid how to live. He gives hera swimming lesson. As they swim faster and fasterthrough the sheets of the beds, however, the maid getsprogressively more tired, developing not one, but threecramps. Projecting her predicament outside her sur¬roundings allows her to imagine being in a real lake andreally drowning and one conjecture follows another asher family starves, etc. This technique of following athought to its extreme is also used very effectively at thebeginning of Red Cross when Carol (June Pyskacek) pic¬tures herself flying faster and faster down a ski-slope tillher head falls off, turns into a snowball and kills a mil¬lion people.The maid, drowned, is now resurrected. The water isbeautiful, fluid, a new skin. Life has another dimensionwhich she cannot quite grasp. In despair, she leaves. Indespair, Shepard symbolizes his own internal hurt in thefinal horror when Jim slowly turns to the audience, blooddripping from a wound on his forehead.Disillusionment, a dominant theme in these twoplays, has imposed limitations on both. They can be fun¬ny, but only in their desperation. They can be mildlytragic, but not fully, for we can have no sympathy withthe characters. Shepard, in rebelling against theatre aswe know it, has come dangerously close to didacticism/which is fine for protest, but fatal to serious drama. Hehas, however, pointed the way to a more meaning^,dramatic form in his directness, his cn^acters’ in¬nocence, and his forceful style.At the very least, these plays are interesting. Whereelse can one find a good serious dramatic discussion o,crabs? Christopher LyonNovember 8, 1968 THE GREY CITYJOURNALThe 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.EditorMichael SorkinManaging EditorJessica SiegelAssociate EditorsMichael AndreSusan SlottowKen ShermanEllen CassedyEllen KaisseHowie SchamestT. C. FoxProductionDavid SteeleThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.The Grey City Journal 5The Year’s Most Significant Reserved Seat AttractionOS€ PH t. LEVINE presents AN AVCO(EMBASSY FILMPETER I KATHARINEOTOOL6 I H6PBURNMARTIN POLTH€ LION IN WINT6RTANK MKRHOWfiJ""" .H)HN« ASTI.KSX' TIMOTHY DALTONiXTHONY HOl’KINSCS^r XKiKI. STOf'KStfS" NIOKI.TKKKYng PhilipPrinceBased uponethe pia> by f «ecut ve Produce' «»JAMES (iOl.DMAN TOSKI'H K I.KYINK TAMKS Ool.DMANProduced by Directed by Music composed andMARTIN 11)1,1, ANTHONY HARYKY «“*<*•’JOHN HARRYta.UrnKMHA^I (Mist l,\\" ISI(l' • -KIHIKSCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES & PRICESALL SEATS RESERVEDALL MATINEESAT 2.00 P.M. MAIN FL.I, MEZZ. BALC.Wednesdays & Saturdays .Sun. & Holidays $2.50$3.25 $2.00$2.50EVENINGSMON. THRU SAT. at 8:30 P.M. - SUNDAY at 8:00 P.M.Sun. thru ThursFri., Sat., Hoi. Eves & Hols. $3.50$4.00 $2.75$3.00HOLIDAY MATINEES: Nov. 11. 2 8-29; Dec. 21 thru Jan. lFor theatre party information, phone MARGE ROVIN ASSOCIATESat (312) 321-0520.ORDER YOURITICKETS NOW NOWPLAYING Final Weeks for“LES CARABINIERS”Godard’s war allegorySTARTS NOV. ISLA GUERRE^‘A TRIUMPH AND A THRILLER^Erotic scenes of suchoutright beauty, such superbsubtlety. ” -jwh* cn.tTHREEPENNYfen™2424 N. Lincolnof Fullerton-Hoistedone block east ofFullerton "El" stopTel.: 528-9126FREE PARKING2438-40 N. HoistedSTUDENT RATE $1.50For special group ratecall 247-6646 or 348-9806The Pope...the Premier of Russia...a last desperate effort to prevent World War III.Metro Goldwyn M.iyer presents a George Engluncl productionTHE SHOES OFTHE FISHERMANAnthony Quinn • Oskar WernerDavid Janssen * Vittorio De SicaLeo McKern • Sir John GielgudBarbara Jefford • Rosemarie Dexter. Sir Laurence Oliviersr'eenp.ay John PstTlCk a^d JamES K6nn3W3V • based on novel by Moms l Westa'frtfo&y Michsel Anderson prod*** o» George EnglundPanawtsion*and Metrocolor MGMif £TS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL! i Clark 1enjoy ourspecial studentrate750 at alltimesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredailyopen 7:30 a.m.—lateshow 3 a.m.Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 50clittle gal-lery for galsonly• dark parking—1 doorsouth4 brs. 95c after 5 p.m.• write for your freemonthly programdark & madison fr 2-2843 University TheatreFirst Play of the SeasonLIVE THEATREPremiere Performance'THE GAMETHAT HAS NO NAMEan original play byMICHAEL BRAUDEdirected by JAMES O’REILLYfriday, Saturday, SundayNOVEMBER 8th, 9th, 10thReynolds Club Theatre 8:30 pmTickets $1.50 / students $1 nauthorized SMC \llv sales & service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, illinois 60615r' ■foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.SCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES AND PRICES: Mon. thru Thurs.Eves, at 8:30; Orch. & Mezz., $2.90; Balcony, $2.50. Sun. Eves, at4 90; Orch. & Mezz., $2.90; Balcony, $2.50. Fri., Sat., Hols. & Hoi.--»s at 8:30; Orch. & Mezz., $3.80; Balcony, $2.90. Mats. Wed.,i & Sun. at 2:00; Wed. & Sat. Orch. & Mezz., $2.50; Balcony,. 30. Mats Sun. & Hols Orch. & Mezz., $2.90; Balcony, $2.50.Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope with check or moneyorder payable to McVickers Theatre, 25 W. Madison Street,Chicago, Illinois 60601.DUAL MIDWEST PREMIERENOVEMBER 20th cVICKERSA TRANS-BEACON THEATRECOAST TO COAST2S W. MADISON ST. • CHICAGO, ILL. 60601PHONE 762-8230 MORGAN’S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.Val Stoecklein iscoming on radio. The Grey City Journal NO WHERE ELSEIN HYDE PARK• Boeuf Fondue• German Roast Duck• c/h Spare Ribs• Berlinerweisse• Complete Wine Cellar• Classical Guitar Nightlyto ptril'M' HYDE PARKSTARTSFRI. Nov. 8th^Purelunacy...uproariouslyfunny!^-TIMEJoseph E Levine Pt.wr.isZEECHOSTELm Mel Brooks'“TEEEECELCEES'A Sidney Glazier ProductionCINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Tiines****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”_„ theTWOofUT. rWHY TRAVELCOURT HOUSERESTAURANTIn Harper Court,-'November 8X 1968 Student rate every $ 4 50day but Sat. * |Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856Culture VultureDECLARATION of intent or warning by birdI. enough of these constrained sentences, packaged,wrapped, nearly hemmed by captials and periodsII. Problem: this is a public service designed and in¬tended to spew out information, and normal sentanceswith real visible endings do help the comphrehension,the eysight and the patience.III. compromise, as no one has yet put a culture vul¬ture in any authorotative reference tone—almost saidtomb) and as this is the midwest center of flexibility,we’ll discard some forms at some times, and clingtenasciously to others, at least until the mood changes.IV. so, conclusion: culture vulture will do this thinghowever it pleases as/when it is doing it. beware,don’t read it, or delight, (such applies mainly to non-informative parts)FILM this is. a spattering of it as summed by MichaelAndre, its easier to look at the ads. wouldn’t be terribly interesting, now, there is a worthlessbit of thinking for you.CHARLIE BYRD at the Grover M. Herman Audito¬rium, 3241 S. Federal St. (Ill. Inst. Tech.) at 8:30 p.m.KABI LARETEI will be at the Auditorium Monday at8:00 as part of the International Festival of Pianistsseries. She is hailed as Sweden’s best and tickets arefrom $1-5.DEITRICH FISCHER-DIESKAU, pre-eminent Germanlieder singer will be at the Auditorium Friday the 15th at8:00. Tickets: 2.50-7.00OBERNKIRCHEN CHILDREN’S CHOIR, made up of36 younger Germans, will be at Orchestra Hall Sunday at3:00 p.m. Tickets: $3-6.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA will give an Il¬linois Sesquicentennial Celebration concert Saturday at8:30 in Orchestra Hall. Tickets-$2-4.50. All the composersSquirrelTHE TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE—Judd 126,Tuesday, 2:33, 5:00. John Huston’s famaus analysis ofCreed; Bogie here divests Maoself oi stoic coin, thusshowing he can abstract.REDUNE 7W#-soc. sci. U2, Thursday, 7:11, t:».Both Cahiers du Cinema aad Robin Wood’s new bookacclaim this film as complex, fascinating, and brilliant;some find it just confusing.etc. following his lines emphasizing in some way thebrevityMUSICPRINCESS IDA presented as a benefit for the scholar¬ship fund of the University of Chicago Laboratory school,will be given Mandel Hall tonight at 8:30 and tomorrowat 1:30 and 8:30. The plot concerns the conflict betweenAristocracy and Intelligentsia, including a King’s daugh¬ter, betrothed in infancy to a neighbouring Prince, whofounds a University to promote the ascendency of Wom¬en.BUKKA WHITE, songwriter and blues singer, who wasin last year’s folk festival is playing at the Quiet Knightat 1311 N. Wells St. Wednesday (13) until Sunday(17).Like it says, he gives the stage impression of being a“happy extrovert with a genial personality.. .plays asteel guitar with fast hands and a few tricks.” excesspractical information—on Wednesday, and Thursdayshow times are 9, 11, 12:30 and on Friday, Saturday, andSunday they are 8, 10:30, 12:30. the 8:00 shows are opento anyone, but for all the others they accept only peopleover 21. Cost Wednesday to Thursday is $1.50; Friday toSunday is $2.00.BUFFY SAINTE MARIE appears tonight at 8:30 atOrchestra Hall, tickets; 2.50-5.50) versusPETE FOUNTAIN who is at the Auditorium at 8:30.Tickets here are 3.50-6.50. we wonder what the crosssection of such a confrontation would be, that is thosewho really can’t decide which to go to. Probably represented have resided in Illinois for some amount oftime.VERM’S REQUEM MAM will be presented by tbeChief Symph—y Qmtmtn aawdacted by Jen Marti-nn, Nov. 14, 15, M at 1:15, 2M mi 8:30 respectively inOrchestra Hall. Tickets: $2-7.THEATERTHE GAME THAT HAS NO NAME by MichaelBraude, Chicago poet nd playwright, is presented in itspremiere performance by University Theatre tonight,Saturday and Staafcy at 1:31 in ReynsMs Club Theatreat 57tb aad University. Eight men, vagrants, spendingthe afternoon in the part are material for a charming,absurd play in the long one-act tradition of Beckett andPinter. Tickets for students and faculty are $1.00. Gener¬al public pays $1.50.THE NEW OLD FASHIONED BAROQUE COMPASSPLAYERS have a whole new show called the ElectricIcons made up almost entirely of improvisations on sug¬gestions from the audience. The LAKE COUNTRYSTRING BAND is probably still there—meaning HarperTheatre Coffee House, 5238 S. Harper—as they were torun for a month from October 18. WFMT guide says theNOFBO Players are doing In the Service of the Ego, goand see for yourself which one it is. Either is likely to begood. Its open from 8:30 to 1:30 Friday and Saturdays.Charge is $1.25.for students.A PLAGUE ON BOTH YOUR HOUSES is Supposedlybeing given by Second City, 1616 N. Wells. As it waspolitical satire of the presidential race, we must expressdoubts on its continuance, ah,well.. .they appear fromTuesday through Sunday at various times and at variousprices. At 11:00 on all those days there are improvisa¬tions by the cast for which the cost is 1.00.JACQUES BREL IS ALIVE AND WELL AND LIVINGIN PARIS is still at the Happy Medium, 901 N. Rushnightly at 9:00 with extra shows Saturday and Friday at11:30, Sunday at 6:00. Tickets for this revue of 26 of his“powerful” songs range from 2.95 to 5.95.'' November % 1968 OVERNIGHT is at the Ivanhoe, 3000 N. Clark. This isthe world premeiere of William Inge’s drama. Again itruns from Tuesday to Sunday at various times andprices (generally slightly expensive)Chicago Circle Players present AN ITALIAN STRAWHAT, November 13, 14, plus some more dates we’ll givenext time, at 62 E. 11th st. The program is a comedy ofsongs in the French l'3th Century farcical vaudevill tra¬dition. Cost is 1.00 students, and 2.00 others.DANCEDance is definitely here this week, though why all atthe same time? FIESTA MEXICANA a company of 30dancers, singers and musicians will be at the AuditoriumSunday at 2:30. Tickets from 2.50 to 6.50.GHANA DANCE ENSEMBLE will be at Mandel hallMonday at 8; 00. There dancing is characterized byspeed, aglity, energy, precision body movements and afascinating sense of rhythm, (ah, such a great quoter ofadvance publicity)THE HARPER THEATRE DANCE FESTIVAL HASTHE PAUL TAYLOR DANCE CO. the 8th and 9th at8:30, and Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30. THE JOSE LIMONDANCE CO. will be there the 12-16 at the same times.This is American modern dance, breathing, movingsculpture.And the CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FOLK (dance)FESTIVAL today and tomorrow. The performancetonight, costing 2.50 for public and 1.25 for students andchildren, features at least twelve different dance troupes.Slavic, African, Israeli, Mexican, Scandinavian, Ir¬ish,more After that performance there will be a folkdance with live and recorded music. Saturday at 2:00there will be folk dance work shops and at 7:30 there willbe a folk dance party with the Dunav TamburitzaOrchestra (Slavic) the Markogiannakis Orchestra (greek)and the U. of C. International Orchestra (?). Workshopsare 75 cents general, 50 cents student. Evening is 2.00general and 1.00 studentsETC.RESISTANCE TEACH-IN at the Blue Gargoyle (thisis culture?). General schedule 7:30, intruduction; 8:00workshops on Vietnam, conscientious objectors, black re¬sistance, prison life, and resistance; 9:30, folk singing andfilm; 10:00, Staughton Lynd speaks on resistance politics.Dr. Alan Cohen speaks Wednesday at 8:00 in Idanoyes 3rd floor on DRUGS AND TEE PATH.SELF-REALIZATION FELLOWSHIP has come toChicago with two lectures and five Yoga classes and avast amount of leaflets. The SRF promotes a West¬ernized version of the Indian KRIYA YOGA, and in theprocess has become thoroughly clogged in the Englishlanguange. Much emphasis on “scientific” and wordsthat sound like the fake baggage of many fringe religiousgroups.—“unfailing Intelligence”, “divine Self within”,“Know your nature as the immortal soul”. Still, BrotherMokshanada gives two free lectures on Friday mi Sat¬urday at I N «t Sherman House. The classes will begftve* MsMay, Widatidays mi Fridays from Mialiy toWednesday the Mth at the Sherman House, CUafc aadRandolph. Cost for students is $14 Aar theseries. Three of tbe AMERICAN INDIAN EXMBITS,“New Directions in American Indian Art, “Contempo¬rary Traditional American Indian Art”, and “Indians ofChicago, 1968”, continue at the Field Museum until No-vember 15.THE CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVALwill be held at the Playboy theatre, 13M n. Dearborn,from the 9 through the 17th. It boasts of several pre¬miere feature films and a special program honoring Ca¬nadian films Sunday and Monday nights. I suppose thebest thing to do if you don’t feel like pilgrimaging northall week and you want to see what sort of junk Chicagohas collected would be to go to the Best of the Festivalon the 16th at 7:30 and again at 10:00. Price for thepriviledge is $3.75.This is also the week for the STROLLING GYPSYMUSICIANS (11-18) wnadering through Carson, Pirie,Scott & Co. due to the Grand Tour Import Fair. Believewhat you like, that’s what they claim.HOT MUSIC BY THE LAKE COUNTRYSTRING BAND COOL HUMOR & IMPROVSBY NOF BAROQUE COMPASS P. HOTSOUP & Cl DE R AT THE HAR PE RTHEATER COFFEE HOUSELATE SHOWS ONLYFRI & SAT 10:30 p.m. — 5238 So. Harper' The Grey City* Journal ‘ 7... 2FOR THE PRICE OF ONE!ALEC GUINESS MARCELLO MASTROIANNIin inLAVENDER BIG DEALHILL ONMOB MADONNASTREET(at 7 and 10) (at 8:30)Saturday, November 9, Cobb Hall, $1, CEFWHPK-FM 88.3First on your dialUniversity of Chicago student-operated radioWEEKDAYS AT A GLANCE7:00-10:30 a.m. Happy MorningWake-Up Service3:00 R & B6:00 News6:05 Rock8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus News and EventsComprehensive Critic10:00 Classical12;00 News12:05 Jazz (until 2:30 a.m.)FRIDAY 87:00-10:30 a.m. Dr. Feelgood’sHappy Sound TherapyClinic3:00 South Side Soul6:00 News6:05 Petticoat Lane8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Chicago SymphonyConcert10:00 (To be announced)12:00 News12:05 JazzSATURDAY 9Noon The Flea Market(News at 3 and 6,Sports at 6:05)9:30 News: Evening Report9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Gilbert and Sullivan’s“Princess Ida’’10:00 Listening: Mozart - TheMagic Flute. (News at 12)SUNDAY 10Noon Conversations at Chicago12:30 Hellhound: Blues3:00 News3:05 Sunday Soul Session6:00 News6:05 Sports6:10 African Highlife Calypso8:00 (To be announced)9:30 News: Evening Report9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Chicago SymphonyPopular Concert10:00 (To be announced)12:00 News12:05 Stonehenge RevisitedMONDAY 117:00-10:30 a.m. Happy MorningWake-Up Service(News at 8)3:00 A Stone Thing6:00 News6;05 The Underground8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 CommuAity Viewpoint 9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Books: Sheed’s “Penn¬sylvania Gothic’’ etc.10:00 Classical Music12:00 News12:05 JazzTUESDAY 127:00-10:30 a.m. Happy MorningWake-Up Service (Newsat 8)3:00 R & B6:00 News6:05 The History of WesternCivilization8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Film review10:00 M.o.z.a.r.t: Orff-CarminaBurana; Mozart - Diver¬timento in D, K. 136;Beethoven - Wind Octet,Op. 103; Mozart - Pianoquartets12:00 News12:05 J azzWEDNESDAY 137:00-10:30 a.m. Cynics Corner(News at 8)3:00 South Side Soul6;00 News6:05 Third World Raspberry8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Rosenberg Art Exhibit,Bergman Gallery10:00 Classical Music12:00 News12:05 J azzTHURSDAY 147:00-10:30 a.m. Happy MorningWake-Up Service(News at 8)3:00 South Side Soul6:00 News6:05 Left Fork8:45 News: Evening Report9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and eventsComprehensive Critic:Drama Review10:00 Concert Hall: Haydn-MassIn Time Of War; Bartok-Quartet No. 1 (1907);Carter-Sonata for Celloand Piano (1948); Berio-Thema (1958); Druckman-Animus I (1966)12:00 News12:05 J azz■ Cut out this program guide and paste your radio under it. |e;p uij jnoA jo aippjtu am in qep >peuis"I 676 ujpsmpunts mtu»Vi J»JS»n» aS3(vouvo)Volvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.Tile |m‘-I n.i-nn fm Inn ill” ,i \ul\u i- I-.m-«• il l.i-U «<• Imi".K\.lrtl\ ll"» loll” il'ill’l Jlll.lialtliv. I .lit »r <||| klKIII tll.lt liver•).V ii| .iII tin' \iiImi- ii "i«li'ii'<l in tin-1 Hill'll St.it”' in the* l.nt1 I vi\ir- an* -till mi tin* fn.nl.Tin-Im'-i ii. i-■ hi ini liiniii”.i \nhii hum. i- Uijiim- «<• have,i li• m iii -Im k. \ml Ir.mkK . mi- ilnil l i \|n'i I In Ii.im- llii'iiiarm uni Inn lung.\\ Iiii-Ii lirill”- II||all mil li-'tIII J |MI.nil•> .ilmill \nlvim. < tillin-lnim-r- like In Inn lln in lifi aii-i' tin ' la-1. W like In 'i'lltllrill In i .iii-i* linn doll I.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800College Relations Directorc/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008Please send mea Sheraton StudentI.D.soIcan save upto 20% onSheraton rooms.Name -AddressReservations with the special low rate are confirmed in advance(based on availability) for Fri., Sat., Sun. nights, plus Thanks-givmg (Nov. 27-Dec. 1), Christmas (Dec. 15-Jan. 1) and Julythrough Labor Day! Many Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns offerstudent rates during other periodSsubject to availability at timeot check-in and may be requested.Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns ®Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns. A Worldwide Service of in5 Nights Only!Nov. 13-17BUKKA WHITE3 Shows NightlySpecial! 8 pm ShowsFri., Sat., Sun.Open to All AgesThe Quiet Knight1311 N. WellsOld Town 944-8755 The Carpet BamA division of Cortland CarpetWe have an enormous se¬lection of new and usedwall-to-wall carpetings,staircase runners, rem¬nants and rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine andAmerican orientals).We open our warehouse tothe public for retail saleson Saturdays ONLY from9-3.1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)243-2279PIZZA DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristPLATTER eye examinationscontact lensesPizza, Fried ChickenItalian Foods in theNew Hyde ParkCompare the Price! Shopping Center1460 E. 53rd Ml 3-2800 1510 E. 55th St.WE DELIVER DO 3-7644 INTERESTEDIN ANOVERSEASCAREER?MR. JOHN F. DALI EREwill be on the campusNOVEMBER 12, 1968to discuss the training offered atA.I.F.T. (an intensive nine monthsprogram of post graduate study) andthe job opportunities open tograduates in the field ofINTERNATIONAL TRADE andGOVERNMENT SERVICE.Interviews may be scheduled atTHE OFFICE OF CAREERCOUNSELING AND PLACEMENTThe American InstituteFor Foreign TradeThunderbird CampusPHOENIX, ARIZONAAn Affiliate OfThe American Management Association Autumn 1968 MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium *1121 East 60th • 8 P.M.Nov. 11 - THOMAS F. PETTIGREW (Harvard)The Future of American Race RelationsNov. 18 - FRITZ MACHLUP (Princeton)Some Aspects of Academic FreedomNov. 25 - VALENTINE TELEGDI (Univ. Chicago)Through the Looking Glass: MirroringSpace CHARGE and Time#>'ADMISSION Series tickets $7.50 by mail only (call FI 6*8300). A limitednumber of complimentary tickets for U. of C. students and faculty areavailable at Central Info. Desk in Adm. Bldg., or at University Extension,Room 121, Center for Continuing Education (Ex. 3137).' * * The Grey City Journal November 8, 1968